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Australian gran wins Malaysia drugs death sentence appeal

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by M. Jegathesan

An Australian grandmother won her final appeal against a death sentence for trafficking in Malaysia on Tuesday and walked free, after claiming she fell for an online love scam and was tricked into transporting drugs.

Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto looked delighted and kissed her lawyer in court after the ruling, which brings down the curtain on a saga that began in 2014 when she was arrested with crystal meth in her backpack while transiting in Kuala Lumpur.

The 55-year-old, who was detained while heading home to Australia, had said she was fooled into carrying the bag after travelling to China to meet someone she met online called “Captain Daniel Smith”, who claimed to be a US serviceman.

“I thank God and my lawyers for my freedom after almost five painful years in jail,” she said in statement through her legal team, after the country’s top court overturned her conviction and ordered her release.

Her son Hugo added: “All I want to do is to take my mum home back to Sydney — she has missed out a lot.”

The mother of four was briefly held by immigration authorities but soon left court in a car with her lawyers. They hope she can fly home within two days once her documents have been processed.

After being arrested in a Kuala Lumpur airport with 1.1 kilos (2.4 pounds) of meth stitched into a compartment of her backpack, she stood trial but was cleared of trafficking in 2017 when a judge ruled she did not know she was transporting the drugs.

However the acquittal was overturned after prosecutors appealed and she was handed a death sentence — only for the Federal Court in administrative capital Putrajaya, her final avenue of appeal, to rule in her favour Tuesday.

Death by hanging is mandatory in Muslim-majority Malaysia for anyone convicted of trafficking certain amounts of some controlled substances.

‘Innocent carrier’
Exposto had travelled to Shanghai to see “Smith” after a long online romance. But she did not succeed in meeting her supposed love interest and was instead given a bag by a stranger, who asked her to take it to Melbourne.

When she arrived at Kuala Lumpur International Airport to change flights, she mistakenly went through immigration as she was unfamiliar with the airport.

She voluntarily offered her bags for customs inspection and the drugs were discovered.

On Tuesday, her lawyer Muhammad Shafee Abdullah told the court she was an “innocent carrier”, adding: “She was intoxicated with love even though it was an internet romance.”

Even if the death sentence was upheld, Exposto would not have been executed soon as Malaysia’s government has imposed a moratorium on capital punishment while it mulls reforms.

A reformist government which took power last year vowed to abolish capital punishment entirely but watered down the plan after a conservative backlash, and has instead said it will scrap the mandatory death sentence for some crimes.

There are hundreds of people on death row in Malaysia, many for drug offences, but executions have been rare in recent years.

Two Australians were hanged in 1986 for heroin trafficking — the first Westerners to be executed in the country — in a case that strained relations.

In 2013 Dominic Bird, a former truck driver from Perth, was acquitted of drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with 167 grams of crystal methamphetamine.

jsm-sr/rma

© Agence France-Presse

China summons US ambassador over Hong Kong rights bill

China has summoned the US ambassador to demand that the United States scrap legislation backing Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, or “bear all the consequences”, the foreign ministry said Tuesday.

The Hong Kong bill awaiting President Donald Trump’s signature supports human rights and democracy in the city, while threatening to revoke the territory’s special economic status.

A separate measure bans the sale of tear gas, rubber bullets and other equipment used by the security forces to suppress pro-democracy protests.

Vice foreign minister Zheng Zeguang summoned US ambassador Terry Branstad on Monday to voice a “strong protest” over the bill, the ministry said in a statement.

The legislation “brazenly interferes in China’s internal affairs” and “indulges and supports the violent criminal behaviour by ‘anti-China disrupting Hong Kong’ forces,” the ministry said.

Trump has not indicated whether he will sign the legislation into law, saying last week that while he stood with Hong Kong, he also stood with his “friend”, President Xi Jinping.

The foreign ministry urged the US to “immediately correct its mistakes, prevent the above-mentioned Hong Kong-related bill from becoming law, and stop any words and deeds that interfere in Hong Kong affairs and China’s internal affairs.”

“Otherwise, the US side must bear all the consequences,” it said.

A US embassy spokesman told AFP that Branstad told Zheng that the United States was watching the situation in Hong Kong “with grave concern”.

“He conveyed that we condemn all forms of violence and intimidation,” the spokesman said.

“The ambassador added that the United States believes that societies are best served when diverse political views can be represented in genuinely free and fair elections.”

© Agence France-Presse

Australian police open probe into ‘Chinese spy’ claims

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Australian police have opened an investigation into explosive claims by a self-styled Chinese spy who defected Down Under with an apparent trove of sensitive intelligence.

The Australian Federal Police announced the probe and is expected to interview Wang Liqiang over his claims that Chinese intelligence tried to interfere with Australian politics.

Wang fled to Australia and told local media he knew the identities of China’s senior military intelligence officers in Hong Kong and took part in covert influence operations there, as well as in Taiwan and Australia.

Separate allegations that China tried to recruit a Melbourne businessman and get him elected to parliament are the subject of a coronial inquest.

The businessman Bo “Nick” Zhao — a 32-year-old luxury car dealer who was a member of the ruling Liberal Party — apparently rebuffed the offer and was found dead in a motel room in March.

“The Australian Federal Police can confirm it is investigating allegations of foreign interference activities in Australia, as recently reported in the media,” a spokesperson told AFP.

“As this investigation is ongoing, it would not be appropriate to comment further.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison described the allegations as “deeply disturbing and troubling”.

The country’s main spy agency, the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), said it was aware of Wang’s claims and was actively investigating them.

Wang is reportedly living in Sydney with his wife and infant son on a tourist visa.

China has accused him of being an unemployed fraudster and fugitive.

© Agence France-Presse

Malaysian Home Minister stresses need for 3rd link between JB and SG due to traffic congestion

Iskandar Puteri— Malaysia’s Home Minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, emphasised the need to build a third link that would link Johor Baru with Singapore in order to ease the heavy traffic on the Causeway. He said this at the Johor state assembly on Monday, November 25.

The Home Minister is the chairman of the Special Committee on Congestion at the Johor Causeway.

According to Bernama, Malaysia’s national news agency, Tan Sri Muhyiddin said that this link could either be a tunnel or a bridge and that he has already told the federal government of this necessity.

The Home Minister said, “If the state government supports this, I will ensure this initiative be started.

Before, we used to have only one bridge. Then we had two bridges and now these two can no longer cope,” since congestion often builds up at the Second Link in Tuas as well as at the Causeway.

Mohd Solihan Badri, the state Public Works, Transport and Infrastructure Committee chairman, said that the Home Minister’s proposal for building the third link is a step in the right direction.

Bernama reports him as saying that the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine complex at Bangunan Sultan Iskandar, built in 2003, would have reached its full capacity by 2020.

The Home Minister echoed Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Tun Mahathir Mohamad, who also recently called for a third link to connect Malaysia and Singapore, due to a large number of vehicles going back and forth between the two countries.

In related news, late last month, Malaysia confirmed its decision to proceed with the construction of the Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link project that connects Johor Bahru and Singapore.

On October 31, Dr Mahathir confirmed in a press conference that the RTS Link would indeed be constructed. Work on the link would resume without further delay, he added, and that the link would be built with a cost cut of 36 percent, “from RM4.93 billion to RM3.16 billion.”

The link was originally planned in order to reduce the heavy traffic on the Johor Causeway and connect Singapore to the Southern Economic Corridor Iskandar Malaysia. The agreement to build the link had been signed between the Government of Singapore and the administration of then Prime Minister of Malaysia, Najib Razak, who lost his bid for re-election in the May 2018 elections.

The project was put on hold when Dr Mahathir began his term, as his administration evaluated the currents and their corresponding costs.

For a time, whether the project would continue or not was uncertain, since in May the two countries agreed to suspend works on the link until September 30. And in September, another month was added to the suspension with no extra cost.

But Dr Mahathir had already confirmed earlier in the month that his government would push through with the project, when the Malaysian Government launched its National Transport Policy in Kuala Lumpur on October 17.

Even earlier,  Lim Guan Eng, Malaysia’s Finance Minister, also said that the Government “intends to proceed” with the link when he tabled the national budget for next year. -/TISG

Read related: Khaw Boon Wan: JB-S’pore RTS Link set to proceed, but suspension extended to April 2020

Khaw Boon Wan: JB-S’pore RTS Link set to proceed, but suspension extended to April 2020

Hotel staff mistake tawas powder for drugs, girl and her friends get arrested

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Sharonia Paruntu planned to celebrate her birthday with her friends, so they booked a hotel room to party.

However, she and her friends ended up being arrested for 14 hours because of a misunderstanding with hotel staff.

Paruntu, an Indonesian teenager living in Singapore, took to Instagram to share her strange birthday experience.

She and her friends were staying at the W Singapore in Sentosa Cove on Nov 10.

According to her account of the events, her friends got stuck in the bathroom because the door won’t budge.

They called for help from the hotel staff.

The staff who helped open the door noticed a small resealable packet filled with white powder in the bathroom. Not knowing what it was, the staff may have suspected it was an illegal substance and called the police.

Paruntu and her friends were reportedly escorted out of the hotel in handcuffs according to an initial report by The New Paper.

“[It] was really humiliating because some of the hotel guests saw us and assumed we are [criminals],” she posted.

Police detained the girls and followed procedure in the investigation.

The white powder turned out to be tawas or alum deodorant.

“They were released unconditionally at 1.43am on Nov 11 after preliminary testing on the white powder and their urine samples turned up negative for controlled drugs,” police said.

Paruntu shared that the hotel charged but eventually refunded the S$1,700 for the broken door. The hotel has since apologised as well./TISG

Shortlisted Founders Memorial designs draws comparison to toilet appliances

A number of the five shortlisted Founders Memorial designs have drawn comparisons to toilet appliances online. The unsavoury comparisons come after the Government sought feedback on which design it should go with for the Founders’ Memorial it is building.

Plans to build a Founders’ Memorial was announced a mere three months after the nation’s founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew passed away in March 2015. At the time, the authorities seemed to position the memorial as though it would pay tribute to many historical figures, including but not solely focused on Lee Kuan Yew, who shaped Singapore.

Curiously, Lee Kuan Yew was the only figure who was explicitly identified in a statement on MCCY’s website, that provided an idea as to what Singaporeans can expect from the memorial.

Besides indicating that the aim of the Founders’ Memorial is “to commemorate the values and ideals of our founding Prime Minister, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, and his team who founded independent Singapore,” MCCY states that many Singaporeans support the idea of such a memorial:

“Many Singaporeans support the idea of a Founders’ Memorial to commemorate the values and ideals of our founding Prime Minister, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, and his team who founded independent Singapore.  Singaporeans young and old expressed hope that the memorial will help current and future generations to cherish and live by such values and ideals. Most importantly, the Memorial will tell the extraordinary story of Singapore, written by ordinary Singaporeans.”

The Government then asked Singaporeans to select one out of five design ideas for the memorial. Revealing that it received close to 200 architectural design submissions from around the world, the committee in-charge of the project said that a jury has shortlisted five design ideas for the project.

Seeking Singaporeans’ help in choosing a design for the memorial, the committee said: “Your feedback will be a critical component of the jury’s evaluation in choosing the winning design, which will be announced in 2020.”

Some of the designs have drawn comparisons to toilet appliances online. Design D, which is proposed by Johnson Pilton Walker + RDC Architects, drew the most criticism for its resemblance to a toilet bowl from a bird’s eye view perspective:

Design C, by DP Architects, has drawn comparisons to a washroom basin with its shape as well as the hole-shaped feature in the centre:

Design B, proposed by Cox Architecture + architects61, has invited comparisons to a typical washroom door handle:

Earlier, netizens pointed out that plans to build a Founders’ Memorial that seems to be centred on the late Lee Kuan Yew’s values and ideals are contrary to his well-known aversion to monuments of himself.

In April 2015, a month after his father’s passing, Singapore’s current Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong noted that his father did not care for monuments. He had said in Parliament: “Mr Lee made it very clear throughout his life that he did not need and did not want any monument… Mr Lee was very careful never to allow a personality cult to grow around him, much less to encourage one himself.”

That same month, Lee Kuan Yew’s second child and only daughter Lee Wei Ling wrote in an article in the Straits Times: “…I was baffled by the news that our MPs were suggesting naming various structures or institutions after Papa.

“Papa had worked hard to prevent any personality cult from growing around him. It would most certainly go against what he would want and what he stood for in life, such as service to Singapore and Singaporeans, because that was the right thing to do, without any ulterior motive, least of all self-promotion.”

She added: “The best response to Papa’s passing is to honour the spirit of what he stood for, which is the welfare of Singaporeans. There is much that we can all work towards for this purpose.

“Similarly, to fuss over Papa’s personal objects or portrait defeats the purpose that he had strived for so diligently in life, which was the welfare of Singaporeans.”

Interestingly, the Government commissioned a committee to look into developing a Founders’ Memorial two months after Lee Hsien Loong and Lee Wei Ling noted their father’s dislike for monuments, in June 2015.

Govt seeks help to decide on the design of Founders’ Memorial that will commemorate Lee Kuan Yew despite his aversion to monuments

Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello gifts Demi Lovato

Singers and celebrity couple Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello were thinking about the singers who have inspired them, including Demi Lovato.

And they thanked him a sweet way.

Photo: Screengrab from Instagram

Demi Lovato shared the love in an Instagram story after receiving a bouquet that Mendes and Cabello sent her. With the flowers came the note that the couple is thinking of Demi and how much she inspired them when they were young.

Lovato replied that it was so sweet and cute and also she feels old now, adding that it is totally worth it because it was so thoughtful and she thanked them back, saying she loves them both.

In other news, Cabello met Mendes while she was still in the girl group Fifth Harmony and they were touring together in 2014 on Austin Mahone’s tour.

Cabello and Mendes reminisce their first meeting with V Magazine.

She said Mendes was very shy during their first few meetings and Mendes said he thought Cabello was crazy.

Cabello said to Mendes that she wanted to hang out with him but he was always on the tour bus, just learning guitar.

The Treat You Better singer confirmed that he had never talked to anybody on the entire tour except for Cabello. She was the only one who was willing to take the time to try to get to know him better.

Photo: Screengrab from Instagram

As for Mendes, he told Cabello that he thought she was out of her mind. He would be on his bus where no one could see him. When he looked out the window, he’d see Cabello flying around on a scooter, jumping around and doing cartwheels. He thought then that she was insane so Mendes would close the window and go to sleep.

Rumours swirled around for years that the two were dating especially when they performed together.

Ex-SPP member provides pro-bono legal services to WP constituents, weeks after joining WP walkabout

Ex-Singapore People’s Party (SPP) member Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss was among a group of volunteer lawyers who offered pro-bono legal services to Aljunied-Hougang residents, on Sunday (24 Nov). Ms Chong-Aruldoss and fellow lawyers prepared Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) documents for Aljunied GRC residents at no charge as part of the Workers’ Party’s (WP) effort to educate their constituents on the importance of LPAs.

An LPA is a legal document that allows an individual to appoint people they trust to make decisions and act on their behalf in the areas of personal welfare, property and affairs should they lose mental capacity. Aljunied GRC MPs Sylvia Lim and Chen Show Mao have been giving talks on LPA. On Sunday (24 Nov), Ms Lim led a team of volunteer lawyers in certifying LPAs for residents at no charge at an event held at Block 117 Hougang Avenue 1.

WP secretary-general Pritam Singh shared photos from the event, that was held at Block 117 Hougang Ave 1, on Facebook and Ms Chong-Aruldoss could be seen among the group of lawyers who provided pro-bono signing of LPA documents.

Her participation at the WP event comes weeks after she joined WP member Yee Jenn Jong’s walkabouts in Marine Parade, shortly after she resigned from the SPP.

Ms Chong-Aruldoss – who was an SPP Central Executive Committee (CEC) member – announced her resignation from the SPP on 4 Sept – the same day that the party indicated that 84-year-old Mr Chiam will step down after 23 years at the party’s helm to make way for new blood.

Ms Chong-Aruldoss later told The Independent that she decided to resign from the party “after considering all the implications of my decision” and that she does not plan to join another political party.

On whether her resignation from the SPP marks the end of her political career, she said: “There are many ways of serving in politics and I hope to continue serving my country and my countrymen in one way or another.”

After she was spotted accompanying the WP on their walkabouts in Marine Parade following her resignation from the SPP, Ms Chong-Aruldoss told The Independent that she has not joined the WP but is supporting Mr Yee in her personal capacity as she wishes to help him win the Marine Parade ward she lives in during the next General Election.

On why she is volunteering with Mr Yee’s team, Ms Chong-Aruldoss told The Independent that she believes in stepping forward and volunteering for a cause she believes in. Noting that alternative parties need all the support they can get, Ms Chong-Aruldoss called on Singaporeans to pitch in and volunteer with opposition parties:

“I live in Joo Chiat, which was an SMC in GE2011 and which subsequently become a part of MP GRC for GE2015. WP contested Joo Chiat SMC in GE2011 and MP GRC in GE 2015. WP’s Yee Jenn Jong lost his bid for Joo Chiat by a very narrow margin in GE2011. Yee Jenn Jong led the WP team which contested MP GRC in GE 2015. I have supported WP/Yee Jenn Jong in GE2011 and GE2015.
“In the run up to GE 2015, it was very difficult for candidates of alternative parties to meet condo residents. I live in a condo. To help him connect with my neighbours, I organised a gathering at the BBQ of my condo in Aug 2015 to give my neighbours the opportunity to meet YJJ – see links.
“As a resident, I would like to see WP to win my constituency in the next GE, so I am lending my personal support. It is good people that people take an interest in what is going on in Singapore. But it is even better to step forward to volunteer for whatever cause one supports or believes in. The alternative parties need all the support they can get. I hope more people would come forward to help the alternative parties as volunteers.”

Ex-SPP member has not joined WP but personally supports Yee Jenn Jong in his Marine Parade campaign

Ada Choi and Max Zhang banters before delivering baby

Before delivering a baby most mothers would be nervous but Ada Choi was the definition of calm.

The Hong Kong actress was so cheerful that she bantered with husband Max Zhang in the maternity room before she gave birth to their third child in the hospital last week.

46-year-old Ada asked her husband in Mandarin whether he was nervous.

“No, I’m not ‘jin zhang’ (nervous),” he replied jokingly on his Chinese name Zhang Jin.

On November 22, in a vlog Max shared on Weibo, both Ada and Max had fun in front of the camera, much to the amusement of Chinese netizens.

Max was seen counting down the minutes when Ada was wheeled into surgery for Caesarean section and he waited on a bench outside the room.

Max met his son for the very first time an hour later to cut his umbilical cord.

46-year-old Ada said the delivery, which took 30 minutes, was smooth due to her ‘youth’.

Max shared how he thinks mothers deserve more credit than fathers for bringing children into the world while Ada rested in the maternity room.

The actor revelled every time the couple welcomed a child into the family.

Photo: Screengrab from Instagram

The next day, daughters Zoe, 8 and Chloe, 6 entered the room to greet their baby brother with gentle kisses on his forehead.

Ada cradled the newborn in her arms and sang a lullaby to her son.

Zhang Jin was born May 19, 1974, and is better known as Max Zhang. He is a former wushu athlete and a Chinese actor who won the Best Supporting Actor at the 33rd Hong Kong Film Awards.

Born September 17, 1973, Ada Choi is a Hong Kong actress known for her work for TVB and her film work.

Max and Ada got married on January 12, 2008, after dating for more than four years.

Time for Pakatan Harapan to reaffirm its hopes and promises: Lim Kit Siang

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After the trashing at the Tanjong Piai by-election in Johor, Pakatan Harapan veteran politician Lim Kit Siang says it is time to buckle up and deliver on the promises.

“Pakatan Harapan received a thrashing in the Tanjong Piai by-election because the voters were disappointed by the record of Pakatan Harapan government in the last 18 months to implement the agenda for a New Malaysia in the 14th General Election Manifesto, and what is worse, the belief that the Pakatan Harapan government in Putrajaya had gone back to the bad old ways of the previous Barisan Nasional government.

“They were wrong, but Pakatan Harapan failed to communicate and to convince them that their disappointment and disillusionment while understandable were completely misplaced,” Lim said in a speech.

He said The Economist saw Malaysia as one of the “ovation countries of the year 2018”, but did not spare the country as a disappointment with the slow pace of reform.

The Economist said, “If PH does not get the economy going, it may wind up in opposition for a few years; if it does not refurbish Malaysia’s democracy, it may be out of office for a generation.”

Lim said Malaysia is at crossroads – “to move forward to be a top world-class nation with an inclusive nation-building policy leveraging on the best qualities of the diverse races, religions, languages and cultures or to be relegated to the trajectory towards a failed, rogue and kleptocratic state obsessed by divisive and intolerant race and religious politics. Malaysia made a good start in the last 18 months to build a New Malaysia where Malaysia can become a top world-class nation.”

He said the PH government  had made strides with several good and important appointments.

“But more must be done,” he warned, adding that it is time for a major review of Pakatan’s promise of a New Malaysia.

He urged the government to be frank with the people and tell them where the coalition went wrong on its promises because he believes Malaysians will appreciate the frankness.

He reminded the coalition that its five-pillars for a New Malaysia must be implemented. They are:

· Reduce the people’s burden;
· Institutional and political reforms;
· Spur sustainable and equitable economic growth;
· Return Sabah and Sarawak to the status accorded in Malaysia Agreement 1963; and
· Create a Malaysia that is inclusive, moderate and respected globally.

“There is also a need to review the modus operandi of Pakatan Harapan and the four component parties.

“I do not agree for instance with the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s expression that the Pakatan Harapan’s Manifesto is not a bible.

“Or with the flying car proposal as a government project or the detention of 12 Malaysians for alleged links with the non-existent Tamil Tigers Liberation Front,” he said.

He called for ways to allow the Pakatan parties to voice their dissent from existing government policies and measures without being seen as Opposition-minded or motivated by an ulterior objective to bring down their own government.

“The alternative is too dire to consider – as it would involve the death of the Malaysian Dream and a sad and heart-aching end to Malaysian nation-building,” he said during a speech at the Perak DAP State Convention in Ipoh on Sunday, November 24, 2019. -/TISG