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ANOTHER YP DRUNK ALREADY KO AT VOID DECK BECOME SLEEPING BEAUTY

A photo emerged online showing an inebriated YP drunk and sleeping on the floor.

He was seen with what appears to be a beer can beside him as he ko-ed on the void deck.

Sleeping beauty was sleeping soundly with his slippers off and not a care in the world.

Image sourceL @sgbengz on IG

GIRL ASK “WHY AM I SO HOT?” THEN SQUEEZE OWN NENEPOK FOR VIDEO

A video emerged online showing a girl questioning her own sexuality, because she found herself “hot”.

She captioned her video: “Why am I so hot omg I’m having gay panic for myself.”

She the proceeded to squeeze her own right breast.

FULL VIDEO LOADING…

Source: @yoursgkaren on IG

FOOTAGE OF CHIOBU SYT ARCHERY ATHLETE CAUGHT MANY HEARTS

In the recent Tokyo Summer Olympics, there are many chiobu athletes participating in all categories of sports.

In a recent archery event, this CHIOBU SYT archer hailing from Colombia has caught the attention of many viewers for her sweet looks and cute disposition.

P.S. Her name is Valentina Acosta Giraldo

Check out the footage below, it will definitely melt your heart and make you want to pick up Archery.

Full video loading…

Image and Video Source: LiluLiki douyin.

EVEN ULTRAMAN ALSO KIASI, QUEUE UP TO GET VACCINATED IN M’SIA

A video emerged online showing a man in an Ultraman costume getting vaccinated.

Ultraman was queueing up and waiting for his turn.

He was seen in costume throughout, even during registration and when the staff was explaining the jab to him.

The incident happened in Malaysia.

FULL VIDEO LOADING…

Image and video source: @sg.incidents on IG

YPS DRINK UNTIL KO AT VOID DECK, SUN HAVEN’T GO DOWN DRUNK ALR

A photo emerged online showing a couple a YPs knocked out following their alcoholic exploits.

They were presumably drinking at the void deck, as a bottle of liquor was seen on the table.

They were seen drunk until KO, sleeping on the spot.

Images source: @sgbengz on IG

SG WILL EASE COVID RULES FOR VACCINATED IF SITUATION IMPROVES BY AUG

Singapore has said that it will review COVID-19 measures in early August and ease some measures if virus clusters come under control and hospitalisation rates remain low.

However, the easing of measures will only apply to vaccinated individuals, said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong in his address to the House in a ministerial statement that gave an overview of the country’s next steps in its pandemic response.

Here is what Minister Wong addressed:

“This means that if you want to attend a large event or a religious service involving more than 100 persons, you have to be fully vaccinated.”

“If you want to go out to dine in a restaurant or work out in a gym, you have to be fully vaccinated,” he added.

Mr Wong noted that by early August – the mid-point of the phase two (heightened alert) period , around two-thirds of Singapore’s population would have received the full two doses and some three-quarters of seniors aged 70 and above would also have been vaccinated.

Singapore will then be able to further ease restrictions around early September, when about 80 per cent of the population are expected to have gotten the full two doses of the vaccine.

It hopes that a similar proportion of seniors 70 and up would also be fully vaccinated by then.

Mr Wong said Singapore will then allow larger groups to gather, especially if all are fully vaccinated.

It will also begin to reopen its borders for travel, especially for vaccinated people.

“We will start by establishing travel corridors with countries or regions that have managed Covid-19 well, and where the infection is similarly under control,” said Mr Wong, who co-chairs the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19.

With these arrangements, fully-vaccinated people will be able to travel to such areas without serving the 14-day stay home notice (SHN) in a hotel.

Instead, this requirement will likely be replaced by either a rigorous testing regime or a shorter seven-day SHN at home, depending on the risk level of the country they visit.

However, unvaccinated individuals will not be able to enjoy the easing of these measures.

Looking further beyond, Singapore will continue with a series of “progressive easings”, the minister said.

As it does so, the country must expect Covid-19 cases to rise partly because there are still “cryptic” cases being transmitted in the community, he noted.

Imported cases will also rise as Singapore opens its borders, with “infected persons slipping through from time to time”.

“But at that stage… our main focus will no longer be on daily case numbers, because the vast majority by then would have been vaccinated, and even if they catch the virus, they are much less likely to become very ill,” Mr Wong said.

“Instead, our focus will be on the much smaller number of infected persons who need supplementary oxygen or require intensive care.”

In his statement, Mr Wong also explained why the task force “made the difficult decision” to return to phase two (heightened alert) – a move that has drawn criticism from some quarters.

The stricter rules that scale back activities help slow down transmission and give the country time to push vaccination rates up further, protecting seniors, he said.

The large clusters that formed in recent weeks show how easy it is for the Delta variant to spread and potentially overwhelm Singapore’s hospital system, Mr Wong added.

He pointed out that vaccinated individuals may experience very mild symptoms when infected, inadvertently becoming asymptomatic carriers.

“By the time the cases pop up, days or even weeks would have passed and the infection would have spread to many people,” he said.

Facing a heightened risk of widespread community transmission before enough people attained adequate vaccine protection, Singapore thus decided to tighten the rules.

At present, the proportion of people who are fully vaccinated is still less than 50 per cent, he said. “We are especially worried about our seniors, because there are still over 200,000 seniors aged 60 and above who are not fully vaccinated.”

Image Source: unsplash.com



“ERRANT KTVS CAUSING NIGHTLIFE SPOTS TO SUFFER UNFAIRLY”

Remembered the last time you partied till the wee hours of the morning openly in Singapore? Well, that seemed like an eternity ago for many of us.

A business association has recently said:

“The nightlife entertainment industry has “unfairly suffered” for wrongdoings of errant KTV operators”

After the recent KTV cluster, the Singapore Nightlife Business Association (SNBA) which represents the nightlife industry in Singapore, appealed to the public not to stereotype the entire industry because of these minority few.

The association said in an open letter to the Government:

“In the past few weeks, the broad spectrum of nightlife has unfairly suffered for the wrongdoings of a handful of errant operators who run unlawful KTVs with unlicensed social hostesses.

“These unlawful operators were breaking the rules of public entertainment and the regulations under the Covid-19 Control Order”

However, the industry came under fire by the public earlier this month after the Ministry of Health said that it was investigating cases of COVD-19 among hostesses who had frequented KTV lounges operating as F&B outlets

The authorities then clarified that no KTV lounges in the Covid-19 cluster received a government grant to convert their businesses.

The association then said that based on its records, 16 operators who had run unlawful KTVs with unlicensed social hostesses had done so using a temporary F&B licence from the Singapore Food Agency (SFA) to operate.

Another 20 operators already possessed a licence to conduct F&B operations granted by SFA or did not have an F&B licence.

“Whether the unlawful KTVs bothered to obtain an F&B licence through SFA application prior to Covid-19 or through a pivot, (it) does not separate them from those unlawful KTVs who did not have an F&B licence at all.

“Ultimately, all these KTVs were flouting the law,” SNBA said.




INFECTED 27 Y.O JAILED TO MEET FRIENDS TO SMOKE DURING CB, JAILED

A man who left his home on several occasions during the circuit breaker was sentenced to 6 weeks in jail. During the CB, he was infected with COVID-19 and was given stay home notices.

27-year-old Leon Chua Yi Yan was jailed for 6 weeks and fined SGD$15,000 for 4 charges of leaving his home for social reasons.

In May last year, Chua arranged with his friend Phan Chong Rong to meet at a staircase in Woodlands to smoke, they even packet drinks to the staircase to chat smoke and relax and on other occasions meeting Ng Yong Jie and Shu Shao Qiang

This happened on several occasions, days after Chua went to Raffles Medical Clinic and he was given 5 days MC for acute respiratory symptoms. He was told that he must not leave his home during the 5 days period yet he did so.

He continued meeting his friend despite the stay home order and he was later diagnosed with COVID-19 on the same day.

Chua then told his friends to delete all evidence of them meeting up such as Whatsapp messages and other contact records.

  • Chua was fined SGD15,000 and jailed for 6 weeeks
  • Shu was fined SGD$3,500
  • Ng was fined SGD$10,000
  • Phan was fined SGD$8,000

FOOTAGE OF ATHLETES TEH EACH OTHER NEH NEH IN OLYMPICS

A video has emerged on FB of an olympic event.

In the video, two female athletes can be seen competing intensely against each other.

In the process of competing, they can be seen teh-ing each other’s neh neh with their body parts and thus causing alot of zao geng.

Watch the video below more more action.

Full video loading…

Image and Video source: FB Page 七年級大叔 QK

SCAMMER POSE AS MJ, SAYS HIS STILL ALIVE AND NEEDS MONEY TO GO USA

Scammers are trying all sorts of funny ways to trick people into giving money and some are just outrageous

A netizen received a message from “Michael Jackson” saying that he is still alive and he needed money to get back to the United States to make more money.

There has been an increase of netizens receiving scams from various people here is another story:

Met him through a dating site, hinge.

At first it was all good and it genuinely felt like we were making a connection. He was a hongkonger. There will usually be some kind of excuse why he can’t meet up physically even if he claims to be in sg. He will say he treasures the first meeting and wants it to be special.
Then after about a month, he started to ask if he could lead me to invest in cryptocurrency to help me earn money.

I believe he earns some kind of commission for how much people put in to these fake crypto brokers. At first below 10000 there was no issue withdrawing money from the platform. After that they will start giving you all sorts of excuses.

I also found out many others have come across such person’s on dating apps sharing their experience in reddit. You can just Google “Hinge” investment scam.