
Jail for man who offered S$53 'kopi money' to officers who caught him selling sexual enhancement drugs
SINGAPORE: A man caught selling sexual enhancement medication in Geylang repeatedly tried to offer S$53 (US$41) in "kopi money'' to two officers so that they would not investigate him over the illicit activity.
Chen Shaowei, who offered the bribe no fewer than seven times, said he was under the impression that - like officers from some other countries - these officers would "go away" once given the money to "drink coffee".
Chen, a 39-year-old Chinese national, was sentenced to 14 weeks' jail on Tuesday (Jun 3), after he pleaded guilty to one count of corruption and one count of using criminal force on a senior security officer who seized his sexual enhancement medication.
Another two charges of a similar nature were considered for his sentencing.
Chen was spotted beside a makeshift table with what appeared to be sexual enhancement medication on May 31, 2023.
The two officers who interacted with him then were Mr Mohammad Alfa Ramli, a technical specialist employed by the Health Sciences Authority (HSA) and Mr Chai Kit Wey, an Aetos Auxillary Police Officer attached to the HotSpots Operation Team of the HSA.
The two were partners were on an operation to disrupt the sale of illegal health products at Geylang that day.
Upon seeing Chen, Mr Alfa approached him and placed his hand on his shoulder.
Chen tried to flee but Mr Alfa patted him on the shoulders and told him to sit down.
As Chen could not speak English, Mr Alfa asked Mr Chai for help to obtain his particulars, but Chen refused to cooperate.
He tried to deny that the medication was his and dithered when asked when he had arrived in Singapore.
At one point, Chen took out S$53 in cash from his back pocket and offered it to Mr Chai. Mr Alfa pushed Chen's arm away.
They warned Chen against bribery, but Chen persisted in offering the "kopi money", even after he was placed under arrest.
"When the accused was later interviewed, he admitted that he had learned the word 'kopi' while in Malaysia and that he was under the impression that Mr Chai and Mr Alfa were like the officers in China and Malaysia – that is, that they would 'let (him) go' and 'go away' once he gives them money to 'drink coffee'," the prosecution said.
Chen admitted to offering both officers "money for kopi" so that they would stop asking him about his stay in Singapore and about the medication.
He was arrested and released on bail on Jun 1, 2023.
PUSHED OFFICER
About a year later, while on bail, Chen had another encounter with officers over sexual enhancement drugs.
On May 24, 2024, officers from the Certis CISCO Auxiliary Police Force seized the medication from a red container in Geylang after a tip-off from a owner of a nearby store.
At about 10.27pm, Chen approached the officers aggressively and tried to snatch the bag of medication. He shouted in Mandarin to ask why the officers were taking his drugs when he did not display them.
One of the officers tried to hold off Chen, who then pushed him in the chest and upper arms while trying to grab the bag.
He then shoved the officer holding the bag, grabbed the stash and fled. The incident was captured by a body-worn camera.
Chen was arrested the next day and released on bail.
Chen's lawyer John Koh from Avalon Law Corporation sought three months' jail for his client, less than the prosecution's proposed four-month jail term.
Mr Koh said Chen had offered bribes in the "spur of the moment". Similarly for his client's charge of using criminal force, Mr Koh said the offence was in "the heat of the moment".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
China urges EU to stop 'provoking trouble' in South China Sea
BEIJING: The Chinese embassy in the Philippines urged the European Union to stop "provoking trouble" in the South China Sea on Thursday (Jun 5), and advised Manila not to "fantasise" about relying on outside forces to resolve disputes in the waterway. An embassy spokesperson made the comments after EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas visited the Philippine capital and voiced concern over China's activities in the busy waterway, where its claims overlap those of some Southeast Asian nations. "We urge the EU to genuinely respect China's territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests in the South China Sea and to stop provoking trouble," the spokesperson said in a statement on the embassy website, noting the bloc has no right to interfere. The spokesperson also said Manila should return to dialogue and consultation to manage differences with China instead of "fantasising about relying on external forces" to resolve the South China Sea dispute. The Philippine embassy in Beijing did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. The EU and the Philippines have expressed concerns about China's "illegal, coercive, aggressive and deceptive measures" against Philippine vessels and aircraft conducting lawful maritime operations in the South China Sea, according to a joint statement after Kallas met with Philippine foreign minister earlier this week. China claims sovereignty over nearly all the South China Sea, including parts of the exclusive economic zones of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.


Independent Singapore
2 hours ago
- Independent Singapore
'Cats can't scream but we can': Viral petition renews calls for stronger animal cruelty Enforcement in Singapore
SINGAPORE: A petition titled 'Cats Can't Scream But We Can' has captured the public's attention, gathering over 14,000 signatures in just days. Sparked by a wave of brutal attacks on community cats, the campaign thrusts into the spotlight a growing plea: that the quiet creatures living among us deserve meaningful protection, not just sympathy. The petition's opening lines cut straight to the heart: 'They live among us— not owned, but loved. Yet they are being hunted… kicked, maimed, killed.' A growing crisis, largely unseen Last year, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) recorded 961 confirmed cruelty and welfare cases, the highest total in twelve years. Of the 2,190 animals affected, nearly two-thirds were cats, whose gentle presence in neighbourhood void decks and stairwells has made them easy targets for violence. Among the most heartbreaking recent incidents: King Kong, a stray in Yishun, was found with his eyes gouged and organs torn (May 2025). Sunshine, a Tampines fixture for over a decade, was discovered bloodied and abandoned in a bin (May 2025). Field Field—affectionately known as 'Garfield'— was allegedly thrown from a 38th-floor apartment in Whampoa (October 2024). And in Haig Road, residents have watched a woman stalk, kick, and injure cats for more than two years, only to learn that no charges can be laid because there was no CCTV footage of the exact blow. Families who once called these cats friends now find themselves grappling with grief, anger, and a sense of helplessness. Five Demands, One Clear Message In response, petitioners have outlined five urgent calls to action—each meant to plug gaps in Singapore's current approach: Allow cumulative evidence in prosecutions. Under the existing Animals and Birds Act, prosecutors must tie cruelty directly to an individual's actions. Petitioners argue that veterinary reports and witness statements, taken together, should meet the burden of proof even when the exact moment of harm isn't on camera. Introduce restraining orders or zone exclusions. Much like Personal Protection Orders in domestic-violence cases, these would keep known abusers away from areas frequented by community cats. Deploy mobile CCTV units and conduct regular patrols. Many of the violence hotspots—void decks, stairwells, underpasses—are dark, unlit, and easy to hide in. Petitioners say that visible deterrents and on-the-ground patrols could stop many attacks before they happen. Toughen sentencing: mandatory jail time and judicial caning for repeat or sadistic offenders. While current penalties allow for up to two years' imprisonment and fines, petitioners believe these measures aren't enough. 'We've seen people who come back again and again,' one feeder told us. 'Until the punishment truly hurts, they won't stop.' Declare animal cruelty a national crisis. This is perhaps the most symbolic ask—an official acknowledgement that unchecked violence against defenceless animals represents a broader moral failing. Petitioners insist that naming the problem is a first step toward real change. Youth, repeat offenders, and a fraying social compact Another worrying trend is the rise in cruelty cases involving minors. In 2024 alone, 15 youth—some as young as primary-school age—were implicated in animal abuse. From children lifting rabbits by their ears to teenagers kicking birds in public, these incidents hint at deeper issues of desensitisation. SPCA notes that, 'In a developmental stage where peer influence takes precedence, youth learn quickly from one another. If the situation is not arrested, they may get desensitised to animal cruelty and regard it as the norm.' As the petition accelerates from social media into mainstream discourse, it underscores a growing impatience with the perceived gap between legislation on the books and the brutal reality on the ground. If you witness or suspect animal cruelty, please contact the SPCA's 24/7 hotline at 6287 5355 ext. 9, AVS at 1800 476 1600, or dial 999 for emergencies.


Independent Singapore
2 hours ago
- Independent Singapore
New era in education: Desmond Lee revamps teacher training and MOE's direction to prepare students for a changing world
SINGAPORE: Teachers, long seen as the quiet engine of Singapore's education system, may soon experience a shift in how they are trained — and recognised. At the 12th Teachers' Conference and ExCEL Fest (TCEF2025) held at the Singapore Expo this week, newly appointed Education Minister Desmond Lee announced a revamp of the Postgraduate Diploma in Education (PGDE), the foundational training programme for degree holders entering the teaching profession. In his first major policy address since taking the helm at the Ministry of Education (MOE), Lee framed the overhaul as both practical and philosophical — a way to future-proof the system not just for students, but for the educators guiding them. 'We learn by doing,' he said. 'And we will walk alongside our new teachers as you hone your craft to help our students learn and grow.' From theory to practice: A faster, flexible pathway The PGDE, currently a 16-month course administered by the National Institute of Education (NIE), will be shortened to a one-year programme. For decades, the PGDE has served as the professional gateway for aspiring teachers, covering education studies, curriculum specialisations, practicum stints in schools, and language training. Its broad-based academic rigour has trained generations of teachers, but it has also drawn critique for being rigid, overly theoretical, and misaligned with the fast-evolving challenges of today's classroom. See also Leon Perera asks: Do we have true meritocracy in Singapore? The new model hopes to change that, not by discarding theory, but by embedding it meaningfully in hands-on teaching environments. For many in the education space, this signals a long-overdue shift away from a passive, credential-heavy pipeline towards one that privileges agility, creativity, and real-world responsiveness. Teaching in the age of AI, fragmentation, and climate crisis But this wasn't just a bureaucratic update to a diploma. In a speech delivered to a packed hall of teachers and parents, Lee used the moment to reflect on what Singaporean education must become — and what teachers must be equipped to face. 'The world our children will inherit will be very different from the one we now know,' he said. Pointing to global conflict, rising protectionism, the encroachment of AI, and the misinformation glut on social media, Lee described a landscape of seismic change — one where traditional answers no longer suffice. 'Intelligence will tell us to push the boundaries,' he added. 'But we will also need moral judgment to tell us where to stop.' That dual charge — equipping students with both capability and conscience — now falls more heavily on educators. It is, in Lee's words, a call for teachers to 'nurture values-driven pioneers, innovators, problem-solvers, bridge-builders, connectors and contributors for the betterment of our community, our nation, and even the region and the world.' From 'good workers' to thoughtful designers? Critics of Singapore's education system have long argued that it focuses too heavily on producing efficient workers rather than original thinkers. In that light, Lee's address — and the structural reforms it accompanies — reads as more than an administrative refresh. It may mark a deeper shift in ethos. In workshops held during the conference, teachers explored everything from the chemistry behind cooking to nature journaling as a medium for building a sense of place — activities that subtly underscore the move toward creativity, experimentation, and context-rich learning. Lee has said, 'Not only do we want our students to learn how to navigate a more complex world, we hope that our students will also grow up to be values-driven pioneers, innovators, problem-solvers, bridge-builders, connectors and contributors for the betterment of our community, our nation, and even the region and the world. Only then can Singapore continue to be a shining light far beyond SG60.' For a system often accused of being rigid, this growing encouragement of flexibility and design thinking feels intentional. And with Lee — one of the younger ministers in Cabinet — now overseeing the ministry, MOE may finally be signalling a generational turn in tone and ambition. Opening the classroom to second careers The refreshed PGDE also opens the door wider to mid-career professionals — individuals who bring with them industry experience, life lessons, and alternative worldviews. Lee expressed hope that more such professionals will join the teaching fraternity, noting their potential to 'bring values, industry experience, and heart into the classroom.' In a time when moral literacy, critical reasoning, and interdisciplinary fluency are increasingly vital, the inclusion of diverse teaching profiles could prove to be a quiet revolution in bureaucratic Singapore — one built not from the top down, but from the evolution of the classroom up. What this means for the road ahead As Singapore looks to its post-SG60 future, education reform remains one of the most sensitive yet vital fronts. The PGDE revamp — while technical in nature — may be the first step in a larger reimagining of what it means to teach, and what it means to learn, in the republic. It's not just about shortening a course. It's about reshaping the journey. Because if, as Lee says, the classroom is where the next generation learns how to navigate complexity, then teacher training is where the map gets drawn. And now, it seems, that map is beginning to evolve for the students it hopes to guide.