• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Chitchat Jiuhu SYT gets $1K a month internship

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Apr 14, 2011
Messages
16,892
Points
113
Malaysian who graduated from NUS in May gets $1k a month as an intern
Ms Germaine Lim, 24, stays alone in a rented bedroom in Bukit Batok and earns $1,000 a month as an intern in a construction firm.

All she earns goes towards her rent of $550, her meals and transport.

The Malaysian, who is a Tuition Grant Scheme (TGS) recipient, has been struggling to find a job since she graduated from the National University of Singapore in May.

The political science graduate sent out about 40 job applications but received only one offer - for an internship. This was in lieu of a full-time position, which would have entailed a monthly levy of $650 if she had been hired on an S Pass, she said.

"Though I didn't get the job, I'm thankful they offered me an internship as an alternative," Ms Lim said.

The three-month internship may have bought her some time, but she is growing more anxious by the day.

Her internship will end in two weeks, and there are no promising leads in her job search.

"There are times when I feel really demoralised about not being able to find a job because of the financial strain and the mental stress of not being able to serve my bond.

"It's frustrating when employers write me off the moment I mention I'm a Malaysian," said Ms Lim, the only child of a single mother.

Asked what can be done to help struggling TGS recipients like herself, Ms Lim said: "It would help greatly if the Government could exempt us from the EP (Employment Pass) minimum salary requirement, as well as the S Pass quota and levy. Perhaps, forgive some of the bond period while stringent restrictions against hiring foreigners are in place."

Ms Lim, who has been living in Singapore for five years, sees the silver lining amid her difficulties.

"At least I have my family with me here. My mum lives with one of my aunts, who is a Singaporean, and their flat is right across the road from where I'm staying.

"It's less lonely, and I always have someone to turn to when I hit a wall," she said.

Ms Lim continues to submit two to three job applications a day and is "hopeful that something will come up".

1600572447292.jpeg


 
That why not worth it to be a local citizen, if stuck here better don hv kids when married, go awsy n cone back to leech in sg.The whole sg system sucks for our young generation.
 
She should thank her lucky starts. Interns elsewhere is paid nothing.
KNN after graduate and before graduate is a different thing KNN those companies just want cheap labour offering internship to desperate graduates KNN my uncle would have leejected those offers KNN
 
Go back Malaysia n work there lah.. Don't hang around here n compete for jobs with Sinkies..
 
Intern or trainee...cheap labour for employers. Please go back to where u come.Don't look back !
 
Whenever the Shitty Times publish these kind of articles, it has an agenda. :wink:
 
Why should mudlanders n other foreigners get scholarships to bus? Where is the oppies on this ? The way this mudlanders talk like as of singkies n singkies owe them a living
 
Why should mudlanders n other foreigners get scholarships to bus? Where is the oppies on this ? The way this mudlanders talk like as of singkies n singkies owe them a living
Malaysian are not foreigners. They have been seeking work in sinkie since British times. Sinkie was the Manhattan of Malaya. Its where everyone ftom peninsular go to seek fame and fortune.among them were numerous malay actors and actresses and singers.
 
Malaysian are not foreigners. They have been seeking work in sinkie since British times. Sinkie was the Manhattan of Malaya. Its where everyone ftom peninsular go to seek fame and fortune.among them were numerous malay actors and actresses and singers.
Don't forgot they are the ones who kick us off in the 1st place.
If they are not foreign, they should be holding Singapore passport.
All jobs should be gear toward our true locals, qualifications equivalent.
 
Malaysian are not foreigners. They have been seeking work in sinkie since British times. Sinkie was the Manhattan of Malaya. Its where everyone ftom peninsular go to seek fame and fortune.among them were numerous malay actors and actresses and singers.
If u think that way...u ain't no singkie
 
Her internship coolie kang is not pay by the company but by all the taxpayers. Why the fark give foreigners internships. Shd be local only.
 
Malaysian are not foreigners. They have been seeking work in sinkie since British times. Sinkie was the Manhattan of Malaya. Its where everyone ftom peninsular go to seek fame and fortune.among them were numerous malay actors and actresses and singers.
So meaning u trying to say a Sinkie working in Mudland is not a foreigner but a local?
Please lah, use your brain n think a bit!
 
This just proves mudland needs singkieland more than singkieland needs mudland

Report: More than 15,000 Malaysians lost their jobs in Singapore due to Covid-19 | Malay Mail
Human Resources Minister Datuk M. Saravanan is pictured at Parliament in Kuala Lumpur July 20, 2020. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
Human Resources Minister Datuk M. Saravanan is pictured at Parliament in Kuala Lumpur July 20, 2020. — Picture by Yusof Mat Isa
KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 22 — Official data showed that 15,666 Malaysians have lost their jobs across the Causeway between January and July 2020, as the Covid-19 pandemic hit the labour market.

The Malaysian Reserve reported Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri M. Saravanan telling the Dewan Negara yesterday that most of those hit were in the service sector.

“Statistics by the Malaysian High Commission in Singapore indicated that Malaysian workers in the service sector were the worst hit, affecting 11,123 people followed by the manufacturing sector with 3,604 workers and construction with 939 workers,” he was quoted saying.

Saravanan was responding to Senator Liew Chin Tong, who asked for data on those who lost their jobs due to the pandemic.

The minister, however, said that the abovementioned figure did not include those who have not returned to Singapore since the movement control order (MCO) took effect on March 18.

Since then, Malaysia and Singapore have closed their borders to each other.

Last month, Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Adham Baba was reported saying his ministry was looking into fully reopening the Malaysia-Singapore border for daily commute, following pressure from the public, whose livelihoods have been affected by the border closing.

On July 26, Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein and his Singaporean counterpart Vivian Balakrishnan met midway at the Johor Causeway and agreed to resume in August cross-border travel.

The measures included the Reciprocal Green Lane, which allows cross-border travel for essential business and official purposes, while the Periodic Commuting Arrangement enables Singapore and Malaysia residents, who hold long-term immigration passes for business and work purposes in the other country, to enter that country for work.
 
So meaning u trying to say a Sinkie working in Mudland is not a foreigner but a local?
Please lah, use your brain n think a bit!
Many sinkies own businesses in jiu hu without any legal documents such as work permit. And authorities can't be bothered to prosecute as they know sinkies are not troublemakers. Unless of course it's a illegal trade.
 
PAP share my thoughts. This is just one example,
You see in the old british days, people from both sides vome and go as they please. Like the example below.
NUS dream to make dad who laboured in Singapore proud, Syed Saddiq tells Twitter critic
Tuesday, 22 Sep 2020 03:12 PM MYT
BY SOO WERN JUN

Syed Saddiq revealed that it had always been his dream to gain a place in NUS. ― Picture by Shafwan Zaidon
Syed Saddiq revealed that it had always been his dream to gain a place in NUS. ― Picture by Shafwan Zaidon
KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 22 — Johor lawmaker Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman today explained his pride in being accepted into the National University of Singapore (NUS) after being criticised for making a big deal of it on social media.
The 27-year-old disclosed that it had always been his dream to gain a place in NUS — widely recognised among the top ranking universities around the world — because of his father.


“My father was a labourer in Singapore and NUS is the best university there.
“As a son, I want to make him happy and proud,” the Muar MP replied former Treasury secretary-general Tan Sri Mohd Irwan Serigar Abdullah on Twitter.

“As a father, I am sure you understand,” he added.




Syed Saddiq recently formed a new Youth-centric political party called Muda after his unceremonious exit from the ruling Bersatu. His grand aspirations have been dismissed by some older allies and derided by those in the opposite bloc.
Irwan had scoffed at Syed Saddiq’s announcement of his NUS scholarship as a senior fellow in public service at its Lee Kuan Yew school in atweet yesterday, saying there were many youths who pursued higher education while working without publicising it on social media.
Syed Saddiq had previously announced that he would be starting online classes at NUS from September 21.
He also shared on Twitter that he had twice turned down an offer at Oxford University for a degree in politics.
The first offer was reportedly a RM400,000 scholarship in 2017. The second rejection was purportedly prior to his contest in GE14 two years ago when he was offered the Chevening Scholarship from the British government for a masters in public policy.
 
Back
Top