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154th Sayang PDMM Whores, Should Import More Woh!

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
While poor Sporns deserve to be kicked in their balls in the words of that Wee bitch?

<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Tough life for 'study mamas'
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- Author --><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Mavis Toh
</TD></TR><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>




<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->The China Embassy estimates that there are about 5,000 peidu mamas in Singapore.
These are Chinese women who come here on long-term visit passes because their children are studying here.
There are about 36,000 Chinese students here, up from 32,000 in 2006.
A member from the Hua Yuan Association for new Chinese migrants says that Singapore is popular with students from China because of its predominant Chinese culture and the use of the language. It is also safe and geographically close to China and schools here charge reasonable fees.
China nationals interviewed said that about 70per cent of peidu (a Mandarin term which literally means 'accompany study') mamas are divorced.

=> And soon, 70% of Sporns' families will be wrecked by them?

These mothers generally fall into three categories:
Wealthy ones who do not have to work, who live in private apartments in districts nine and 10 and who drive their children - who are usually in the better schools - around.

=> How many poor Sporns are being displaced as a result?

Middle-class mothers who are in service jobs like sales or who give Chinese tuition to Singaporean students. They live in HDB flats and their children attend neighbourhood schools.
Poorer study mamas who work in coffee shops and clean homes, live in HDB flats and whose children are also in neighbourhood schools.
Peidu mamas have made the news in Singapore since 2002, although not always for good reasons. Some have been called 'husband snatchers', others have been found registered with matchmaking agencies although they are married, and there are those who work in the sex trade.
The recent Yishun triple deaths were a hot topic among China nationals here and also much discussed on online Chinese forums. Most netizens expressed sadness for the victims and some tried to rally China nationals in Singapore to help the teenage survivor.
A peidu mama who wanted to be known only as Madam Chen said that most of these women lead difficult lives.
'Our life here is already so tough, this gruesome murder is going to make it worse,' said Madam Chen, 45. Three years ago, she left her job and husband behind in Tianjin to accompany her son, now 16, here. She cleans people's homes for a living.
While she used to get about eight jobs a week, the number has dropped to five since the Yishun murders. 'When Singaporeans see the trouble China nationals get into, they get worried and don't trust us anymore,' she said. Most study mamas are on long-term visit passes. They are not allowed to work in their first year here. Thereafter, they can apply for a work permit, but are banned from working as bar and dance hostesses, masseuses and at food stalls.

=> Has the ban been enforced?
Peidu mama Dai Kai, 40, said renting apartments was often a headache for China nationals. 'Singaporeans say they don't want trouble and will rent only to Malaysians,' she added.
Madam Hu Xiu Ling, 36, said her heart sinks whenever she reads negative reports on study mamas. She hopes the Government will not tighten the rules against them because of the Yishun killings.

=> Dun worry lah! The compassionate Familee will relax them further since they create more biz for divorce lawyers!
'The last thing we want is more rules, making it harder for us to find jobs,' she said. 'We just want a simple life and a good education for our children.' Do you think peidu mamas get a raw deal here? Send your comments to [email protected]
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Struggle from day one for divorced mum abd daughter
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>




<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->When Madam Zhang Jin Mei found out in 2002 that her husband was cheating on her, she divorced him and left China with their only child.
She paid an agent $500 to arrange for the girl, then 15, to be enrolled in a government school in Singapore.
Then with $4,000 borrowed from friends and family, the mother and daughter left Shandong province in eastern China to start a new life.
'I have one good pair of hands, I was sure we could survive here,' Madam Zhang, 54, said in Mandarin.
She had never been to Singapore before, and did not have any family here.
When they arrived, the soft-spoken mother found out that the school in which the agent had enrolled her daughter was just a private language centre.
'We went from school to school, at least 10 of them, to see which one would take my daughter in,' she said. 'We didn't know English. It was so tough.'
Depressed, she wanted to go back to China but her daughter, Amy, said no. 'We left everything behind. It would have been a disgrace to go back,' said Amy, now 21.
The girl was eventually accepted into a secondary school in Woodlands and Madam Zhang found work as a waitress at a steamboat restaurant.
Today, Amy is studying for a diploma in electrical engineering at Singapore Polytechnic and hopes to work here. They live in a four-room flat in Bukit Batok.

=> No $ can live in 4rm flat?
Life is better for them now, but their financial struggles are not over.
Two weeks ago, the restaurant Madam Zhang had been working in for five years closed down. She now cleans up to five houses a week for $10 an hour.
'Every day I worry about money,' she said, adding that she cannot wait to return to China once her daughter graduates.
Mavis Toh
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Wah seh! Another writeup to psycho Sporns to accept "entrepreneurial" PDMM whores! Cheepskate till like this?

<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Call me an entrepreneur
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --><TR vAlign=bottom><TD width=330>
ST_IMAGES_MVMAMA2.jpg

</TD><TD width=10>
c.gif
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>




<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->Madam Yan Hong (with her son) may be in Singapore because her son studies here, but she takes umbrage if you call her a peidu mama.
She is quick to remind you that she holds an EntrePass for entrepreneurs, not the long-term visit pass that most study mamas have.
The 39-year-old from Xian, the capital of Shaanxi province in north-central China, adds that she does not attend gatherings organised by study mamas here.
'Everyone just talks about their problems at those meetings. I do not feel good attending them,' she said.
Madam Yan, who has a master's degree in economics from the Central Party School, an institution which trains Chinese leaders, owned a property management company and a vocational school business back home.

=> Valued more than MBA in NUS by the Familee since she does not hold the pink IC?

In 2006, the well-spoken divorcee decided to take her son, her only child, to Singapore because she felt that the education system in China was too stressful. Besides, both her sisters had been studying and working in Singapore for 16 years.
Her son, now 12, is studying in a primary school in Bukit Batok. He topped his class last year. 'He loves it here - the school, the teachers, the environment,' she said.

=> Wait a min. And the class he is in is for Pri 1 Sporns? Expect a free scholarship to be given to him and he can skip NS at the same time?

But the adjustment was more difficult for her. Chinese nationals who hold good jobs in Singapore tend to look down on study mamas, she said.
She added that study mamas tend to get into trouble because they are lonely. 'One mother, one child, you feel alone and have no outlet for the stress and pressure. That is why many get into relationship problems here.'
Madam Yan, who lives in a flat in Bukit Batok, has partnered a Singaporean to start a health product chain here and they have two shops.
Last year, she invested $300,000 of her savings in two local companies, both of which are now under probe by the Commercial Affairs Department.

=> Wah seh! Either she's blind or she's trying to act blur. $300k capital from selling kar chng?

She is unlikely to get her money back.
During that time, counsellors from a family service centre here and friends from the church she attends stood by her.
'I am really grateful for the help Singaporeans have shown towards us,' she said. 'I hope China professionals here will try to understand study mamas better.'

=> 66% coolie rice bowlers will support whoever the Familee loves!

Mavis Toh
 

DIVISION1

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore gives divorcee Chinese mothers a second chance as they learn to cherish a second chance and have a hungry spirit. We need hungry spirits in Singapore to remain competitve. Perhaps second marriages may make single Singaporean male citizens stronger and more responsible mn.
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Singapore gives divorcee Chinese mothers a second chance as they learn to cherish a second chance and have a hungry spirit. We need hungry spirits in Singapore to remain competitve. Perhaps second marriages may make single Singaporean male citizens stronger and more responsible mn.

Lotsa hungry spirits roam free in lunar month of July. Have they made a running dog like yourself stronger?
 

DIVISION1

Alfrescian
Loyal
If this is a question directed at me, I am happily married to a foreign talent. Unsubstantiated discrimination against chinese women divorcees makes bad arguments.
 

nitecrawllerr

Alfrescian
Loyal
This stupid F/T policy is really affecting sillyporean ricebowl. On the contrary to wat the garment claim tat it benefits us on the whole, I only see it benefits the retail shop, hawkers but definitely not to those whose jobs were being taken away/replaced by those F/T. The British used to be our colonial Master. But very very near future those F/T would be our "Master". :rolleyes:
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
This stupid F/T policy is really affecting sillyporean ricebowl. On the contrary to wat the garment claim tat it benefits us on the whole, I only see it benefits the retail shop, hawkers but definitely not to those whose jobs were being taken away/replaced by those F/T. The British used to be our colonial Master. But very very near future those F/T would be our "Master". :rolleyes:

TV2008080918350200-1.jpg


Hey! Mind your words! I am still your Emperor! *hee*hee*
 

kuntakinte

Alfrescian
Loyal
This is the kind of Shit one can expect from The Shitty Times managed by Shitty Press Holding - When you HOLD your SHIT for too loong, there is a PRESSing need to ease off !!

Reporters/Journalists with F88ked brains write f88ked up articles !! After reading them, you wonder what f88ks are they trying to propagate ??

While poor Sporns deserve to be kicked in their balls in the words of that Wee bitch?
 
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