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Author: fatz

Mas Selamat Kastari

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Post time 15-4-2008 10:14 AM | Show all posts
ntah ehh...
tapi kat koswei.... jem sama tak jekk... tak berubah...
even kalau naik kete masuk johor..., driver nak kena thumb print kat mesin dia....

Originally posted by tig_cun at 15-4-2008 08:44 AM
dah slow dah kes mas selamat nie....
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Post time 15-4-2008 10:33 AM | Show all posts

Reply #121 sutera_abadi's post

ka ni na.. aku lelawa gini pun kena thumbprint...

kalau mas selamat gi extreme makeover pun tak boleh sejambu aku lah
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Post time 15-4-2008 02:51 PM | Show all posts
PAGE
M
E
N
D
A
P

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Post time 15-4-2008 03:16 PM | Show all posts
apsal pulak sut
wa dari tadi dah repair ni page
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Post time 15-4-2008 03:17 PM | Show all posts
bharu bleh masyuk la modd...
Originally posted by virgomal at 15-4-2008 03:16 PM
apsal pulak sut
wa dari tadi dah repair ni page
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Post time 15-4-2008 03:19 PM | Show all posts
Bila akak masuk JB????
hari biasa ke weekend???
Originally posted by Browneyes at 15-4-2008 10:33 AM
ka ni na.. aku lelawa gini pun kena thumbprint...

kalau mas selamat gi extreme makeover pun tak boleh sejambu aku lah
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Post time 15-4-2008 05:09 PM | Show all posts
seme nyer kena thumb print.. kalau pegi kat 2nd link lagik bangang... suruh org turun!!!...
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Post time 15-4-2008 05:25 PM | Show all posts
itu laa... memang bangang....
hari tu ingatkan lelaki aje yg kena thumb print.... rupanya yg pompuan-pompuan pun kena sama.... (Kat 2nd link) :@
Originally posted by tig_cun at 15-4-2008 05:09 PM
seme nyer kena thumb print.. kalau pegi kat 2nd link lagik bangang... suruh org turun!!!...
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Post time 15-4-2008 09:21 PM | Show all posts
Originally posted by Browneyes at 15-4-2008 10:33 AM
ka ni na.. aku lelawa gini pun kena thumbprint...

kalau mas selamat gi extreme makeover pun tak boleh sejambu aku lah



joke of the day
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Post time 15-4-2008 09:34 PM | Show all posts

Reply #122 Browneyes's post

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Post time 16-4-2008 10:36 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 16-4-2008 12:02 PM | Show all posts
aku tak bleh bukak ko nyer link....
Originally posted by herokampong at 16-4-2008 10:36 AM
>> Operation Investigation  
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 Author| Post time 16-4-2008 11:07 PM | Show all posts
Terror detainee says foreign JI elements trying to revive group
By May Wong, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 16 April 2008 0812 hrs


SINGAPORE: A Jemaah Islamiyah member detained in Singapore has said a group of foreign JI elements is actively trying to revive the clandestine terrorist group.

Rijal Yadri Jumari, 27, revealed this recently while under detention at Singapore's Whitley Road Detention Centre, the same place from where fugitive Mas Selamat Kastari escaped in February.

Singapore's Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) released the information in response to Channel NewsAsia's queries on the role and function of the detention centre.

The questioning of the detainees at the Whitley Road centre, together with investigations by the Internal Security Department (ISD), has helped authorities track down several Singapore JI members who had fled the country, including Mas Selamat, said the MHA.

Deputy Prime Minister S Jayakumar has said Mas Selamat's escape is a "serious setback" to the Internal Security Department (ISD), adding that he understood Singaporeans' reaction of shock and alarm because there must have been a serious security lapse at the detention centre for the escape to happen.

But Professor Jayakumar called on Singaporeans not to overlook the outstanding work done by the ISD in the past in keeping Singapore safe.

The MHA has released more information on such work, especially the arrests of terrorists that resulted from the sharing of information gathered at the Whitley Road Detention Centre.

For instance, the Bali bombers - Amrozi and his brother, Indonesian JI leader Mukhlas - and others involved in the Indonesian resort attack were arrested by Indonesian authorities, with the help of information gathered from detainees at the Singapore centre.

Other arrests that resulted from such sharing of information included JI bomb maker Fathur Rohman Al Ghozi, who was captured in the Philippines, and Al-Qaeda operative "Sammy", who was identified as Mohd Mansour Jabarrah by the ISD, leading to his arrest in Oman.

Detainees in Singapore have also testified in the trials of terrorists linked to the US attacks on September 11, 2001.

Besides detention and intelligence gathering, another aspect of work at the Whitley Road detention centre is rehabilitation, the MHA said.

No filming has ever been allowed inside the premises, but the MHA shared some parts of the rehabilitation work.

For example, the centre allows weekly visits by family members and during such visits, detainees can wear their own clothes. Religious counselling is also conducted in the centre and detainees are encouraged to practise their religion.

The MHA's point is that the environment in the detention centre is not meant to be a punishing one but one which helps rehabilitate detainees.

A website has been launched by the Religious Rehabilitation Group - Muslim religious scholars who counsel JI detainees. Several detainees have acknowledged the help given to their families by this group.

While Channel NewsAsia's news team were not allowed access to any former detainee, the MHA obtained a quote from one who has renounced armed jihad. He said he is gratified for the support given to his family during his detention, adding "I have no excuse not to reciprocate by contributing to society".

The MHA also revealed that another former JI detainee had said that times were difficult for his family during his detention, but he continued to receive strong support from his wife and children.

He also appreciated the religious counselling and regarded his religious counsellor as a fatherly figure. The ex-detainee told authorities that he felt indebted to his religious counsellor for the advice given.

While the information released has given some insight into the work at the detention centre, there are questions still unanswered.

Parliament will sit on Monday, and Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng is likely to respond then. - CNA/ir
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 Author| Post time 16-4-2008 11:35 PM | Show all posts
April 16, 2008         
What goes on here...helps S'pore against JI


The Whitley Road Detention Centre has been the site of countless investigative interrogations and detentions since 1966. These examples provided by the Ministry of Home Affairs highlight various terrorist and espionage threats that they helped to curb.

By Zakir Hussain




HE WAS arrested just two months ago in an undisclosed country in the region.

But interrogations of Singapore's latest terror detainee, Rijal Yadri Jumari, surfaced intelligence that a group of foreign Jemaah Islamiah (JI) elements are actively trying to revive the clandestine grouping.

Internal Security Department (ISD) investigations and questioning of more than 50 JI detainees at the Whitley Road Detention Centre in the past seven years have 'led to critical breaks in Singapore's counter-terrorism efforts', said the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).

The information obtained has also helped cripple a terror network that operated in the region and beyond.

MHA said being able to question detainees as and when new intelligence comes has been 'operationally advantageous', and helped identify several lethal terrorists.

One ISD detainee identified Amrozi, who plotted the 2002 Bali blasts which killed 200 people, based on a description provided.

'Based on this lead, the Indonesian authorities identified and later apprehended Amrozi and many others...including (his brother) Mukhlas,' said MHA.

Both Amrozi and Mukhlas, who had directed the Singapore JI, were found guilty of the Bali blasts and are awaiting execution in Indonesia.

Detainees also gave information which 'considerably' aided investigations, and revealed the JI's operational plans aimed at causing massive damage in Singapore.

That was not all.

The ISD shared intelligence on the regional JI network covering Indonesia, Malaysia, southern Philippines and Australia with security agencies in those countries.

Those agencies then disrupted cells in their countries.

In Malaysia, many JI members were detained and JI madrasahs in Ulu Tiram in Johor and Kelantan were shut.

The JI's Australian network in Perth, Melbourne and Sydney was also disrupted.

In Singapore, the JI had been discussing potential targets since the mid-1990s, and preparations intensified after the Sept 11, 2001 terror attacks on the United States.

Targets included embassies, Changi Airport, MRT stations, water pipelines and the Ministries of Defence and Education - and these were 'the more developed plans'.

ISD investigations saw key members of the local JI network apprehended - including spiritual leader Ibrahim Maidin and experienced operations planners Mohamed Khalim Jaffar, Hashim Abas and Ja'afar Mistooki.

In the first phase of operations in December 2001, 13 JI members and two Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) members were rounded up.

Resulting investigations surfaced many others, and in August 2002, another 21 men were arrested, with 18 placed under detention orders.

Many more were warned or placed on restriction orders which limited their activities.

About half the detainees have now been released after they were assessed to have been rehabilitated, said MHA.

ISD interrogations also managed to identify and track down Singaporean JI members who had fled overseas.

Working with foreign partners, ISD found and brought back 10 such men in the past five years.

MHA described these arrests as 'significant'.

Arifin Ali, who was arrested in May 2003, worked with a few Thai extremists and was planning to bomb several embassies - Singapore's included - in Bangkok.

Known also as John Wong Ah Hung, he had been considering targeting Singapore's ambassador to Thailand (who was then Mr Chan Heng Wing) but his plans were foiled by his timely arrest.

Others arrested abroad include Anis Mohd Mansor in 2004; and Mas Selamat Kastari, Mohd Rashid Zainal Abidin and Ishak Mohamed Noohu, in 2006.

The latter three were involved in Mas Selamat's plan to crash a plane into Changi Airport. Their interrogation revealed new information that the group had continued to plan such an attack even after their first attempt was thwarted, said MHA.

Early last year, four others were brought back: Mohd Hussain Saynudin, Mohd Yassin Mohd Noor, Jamil Ansani and Ibrahim Mohd Noor. Three were detained and Jamil was given a restriction order limiting his movements.

MHA added that interrogation of these detainees hiding overseas turned up names of many foreign JI members and collaborators, which ISD shared with its security partners.

Such intelligence exchange is critical because terror groups do not respect national borders, noted security expert Kumar Ramakrishna.

But terror outfits also want to know if they have been penetrated, monitored or compromised, so agencies are careful to ensure they do not 'tip off the bad guys' as to just how much is known, he added.

Intelligence and security officers from several countries have interviewed some detainees in Singapore, said MHA.

Several detainees also agreed to testify via video conference at foreign terrorism trials, MHA added.

Among them was Faiz Bafana, released in 2006, who testified at the closed-door hearing of Zacarias Moussaoui in a Virginia federal court in 2002.

Moussaoui was convicted of conspiring with the Sept 11, 2001 hijackers and has been sentenced to life without parole in the US.

Bafana, Hashim Abas and Ja'afar Mistooki also testified at the 2003 trial of JI leader Abu Bakar Bashir in Jakarta.

The trio testified to Bashir's involvement in JI, 'even when Indonesian JI members were too afraid to do so', said MHA.

International Crisis Group analyst Sidney Jones said the willingness of security agencies in the region to cooperate has increased dramatically in recent years, but some still needed to beef up skill levels.

zakirh@sph.com.sg
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Post time 17-4-2008 08:20 AM | Show all posts
ohh... rupanya kat ostolia pun ada JI ehh....
sut baru tau niari...
Originally posted by fatz at 16-4-2008 11:35 PM
April 16, 2008         
What goes on here...helps S'pore against JI

The Whitley Road Detention Centre has been the site of countless investigative interrogations and detentions since 1966. These ex ...
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Post time 17-4-2008 05:02 PM | Show all posts

Reply #132 sutera_abadi's post

same.. tak leh bukak..
semalam pon cuba tak boleh
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 Author| Post time 17-4-2008 05:23 PM | Show all posts

Reply #136 virgomal's post

takder apa2 arr...just suara2 org seolah2 perbualan dlm radio...buat2 lawak pasal mas escape tu.....
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Post time 18-4-2008 09:35 PM | Show all posts
Govt to release COI's findings on Mas Selamat's escape on Monday
By May Wong/Hoe Yeen Nie, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 18 April 2008 1853 hrs


SINGAPORE : The government will release the Committee of Inquiry's findings on Mas Selamat Kastari's escape, in Parliament on Monday.

Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng will provide the update in response to questions from Members of Parliament (MPs).

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will also deliver a statement regarding the government's responsibility on the issue.

The Jemaah Islamiyah leader had escaped from the Whitley Road Detention Centre on February 27.

He reportedly escaped after he asked to use the toilet, on his way to meet his family.

Mas Selamat's escape sparked off the biggest manhunt in Singapore, involving more than 3,000 officers at one point.

Many grassroots organisations and Singaporeans also volunteered to distribute over 54,000 leaflets on the wanted man.

So MPs would like some answers on questions like how he managed to escape from a high-security facility and what control measures are now in place to prevent a recurrence.

They also want to know how the manhunt is proceeding and how much money the government has spent on this operation.

Some MPs wonder if the incident has dented investor confidence and the international reputation of Singapore.

Others also want to know the government's approach to taking responsibility for such a major security lapse.

So DPM Wong will address these questions and more in his Ministerial Statement on Monday.

The three-member Committee of Inquiry was set up just days after Mas Selamat escaped.

It is headed by retired Judge, Goh Joon Seng, and he is joined by Tee Tua Ba, former Police Commissioner, and a Deputy Secretary at the Home Affairs Ministry, Choong May Ling.

They were tasked to come up with a comprehensive report on how Mas Selamat escaped and recommendations on what needs to be done to avoid a repeat incident.

DPM Wong had earlier also announced that the Criminal Investigation Department will be conducting a separate investigation on whether there was any criminal wrongdoing in this matter.

He could likely give an update on this as well.

Meanwhile, other items to be discussed in Parliament on Monday include the issues of rice and the cost of living.

Some MPs have asked how export restrictions by some countries will affect Singapore's rice supplies, and what steps are being taken against traders who hoard rice illegally to take advantage of high prices.

Two bills will come up for second reading, including the Infectious Diseases (Amendment) Bill. - CNA/ms
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 Author| Post time 22-4-2008 12:48 AM | Show all posts

In Parliament on Monday, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng (above) has said that the escape of fugitive terrorist Mas Selamat Kastari from the Whitley Road Detention Centre was a 'costful and painful wake-up call'. -- ST PHOTO: TERENCE TAN 籟/size]

April 21, 2008         
Escape a 'painful wake-up call', shows complacency: DPM
THE escape of fugitive terrorist Mas Selamat Kastari is a 'costly and painful wake-up call', and shows that complacency has crept into the operating culture at the Whitley Road Detention Centre (WRDC), said Deputy Prime Minister Wong Kan Seng in Parliament on Monday.

While the probes by the Committee of Inquiry and the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) found no malice or criminal liability on the part of any officer implicated in the Feb 27 escape, he said it would not have happened but for the security and operational lapses.

'Mas Selamat was able to exploit these weaknesses when the opportunity arose,' said the minister.

'A window that should have grills but did not; guards who should have maintained line of sight of the detainee under their escort, and who should have immediately checked why the detainee took so long in the urinal cubicle, but did not; physical security weaknesses that were not plugged - these all point to a slackening in internal vigilance and supervision.'

He added: 'Complacency for whatever reason, be it fatigue given the protracted security operations by ISD since 2001 or routinisation over time, had crept into the operating culture at WRDC.'

He said the staff there might have been lulled into complacency by the fact that no detainee had escaped from the facility before.

'Even when the guards and the Special Duty Operative became concerned over the time Mas Selamat was taking in the toilet, they did not think that he might have escaped,' he said.

On why Mas Selamat was not held in Changi Prison instead, Mr Wong said that on hindsight, it would have been a less problematic solution.

But he said that in Mas Selamat's case, the Jemaah Islamiah leader was not hostile so ISD held him at Whitley Road in hopes of gaining useful intelligence from him.

Mr Wong added: 'What has happened is a costly and painful wake-up call.'

No economic backlash

Responding to questions by MPs during question time, Mr Wong also said that EDB has not received any information that there is a loss of investor confidence as a result of Mas Selamat's escape.

Trade Minister Lim Hng Kiang also said the impact on the economy caused by the security checks at the Causeway and other areas is not known yet as the search is an ongoing operation.

*********************************************
Gone in 11 minutes
DPM Wong details events on day of Mas Selamat's escape
by Jeremy Au Yong

AT SOME point between 3.54pm and 4.05pm on Feb 27 - from the time heentered the toilet to the time the alert was raised - Mas SelamatKastari made a break for it.  In a urinal cubicle and out of sight from his guards, he escapedout of a ventilation window and is then thought to have made it overthe Whitley Road Detention Centre's double perimeter fence via the roofof an enclosed walkway.

On Monday, the highly anticipated full account of theterrorist leader's escape, as promised by Home Affairs Minister WongKan Seng, was finally disclosed in Parliament.
During an hour-long speech listened to by rapt MPs, Mr Wongtold in vivid detail the story of an escape plan that appeared to havebeen hatched ahead of time, and that seized on a 'confluence' of humanerrors and physical security lapses.

The lapses include a window with no grilles, guards who failed in their duties, and CCTV cameras that were not turned on.
His assessment of these breaches was damning: 'The mistakeshave turned out to be so simple as to appear silly and incredible.'

A five-page executive summary from the report of the Committee ofInquiry (COI) set up to investigate the escape, was also released onMonday. The Minister's comments, together with the report's summary,gave the public, for the first time, a detailed picture of what likelyhappened on the day Mas Selamat fled.
On that day, the 47-year-old Jemaah Islamiah leader had beendue for a visit from his family members between 4pm and 4.30pm.

At 3.30pm, he was escorted from his cell by three people - two Gurkha guards and a Special Duty Operative.

The Special Duty Operative's job is to make administrativearrangements for family visits, which include supervising the movementof detainees.

From the cell block, he was first taken to a locker block tochange into civilian clothes. Detainees are allowed to dress incivilian clothes for family visits.
Inside the locker room, Mas Selamat put his plan into action.

He asked the guard for a curtain so he could change behind it.As there were no curtains, he stood behind a column of lockers tochange.

That was to be the first of two times within less than half an hour that the guards let him out of their sights.  
While unseen, it is believed that Mas Selamat put on at leasttwo layers of clothes. He emerged dressed in a light yellow baju kurungand greenish grey pants.
He would later use this pair of pants as a decoy while he bolted to freedom.




[ Last edited by  fatz at 22-4-2008 06:31 AM ]
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Post time 22-4-2008 02:57 AM | Show all posts
still at large ropenya...
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