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Chitchat AMDKs and SPG ChioBUs Kenna Charged for Orgy Party in Lazarus Island!

Pinkieslut

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COVID-19: 12 charged with safe distancing breaches at Lazarus Island
Wan Ting KohFri, 2 October 2020, 2:58 PM SGT
12 charged for breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures at Lazarus Island. (PHOTO: Facebook)

12 charged for breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures at Lazarus Island. (PHOTO: Facebook)
SINGAPORE — Five women and seven men were charged on Friday (2 October) with breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures during a trip to Lazarus Island in August.

The 12, aged between 29 and 32, are: Edward John Joseph Lee-Bull (32), Dunford William Edwin (32), Luong Thi Thu Ha (31), Trimming James Riby Oram (31), Lagesse Richard Henri (31), Helen Ann Sullivan (30), Paul Jonathon Gold (32), Jeffs Lowri Mair (31), Roth Joshua Adam (31), Natalie Joanna Sarkies (29), Cronk Zoe Louise (30), and Jeff Richard Alexander (31). Luong is a Vietnamese national who is a Singaporean permanent resident, Sarkies is a Singaporean and the remaining 10 are British nationals.

Each of them faces the charge for gathering outside a place of residence that was not for the purpose of work on 8 August 2020, between 11am and 6pm, at Lazarus Island. In Phase 2 of Singapore’s reopening, which began on 19 June, only up to five people per group are allowed in social gatherings.

All the accused have been placed on a personal bond of $2,000.

Gold has indicated that he will plead guilty to his charge and the next mention of his case is on 14 October. The cases for the other accused will be heard again on 23 October.

If convicted, each may be jailed up to six months and/or fined up to $10,000.

ACEC6E24-6367-4262-8B39-C8664A42D4D9.png
 
Last edited:

balapundek

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For the females they should let all the sbf people ram them. For the males their punishment is they must smell AH GIN's big black hole.
 

duckrice

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COVID-19: 12 charged with safe distancing breaches at Lazarus Island
0e2137f0-b95b-11e7-a169-c14a3bd7e479_wantingbyline.jpg

Wan Ting Koh
Reporter
Yahoo News Singapore2 October 2020
12 charged for breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures at Lazarus Island. (PHOTO: Facebook)

12 charged for breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures at Lazarus Island. (PHOTO: Facebook)
More
SINGAPORE — Five women and seven men were charged on Friday (2 October) with breaching COVID-19 safe distancing measures during a trip to Lazarus Island in August.
The 12, aged between 29 and 32, are: Edward John Joseph Lee-Bull (32), Dunford William Edwin (32), Luong Thi Thu Ha (31), Trimming James Riby Oram (31), Lagesse Richard Henri (31), Helen Ann Sullivan (30), Paul Jonathon Gold (32), Jeffs Lowri Mair (31), Roth Joshua Adam (31), Natalie Joanna Sarkies (29), Cronk Zoe Louise (30), and Jeff Richard Alexander (31). Luong is a Vietnamese national who is a Singaporean permanent resident, Sarkies is a Singaporean and the remaining 10 are British nationals.
Each of them faces the charge for gathering outside a place of residence that was not for the purpose of work on 8 August 2020, between 11am and 6pm, at Lazarus Island. In Phase 2 of Singapore’s reopening, which began on 19 June, only up to five people per group are allowed in social gatherings.
All the accused have been placed on a personal bond of $2,000.
Gold has indicated that he will plead guilty to his charge and the next mention of his case is on 14 October. The cases for the other accused will be heard again on 23 October.
If convicted, each may be jailed up to six months and/or fined up to $10,000.
 

Hypocrite-The

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11 foreigners and 1 SG charged in court for flouting safe distancing rules on islands - The Online Citizen
Correspondent
Eleven forigners and 1 Singaporean were charged in court yesterday (2 Oct) after they allegedly flouted safe distancing measures and took part in a party on Lazarus Island amidst the current COVID-19 pandemic outbreak.

According to court documents, the event took place between 11am and 6pm on 8 Aug, National Day Eve. Current COVID-19 regulations prohibit social gatherings of more than five people who do not stay in the same place of residence.

The twelve people charged consist of 7 men and 5 women:

Natalie Joanna Sarkies, 29 (Singaporean)
Helen Ann Sullivan, 30 (British)
Zoe Louise Cronk, 30 (British)
Jeff Richard Alexander, 31 (British)
Joshua Adam Roth, 31 (British)
Lowri Mair Jeffs, 31 (British)
James Riby Oram Trimming, 31 (British)
Richard Henri Lagesse, 31 (British)
Luong Thi Thu Ha, 31 (Vietnamese)
William Edwin Dunford, 32 (British)
Edward John Joseph Lee-Bull, 32 (British)
Paul Jonathon Gold, 32 (British)
Gold intends to plead guilty and he will be back in court on 14 Oct. As for the rest, their cases have been adjourned to Oct 23.

Self-revelation on social media

It all started when Ms Sarkies posted photos of their gathering at Lazarus Island and St John’s Island on social media soon after their trip to the 2 islands.

Almost immediately, netizens began to pick up Ms Sarkies’ postings and started circulating on Facebook and other online forums including HWZ. Netizen Shalomp re-posted Ms Sarkies’ photos on HWZ in a post titled, ‘Shiok!!!!! Go st John island no need wear mask!!!!! #sovereignlife‘, on 9 Aug.


Many netizens posted negative comments following Shalomp’s post, with regard to these foreign expats’ island escapade:

snap99: Can we send these f**tards home ?
Hierophant: They must pay enough taxes to feel so entitled
trevlim: self-pwned. jin sarkies man
tank_t: They are creating healthcare jobs?
samich: Faster ban them from Singapore. Anyone report

Others were asking the authorities to take actions and revoke their work pass if they’re not citizen or PR.

King.Koopa: Revoke all their Employment pass!
starlike: pls revoke their work pass
souldude: Sg gov should grow a spine and send them home if it is serious about upholding the rule, or just give it up and stop pretending that the rule matters.
Weaboo: i expect pap to deport all of them asap
Ubi-Warrior: I expect all to be kick out assuming they are not PR or citizen

In June, 7 foreigners were fined in court when they were caught flouting safe distancing rules at Robertson Quay. It was noted that 6 of them also had their work passes revoked by the Manpower Ministry and were banned from working here again (‘Robertson Quay incident: Seven fined, work passes for six revoked‘, 26 Jun)

Lazarus Island has been touted as one of Singapore’s best kept secrets and also one of the forgotten islands. There is a C-shaped lagoon on the island and visitors can enjoy the clean, white and sandy beach at the lagoon.

It is popular with beachgoers and families who wish to have a peaceful and quiet time together. Lazarus Island is linked to St John’s island through a causeway.

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Pinkieslut

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Proud of the legendary Sarkies name
Madam Loretta Sarkies, 74, lives in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother. Her father ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and her grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies founded Raffles Hotel with
Madam Loretta Sarkies, 74, lives in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother. Her father ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and her grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies founded Raffles Hotel with his younger brother Aviet.ST PHOTO: DESMOND LIM
PUBLISHED
SEP 17, 2015, 5:00 AM SGT
FACEBOOKTWITTER

Her grand-uncles founded Raffles Hotel, contributing to the Armenian legacy here
Cheong Suk-Wai
Senior Writer

Madam Loretta Sarkies has led a fuller life than most people. Twice married and a mother of three, the 74-year-old is the eldest daughter of Mr James Arathoon Sarkies, who ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and his French-Spanish wife Mae Didier.
Theirs was "a very well-to-do" family, Madam Sarkies says, with a family mansion at 8 Da Silva Lane - now a row of terraced houses in Upper Serangoon - and, as her father put it, "a spare house" called Sentosa in Stevens Road.
She remembers that when she was a child, her car-crazy father owned at least five cars, including a Buick, a Chevrolet, a Chrysler and a De Soto.



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"I still remember 7799 was the number plate of his Ford, and 8648 the number plate of the black Morris Minor he bought my mother after she passed her driving test," she recalls. On her 16th birthday, he screened movies in their garden for her friends and let off firecrackers for good luck.
"My parents told me from the time I was young that I was an Armenian, not Eurasian, and that I was from the family that established the finest hotels in South-east Asia at that time," Madam Sarkies tells The Straits Times.
Her family's roots go back to 1884, when grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies arrived here. Three years later, he founded Raffles Hotel with younger brother Aviet. Their brothers Martin and Arshak did likewise with the landmarks Eastern and Oriental Hotel in Penang and The Strand in Myanmar.


Armenians have settled in Singapore since the early 1820s, with nine recorded in Singapore's first census in 1824.
These early settlers were not from Armenia but the trading town of New Julfa in Persia, what is now Iran. Persian king Shah Abbas I had founded New Julfa in 1604 by driving 25,000 Armenian artisans and traders to the site to boost the Persian economy.
In Singapore, the early community of nine swelled to an all-time high of about 400 in the late 1800s, before dwindling to almost zero during World War II.
In the 1980s, there were about 30 Armenians here, although it would have been hard to tell as they were often mistaken for Arabs, Eurasians, Indians, Italians and Pashtuns. During the 2008 global financial crisis, young people from Armenia started settling here for work or studies.

Madam Sarkies recalls that as she was growing up, her father used to tell her she looked a lot like his "very beautiful" mother, Madam Regina Carapiet.
In 1901, Madam Carapiet had married divorcee Arathoon Sarkies, a cousin of the hoteliers. He had no role in Raffles Hotel, but set up his own company and ran the nearby Adelphi Hotel instead.
A twice-married father of five, he trusted his son-in-law and business partner Basil Johannes too much.
Both went bankrupt, in 1908 and 1929. In 1932, after a judge barred him from ever doing business here, Mr Arathoon Sarkies jumped into the sea off Tanjung Pinang and died.
Madam Sarkies recalls: "My dad, who was his only son, never liked to speak about it. But according to him, my grandfather preferred to die because he couldn't live without money." Her grandmother, she adds, died six months later from grief, having "starved herself to death".
Madam Sarkies says her father, an alumnus of Raffles Institution, was well-known as a "tuan besar" (Malay for big boss). Her parents' 1940 wedding was a prominent story in The Straits Times.
History repeated itself in the 1970s when her father was guarantor for a friend's debt. When the friend absconded, he was forced to sell 8 Da Silva Lane.
At that time, Madam Sarkies and her sister Jessica had married and moved out.
Their parents moved into a three-room HDB flat in Toa Payoh with their two adopted daughters, Ruby and Susan. Mr James Sarkies died in 1977, and his wife later remarried and died.
Madam Sarkies married Dutch-Eurasian civil servant Simon Aroozoo, and had three daughters - Brigitte, Carol and Debra.
She drummed it early into her girls that they are half-Armenian.
After her husband died of brain cancer in 1991, she married Mr Michael Tan, with whom she ran an employment agency in Orchard Road. They closed it down when he fell ill.
He lived long enough to see her, at age 60, finish as first runner-up and Glamour Queen in the 2001 Mrs Senior Singapore pageant.
Madam Sarkies now lives alone in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother.
For about two years after her sister Jessica died in 2012, she was the last person here named Sarkies who is directly related to the Raffles Hotel founders.
Then her youngest daughter Debra Aroozoo, a 49-year-old office manager, decided to act on a suggestion by a visiting Armenian priest to change her surname to Sarkies to keep it alive.
Twice-married like her mother, Debra has three sons and a daughter aged between 14 and 24. With her mother's blessings, she went ahead with the name change.
Earlier this year, Debra and her children all became Sarkies, and the fabled name will live on.
Madam Sarkies, who calls herself an optimist, vows: "I will never change my name even if I should get married again, as I am proud of how well-known it is in Singapore."
 

zeddy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Madam Loretta Sarkies

She was probably very chio during her younger days but now she looks like a Pontianak ghost!
 

knnccb

Alfrescian
Loyal
Proud of the legendary Sarkies name
Madam Loretta Sarkies, 74, lives in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother. Her father ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and her grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies founded Raffles Hotel with
Madam Loretta Sarkies, 74, lives in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother. Her father ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and her grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies founded Raffles Hotel with his younger brother Aviet.ST PHOTO: DESMOND LIM
PUBLISHED
SEP 17, 2015, 5:00 AM SGT
FACEBOOKTWITTER

Her grand-uncles founded Raffles Hotel, contributing to the Armenian legacy here
Cheong Suk-Wai
Senior Writer

Madam Loretta Sarkies has led a fuller life than most people. Twice married and a mother of three, the 74-year-old is the eldest daughter of Mr James Arathoon Sarkies, who ran the Happy World Cabaret here in the 1940s, and his French-Spanish wife Mae Didier.
Theirs was "a very well-to-do" family, Madam Sarkies says, with a family mansion at 8 Da Silva Lane - now a row of terraced houses in Upper Serangoon - and, as her father put it, "a spare house" called Sentosa in Stevens Road.
She remembers that when she was a child, her car-crazy father owned at least five cars, including a Buick, a Chevrolet, a Chrysler and a De Soto.
Webinar: 5 Recruitment Metrics for 2020 & beyond
A lot has changed this year. It’s only natural that the way we measure hiring success should change, too. Expanding on PageUp research conducted over the past 2 years, we’re hosting a free webinar (with a special guest from KPMG Australia) to discuss the key metrics worth keeping an eye on in...
Sponsored by PageUp
See More

"I still remember 7799 was the number plate of his Ford, and 8648 the number plate of the black Morris Minor he bought my mother after she passed her driving test," she recalls. On her 16th birthday, he screened movies in their garden for her friends and let off firecrackers for good luck.
"My parents told me from the time I was young that I was an Armenian, not Eurasian, and that I was from the family that established the finest hotels in South-east Asia at that time," Madam Sarkies tells The Straits Times.
Her family's roots go back to 1884, when grand-uncle Tigran Sarkies arrived here. Three years later, he founded Raffles Hotel with younger brother Aviet. Their brothers Martin and Arshak did likewise with the landmarks Eastern and Oriental Hotel in Penang and The Strand in Myanmar.


Armenians have settled in Singapore since the early 1820s, with nine recorded in Singapore's first census in 1824.
These early settlers were not from Armenia but the trading town of New Julfa in Persia, what is now Iran. Persian king Shah Abbas I had founded New Julfa in 1604 by driving 25,000 Armenian artisans and traders to the site to boost the Persian economy.
In Singapore, the early community of nine swelled to an all-time high of about 400 in the late 1800s, before dwindling to almost zero during World War II.
In the 1980s, there were about 30 Armenians here, although it would have been hard to tell as they were often mistaken for Arabs, Eurasians, Indians, Italians and Pashtuns. During the 2008 global financial crisis, young people from Armenia started settling here for work or studies.

Madam Sarkies recalls that as she was growing up, her father used to tell her she looked a lot like his "very beautiful" mother, Madam Regina Carapiet.
In 1901, Madam Carapiet had married divorcee Arathoon Sarkies, a cousin of the hoteliers. He had no role in Raffles Hotel, but set up his own company and ran the nearby Adelphi Hotel instead.
A twice-married father of five, he trusted his son-in-law and business partner Basil Johannes too much.
Both went bankrupt, in 1908 and 1929. In 1932, after a judge barred him from ever doing business here, Mr Arathoon Sarkies jumped into the sea off Tanjung Pinang and died.
Madam Sarkies recalls: "My dad, who was his only son, never liked to speak about it. But according to him, my grandfather preferred to die because he couldn't live without money." Her grandmother, she adds, died six months later from grief, having "starved herself to death".
Madam Sarkies says her father, an alumnus of Raffles Institution, was well-known as a "tuan besar" (Malay for big boss). Her parents' 1940 wedding was a prominent story in The Straits Times.
History repeated itself in the 1970s when her father was guarantor for a friend's debt. When the friend absconded, he was forced to sell 8 Da Silva Lane.
At that time, Madam Sarkies and her sister Jessica had married and moved out.
Their parents moved into a three-room HDB flat in Toa Payoh with their two adopted daughters, Ruby and Susan. Mr James Sarkies died in 1977, and his wife later remarried and died.
Madam Sarkies married Dutch-Eurasian civil servant Simon Aroozoo, and had three daughters - Brigitte, Carol and Debra.
She drummed it early into her girls that they are half-Armenian.
After her husband died of brain cancer in 1991, she married Mr Michael Tan, with whom she ran an employment agency in Orchard Road. They closed it down when he fell ill.
He lived long enough to see her, at age 60, finish as first runner-up and Glamour Queen in the 2001 Mrs Senior Singapore pageant.
Madam Sarkies now lives alone in an HDB flat in Pasir Ris, surrounded by family mementos and antiques left by her grandmother.
For about two years after her sister Jessica died in 2012, she was the last person here named Sarkies who is directly related to the Raffles Hotel founders.
Then her youngest daughter Debra Aroozoo, a 49-year-old office manager, decided to act on a suggestion by a visiting Armenian priest to change her surname to Sarkies to keep it alive.
Twice-married like her mother, Debra has three sons and a daughter aged between 14 and 24. With her mother's blessings, she went ahead with the name change.
Earlier this year, Debra and her children all became Sarkies, and the fabled name will live on.
Madam Sarkies, who calls herself an optimist, vows: "I will never change my name even if I should get married again, as I am proud of how well-known it is in Singapore."



this lau angmobu look damn scary, like the angmo version of lau gin
 
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