Carol Elizabeth-Ann 's posts with tag: malaysia
Heart warming and cute....... Import.flv (2.0 MB)
Funny how Usu tripped and fall.......very natural....:D Import.flv (5.2 MB)
Link: http://balingian.blogspot.com/Balingian is my hometown. Hence, I would like to help this blogger to promote his blog on all the goods stuff in Balingian.
;-) 
| "I just can't believe the murderer/rapist would do such horrible thing to an 8-yr old little girl!!"  Nurin Jazlin Jazimin was last seen getting into a van on Aug 20.
| KUALA LUMPUR: Police have new leads in the murder of 8-year-old Nurin Jazlin Jazimin and are expected to make arrests soon.  | | The three sisters, Nurin Jazshira (left), Nurin and baby Nurin Jazlisa. |  | | One-year-old Nurin (left) with her older sister Nurin Jazshira. | Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Musa Hassan said this yesterday after DNA tests confirmed the body in the gym bag was Nurin. Images taken from the closed-circuit television cameras near where Nurin’s body was dumped, have been digitally enhanced and police are now looking for a couple in a silver Perodua Kenari. Sources disclosed that the woman captured on tape is a Malay in her 20s. The driver is also in his 20s. Footage showed a woman walking out of the entrance next to the book distribution company, where the bag was later found. She was then seen getting into the car. Witnesses had also told police that they had seen awoman, matching the description of the person in the footage, sitting near the staircase with a “Diadora” sports bag beside her. She was seen on Sunday afternoon. By evening, the woman was gone but not the bag. Its contents were discovered the next morning. Police are also looking into the possibility that the suspects are linked to two other sexual attacks of children in Kampung Baru recently. “We believe the attacks were by the same person, meaning that a serial sexual predator is on the loose,”a source said. The three cases share similarities: - The victims had either brinjals or cucumbers forced into their private parts.
- The proximity of the incidents. Nurin went missing on Aug 20 in Section 1, Wangsa Maju which is close to the earlier two cases in Kampung Baru.
Selangor and the city police have exchanged information on known paedophiles and serial sex offenders in the Klang Valley. Meanwhile, Selangor police chief Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar said although the DNA tests carried out on the body proved it was Nurin, a second test would be conducted as Nurin’s parents were adamant the child was not their daughter. “We are conducting a second DNA test. We will also take samples from Nurin’s elder sister, Nurin Jazshira.” Khalid emphasised that the DNA testing had a 99.99 per cent accuracy. Police will interview the parents again. Yesterday afternoon, after returning from the Kuala Lumpur Hospital mortuary, Nurin’s father Jazimin Abdul Jalil was called to the Wangsa Maju police station where his statement was recorded again. Post-mortem results revealed that Nurin died after a brinjal and a cucumber were forced into her private parts, rupturing the intestines. Nurin, a Standard Two pupil of SK Desa Setapak, suffered bruises to the head and cuts on the lips, signs that she had been beaten. Read original news and more news link here: http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Friday/Frontpage/20070921073921/Article/index_html
|  | I just love the colours of the sky and water in this beautiful sunset! |
|  | Didn't take much photos of me as I'm just busy taking photos of the surrounding. :-) |
Malaysian government wants him back to be questioned... Import.flv (2.0 MB)
Hello dudes and dudess... Since my boss left the company on 8th June, I am really bored at work. No more emails in my inbox (previously my boss will forward at least 20 emails in my inbox). I thought of changing job, but it's not the right time yet. Maybe in mid of 2008. Tomorrow, my baby will arrive from Germany. This time, he will stay here with me permanently. I am crossing my fingers now to hope that he will find a job in not time. There's so much to worry about but we both have faith that it will goes well for us. I didn't get good sleep last night, I don't know why. Was watching 'Law & Order' on Ch5 until I almost fall asleep around 12.30 midnight. The I switched off the TV and went to bed. The next day, I woke up at 6am! Immediately I turned on my PC and within 5 minutes, my baby MSN me.... I knew he's always there. Below is my pic which he has modified to fit on his computer as wallpaper. I had full-legs waxed and Brazillian at Strips during lunch break today. For that, it costs me S$102.00 (fortunately it was deducted from my member package). Tomorrow, I'm going to wash and blow my hair straight before I go to the airport to meet my baby and fetch him back to where I'm currently staying. *grin*
Exactly 7 days from today I will be celebrating my birthday. Time flies (lalat). I won't be in Singapore from tomorrow and will depart for Sarawak to spend some times with my family members. When I am away, I will not be online often like now. Some people must have noticed I am always 'ONLINE'. Sometimes I would even wake up in the middle of the night....then turn to my PC and check for any new messages on my Multiply...then go back to sleep again. I think I'm totally addicted to internet. Of course besides internet addiction, I'm using it to communicate with my darling..... always stick with my home laptop just to be there for him.. I planned to do some experimental shoots with my sisters and my 10yo niece. I'm not sure what I can do yet.. Anyway, if I am happy with the results of the shoots, I will surely share with the rest here. So stay tune! The month of JUNE is very special for me, because I'm getting older (and hopefully wiser), my darling is coming to be with me very soon (yayy!), my brother has returned to work in Singapore and of course, i'm going back to meet my sisters and my niece. The one that always cries whenever I'm leaving her. Till my return to Singapore on the 6th, I wish you all best of health and luck. Thanks for being my friends and supporting me. I'm sorry if I have offended anyone of you whether directly or indirectly.
Why Singaporeans fall victim to crime, and what the M'sian police are doing
JAN 3, 4am: Singaporean Teo Guan Kah, 29, is returning from a nightclub when he is attacked by a gang of parang-wielding men in Johor Baru near his girlfriend's place. He dies.
Jan 6, 3am: IT consultant Fareed Hassan leaves a restaurant in Danga Bay, 10 minutes from the Causeway. He is attacked by men wielding a parang and a steering lock. When the robbers find just RM10 ($4.40) on him, they ask: "What kind of Singaporean are you?" They take his car, laptop and handphone.
Jan 9, 4.10am: Ms Wati, 27, a mother of two, is hurled from her friend's motorbike and set upon by a group of 12 armed men on motorcycles. She is robbed of her money and belongings worth $1,600.
Jan 10, time unknown: Singaporean hawker Mohamad Bolah is robbed, stabbed and left for dead in a mangrove swamp, just five minutes from where he lived in JB.
Just another action-packed week in Singapore's favourite destination. And more headaches for Johor police chief Hussin Ismail, who knows that he must keep attracting his city's big money-spinners — Singaporean visitors — without glossing over the crime that seems to target them.
The Republic's favourite playground, with many of its shopping centres and restaurants thriving on Singaporean patronage, has become somewhat unsafe partly because Singaporeans play too hard and too recklessly and are victims of 5 per cent of Johor's crime.
"If you go to sleazy places, dark alleys, late at night, you are asking for trouble — anywhere in the world," said Mr Freddy Long, chairman of the Johor Executive Committee for Tourism and Environment.
Cars with Singapore plates are a magnet to criminals, and some Singaporeans stand out with their flashy dressing.
"Very few Malaysians are targeted unless the ladies are dressed up like decorated Christmas trees," said retired Singapore police officer Lionel de Souza.
Johor police chief Hussin agrees that some victims from Singapore contribute to their own plight. But the problems he is trying to fight often run deeper.
Johor has just one policeman for every 1,100 residents. Mr Hussin wants this ratio to be around 1:250 — which would mean a four-fold increase in its 3,000-strong police force.
The force has 100 patrol cars now. Mr Hussin estimates that he needs 400.
And while he looks for reinforcements, this could be a race against time as Johor's population of three million is expanding by the day, with all the growing pains that come with development.
Drug users, who turn to wayside robberies to get cash for their fix, have become regulars on the crime charts.
Illegal immigrants are also on the lookout for a quick buck. Over the past six years, some 3,100 of them have been sentenced to whipping in Johor. They contribute to around 3 per cent of Johor's crime, according to criminologist P Sundramoorthy from Universiti Sains Malaysia.
Car-thefts are orchestrated by syndicates and 3.7 per cent of their victims are from Singapore.
Another peculiar group has also been keeping the police on their toes. Some Malaysians come down to Johor from the northern states to work in Singapore and end up getting retrenched. Ms J Chandrika, liaison officer between the Johor lawyers and the police, has seen several of them hauled up in court of late for break-ins.
"Many of them have dependents or payments to make on a house. So, what are they going to do?" she asked.
None of this is making the police's job any easier, so Mr Hus-sin has resorted to softer measures to get his men extra leads.
In September, he started a 24-hour hotline which the public can call or send an SMS to if they see anything suspicious. Since then, an average of 10 to 15 tip-offs have streamed in each day. "If you have any information about a crime, if you think there's something suspicious, if you let us know early, we can respond early," he told Today.
A campaign last year to get residents to inform the police when they were leaving their homes during the festive period resulted in 1,000 requests, a lot of police patrolling — and not one break-in.
Mr Hussin also hopes to have closed-circuit security cameras installed this year at strategic public areas.
Despite such efforts, the state's crime rate increased by 4.9 per cent in 2005. But Mr Hussin is proud of the fact that Johor's crime-solving rate last year was 46 per cent, which he says is higher than the 20 per cent recommended by Interpol.
But even after an offender has been arrested, he doesn't always get convicted. Sometimes, the hitch is as minor as a shortage of Chinese-language interpreters, said Ms Chandrika.
On other occasions, the police can't get witnesses to come to court. Add the time lag before the court hears a case — easily up to four to five years according to Ms Chandrika — and the size of the task facing the Johor police becomes clearer.
This may not be of much consolation to the 13.2 million Singaporeans who crossed the Causeway between January and September last year. But it can serve as a warning.
Tomorrow: View from Ground Zero — a wounded Johor policeman speaks out
|  | It is said that a fisherman came across this creature at Teluk Bahang Beach, Penang, Malaysia. But it was not being published in the local newspaper.
Anyone heard about this before??
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Heart breaking yet surreal story line.... Import.flv (7.1 MB)
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