NEW - Intramuscularly injected lipid nanoparticles carrying SARS-CoV-2 spike mRNA were shown to travel beyond the injection site, reaching the heart tissue of a mouse
-Results Accepted 06 December 2024
Link: http://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-024-02528-1
SINGAPORE - Two more men have been charged with urinating in public at MRT stations.
This comes a day after a man was fined $2,000 for the same offence at Outram Park MRT station.
On Jan 15, Zhou Hongwei, 57, was charged with urinating in front of the passenger service centre at Potong Pasir MRT station on Jan 13 at around 7.30pm.
The same day, Soo Fook Khan, 53, was charged with urinating at the platform of Tanah Merah MRT station on Jan 8 at around 12.30pm.
Both men are Singaporeans.
According to charge sheets, Zhou allegedly committed the act knowing that it would cause a common annoyance to the public.
In court, Zhou said he wanted to plead guilty to the offence and that he would not be engaging a defence lawyer.
Before the case was adjourned, District Judge Paul Quan told Zhou: “Please don’t reoffend. If you reoffend, you will come back again.”
Zhou nodded in response. He is expected to plead guilty when he returns to court on Feb 26.
In the other case, Soo has been remanded at the Institute of Mental Health for a medical examination and his case will be heard again on Jan 28.
Separately, Soo was also handed a charge under the Moneylenders Act for allegedly acting on behalf of an unlicensed moneylender.
On Oct 5, 2024, he allegedly poured out ashes from a prayer urn to the floor at a flat in Yishun, to cause alarm to the flat’s occupant.
Soo’s and Zhou’s alleged urination cases are the latest in a series of public urination cases in the past week.
On Jan 14, Chinese national Li Guorui, 41, was fined $2,000 for urinating on an escalator handrail at Outram Park MRT station.
The offence took place on Jan 10 after he had attended a business dinner at Westgate, where he consumed a large amount of beer and became heavily intoxicated.
At around 10pm that day, Li was exiting Outram Park MRT station to return to his hotel in Upper Cross Street when he unzipped his pants and urinated on the handrail of a downward-moving escalator.
The prosecution said Li’s actions went beyond just causing annoyance, and involved issues of health and sanitation.
Those found guilty of public nuisance can be fined up to $2,000.
For committing an act of public nuisance and knowing that this act would cause annoyance to the public, an offender can be jailed for up to three months, fined up to $2,000, or both.