987 top 20 faves

Thursday, February 28, 2008

JI

wth... lets start from yesterday... thursday 27/2/08...

i was going home that day about 5pm after my cca. normally i would go esso and get something to eat before heading back home at the bus stop. the bus stop i go to was next to the tennis courts and a cemetery. by now you should know that the JI leader in Singapore is running loose and guess what? i was walking out of the esso station and going towards the bus stop, this man was all sweating and was running toward the esso station. the next minute, when i was in the bus stop, he went back to the cemetery. from there, my friend spotted a man running up the hill with that guy chasing into the cemetery. wat the hell was wrong?


the next morning i realized that there was something amiss. why so many police and soldiers with brown and black beret was station along the road. i tried taking photos of them but not really good cos it was dark.















then i asked around in school and only then i found out that this JI man ran loose of the detention cell near our school. how shocked! i started getting spastic and was very excited about this particular man. after that in school, this was a very exciting topic in the class. i mean, like everyone was talking about it. wat can happen if that man bomb somewhere? no school?

fat hope...












police in our school













the police check













the soldiers' line up





then when i went home at the same bus stop, only then i realized that the incident was a very possible chance that the man running away was the JI leader. i was excited once again and i couldn't stop solving my rubik's cube. i might seem very immature but, this is mostly what i think i remembered. i recommend you, the reader, not a entirly believe me as i might be blowing the truth but i am sure that i saw that man running up the hill.

the next few post below are news paper cutting of the JI leader's escape.
Escape of JI leader: How can this happen in S'pore?
Mas Selamat, who heads the Singapore JI terror network, escaped from the Whitley Road Detention Centre on Wednesday, sparking an island-wide manhunt. -- ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
MANY Singaporeans reacted to news of the escape of JI leader Mas Selamat Kastari from a high-security detention centre with disbelief and incredulity.

This posting from Jordan Tan in the straitstimes.com discussion board aptly summed up the reaction of many others: 'Hello, this is Singapore. How can this happen?'

Added cc1034: 'How can a highly dangerous person escape from a highly secured prison?'

Another disbelieving reader, who goes by the monicker howaiyee, said: 'Security at the detention centre is 'tight'. He walks with a limp. Yet he managed to escape. What a shame!'

'How can we feel safe anymore?' said a worried Lim Boon Hee.

Mas Selamat, 47, who heads the Singapore Jemaah Islamiyah terror network, escaped from the Whitley Road Detention Centre at 4.05 pm on Wednesday, sparking an island-wide manhunt involving thousands of police, SAF, Gurkha and Special Operations Command forces.

The Straits Times online discussion board has also been buzzing with readers' comments, with postings coming in at 3 am in the morning. As at 2.15 pm, there were 186 postings on this issue, with 16,528 views.

Many readers expressed concern about the breach of security which allowed the terror leader to slip away.

Said raymond_lo: 'I feel throughly let down by our security men.'

A user who signed off as a 'terrified student from SCGS', said she would not be going to school on Thursday.

Several also urged the authorities to provide more information about the escape.

Said shean777: 'Please, Home Affairs Minister, say something or more importantly, DO something!'

Indeed, a user who went by the name lib27 put it bluntly: 'The whole Singapore is waiting for an answer.'

Many readers also offered tips and advice to catch the JI leader.

Suggested mr.speakersir: 'Perhaps the authorities might seriously warn Singaporeans and whoever else in Singapore about the cosequences of sheltering him.. and whoever provides leads to his whereabouts and subsequent capture should be rewarded ... Singaporeans just love rewards!' He also suggested plastering his picture island-wide, terming it the 'great Singapore terrorist hunt.'

A reader readi suggested a CCTV system that could hook up images of all passengers in taxis that could be beamed to a centralised system.

Many also rallied Singaporeans to pitch in the search for the wanted man.

Reader jchlee urged 'all to keep a lookout for this damn fella, and help the SPF nab him before he really wreaks havoc in Singapore.'


for full story, click link

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/Singapore/STIStory_211368.html

'Ruthless' JI chief planned attacks here
Among Mas Selamat's terror projects: plot to crash plane into Changi Airport
By Zakir Hussain
HUNT BY NIGHT: A group from the Ghurka contingent patrols along the Pan-Island Expressway just outside Catholic Junior College in a manhunt for escaped JI datainee Mas Selamat Kastari. -- ST PHOTO: WANG HUI FEN
ESCAPED detainee Mas Selamat Kastari, 47, led the Singapore branch of regional terror network Jemaah Islamiah but escaped a government dragnet in December 2001.

Some 13 JI members planning attacks against a number of foreign and local targets here, including the Causeway, were nabbed in that operation.

The 1.6m-tall Indonesia-born former resident of Teck Whye Lane, thought to have worked as a mechanic here, escaped. He then hatched an even deadlier plot to hit back at Singapore for arresting his JI colleagues.

Said to have been inspired by the Sept 11, 2001 attacks on America by Al-Qaeda, Mas Selamat and several other JI members planned to hijack an aircraft flying out of Bangkok and crash it into Changi Airport in early 2002.

To circumvent stringent airport checks, they did not plan to carry weapons on board, but intended to have the two physically stronger members in their group force their way into the cockpit.

But the plot was foiled when Mas Selamat's name appeared in the media, proclaiming him as being wanted in connection with JI activities.

VIDEO
Still, he continued to harbour hopes of carrying the plan out one day, Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng told Parliament in 2003.

He was arrested twice in Indonesia, in Bintan in 2003 and again in Malang in 2006, for carrying false identification papers. He was handed over to Singapore authorities in February 2006.

He was detained under the Internal Security Act in March that year.

Mas Selamat's involvement in JI began much earlier, in 1990, when he joined Darul Islam, a movement considered to be the parent organisation of the JI and that fought for an Islamic state in Indonesia in the 1950s.

According to a report by the International Crisis Group (ICG), he joined the group after he had heard Indonesian cleric Abu Jibril preach in Johor.

By 1992, he had joined the religious council of the Singapore JI cell. A year later, he travelled to Afghanistan for military training supervised by another Indonesian cleric.

In 1998, JI paid for Mas Selamat and another JI member to visit Afghanistan for a month to look at the Taleban system of government.

The ICG report noted that they returned home 'deeply impressed'.

By 1999, Mas Selamat was chosen by JI operations chief Hambali - now in US custody in Guantanamo Bay - to take over as JI leader here from Ibrahim Maidin, who was nabbed in 2001 and remains in detention.

Mas Selamat's role included directing Singapore JI members to undertake reconnaissance of various establishments and handing over the material so gained to JI operational leaders based in Malaysia.

The hit list included the United States Embassy and American Club, the Defence Ministry headquarters at Bukit Gombak and the Education Ministry building at North Buona Vista Drive.

When detained by the Indonesian police for the first time, Mas Selamat had been on the run in Denpasar, Surabaya, Medan and Padang, before reportedly working as a farmer on Kundur island, about an hour's ferry ride from Singapore. Among other things, he had on him a book on the virtue of suicide.

He told the police that he supported himself from his savings, but that relatives from Singapore who visited him also provided him and his family with funds.

Mas Selamat, who used to sport a moustache and goatee, has five children believed to be aged between seven and 18 now.

Security analyst Rohan Gunaratna of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research here described him as 'the most ruthless of the JI Singapore members'.

'His mindset is more Al-Qaeda, favouring mass suicide and mass fatality attacks.

'I think it will be hard for him to escape Singapore, but he will do his best to get to Indonesia,' he said.

Dr Gunaratna said that the JI still presented a very significant threat to Southeast Asia but was largely confined to Indonesia and the Philippines, as operations elsewhere had crippled it.

The ICG, in a report last year, said it believed JI had a solid core totalling some 900 members across Indonesia. It was not likely to be growing but retained deep roots and a long-term vision of setting up an Islamic state.

'The JI has some 400 trained terrorists who have fought in Afghanistan and the region, and bomb-maker Noordin Mohamed Top remains at large,' Dr Gunaratna said.

'I think Mas Selamat would look for the first available opportunity to link up with him,' he said.

'Every Singaporean must be alert and make a concerted effort to identify him before he leaves Singapore.'


for full story, click here

http://www.straitstimes.com/Free/Story/STIStory_211177.html

Manhunt for escaped JI leader intensifies
By Teh Joo Lin, Tania Tan and K.C Vijayan
A massive traffic jam started this morning along Dunearn Road where police and Special Operations Command officers set up camp just by Goldhill Avenue with military personnel stood guard every ten metres along the road. -- ST PHOTO: JOYCE FANG

SAF soldiers have joined the island-wide land, sea and air hunt.

The manhunt for the escaped Jemaah Islamiyah leader has intensified, with more than 100 soldiers joining the thousands of security forces that are tracking down the fugivtive across the island and other air and sea checkpoints.

It is almost 24 hours since the wanted man, Mas Selamat Kastari, 47, who was linked to a sensation plant to crash a hijacked plane into Changi Airport, has been on the run.

Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng told Parliament earlier on Thursday that the JI militant escaped while he was brought to meet his family who was visiting him at the detention centre.

While being led to the room to meet his family, he asked to go to the toilet and gave his escorting officers the slip. The public was informed of his escape only about four hours later because the authorities said he posed no 'imminent danger to the public' at the time.

VIDEO
RELATED LINKS
The fugitive is said to walk with a limp and is not known to be armed.

Early on Thursday morning, the SAF military police and guardsmen were brought in at about 6.30 am to beef up the huge security cordon around the wooded Malcolm Park, near the Singapore Chinese Girls' School and the vicinity.

A snaking line of more than 20 military and police vehicles, including a 5-tonner truck, occupied the left most lane of Dunearn Road, causing the morning rush hour traffic to slow to a crawl.

Pupils arriving at the Singapore Chinese Girls School on Dunearn Road were ushered in through the school gates by teachers and parents, and immediately up to the second floor assembly hall.

There, vice-principal Mrs Shermaine Tang, told them 'not to roam around' and explained to them why they were surrounded by military vehicles and armed security forces on the school compound.

'Your teachers are here for you, and we're going to have a great day at school,' reassured Mrs Tang.

But some rattled parents were not convinced and at least 10 of them took their daughters home early.

One mother, who would only give her name as Ms Tan, said she felt 'uneasy' and preferred to have her daughter at home.

All the schools in the vicinity, including St Joseph Institution, Anglo Chinese School (Barker Road) and Catholic Junior College were also combed by security forces before the students turned up.

At the junction of Goldhill Avenue and Dunnearn Road, all vehicles were checked and the drivers asked to open their boots for scrutiny by the police.

Military police and Gurkha guards stood at 10 metres apart along the footpaths of Goldhill Avenue, stretching to Mount Rosie Terrace.

At about 8.15 am, some 50 Gurkha guards fanned out to check on several vacant bungalows in the area, led by grassroots leader Fred Chong, who has lived in the area for over 20 years. He brought them to about six empty houses, which were left vacant or undergoing renovation.

The Gurkhas also checked the drains and backways between the private houses.

Shortly after, they started combing the wooded area behind Goldhill Place, which residents said is cobra-infested.

In Parlaiment, Mr Wong said that the security at all the air, land and sea checkpoints have been tightened, including the areas where the escaped terrorist "may leave our shores not from the normal immigration clearance areas'.

He also warned that anyone who helps Mat Selamat would be committing a serious offence. 'I urge the public to stay calm and report any suspicious sightings to the police immediately,' he said.

Mas Selamat, 47, a father of four, took over as head of the JI network here in 1999, and later plotted to crash a hijacked plane into Changi Airport.

Read also: JI leader escapes while on the way to toilet


for full story, click here

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/Singapore/STIStory_211339.html

Jemaah Islamiya (JI)

Jemaah Islamiya (JI)

For decades, the Indonesia-based Jemaah Islamiyah has expounded its idea of amalgamating Indonesia, Malaysia and the southern Philippines into a regional Islamic state. Kumpulan Mujahideen Malaysia also has the same ambition.

In October 2002, the United States Government designated the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) a Foreign Terrorist Organization. JI is an extremist group linked to al-Qaida and other regional terrorist groups and has cells operating throughout Southeast Asia. Extremist groups in the region have demonstrated their capability to carry out transnational attacks in locations where Westerners congregate. Terrorist groups do not distinguish between official and civilian targets.

Jemaah Islamiya is a Southeast Asian terrorist network with links to al-Qaida. The network plotted in secrecy through the late 1990s, following the stated goal of creating an idealized Islamic state comprising Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the southern Philippines, and southern Thailand.

The name Jemaah Islamiyah dates to the late 1970s, but experts aren’t certain if the name referred to a formal organization or an informal gathering of like-minded Muslim radicals—or a government label for Islamist malcontents. The group has its roots in Darul Islam, a violent radical movement that advocated the establishment of Islamic law in Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country and also home to Christians, Hindus, and adherents of other faiths. Darul Islam sprang up as the country emerged from Dutch colonial rule in the late 1940s, and it continued to resist the postcolonial Indonesian republic, which it saw as too secular.

Activities

Militant islamic group active in Southeast Asia that seeks to etablish an Islamic fundamentalist state in the region. J.I. is allegeed to have attacked or plotted against U.S. and Wesern targets in Inodnesia, Singapore and the Philippines. Several J.I. members have been jailed for the planning of the October 12, 2002, bombing that killed 202 people in Bali. J.I. is also suspected in the August 5, 2003 bombing of the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta that killed 12.

The group—or individuals affiliated with it—is thought to be tied to several terrorist plots. Among them:

The August 2003 car bombing of the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta that killed 12 people. The October 2002 bombing of a nightclub on the predominantly Hindu island of Bali that killed 202 people, most of them foreign tourists from Australia and elsewhere. Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, a 41-year-old mechanic from east Java, was convicted on August 8 for buying the vehicle used in the main explosion and buying and transporting most of the chemicals used for the explosives. He was the first of 33 suspects arrested for the bombings to be convicted.

The JI was responsible for the Bali bombings on 12 October 2002, which killed nearly 200 and wounded 300 others. The Bali plot was apparently the final outcome of meetings in early 2002 in Thailand, where attacks against Singapore and soft targets such as tourist spots in the region were considered.

In December 2001, Singapore authorities uncovered a JI plot to attack the US and Israeli Embassies and British and Australian diplomatic buildings in Singapore.

A December 2000 wave of church bombings in Indonesia that killed 18. Asian and U.S. officials say Hambali had a hand in these attacks, and Indonesian officials arrested J.I. leader Bashir for questioning in connection with this anti-Christian campaign. Recent investigations linked the JI to December 2000 bombings where dozens of bombs were detonated in Indonesia and the Philippines.

A December 2000 series of bombings in Manila that killed 22. The State Department says Hambali helped plan these attacks. Fathur Rahman al-Ghozi, a Bashir follower, reportedly confessed to a role in the bombings. In April 2002, he was convicted in the Philippines on unrelated charges of possessing explosives.

A 1995 plot to bomb 11 U.S. commercial airliners in Asia that, the State Department says, Hambali helped plan.

Jemaah Islamiyah has also been linked to aborted plans to attack U.S., British, and Australian embassies in Singapore.

Location/Area of Operation

Jemaah Islamiya operates across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and possibly in the Philippines and Thailand. Due to weak central authority and lax or corrupt law enforcement and open borders allows J.I. to operate easily throughout the region.

Following the regional crackdown against JI, it is unclear how the network has responded. The JI is believed to have cells spanning Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and southern Thailand and may have some presence in neighboring countries.

The Singapore Jemaah Islamiyah is part of a much larger regional terrorist network spanning Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Singapore Jemaah Islamiyah members have identified Abu Bakar Baasyir and Abu Jibril as among those responsible for the establishment and operation of the Singapore Jemaah Islamiyah. Abu Jibril has been implicated in crimes committed by the Kumpulan Mujahideen Malaysia, while Abu Bakar Baasyir and another Indonesian Mujahidin Council leader, Hambali, are said to be behind the movement to establish an Islamic state comprising Indonesia, Malaysia and southern Philippines.

Six of the 13 Jemaah Islamiyah members being held in Singapore had links with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, while the two who were arrested and then released had visited Moro Islamic Liberation Front camps in the past.

Jemaah Islamiyah may also have Thai connections. In January this year, a Singaporean Jemaah Islamiyah fugitive, Mas Selamat Kastari, and four others were believed to have fled to Thailand. Kastari was suspected to be planning to hijack an aircraft from Indonesia, Malaysia or Thailand, and crash it into Changi Airport.

Strength

Peaked in the late 1980s at about 500 hundred plus limited overseas support structure.

Exact numbers are currently unknown, and Southeast Asian authorities continue to uncover and arrest additional JI elements. Singaporean officials have estimated total JI members to be approximately 5,000. The number of actual operationally oriented JI members probably is several hundred.

External Aid

Based on information from ongoing investigations, in addition to raising its own funds, the JI receives money and logistic assistance from Middle Eastern and South Asian contacts, NGOs, and other groups, including al-Qaida.

Has received considerable support, including safehaven, training, logistic assistance, and financial aid from Iraq, Libya, and Syria (until 1987), in addition to close support for selected operations. Abu Nidal was residing in Baghdad at his death in 2002.

Key Personalities

Abu Bakar Bashir, an Indonesian of Yemeni descent, is thought to be the group’s spiritual leader—and, some speculate, an operational leader as well. Bashir joined Darul Islam in the 1970s and was imprisoned in Indonesia for Islamist activism. In 1985, after a court ordered him back to prison, Bashir fled to Malaysia. There, he recruited volunteers to fight in the anti-Soviet Muslim brigades in Afghanistan and sought funding from Saudi Arabia while maintaining connections with former colleagues in Indonesia.

After the Indonesian dictator Suharto stepped down in 1998, Bashir returned home to run a pesantren—a Muslim seminary— in Solo, on the Muslim-majority island of Java. He also took up leadership of the Indonesian Mujahedeen Council, an Islamist umbrella group. Bashir has denied involvement in terrorism. Following the October 2002 Bali bombing, Indonesian officials demanded that Bashir submit to questioning about earlier attacks. He is currently on trial in Indonesia for treason for his alleged links to terrorism.

U.S. and Asian intelligence officials say that Hambali played a key leadership role in the organization. He was J.I.’s operational chief, they say, and was closely involved in several terrorist plots. U.S. officials announced August 14 that he was arrested by Thai authorities in Ayutthaya, about 60 miles north of Bangkok, and handed over to the Central Intelligence Agency. The U.S. State Department says Hambali is the head of Jemaah Islamiyah’s regional shura, its policymaking body, and is suspected of being al Qaeda’s operations director for East Asia.

The State Department in January 2003 froze Hambali’s assets and the assets of another suspected terrorist, Mohamad Iqbal Abdurraham, a.k.a. Abu Jibril. The department said that, until his arrest in Malaysia in June 2001, Abu Jibril was “Jemaah Islamiyah’s primary recruiter and second-in-command.”

Monday, February 25, 2008

loillpop - mika



can you find the hidden theme in it?

Chinese Garden and Park Connectors

here are some pics and vids









World Scout Day

hmm... last friday was world scout day! it is the same every year, however, this year was extra special as i got to go to the world scout day dinner at some bukit batok NS club thing... below is the speech done by Mr Tan Guong Ching, President, Singapore Scout Guild






Fellow scouts, guests and friends

Thank you for the privilege of joining you to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the World Scout Movement.

Staying relevant, being prepared

The World Scout Movement has over 28 million members in 155 countries today. Lord Baden Powell would have been justifiably proud of the movement he started. The world has changed considerably in the last 100 years. Consequently, the Scout Movement must also adjust and change with the times. It must therefore offer more than just the traditional camp craft and outdoor activities if it is to continue to attract young boys and men to our movement.

For example, the Singapore Scout Association (SSA) has updated its training syllabus to include topics such as the Internet and the conservation of the environment. It must keep pace with the interests and concerns of today's younger generation.

I have fond memories of my school boy scouting days - the outdoor camps, songs at campfires, doing odd jobs at Job Week, joint expeditions with Girl Guides but most of all - friendships which have lasted the test of time. I picked up many useful skills and learnt values such as loyalty, responsibility and of being prepared. These values made a real difference to my life, and I am sure in many other scouts. Thus, even as the Scout Movement changes to stay relevant, it must not lose sight of these core values of scouting.

I am happy to join you today to launch the new SSA emblem. The updated emblem reflects SSA's desire and intention to stay current but based on core values. It still incorporates the motto: ''Be Prepared.'' It remains an apt reminder to all scouts that they have to be prepared for any contingency and to face the uncertainties of the future.

Serving the community

One of the key principle of scouting is service to the community. In fact, the Scout Promise put it succinctly - a simple promise ''to help other people.'' That's why the SSA places strong emphasis on community service and involvement. It has been involving parents and reaching out to more youth through the formation of community-based scout groups such as those in Henry Park Primary, Gong Shang Primary as well as a community-based group at Pine Vale Condominium.

The SSA also reaches out to the older members in our community through the project - ''Developing Seniors as Resources for Community Scouting'', which is co-funded by the GO! (Golden Opportunities!) Fund under my Ministry. Under the project, 23 seniors have since been trained to assist in the running of Cub Scout units in the schools and other scouting activities both at SSA & district teams. This project will foster inter-generational bonding and help our elderly Singaporeans stay active in the community.

Other than community-based scouting and working with elderly, our Singapore scouts have also not forgotten the under-privileged and needy in our neighbouring countries. After the 2002 tsunami, our scouts raised over $10,000 towards the relief effort for the victims. In August last year, our scouts repaired a village bridge and built a school sports field on an island off Batam, Indonesia. Thank you for being our ambassadors and flying our flag overseas in these meaningful ways.






hmmm... it was bit boring but the food was great!!! see this









































































i got lots of great food btw... have fun eating my jpegs!

Thursday, February 21, 2008

class 3G1-3'07-08 (2)

srry ppl that i did not post for quite some time... it is a hard time for me during the exams as i had to mug and then realize i am going to fail everything... arg... tell you something too... i am empty again... damn bored... haiz... only drawing and juggling and chatting as got me going today... hmm... tried to entertain myself but snapping photos!! maybe this would entertain you...







me and lenses













ryan chee the cuber
























jon
saw












darryl's egg yolk onion rings



















the phone drawer










class after school


















me and darryl












random


















thomas

matthias' handstand



Juggling!!!

this guy is a freaking pro!!!



Sunday, February 17, 2008

http://youtube.com/watch?v=9WRC8RE9dfg&feature=user

dont watch if you are weak minded... about nudity... but it is meaningful... all censored... but meaningful

omg

the leap years... i want to watch...

Monday, February 11, 2008

Valentine's day
























to everyone,

a happy valentine's day

artistic photos

look at this...















































any comments? tell me!