Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Poly couple run over by train were drunk

This news was happen on Aug 8 last year
Both of the students from Republic Polytechnic were dead. Due to the Malayan Railway train was unable to stop in time. A coroner’s court recently found out that the pair were too drunk to get away from the path of the oncoming train. The train driver had just taken the train, and was moving at 70kmh, around a bend along the Bukit Timah bridge when his assistant spotted something on the truck about 30m ahead. They sounded the horn three or four times. It was only when the train was 10m away that they realised there were two people on the track facing each other. The driver applied the emergency brake, but it was too late as the train needed 50m to stop completely. Their friends said that there is no reason for them to commit suicide and neither were there any documents or messages to indicate they were troubled or wanted to kill themselves.

This article appears to me because I wondering is what train run over them?? Is MRT or others.
I would like to ask the writer that will there any action to be done example like they will not let people to easy accessible to the place and will put more warning signs?
If I am in-charge I will try to increase more barriers to the place.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Dog breeder in jail after conviction for animal cruelty

In the first such case here, a dog breeder has been put behind bars for causing unnecessary pain and suffering to six dogs he owned. Ng Kok Ming was sentenced to a $30,000 fine for animal cruelty offences committed last August at a kennel he rented from the Ericsson Pet Farm at Pasir Ris Farmway2. But it is understood that he is now serving a six-week jail sentence because he could not pay the fine.
There were two similar cases in 2006 and 2008 but the breeding were not taken to court and they were fined $1000 each for failing to provide reasonable care and supervision for their animals.

This article appears to me because I like dogs too. I don’t wish that any dogs are been abuse.
There is no writer point of view.
I would like to ask the writer that does he/she know that what are they maximum amount of money that they need to pay for other cases of dog abuse?
If I am in-charge of I will still fined him a bit of money even though he also when to jail.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Marina Bay will be criss-crossed by a 16km network of the cycling paths by 2014, becoming the first area in the city with such facility. A $26million fund has been set aside for the construction works, which will begin this year. When it is complete, residents and office workers area will be able to cycle on bike-dedicated stretches linking the Marina Bay Financial District, Marina Bay Sands integrated resort, Maina Barrage and the future Gardens by the Bay.
The Transport Ministry said the area was chosen because it is not yet fully built-up, making it easier to install infrastructure and plan the pathways. As for places like orchard and shenton way are more difficult to retrofit with cycling paths because they already built-up.


This article appears to me because I also kind of like to cycle.
There is no writer point of view.
I would like to ask the writer. Then will they try to build it in other areas too?
If I am in-charged I would like to build it at more other places too…

Sunday, July 11, 2010

More hearts to go around

MR CHUA Kok Hin, 66, works six days a week doing shifts as a cleaner at the airport, plays table tennis twice a week for two hours each time, and has won several competitions in the sport.

All this was made possible after he got a new heart 16 years ago.

'I feel good,' he said, 'Previously, I could not work. Now I'm happy to have a job. I'm satisfied.'

Mr Chua is one of 27 Singaporeans leading relatively normal lives after receiving heart transplants. The longest surviving patient here has lived for 19 years with his new heart.

In 1999, Mr Chua even represented Singapore in table tennis in the biennial World Transplant Games, a sports competition organised specially for organ and tissue receipients.

The affable man admitted that previously, he did not watch his health, slept at irregular hours and smoked heavily. All this, he reckoned, contributed to his heart problems...

This article appears to me because I thought it is something about charity.

There is no writer point of view.

I would like to ask the writer, how he can stay on when he had not charge his heart.

Two JC girls in suicide tragedy

10 July 2010
Ho Yi Xin, 17, had ambitions of becoming a doctor, and was described as a hardworking student with high expectations of herself. She was seeing a private psychiatrist prior to her death as she was experiencing anxiety in school and at home. She was not able to concentrate on her studies and had problems sleeping. on July 3, she was found dead at the foot of Block 533 in Jelapand Road in Bukit Panjang. She was believed to have leapt from the 24th storey of the block, where her silver-coloured bag was found. Just seventeen days after Yi Xin committed suicide, her classmate, Wong Peek Yian, jumped to her death from her seventh-floor bedroom window at Jurong West Street 81. Peek Yian had just found out she had done badly in her mid-year examination and was dreading meeting her vice-principal over her poor performanceust seventeen days after Yi Xin committed suicide, her classmate, Wong Peek Yian, jumped to her death from her seventh-floor bedroom window at Jurong West Street 81. Peek Yian had just found out she had done badly in her mid-year examination and was dreading meeting her vice-principal over her poor performance. She had sent text messages to her boyfriend, full-time national serviceman Valentino Lee, 19, just before her death. He was told that Peek Yian’s teacher had advised her not to see him too often.

This article appears to me because I was wondering why they want to commit suicide.

There is no writer point of view.

If i was in-charge of this matter i think i also can't do anything.

Monday, July 5, 2010

She kept baby despite doc's advice but dumps him 4 months later after family quarrel

she wanted the child so badly, she went against her doctor’s advice to abort the baby. But four months after child was born, the 34-year-old women left the baby boy alone at bus stop with nothing more than a blanket and some pieces of cloth to keep it warm from the afternoon downpour. The doctor had detected complications with the foetus’ kidney. The child was eventually born with kidney problems and an operation has been scheduled on Friday. She thought that after she had given birth she would look for a job so she could provide for the child, but she didn’t manage to do that.
She had a lot of boyfriends. And two husband before and got two kids, one was 7-years-old and 4-month-old boy that was been abandoned.

This article appears to me because I was wondering y the doctor advice her to abort the baby?

There is no writer point of view.

I would like to ask the writer, will she been charged to any police case?

If I would in-charge I will send her to counseling and help her to find a job.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Flash floods come to the neighbourhood

On Friday morning once again triggered flash floods across the island. But this time orchard road was spared and the area affect is upper Thomson road, bugis and jalan boon lay. Heavy rain was also reported in change, eunos, jurong east, tampines and sims avenue. There was a tree fell outside ouchard central, near the somerset mrt station on orchard road, blocking three of the five lanes, but there was no floods were reported in the shopping belt. When falling trees and tree branches landed on the cars there were four people injured.

This article appears to me because the previous flood I was working at my workplace and I can’t go over to lucky plaza to buy my lunch. So I wondering will this time affect me and my lunch.. :D

There is no writer point of view.

I would like to ask the writer, how they going to solve the flood case as every time flood different places?

If I would in-charge I will try to dig more drain at those flood area so that the water can go to the drain.