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Originally posted by puteri81 at 23-6-2005 09:42 AM:
Ha'ah lah sis....me dulu kat Harbourfront office building pon sama....
tapi yg gereknya mlm bleh tgk lampu2 kat Sentosa....very de beautiful...:bgrin:
Tapi WTC ok eh...... aku suka sana midnite pun cam semua terang.....sana banyak lampu ah.. |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:05 AM:
Yup, i think he really affected with the incident....terus kasi 24 hrs resignation....
[size=-2]psstttt...btw, niari Aries nak pergi jogging kat treadmill di gym tu...tapi lunch time ok... ...
rajin ko eh...
Seriously me tak pernah naik treadmill, cam takut slip then termasuk dalam roda2 tu :malu::malu::malu: |
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Originally posted by chicsee at 22-6-2005 05:12 PM:
Tapi kan...office building ni pun memang eerie la....Chic kalau sensorang dalam office pun rasa semacam aje...
:setuju: dgn Chic
Dulu masa Aries keje di Tiong Bahru Plaza then selalu kena keje OT sampai pukul 8 malam...usually dah pukul 7 lebih office pun dah lengang....Aries perasan bila Aries tinggal sorang mesti bunyi org tolak kerusi kat meeting room lah, blinds kat meeting room berbunyi lah (heran kan cos' kat office ni mana lah kita buka tingkap, then mcmana blinds tu mcm kena tiup angin bergerak-gerak) & also kalau nak pergi ke ladies, suddenly bau kemenyan...:geram::geram: |
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 23-6-2005 10:13 AM:
rajin ko eh...
Seriously me tak pernah naik treadmill, cam takut slip then termasuk dalam roda2 tu :malu::malu::malu:
Rajin? hehehe...dah gemuk ni...so kenalah exercise....
lol manalah boleh termasuk dlm roda |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:16 AM:
:setuju: dgn Chic
Dulu masa Aries keje di Tiong Bahru Plaza then selalu kena keje OT sampai pukul 8 malam...usually dah pukul 7 lebih office pun dah lengang....Aries perasan bila Aries tingg ...
wooo cam gini punye tanda2 pun ko steady ye??
kalo aku , melutut depan boss ah, mintak tiap2 hari kul 5pm nak balik... takut :malu: |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:19 AM:
lol:lol kepochi? heheh....biasalah Dep nak jadi reporter tak bergaji...
btw, hari tu kita tak jadi pergi lah cos' my doter takut :geram:
ooo budak2 kecik ada tak mau ah...nanti takut dorang terbawak2 sampai tido malam mengigau......korang jugak susah...;) |
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[quote]Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:23 AM:
Rajin? hehehe...dah gemuk ni...so kenalah exercise....
lol manalah boleh termasuk dlm roda |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:16 AM:
:setuju: dgn Chic
Dulu masa Aries keje di Tiong Bahru Plaza then selalu kena keje OT sampai pukul 8 malam...usually dah pukul 7 lebih office pun dah lengang....Aries perasan bila Aries tingg ...
Aiyoooooh.....:geram: |
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 23-6-2005 10:37 AM:
wooo cam gini punye tanda2 pun ko steady ye??
kalo aku , melutut depan boss ah, mintak tiap2 hari kul 5pm nak balik... takut :malu:
apa nak buat Dep...dah terpaksa kena overtime...
tapi dengar |
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 23-6-2005 10:38 AM:
ooo budak2 kecik ada tak mau ah...nanti takut dorang terbawak2 sampai tido malam mengigau......korang jugak susah...;)
:setuju: tu Dep |
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[quote]Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 10:42 AM:
apa nak buat Dep...dah terpaksa kena overtime...
tapi dengar |
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Ni blok yang China girl tu kena kerat....seram jugak sey residents kat sana.
CUT-UP CHINA GIRL
Just give me 4 numbers
A man prays for winning 4D numbers
One group goes to gawk
Another takes down unit number
June 23, 2005
IT used to be just another ordinary HDB block in a quiet neighbourhood.
--Pics/CHOO CHWEE HUA
But now, residents of Block 114, Geylang Lorong 3, call it 'hong pai' (Mandarin for the most popular block).
China national Liu Hong Mei was allegedly killed and dismembered by Leong Siew Chor in his ninth-storey unit there.
Over the past few days, the block has seen its fair share of visitors.
THE 4D PUNTER
Retiree Steven Fung went there last night to pray to Hong Mei's spirit and ask for a 4D number.
The 53-year-old even timed his visit - yesterday was the seventh day of Hong Mei's death. The Chinese believe that it is on this day that the spirit will return.
After buying some joss sticks and incense paper, Mr Fung took a bus from his home in Bedok with his wife, 55.
He told The New Paper in Mandarin: 'It's tragic what happened to her. At the same time, I want to see if I can get lucky in 4D after paying my respects.
'If I do strike it big, I'll get some monks to perform some rites for her so she can embark on her final journey smoothly.'
After he burnt the joss sticks, he kneeled and bowed his head in prayer. Then he took out folded pieces of paper with the numbers 0 to 9 written on them.
Holding them in his palms, he shook them earnestly and picked each one as they fell out.
Until he got four numbers.
He declined to tell us what the number was, saying that it would 'jinx' his chances of winning.
Another man was less forthcoming about his intentions.
At the void deck, he asked who we were when he noticed us coming down from the ninth storey in the lift.
We told him we were reporters, and he said he was an employee at Agere Systems in Kallang. Leong and Hong Mei had worked at the company's Serangoon North factory.
The man, in his 20s, said he did not know the pair, but he wanted to go to the unit to take a look as he lived nearby.
He asked if we could go up with him as he was afraid. We agreed.
Once there, he clasped his hands and prayed, before looking up at the unit number.
He sheepishly admitted to wanting to buy 4D when we asked him.
'Three colleagues asked me to come to get the number as I live nearby.'
THE GAWKERS
Then there were those who just came to gawk.
A Chinese national in her 20s was there with her 10-year-old niece and 7-year-old nephew.
Carrying a copy of Lianhe Wanbao, they were still looking for the unit.
The woman, who wanted to be known only as Miss Lin, said she was from Fujian province and has been in Singapore for 15 years. She lives with the children in Woodlands.
She said: 'My niece and I are going back to China for a short visit tomorrow, so we thought we'd come here tonight.'
She added that she was appalled by the brutal crime.
'It's so tragic - she came all the way from China to make a living, but ended up dead.'
THE SCAREDY-CAT
A resident on the sixth storey who did not want to be named, said that she had been so 'freaked out' by the murder she made sure that she was accompanied by either her husband or son whenever she had to go out.
The 49-year-old said: 'I get chills running down my spine when I take the lift alone, especially the one which the person took to dispose of the body.
'It's even more eerie at night.
'I never imagined that taking a lift could be so scary.'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Talk of the block
OVER the past week, the body parts murder has become the talk of the block.
Whether along the corridors, at the market or the nearby coffee shops, the topic has been on the lips of residents at Block 114 and the nearby blocks.
Mrs Kng, a housewife in her 40s who lives on the 10th storey, said: 'Every day, the neighbours talk about the case. Even at the market, people talk about it.'
A 10-year-old boy looking at the Lianhe Wanbao newspaper outside the flat where Hong Mei was allegedly killed.
Many residents have been getting visits from reporters every day.
An old woman who lives next to the flat where the alleged murder took place was jittery when we knocked on her door last night.
SCARED
She said: 'People have been knocking on my door so often. Sometimes, my imagination runs wild and I get scared.'
But despite the gruesome murder, life goes on for the residents in the block.
Madam Chia, 40, a hawker's assistant, said: 'People talk about it because it's a shocking crime, but it doesn't affect the way we live our lives.'
Unlike the resident on the sixth storey who is afraid to take the lift, others we spoke to are not bothered.
Mr Kng, 40, a supervisor, said: 'We heard there were blood stains on the lift's door and walls, but we still take the lift.
'Why should we be afraid? We've done nothing wrong, and we don't even know the dead girl.'
But some residents feel that maybe they should get together to organise a prayer session for Hong Mei.
A female resident on the 10th storey said: 'It might put some residents at ease and also let her soul rest in peace.' |
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puteri81 This user has been deleted
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 23-6-2005 01:25 PM:
hantu cina pun seram jugak ye....
those old chinese ladies cam samsui women gitu...
Dep, lebih seram kalau pompuan cina kan dorang commit suicide then pakai baju merah...confirmmmmmmm dorang akan bangun semula kiranya macam balas dendam lah gitu.... |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 01-04-2005 14:07:
Dep, lebih seram kalau pompuan cina kan dorang commit suicide then pakai baju merah...confirmmmmmmm dorang akan bangun semula kiranya macam balas dendam lah gitu....
betul tu...ian ada jugak dengar macam tu |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 23-6-2005 02:07 PM:
Dep, lebih seram kalau pompuan cina kan dorang commit suicide then pakai baju merah...confirmmmmmmm dorang akan bangun semula kiranya macam balas dendam lah gitu....
ooo ya...ada dua kes kan tahun lepas gitu....
pes - ni two girls, satu butch satu normal...
dorang suicide pact terjun flet sama2, dua2 pakai baju merah...
seken - yang Thailand tu dia ada sakit apa ntah, so dia lompat ngan anak dia dua orang, tak pakai baju merah, tapi semua tangan dia ikat ngan string kaler merah...
then dulu yang nyonya keja NTUC cashier tu kan, dia kena tuduh curik duit dari cashier , then kena bawak pegi court, so masa lunch break ke apa, dia keluar sub court, dia gi flat dekat tu kan, dia terjun, pun pakai baju merah... |
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aku baca kat new paper kelakar ada kesian pun ada...
Anyway, jiran bawah dia pun cakap scary pun....
FAMILY PLEADS
Go away, please
By Tay Shi'an
June 24, 2005
NO, it's not a plea to naughty spirits or ghosts.
Inside Madam Lee's kitchen, there are no ghosts - only laundry being blown by a fan. --Pics/MOHD ISHAK
This desperate plea from a Bukit Batok housewife and her two children is directed at the throngs of curious humans who have been 'ghost-spotting' outside her flat over the last two weeks.
Madam Nancy Lee, 54, has been plagued by hordes of gawkers every night for the past two weeks.
On weekends, the crowd gets so big they number over a hundred, the housewife and her neighbours claim.
The gawkers gather at the foot of her block, staring at her kitchen window.
Some even creep up to her flat after midnight, knock on the door, then dash off.
Once, they even allegedly cut off their power supply.
A group of gawkers hoping to see ghosts in Madam Lee's flat.
But why the strange behaviour?
RADIO THE CULPRIT
Well, Madam Lee's home in Bukit Batok West had been repeatedly identified - unit number and all - on a late-night radio show as being haunted. (See report at far right.)
This began two weeks ago, when a listener called the Ria 89.7FM station to make the claim. (See report below.)
More callers with similar claims followed. As the rumours spread, the crowd grew. Among them was Mr Hairul Hamdan, 27, a trainer.
He said: 'I heard from the radio about this place, so I wanted to come and see for myself.'
Many were curious about the reported 'ghostly apparitions', which range from floating heads and beautiful women to mummies.
And the ghost-sighters came by the truckload - literally.
Said resident Leong Chin Cheng, 40, a businessman who lives in the same block: 'I got a shock, I looked downstairs and saw so many people, whole families. They come by bus, pickup, lorry... So scary!'
Another neighbour, Mr Abdul Hamid Harun, 50, added that some came armed with camera handphones, digital cameras, and even binoculars.
Resident Ng Chong Eng, 48, an insurance agent, said the crowds swelled after midnight on Friday.
He said: 'Last week, the radio show kept repeating and repeating the report. Hundreds of people came to see. 1am, 2am, 3am, 4am, even 5am, it was still crammed with people.'
But most left with unsated appetites.
You see, the truth is far less supernatural. The so-called ghosts in Madam Lee's kitchen are actually shadows of Madam Lee's laundry.
Madam Lee, whose husband passed away four years ago, suffers from rheumatism.
She hangs her clothes inside her kitchen as she is not strong enough to lift the bamboo poles out of the window. At night, she closes the windows to keep the rain out and draws her white curtains.
Finally, she turns on a fan and a yellow lamp to help the clothes dry.
The result? Shadows dancing gently behind a white curtain, under a 'spooky' yellow light.
Her neighbour, Mr Ng, who lives in the unit directly below hers, admitted that the shadows did indeed look 'very scary, like a head flying'.
So, he advised Madam Lee to remove the curtain and use a fluorescent light instead. Together with other neighbours, he has also been helping to explain the misunderstanding to Madam Lee's curious audience. They also got a friend to call the radio station to clarify the matter.
'But even when we tell them there is nothing, they still want to see. New people keep coming,' said Mr Ng.
DESPERATE MOVE
On Sunday, in desperation, Mr Ng and Madam Lee's son let two visitors in to act as 'witnesses' and prove there are no ghosts in their flat.
The stream of late night visitors has taken its toll on the family.
Said Madam Lee's son Kelvin, 20, a salesman: 'We keep getting woken up. Every night, there will be people knocking, and footsteps.'
The constant attention is unnerving.
Said Madam Lee: 'I feel so much stress when I hang my clothes. So many people staring at me! Once, I was hanging clothes when I looked down and saw so many people that I felt faint.
'My children tell me to ignore them. My pastor also prays for us.'
The last straw came on Saturday night, when the family's power was turned off at 4am.
Some gawkers had apparently messed with their fuse box, and the family woke up sweating. The air-con had gone dead.
Even her neighbours are not spared.
Mr Kamarudin Mailah, 41, a technician who lives on the second floor, said: 'Every night, I cannot sleep. Sometimes, a whole group of motorcycles come at 2am. My house is near the carpark, so I can hear everything.'
Madam Lee has already called the police at least 10 times to ask for help. Neighbours said that the police now conduct regular patrols to chase away the gawkers.
Said Madam Lee: 'I've lived here for over 20 years. If there really is a ghost, I would have moved away long ago.
'We never harmed others, so why do others harm us now? Please, just leave us alone.'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RADIO NUISANCE
MADAM Nancy Lee's nightmare began about two weeks ago, when a listener called Ria 89.7FM claiming the flat was haunted.
The station had invited listeners to share their stories during the late-night show Pelik Tapi Benar (strange but true in Malay).
According to listeners The New Paper spoke to, one of the earliest calls was a woman who claimed she saw ghosts at Madam Lee's block and floor.
Soon, more callers called with their own stories about the block. The stories started to point to Madam Lee's unit.
Then, the gawkers started showing up in droves.
Despite subsequent calls from those who visited the flat and realised there were no ghosts, the damage was done.
When contacted, MediaCorp Radio, which runs the station, declined to comment.
Some arrive in buses...
HERE'S proof that sometimes, humans can be more disturbing than ghosts.
Since the radio reports of the 'haunting', thrill-seekers have even organised excursions to the block.
The New Paper visited the block on Tuesday and yesterday night.
Groups of gawkers arrived from 9.30pm, with the numbers picking up as midnight passed.
At midnight on Tuesday, a group of about 10 people emerged from a large, private bus.
A member of the group, who declined to be named, said they were families from Choa Chu Kang who got together to check out the 'haunted flat'.
He added that some women and children in the group decided to remain on the bus.
The group trooped noisily upstairs to Madam Lee's unit.
Some went up to the door to listen for sounds.
At this point, the door suddenly burst open.
An angry and pale-looking Kelvin shouted at the group, who immediately clamoured upstairs.
Other gawkers were less intrusive. They simply stood in the carpark and stared at the kitchen window, some for more than half an hour.
And many came to the same conclusion: there really is no ghost.
The reports about the 'haunted' flat differed wildly among the radio callers.
One listener, Mr Md Hazmi Abd Hamid, 24, a technician, said that an early listener talked about seeing a 'white thing' moving around the unit. Subsequent callers described a floating head or ghost.
Soon, callers were buzzing about pocong - jumping mummies.
Said Mr Hairul Hamdan, 27, a trainer: 'Some people said they saw five pocong at the one house.'
Young gawker Shaik Muhfiyan, 12, cycled from Choa Chu Kang with two friends.
He had heard yet another tale.
'My brother's friend works around here. He was delivering pizza one night when he saw something - a very beautiful lady.'
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 25-6-2005 06:06 AM:
aku baca kat new paper kelakar ada kesian pun ada...
Anyway, jiran bawah dia pun cakap scary pun....
FAMILY PLEADS
Go away, please
By Tay Shi'an
June 24, 2005
...
hmm...sampai masuk kat sokkabar pasal "pocong" ni.... |
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Originally posted by gadis_aries at 27-6-2005 03:35 PM:
hmm...sampai masuk kat sokkabar pasal "pocong" ni....
kesian family tu.....bukan kena ganggu ngan hantu....tapi kena ganggu ngan orang2..... |
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Category: Negeri & Negara
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