Ex-boyfriend posts nude pictures of exec on Internet
A COMPANY executive has sought the help of the MCA Public Services and Complaints Department after her former boyfriend from Hong Kong posted nude pictures of her on the Internet.
Sin Chew Daily reported that 25-year-old Chen said the man used her e-mail account to send out the pictures to her friends, colleagues and family members.
The couple met in 2004 while both were studying in Australia. Chen decided to call off their relationship in September last year. She is working in Malaysia, and he in the financial sector in Shanghai, China.
The man had made numerous calls to Chen to reconcile, but to no avail. Unable to accept the decision, he sent out the pictures as an apparent act of revenge.
Chen said she only knew about it after one of her friends received the offending e-mail last week. Her friends and colleagues had since promised not to circulate the pictures.
Embarrassed by the incident, Chen said she was in two minds as to whether she ought to remain working where she was.
Department head Datuk Michael Chong said he would accompany Chen to meet the man, who had informed her via e-mail that he would meet her in Kuala Lumpur tomorrow.
Chong said the department had so far received 26 such cases since 2006, six of these in the first half of this year.
The daily also reported that Chinese primary schools in four states – Penang, Pahang, Malacca and Perak – were facing problems in hiring temporary teachers.
Quoting United Chinese School Teachers Association (Jiao Zong) president Ong Chiow Chuan, the daily said the cause of the problem was insufficient allocation from the respective state education departments.
As such, the school authorities could not afford to hire temporary school teachers to replace those on training stints and maternity leave. Ong said Penang was the hardest hit; it needed 50 such teachers.
A COMPANY executive has sought the help of the MCA Public Services and Complaints Department after her former boyfriend from Hong Kong posted nude pictures of her on the Internet.
Sin Chew Daily reported that 25-year-old Chen said the man used her e-mail account to send out the pictures to her friends, colleagues and family members.
The couple met in 2004 while both were studying in Australia. Chen decided to call off their relationship in September last year. She is working in Malaysia, and he in the financial sector in Shanghai, China.
The man had made numerous calls to Chen to reconcile, but to no avail. Unable to accept the decision, he sent out the pictures as an apparent act of revenge.
Chen said she only knew about it after one of her friends received the offending e-mail last week. Her friends and colleagues had since promised not to circulate the pictures.
Embarrassed by the incident, Chen said she was in two minds as to whether she ought to remain working where she was.
Department head Datuk Michael Chong said he would accompany Chen to meet the man, who had informed her via e-mail that he would meet her in Kuala Lumpur tomorrow.
Chong said the department had so far received 26 such cases since 2006, six of these in the first half of this year.
The daily also reported that Chinese primary schools in four states – Penang, Pahang, Malacca and Perak – were facing problems in hiring temporary teachers.
Quoting United Chinese School Teachers Association (Jiao Zong) president Ong Chiow Chuan, the daily said the cause of the problem was insufficient allocation from the respective state education departments.
As such, the school authorities could not afford to hire temporary school teachers to replace those on training stints and maternity leave. Ong said Penang was the hardest hit; it needed 50 such teachers.