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The_King

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  1. SINGAPORE: Plots of land earmarked for the development of the Agri-Food Innovation Park in Kranji were "erroneously" cleared ahead of the conclusion of a commissioned study and a "stern warning" has been issued to the contractor involved, said JTC Corp on Tuesday (Feb 16). In a statement, JTC referred to social media posts regarding the clearance of land at Kranji Road and Kranji Close, saying the area that had been cleared was earmarked for the development of the Agri-Food Innovation Park. The Agri-Food Innovation Park is part of the Sungei Kadut Eco-District. About 18 hectares of land has been set aside for the first phase of development for the Agri-Food Innovation Park in the district to co-locate research and development, prototyping and high-tech farming operations such as indoor farming and aquaculture hatcheries. As part of JTC’s preparations to develop the Agri-Food Innovation Park, it had engaged an environmental specialist to carry out a biodiversity baseline study in December last year, and to work out an environmental monitoring and management plan for specified plots of land within the area, it said. The study and the plan were expected to be completed around April, following which JTC would engage key stateholders, including nature groups, to discuss development plans, it said. On Jan 13, however, JTC discovered during a site inspection that its contractor had erroneously begun clearing some plots of land prior to the conclusion of the baseline study and environmental monitoring plan for those areas, it said. "Upon this discovery, JTC instructed the contractor to stop all clearing works immediately. Since then, no further clearing has taken place on site and the contractor has been issued a stern warning," it said. In a separate statement, contractor Huationg said it has complied with JTC's instruction to stop all clearing works. “We apologise for the erroneous clearing of land and are working with JTC on ongoing investigations to determine the cause of this lapse, and to prevent future occurrences,” said Huationg. The company is also conducting an internal review and working with JTC to strengthen its project management processes, it added. JTC said it "takes a very serious view of this incident" and is investigating how the error occurred before deciding whether further punitive measures need to be taken. "Going forward, JTC will continue with the baseline study and environmental monitoring and management plan and will work closely with all relevant stakeholders, including URA, NParks, nature interest groups and the community, to ensure that the Sungei Kadut Eco-District redevelopment plans are carried out with due consultation and in an environmentally responsible and sensitive manner," it said. The findings of the studies will be made public when ready, it added. On Monday, the Nature Society Singapore shared a Facebook post showing cleared swathes of land in the area. "This is a shocking and dreadful development in an important green area contiguous to the Rail Corridor," said Nature Society Singapore, referring to aerial shots of the area taken in May 2019 and February 2021. The Sungei Kadut Eco-District is part of the Northern Agri-Tech and Food Corridor and is one of the nodes that will be connected via the 24km Rail Corridor. The land 15m to 20m to the left and right of the Rail Corridor has been "safeguarded to protect biodiversity within the belt of the existing forest", JTC said. Source: CNA/ga
  2. KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 9 – Malaysia is home to 42,500 sugar daddies earning it the third spot for the highest number of sugar daddies in Asia behind Indonesia with 60,250. India, however, dominates the top ten Asian list with a whopping 338,000 (or 61 per cent of the total 556,000) sugar daddies in the region, according to a survey by the world’s largest sugar dating site, SeekingArrangement. The dating firm said in a statement that countries with high-tertiary education penetration rates were proven to be more vulnerable to this trend. It said Malaysia recorded an outstanding debt of RM39 billion in student loans as of 2018. According to their report, similar results were seen in South Korea and Japan, which recorded 90 per cent and 76 per cent demand in tertiary education respectively. SeekingArrangement CEO Brandon Wade said the gap between Asia’s wealthy and poor has swelled alarmingly in the last two decades, stimulating more women to seek older men for various factors. “A platform like SeekingArrangement helps connect young and empowered women with wealthier, more affluent men who not only bolster their financial woes but act as a mentor or gateway in catapulting a promising future for these sugar babies,” he said in a statement. Wade also noted that Asian economies that are rapidly growing are also attracting many foreign investors to set up businesses in the region. “Thus, it is really no shocker why Asia seems to be a hotbed for sugar dating, especially among the urban demographics.” After Malaysia, Japan (32,500) comes in at fourth and Hong Kong (28,600) at fifth with Taiwan (27,300), Vietnam (12,000), South Korea (7,000), Sri Lanka (5,000) and Cambodia (3,500) completing the list.
  3. for me i will call 995 and 995 if i the person that got knock down. cause dont want suddenly it my fault
  4. THE Pentagon has admitted to holding and testing wreckage from UFO crashes in a bombshell Freedom of Information letter, shared with The Sun. Researcher Anthony Bragalia wrote to the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) requesting details of all UFO material, which they hold and results of any tests they had been carrying out on it. The Pentagon has admitted testing UFO materialCredit: Getty Images - Getty He wrote: "This could include physical debris recovered by personnel of the Department of Defense as residue, flotsam, shot-off material or crashed material from UAPS [unidentified aerial phenomenon] or unidentified flying objects." In the response, shared with The Sun, the DIA released 154 pages of test results that includes reports on a mysterious "memory" metal called Nitinol, which remembers its original shape when folded. Bragalia said it was a "stunning admission" from the US government and the documents reveal that some of the retrieved debris possesses "extraordinary capabilities" including the potential to make things invisible or even slow down the speed of light. He told The Sun: "The Pentagon has admitted to holding and testing anomalous debris from UFOs. Bragalia's original FOIA requestCredit: Department of Defense/ Anthony Bragalia Here is the official response from the Defense Intelligence AgencyCredit: Department of Defense/ Anthony Bragalia "They have been able to learn some things about the materials of construction which hold tremendous promise as futuristic materials which will change our lives forever." He said he first made the request in 2017 - which took three years for the DIA to fulfill - after it was revealed the Pentagon had been studying UFOs under the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (AATIP). "The article mentioned that anomalous debris from UFOs (now called UAPs) was being analyzed by a private defense contractor," Bragalia said. "Material evidence such as UFO debris has been a focus of my research. "My Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request was very specific, seeking the test results of UFO/UAP debris, not material already known to science." Major Jesse Marcel with debris from the Roswell UFO crash of 1947Credit: Handout - Getty Bragalia believes some of the debris being tested may be from this incident Bragalia believes some of the material that is being tested could have come from the notorious Roswell incident of 1947, in which a UFO crashed in New Mexico. "The inclusion of advanced technical reports on Nitinol is curious," Bragalia said. "Nitinol is a shape-memory alloy that 'remembers' its original shape when folded or crunched, and snaps back seamlessly and instantly. "This memory metal characteristic was reported by many witnesses at Roswell." The site of the Roswell crashCredit: Reuters The Pentagon has not disclosed the origins of the UFO materialCredit: Getty Images - Getty However the agency has held back certain details about the materials - including any information about they could be of alien origin - stating in the letter: "I have determined that some portions of five documents must be withheld in part from disclosure..." "They are omitting information on the chemical and elemental composition of the material as well as its origin," Bragalia said. "They have omitted the names of the involved scientists as well, but I have since learned some of their names and will be contacting them." The DIA letter, first shared on Bragalia's blog, reveals that the testing was carried out by Bigelow Aerospace, one of the Department of Defense's private contractors based in Las Vegas, Nevada. The DIA released 154 pages of testing resultsCredit: Department of Defense/ Anthony Bragalia Bragalia said the results of the tests could be life changingCredit: Department of Defense/ Anthony Bragalia The company laid off all of its staff at the Vegas plant last March due to the toll of the pandemic - and it's not known where the UFO material may now be kept. Mysteriously Bragalia said everyone he approached who used to work at the plant refused to comment to him. "All former personnel have refused me any real comment," he said. "I suspect the material has been returned to the Pentagon." The UFO researcher is planning to launch an appeal to obtain some of the redacted information in the coming months. The Sun reached out to the DIA for comment.
  5. https://www.facebook.com/e3ncctv/videos/pcb.2838370693067910/234058855038169 https://www.facebook.com/e3ncctv/videos/pcb.2838370693067910/416773112913725
  6. the thing on my mind is always $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$. No $$$$$ pay bill, lawyer letter come, debt collector come, service get cut off etc. No $$$$$$ how to care about the earth
  7. Delivery costs $5.50 for Clementi, Jurong and Bukit Batok residents and $8.50 for other areas.
  8. https://www.asiaone.com/lifestyle/celeb-fb-venture-alert-terence-cao-vincent-ng-shane-pow-and-dawn-yeoh-are-now-selling-mee
  9. listen to the king la. To stop unauthorised online transaction. For Debit card user. Step 1: go online banking find Manage alerts to receive SMS notifications for your credit/debit card transactions. find Transaction alerts . for me i set my Transaction alerts to $0.01. if any Transaction more then 0.01cent, i will recevie sms step 2. to protect more, set the Debit Card Limit to $0, if you want to buy stuff then change the value, once payment is process change bank to 0 step 3. for order like amazon that dont deduct your money straight away. then just deposit enough cash for the order then once amazon process the order then add top up to $500 to prevent service charge. then set back to 0 limit when done or option 2 step 1: can use virtual CC to make payment or to allow which payment to approve which i did. so only those i want can deduct it those got more info, share please
  10. SINGAPORE - The number of unauthorised online banking and card transactions jumped sharply last year amid the Covid-19 pandemic. There were 1,848 police reports of such transactions involving criminals phishing for banking and card details from victims - up 462 per cent from 2019's 329 cases. There were just 114 incidents in 2018, said Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung, who is a Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) board member, on Tuesday (Feb 16). He was speaking in Parliament on behalf of Senior Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, who is Minister-in-charge of the MAS. The update comes after the police said earlier this month that the number of scams reported last year also hit a high, climbing 65.1 per cent from 2019, with fraudsters swiping around $201 million from victims. E-commerce scams, the most commonly reported type of scams last year, jumped 19.1 per cent from 2019 to 3,354 reported cases, partly due to the increase in online transactions amid the pandemic. While banks must implement controls such as multi-factor authentication using one-time passwords (OTPs) to keep online transactions secure, these measures cannot eliminate all scams. Many victims have been tricked by crooks into revealing their user IDs, passwords, OTPs or credit card details, said Mr Ong. Financial institutions will never ask customers for their log-in information, like OTPs. Mr Ong noted that some account holders have recently reported that online transactions have been made through their accounts even though they did not receive any SMS OTPs or did not reveal OTPs to other people. The police and banks are investigating these cases. "As a precaution, the banks have put in place additional measures, such as rejecting card payments made to some commonly disputed merchants, or placing limits on the transaction amounts that customers can transact with such merchants," said Mr Ong. A person who suspects an unauthorised online transaction should make a police report and contact the bank immediately. The customer will not bear any financial loss even if the unauthorised transaction was due to lapses by the bank or non-compliance with MAS rules. But this is provided the customer has "practised proper cyber hygiene and has not been negligent", said Mr Ong, whose remarks came in response to a parliamentary question on unauthorised online bank transactions by Dr Tan Wu Meng (Jurong GRC). "It is very important that consumers treat their online banking log-in information, including OTPs, as they would their ATM PINs."
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