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breaking: leongsam burma military coup!

What about temaseks investments there? Will the army take over in an emergency?

In this perilous times, just be happy to stay alive and forget about the money.

st_20210130_vnpm1_62977492.jpg
 
Good news for Singapore. More sand in return for covid vaccine. Business as usual.
 
We have always close ties w the junta. We launder their money they give us sand.
 
m&ds do it in public as adults
Melaka Teenage Girl Pees on Laundromat Floor Even When Toilets are Nearby
AliefEsmail.png

Published
1 year ago
on
August 11, 2019
Follow us on Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, and Instagram for the latest stories and updates daily.
Doing laundry can be a way for some people to find zen. Watching their clothes tumble inside the machine, and the smell of fresh laundry can really calm oneself. However, in Malaysia, our laundromats are often the grounds for ridiculous incidents to take place, which can increase a person’s anxiety level instead.
In the latest and weirdest of Malaysian laundromats, a teenage girl was recorded on CCTV peeing on the floor on one in Bukit Baru, Melaka, last Tuesday (6 August).
On top of the heinous act, the girl then stole some clean clothes left by a customer to cover her secretion. Owner, Mat Nasir, told Harian Metro that he sensed something was not right after looking through the recording from his mobile phone. He explained,

He went on to say that the girl was going back and forth, non-stop for 5 minutes before the act happened. Even if she couldn’t hold her pee anymore, the last place you want to do your business is on the floor of the laundry mart. There are two restaurants right beside the laundromat with toilets she could use.
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He also found out that the girl has been hanging there for three days in a row after the incident occurred. On the third day, Mat Nasir confronted the girl, and she immediately went off.
Watch the video here:

Sometimes, we can’t tell the thought process that goes through each individual’s mind. However, when nature calls, try your best to find someplace suitable to your business. One missed step and urine trouble.

How many cases were tere? Plse copy paste more and count for me?

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1612157735461.png


1612157752823.png
 
While the United States and Australia called on Myanmar military leaders to release civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and others detained in overnight raids in the country, Singapore only expressed grave concern and did not call for the civilian leaders' release.

With friends like this, who needs enemies?

Singapore expresses 'grave concern' over Myanmar's political crisis
A state of emergency has been declared in Myanmar.

A state of emergency has been declared in Myanmar.PHOTO: EPA-EFE

1 FEB 2021

SINGAPORE - Singapore on Monday (Feb 1) expressed "grave concern" over the political crisis in Myanmar.

"We are monitoring the situation closely and hope all parties involved will exercise restraint, maintain dialogue, and work towards a positive and peaceful outcome," said a spokesman for Singapore's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA).

"Myanmar is a close friend of Singapore and key member of Asean (Association of South-east Asian Nations). We hope that the situation will return to normal as soon as possible."
A state of emergency has been declared in Myanmar after the country's military detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other top leaders on Monday.

A statement signed by the new acting president Myint Swe, a former general who had been vice-president, said the move was needed to preserve the "stability" of the state, accusing the country's election commission of failing to address "huge irregularities" in the November election.

In view of the fluid situation, MFA said Singaporeans in Myanmar are advised to remain vigilant, monitor local news closely and follow the advice of the local authorities. Singaporeans in Myanmar are also strongly encouraged to e-register with MFA.


Those who are in need of consular assistance while in Myanmar should contact the Singapore Embassy in Yangon on +95-1-9-559-001 or 09-250-863-840.
They can also contact the MFA Duty office (24-hours) on +65-6379 8800/8855
PAP is very clever. Know who is really in charge. :cool:
 
That's a crappy-looking embassy. The waiting room looks like a SAF camp training shed.

AF1QipNMF-4njnpAGhGHWwq1bJjrVEOyGx8ZsthVFt7Y=s0

AF1QipPlW2YppyZtMwXpavoni6lyKh6E8tug8_r2V4Dg=s0
 
Aung San Suu Kyi has been detained amid reports of a coup in Myanmar. Photo: EPA

Politics
Myanmar Army declares state of emergency for one year in a coup against Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government
  • Military-owned television said power had been handed to the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
  • Parliament was due to sit on Monday after the National League of Democracy won the election last November. The army said there was ‘election fraud’
 
Analysts say China is expected to urge both the civilian government and the military to resolve their differences; political stability is crucial for its Belt and Road Initiative projects


Myanmar’s army on Monday declared a state of emergency and handed power to the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, to take control of the country for one year, according to a statement on a military-owned television station.
 
How many cases were tere? Plse copy paste more and count for me?

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High SES m&d some more...not kids.

Malaysian diplomat Muhammad Rizalman defecated outside woman's house as part of 'black magic'
Wellington: A Malaysian military man believed in black magic, including a spell that meant if he defecated outside a woman's house she would fall in love with him, a court has heard.
Crown prosecutor Grant Burston began cross-examining Muhammad Rizalman bin Ismail, 39, at the High Court in Wellington in a disputed facts hearing on Friday.
Malaysian diplomat back in court
Play video 0:16 Malaysian diplomat back in court
Former Malaysian diplomatic employee Muhammad Rizalman bin Ismail, 38, arrives at the High Court for his disputed facts hearing in Wellington, New Zealand this morning.
Rizalman had changed his plea on the morning of his trial on Monday on one charge of indecently assaulting Tania Billingsley on May 10, 2014 following the attack in her home in the Wellington suburb of Brooklyn.
Advertisement
Burston said: "It was the reason you took off your belt and lowered your trousers and underpants outside this young woman's front door on the patio.
[IMG alt="Former military attache with the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington, Muhammad Rizalman.
"]https://static.ffx.io/images/$zoom_...04064226c5ce37031cfcac9ffa489f489[/IMG]Former military attache with the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington, Muhammad Rizalman. CREDIT: DAVID WHITE
"It was more about black magic than about having to go to the toilet in an emergency."
Rizalman said no, but admitted he believed in black magic and that a superior officer had put a spell on him.
Burston also asked about Rizalman about going into Cosmic Corner on Cuba St on May 2, and buying synthetic cannabis.
Advertisement
Rizalman admitted he had but would not admit he had used it.
He said he could not remember asking two women working there if they had boyfriends or wanted to go for a drink.
Burston asked him if he remembered one of the women asking him to leave her alone, and a male staff member having to usher him from the shop.
Rizalman said he did not.
The crown prosecutor then asked him about going to Mermaids bar in Courtenay Place twice when he felt under pressure.
Advertisement
Rizalman said he went to listen to music and release tension.
Another woman was followed by him in a car after she saw him staring at her through a shop window, only the day before he went to Billingsley's home.
Rizalman denied wanting to have sex with the shop assistants or the girls at Mermaids.
He left New Zealand without facing trial after Malaysia invoked diplomatic immunity, in the belief it did so with the blessing of the New Zealand Government.
He returned to New Zealand escorted by police after extradition hearings were filed in Malaysia.
Advertisement
At the time of the attack he had been working at the Malaysian High Commission as a staff assistant to the Malaysian defence advisor.
Alleged victim Tania Billingsley waived her right to name suppression before a district court judge
Two other charges, of assault with intent to commit sexual violation and burglary, were discharged by Justice David Collins.
POSTING
Rizalman begun outlining his life, joining the Malaysian Armed Forces in 1994 and taking his first overseas posting to the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington in 2013.
Advertisement
He said he was married with three children. His job had been a staff assistant to the defence advisor.
A Crown summary of facts said Billingsley had been home alone watching a movie in her bedroom. Rizalman took off his trousers and underwear before going into the house through the closed but unlocked front door.
In the kitchen he then took off his jacket as well before knocking on her partially open bedroom door and pushing it open.
He asked her if he could come in.
Billingsley looked up and saw him wearing only a shirt and naked from the waist down. She screamed at him to leave. Rizalman put his hands on her shoulders but she managed to push him into the living room then out of the flat before locking him out.
Advertisement
She then locked herself in the bathroom and called police. A flatmate's boyfriend arrived home and challenged Rizalman who was still outside the front door.
Rizalman began walking away but was stopped down the road by the police.
Crown prosecutor Grant Burston is to begin cross examining Rizalman shortly.
HOW THE SAGA UNFOLDED
2014

Advertisement
May 9: Rizalman follows Tania Billingsley from a shop to her home. After a struggle in the house he is arrested by police down the road.
May 10: Rizalman appears in court and his diplomatic status is considered.
Foreign Minister Murray McCully is informed but Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade boss John Allen is left out of the loop.
May 12: An informal discussion between officials from Mfat and the Malaysian High Commission leads to Malaysia concluding that New Zealand "offered" an alternative option for Rizalman to be sent back to Malaysia to face charges.
May 21: Malaysian High Commission tells Mfat it will not waive Rizalman's immunity and asks for all charges to be dropped and all documents to be "sealed".
Advertisement
May 22: Rizalman leaves New Zealand and returns to Malaysia. He is hospitalised for psychiatric evaluation.
June 27: McCully hears for the first time that the Malaysians rejected the request for a waiver. Allen hears about the case for the first time.
June 29: The media reports that a diplomat has claimed immunity and left the country. Malaysian media soon report he was one of their diplomats.
June 30: Prime Minister John Key and McCully are adamant that New Zealand clearly opposed Rizalman leaving and wanted him tried, but on legal advice say they can't name him or the country. Malaysian High Commissioner called in for grilling by Allen; she reveals "ambiguity".
July 1: Fairfax Media lawyers succeed in getting court-ordered name suppression lifted so that Rizalman and the country he represents can be named in New Zealand. McCully releases May 10 and May 21 documents showing New Zealand's unambiguous request for a waiver, and Malaysia's refusal. Hours later McCully concedes informal discussions may have created the "ambiguity" about New Zealand's position. He says Malaysia acted in good faith.
Advertisement
July 2: McCully apologises to Key and Allen apologises to McCully but they both refuse to say if resignations were offered. Allen announces an independent review of Mfat's handling of the event. McCully also reveals that a junior staffer in his office was informed about Malaysia invoking diplomatic immunity but never opened the email.
July 9: A district court judge accepts Billingsley's application for her name suppression to be removed and she speaks to the media.
October: A formal request to extradite Rizalman to New Zealand is made. Rizalman waives the need for a formal extradition and agrees to return.
October 25: Rizalman returns to New Zealand and immediately faces a district court.
2015
Advertisement
November 27: A High Court judge is told the trial does not need to go ahead as Rizalman will plead to one of the charges.
November 30: Rizalman pleads guilty to indecent assault and is remanded for further court hearings.
Stuff
 
High SES m&d some more...not kids.

Malaysian diplomat Muhammad Rizalman defecated outside woman's house as part of 'black magic'
Wellington: A Malaysian military man believed in black magic, including a spell that meant if he defecated outside a woman's house she would fall in love with him, a court has heard.
Crown prosecutor Grant Burston began cross-examining Muhammad Rizalman bin Ismail, 39, at the High Court in Wellington in a disputed facts hearing on Friday.
Malaysian diplomat back in court
Play video 0:16 Malaysian diplomat back in court
Former Malaysian diplomatic employee Muhammad Rizalman bin Ismail, 38, arrives at the High Court for his disputed facts hearing in Wellington, New Zealand this morning.
Rizalman had changed his plea on the morning of his trial on Monday on one charge of indecently assaulting Tania Billingsley on May 10, 2014 following the attack in her home in the Wellington suburb of Brooklyn.
Advertisement
Burston said: "It was the reason you took off your belt and lowered your trousers and underpants outside this young woman's front door on the patio.
[IMG alt="Former military attache with the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington, Muhammad Rizalman.
"]https://static.ffx.io/images/$zoom_1,$multiply_0.6334,$ratio_1.777778,$width_592,$x_7,$y_16/t_crop_custom/q_86,f_auto/394a77c04064226c5ce37031cfcac9ffa489f489[/IMG]Former military attache with the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington, Muhammad Rizalman. CREDIT: DAVID WHITE
"It was more about black magic than about having to go to the toilet in an emergency."
Rizalman said no, but admitted he believed in black magic and that a superior officer had put a spell on him.
Burston also asked about Rizalman about going into Cosmic Corner on Cuba St on May 2, and buying synthetic cannabis.
Advertisement
Rizalman admitted he had but would not admit he had used it.
He said he could not remember asking two women working there if they had boyfriends or wanted to go for a drink.
Burston asked him if he remembered one of the women asking him to leave her alone, and a male staff member having to usher him from the shop.
Rizalman said he did not.
The crown prosecutor then asked him about going to Mermaids bar in Courtenay Place twice when he felt under pressure.
Advertisement
Rizalman said he went to listen to music and release tension.
Another woman was followed by him in a car after she saw him staring at her through a shop window, only the day before he went to Billingsley's home.
Rizalman denied wanting to have sex with the shop assistants or the girls at Mermaids.
He left New Zealand without facing trial after Malaysia invoked diplomatic immunity, in the belief it did so with the blessing of the New Zealand Government.
He returned to New Zealand escorted by police after extradition hearings were filed in Malaysia.
Advertisement
At the time of the attack he had been working at the Malaysian High Commission as a staff assistant to the Malaysian defence advisor.
Alleged victim Tania Billingsley waived her right to name suppression before a district court judge
Two other charges, of assault with intent to commit sexual violation and burglary, were discharged by Justice David Collins.
POSTING
Rizalman begun outlining his life, joining the Malaysian Armed Forces in 1994 and taking his first overseas posting to the Malaysian High Commission in Wellington in 2013.
Advertisement
He said he was married with three children. His job had been a staff assistant to the defence advisor.
A Crown summary of facts said Billingsley had been home alone watching a movie in her bedroom. Rizalman took off his trousers and underwear before going into the house through the closed but unlocked front door.
In the kitchen he then took off his jacket as well before knocking on her partially open bedroom door and pushing it open.
He asked her if he could come in.
Billingsley looked up and saw him wearing only a shirt and naked from the waist down. She screamed at him to leave. Rizalman put his hands on her shoulders but she managed to push him into the living room then out of the flat before locking him out.
Advertisement
She then locked herself in the bathroom and called police. A flatmate's boyfriend arrived home and challenged Rizalman who was still outside the front door.
Rizalman began walking away but was stopped down the road by the police.
Crown prosecutor Grant Burston is to begin cross examining Rizalman shortly.
HOW THE SAGA UNFOLDED
2014

Advertisement
May 9: Rizalman follows Tania Billingsley from a shop to her home. After a struggle in the house he is arrested by police down the road.
May 10: Rizalman appears in court and his diplomatic status is considered.
Foreign Minister Murray McCully is informed but Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade boss John Allen is left out of the loop.
May 12: An informal discussion between officials from Mfat and the Malaysian High Commission leads to Malaysia concluding that New Zealand "offered" an alternative option for Rizalman to be sent back to Malaysia to face charges.
May 21: Malaysian High Commission tells Mfat it will not waive Rizalman's immunity and asks for all charges to be dropped and all documents to be "sealed".
Advertisement
May 22: Rizalman leaves New Zealand and returns to Malaysia. He is hospitalised for psychiatric evaluation.
June 27: McCully hears for the first time that the Malaysians rejected the request for a waiver. Allen hears about the case for the first time.
June 29: The media reports that a diplomat has claimed immunity and left the country. Malaysian media soon report he was one of their diplomats.
June 30: Prime Minister John Key and McCully are adamant that New Zealand clearly opposed Rizalman leaving and wanted him tried, but on legal advice say they can't name him or the country. Malaysian High Commissioner called in for grilling by Allen; she reveals "ambiguity".
July 1: Fairfax Media lawyers succeed in getting court-ordered name suppression lifted so that Rizalman and the country he represents can be named in New Zealand. McCully releases May 10 and May 21 documents showing New Zealand's unambiguous request for a waiver, and Malaysia's refusal. Hours later McCully concedes informal discussions may have created the "ambiguity" about New Zealand's position. He says Malaysia acted in good faith.
Advertisement
July 2: McCully apologises to Key and Allen apologises to McCully but they both refuse to say if resignations were offered. Allen announces an independent review of Mfat's handling of the event. McCully also reveals that a junior staffer in his office was informed about Malaysia invoking diplomatic immunity but never opened the email.
July 9: A district court judge accepts Billingsley's application for her name suppression to be removed and she speaks to the media.
October: A formal request to extradite Rizalman to New Zealand is made. Rizalman waives the need for a formal extradition and agrees to return.
October 25: Rizalman returns to New Zealand and immediately faces a district court.
2015
Advertisement
November 27: A High Court judge is told the trial does not need to go ahead as Rizalman will plead to one of the charges.
November 30: Rizalman pleads guilty to indecent assault and is remanded for further court hearings.
Stuff

Plse dont quote whole article. Groggy. Just the pic will do. So far only two. I can post another dozen of it fm ur kind
 
Plse dont quote whole article. Groggy. Just the pic will do. So far only two. I can post another dozen of it fm ur kind
Go ahead....no matter wat. m&ds public defecation... still one up on tiongs... even got high SES m&ds doing it. m&ds bagus
 
China prefers military rule
KNN my uncle think military rule if used fairly is very effective KNN eg if KNN party issued whole island lockdown for the benefits of everyone any non compliance to be shot without trial KNN simple and easy to follow order KNN
 
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