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Bangladesh Air Force jet crashes into Dhaka college campus

Bangladesh Air Force jet crashes into Dhaka college campus

CNA22-07-2025
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Bangladesh Air Force jet crashes into Dhaka college campus
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Man fined for damaging PAP posters, flags during 2025 General Election
Man fined for damaging PAP posters, flags during 2025 General Election

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

Man fined for damaging PAP posters, flags during 2025 General Election

SINGAPORE: A man who damaged People's Action Party (PAP) campaign posters and broke flag poles on GE2025 Polling Day was fined S$5,300 (US$4,130) by a court on Thursday (Aug 7). Seng Guan Heng, 57, apologised to the court for his "mistake" and said he has decided to quit drinking because of this incident. Seng pleaded guilty to a charge each of mischief, harassment by cursing at PAP volunteers, and being drunk in a public place. Another two charges were taken into consideration. WHAT HAPPENED The court heard that Seng drank five to six bottles of beer while with his friends at a coffeeshop at Block 327, Hougang Avenue 5, on May 3. He left the coffeeshop intoxicated at 11.20pm and passed an open car park nearby where he saw a parked lorry that the PAP had used for campaigning. The lorry displayed two PAP flags and six election posters, affixed to the side railings with cable ties. The court heard Seng was upset over the General Election and intended to cause damage to the PAP. He ripped five posters from the lorry, causing small tears in each poster, and threw them to the ground. He also tore two flags off the lorry by breaking the flag poles. In total, the items cost about S$205. He then took one of the flags and walked around shouting vulgarities before throwing the flag on the ground and leaving. A few PAP volunteers noticed the acts and gathered at a sheltered walkway, with at least one person filming Seng. Seng returned minutes later. When he saw the group of PAP volunteers, he shouted Hokkien vulgarities and pointed his middle fingers at them. An election agent appointed by the PAP, who was with the group, called the police to report what had happened. The police arrived and the election agent pointed Seng out. Noticing this, Seng began cursing again. The police observed Seng's unsteady gait and a strong smell of alcohol on him. He had appeared drunk in a public place and conducted himself in a manner causing annoyance to the election agent, the prosecutor said. He was arrested and later released on bail. The PAP is not pursuing compensation for the damaged property, said the prosecutor. She said the prosecution would not object to a fine being imposed. DECIDED TO QUIT DRINKING: SENG Seng was unrepresented. He passed a mitigation letter to a Mandarin interpreter, who read it to the court. In it, he said he was remorseful for his mistake. "After the mistake, I have decided to quit drinking and I no longer drink at home nor overseas," he said. "Please believe that I will definitely not reoffend." He apologised to the affected people, especially the volunteers and the owners of the posters. He said he was facing life and money stressors, with his father and sister in hospital on the day of the incident. His sister is unmarried and has been suffering from a mental illness, going in and out of hospital. His daughter has dropped out of secondary education due to a mental condition and his mother suffered a stroke and relies on a wheelchair and a maid. "Originally, I had wanted to go drinking to destress. Little did I know that I would commit a mistake after getting drunk," said Seng. "I plead for a light sentence. I cannot lose my job. I am a pillar of support for two families."

North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul
North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul

CNA

time4 hours ago

  • CNA

North Korean rescued after swimming across border: Seoul

SEOUL: A North Korean defector who swam across a sea border with South Korea while reportedly tied to a floating plastic has been rescued and taken into custody, Seoul authorities said on Thursday (Aug 7). The North Korean managed to swim across the de facto maritime border off the western coast of the Korean peninsula on the night of Jul 30, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The border is known as the Northern Limit Line and has occasionally served as a route for North Korean defectors swimming to South Korea's Ganghwa Island. "The military identified the individual near the north of the mid-river boundary," a military official told reporters. The individual, who local media reported was tied to styrofoam when he was found, waved for help and said he wanted to defect to South Korea when asked by a South Korean naval officer, the official said. The operation took about 10 hours, according to Seoul, and the individual was rescued at around 4am (3am, Singapore time) on Jul 31. The North Korean is now in custody and has expressed their wish to defect, the defence ministry said. Ganghwa Island, located northwest of Seoul, is one of the closest South Korean territories to North Korea, with some parts of the surrounding sea lying just 10km from the maritime border between the two countries. Tens of thousands of North Koreans have fled to the South since the peninsula was divided by war in the 1950s, with most going overland to neighbouring China first, then entering a third country such as Thailand before finally making it to the South. Defections across the land border that divides the peninsula are relatively rare, as the area is densely forested, heavily mined and monitored by soldiers on both sides. But a North Korean man defected last month to the South by crossing the Military Demarcation Line. The number of successful escapes dropped significantly from 2020 after the North sealed its borders - purportedly with shoot-on-sight orders along the frontier with China - to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

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