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 A Day In The Life Of A Changi Prison Inmate, singapore //6am - 9 pm//

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TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 03:09 PM, updated 6y ago

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A Day In The Life Of A Changi Prison Inmate



January 14, 2020
Prison dramas are a Hollywood favourite, but besides the occasional Crimewatch footage, Singaporeans rarely get a look at Changi Prison Complex.



This begs the question: for the 23,000 inmates being housed in Singapore’s very own prison, what is life like?


Changi Prison Complex


Known to the world as a high-rise, high-tech and above all, claustrophobic facility, Changi Prison has a reputation for inhumane conditions and violating international standards. Are the horror stories really true? Beyond the notion of prison, how do people cope with the lifestyle?


Samuel*, an ex-inmate, likened Changi Prison to an abandoned school. The peeling walls and rows of cells lining the concrete floors look bleak, but the prison is kept clean by the inmates. The complex is divided in clusters, each resembling a HDB block. Every level of the cell is a different housing unit.



The 24-year-old served a three-month stint in Cluster B3 after committing a drug-related crime. Samuel described Changi Prison as a regimented hotel where one could do some reflection and self-discovery. To be exact, an “eat, pray, love with restrictions” – not exactly the vicious prison life you would expect.



His experience isn’t all-compassing though, as the rules and schedules vary from cluster to cluster, which is determined by severity of crime, length of imprisonment and luck.




6AM: Lights On

There are no clocks in prison. Time is indicated by the schedule, announced over an intercom. White fluorescent lights flicker on at 6am sharp. Inmates are given time to wash up, pray or even snooze. The cells come with an en-suite toilet bowl and a shower head, so there is no need to step out.



Just like school, a bell rings to signal the start of the day at 7:30am.

The first muster check commences. Prisoners are to greet the officers and stand beside their bunks while they do a head count. During this time, inmates can report sick or inform the management of any maintenance issues.


Next up, breakfast at 7.45am. All meals are prepared by the napohs, the inmates who work in the kitchen, and served through a doggy door in the cell.


The menu never changes – 4 slices of bread with a stingy serving of either butter or jam and a cup of 3-in-1 Super brand coffee or teh to wash it down.



Source
12PM: Lunch


Lunch is served at 12pm after the second muster check. Lunch is usually vegetarian cai fan, with rice, 1 vegetable and 1 side dish, alternating between

tofu, beancurd and fishcake.

Hot dogs are an occasional treat.


On Wednesdays and Saturdays, rice is swapped out for noodles, either mee goreng (a favourite),

bee hoon or

hor fun.


This is when inmates get innovative, with old-timers keeping their coffee or tea from breakfast to make mee siam or mee rebus from the noodles.



The menu gets an upgrade on holidays. Samuel reports a spread of pandan rice, curry chicken and a fried chicken drumstick on Hari Raya, accompanied by

an hour of festive music.



Food in Changi Prison isn’t the grey slop you would expect, but that doesn’t mean it’s nutritious. After some time, inmates can even feel their hair and nails weakening from the lack of vitamins.



The vegetables are almost expired and aren’t green,


so quantity is key.
Unfortunately, sharing food is a chargeable offence. “Just like communism,” Samuel jokes. Befriending the cookies, or prison workers, comes with perks. Samuel sometimes gets extra food from one of the cookies who serve the food to every cell. Cookies also help out with various housekeeping duties.




2PM: “Outdoor” Activities



2pm is the most anticipated time of the day. Inmates are ushered into the corridor outside the cells, where they wait for their turn at outdoor yard time.




On Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, it’s 1 hour of television and 1 hour of exercise.



Wednesdays and Fridays promise 2 whole hours of IMDA-approved television.


The officers regulate 3 English programmes and 2 in Chinese, Malay or Tamil weekly.



Day room activities also include shaving (inmates have to check with officers for permission to shave intimate areas), reading newspapers, an assortment of board games like


chess, Carom, checkers and Scrabble and chit chat.


Popular conversation topics range from tagging life and gang gossip to kopitiam food recommendations. A mobile library (essentially a shelf) comes in once every 3 weeks on Wednesdays.



Yard time is the only time inmates get to breathe some fresh air. The yard is located on the roof of the block, consisting of


a sepak takraw court beside a

basketball court.


It is built like a bird cage, with barbed wire fencing on all sides, even covering the top of the court.




No complaints though; the unlucky ones housed on level 1 and 2 don’t get the luxury of sunshine as they spend yard time in an

indoor sports hall.



T-shirts aren’t allowed in the yard, and inmates have to undergo a strip search before exercise. Another yard time rule is that the

sepak takraw ball can’t be used to play soccer


due to safety reasons, a rule that is often challenged and reinforced with exasperation.



Games are carried out tournament-style, which can get overly-competitive. In a scuffle Samuel witnessed over a basketball match, a blaring alarm sounded out within a minute. All inmates had to drop to the floor with their hands above their heads. Those involved were then arrested, charged and transferred elsewhere.

Consequences for misbehaviour include solitary or caning.



During this time, an officer will shout jiak you, Hokkien for ‘eat medicine’. Babas, or nurses, will administer the medicine in zip lock bags to those with medical conditions. The officers will watch them swallow the medicine. Some prisoners hide the pills in their mouths for later use.


On weekends, yard time is replaced by religious classes conducted by volunteers in classrooms. Muslim, Buddhist and Roman Catholic classes are held on Saturdays and Christian classes on Sundays.



Most join religious classes just for time out of the cell.


Christian classes are popular as there is an additional Christian bible study class on


Tuesday,

which means double out-of-cell time. However, some do end up converting religions in prison. For others, these classes act as a counselling session or an outlet.



4.30PM: Dinner


An early dinner is served at 4.30pm.


The meal consists of 3 servings of


rice,

vegetables rotating between beansprouts,

bitter gourd,

eggplant,

kangkong or cauliflower

and baked chicken or fish.


Occasionally, cheers will be heard from the cells, which means that there’s curry chicken.


Samuel says that prison curry is


extremely thick and flavourful,

even going as far as to deem it the

best curry chicken he has ever had.



Special diets such as low-sugar, low-protein, non-spicy are available to accommodate to medical conditions. Fruits, usually

an orange or banana

comes with

both lunch and dinner


as an attempt to encourage a balanced diet.


When the kitchen closes for cleaning once a month, dinner is something called a ‘6 pack’ – a measly packet of old-school buns with various fillings such as


red bean.




Source

Coping With 22 Hours Of Lock Up




Besides yard time and religious classes, most of the day is spent within the four narrow walls of the cell. It is very literally imprisonment – even 30 seconds of open-door time is greatly appreciated. How do prisoners keep themselves occupied?



Long-term inmates usually have jobs that pay in credit

after 6 months. Credit can be used to buy snacks like


Nutella, toiletries or miscellaneous items

from the e-kiosk, such as family photos for the homesick.



A trend among old-timers would be to customise their all-blue uniform with their names (or nicknames), a novelty service available at the e-kiosk as well.



For those like Samuel who don’t work, time passes a little slower. They exercise, pore over Sudoku and crosswords books (requested from visitors), confide in their cell mates, or even manage to play chess, fashioned out of rice and magazine.


One unanimous pastime of the inmates is karaoke; it’s common to hear inmates from different cells singing the popular songs in unison.



It helps that there are tablets

provided to inmates for 90 minutes every night, where they can play games like Find the Item, learn subjects like Physics and Biology online,

read e-books and write e-letters via the prison portal.


On top of weekly visits, a tele-visit room allows loved ones to hold a 30-minute video call inmates from the visit points around Singapore.



Spending 22 hours in a confined space can get brutal, but there is community. Inmates lend support to each other to keep morale up. Long-term inmates usually comfort newcomers, sometimes with tough love. People are considerate; be it sharing their tablet time with those who are taking it harder or


flushing with a pail of water to avoid waking their cellmates up.
???????


Lights go off everyday at 9pm, leaving the complex pitch-black.


The first day usually calls for some crying, but eventually it’s easy to fall into the routine of fitful sleep (no thanks to cell mate’s loud snoring) on the cool floor instead of the uncomfortable mat provided. Rinse and repeat at 6am.



*Not his real name.

This post has been edited by plouffle0789: Aug 15 2020, 07:35 PM
Baconateer
post Aug 15 2020, 03:12 PM

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copy and pasta like that

might as well dont open thread

sei sohai
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 03:14 PM

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post Aug 15 2020, 03:14 PM

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tahfeikei
post Aug 15 2020, 03:21 PM

TALK TO MY ENGRISH
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QUOTE(plouffle0789 @ Aug 15 2020, 03:09 PM)
A Day In The Life Of A Changi Prison Inmate
January 14, 2020

*
WindDragon

comments?

This post has been edited by tahfeikei: Aug 15 2020, 03:21 PM
Slowpokeking
post Aug 15 2020, 03:22 PM

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Nice read. Thanks TS.
Chanwsan
post Aug 15 2020, 03:26 PM

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Not this kind of fucking wall of text
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post Aug 15 2020, 03:26 PM

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post Aug 15 2020, 03:28 PM

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No description of "drop the soap"?
SUSM4A1
post Aug 15 2020, 03:28 PM

[*#^♥SONE♥^#]
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No internet

Hmmm
SUSbeanflicker
post Aug 15 2020, 03:29 PM

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Better than sg buloh?
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post Aug 15 2020, 03:30 PM

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WindDragon wanna try? Strip search smile.gif
WindDragon
post Aug 15 2020, 03:35 PM

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QUOTE(tahfeikei @ Aug 15 2020, 03:21 PM)
WindDragon

comments?
*
Wadddaaaafukkkkkk can play iPad for 90 mins each day? Got bed and toilet and can play basketball ? Omg this is not a prison
tahfeikei
post Aug 15 2020, 03:40 PM

TALK TO MY ENGRISH
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QUOTE(WindDragon @ Aug 15 2020, 03:35 PM)
Wadddaaaafukkkkkk can play iPad for 90 mins each day? Got bed and toilet and can play basketball ? Omg this is not a prison
*
1st world maaaaaaaaaaaa
samjet
post Aug 15 2020, 03:55 PM

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When is the time for tahfeikei / buttseks
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post Aug 15 2020, 03:57 PM

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Did anyone summarise? D posting was too long, to many scrolling, i gave up
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post Aug 15 2020, 04:26 PM

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Butsek time is what time?
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post Aug 15 2020, 04:40 PM

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No "running away from gay rapist in the shower" sessions?

Where's the fun in that
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post Aug 15 2020, 04:49 PM

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Shower in own cell. So no worries sudden butsek ma.

Wah. Got ipad, got newspaper?
KLthinker91
post Aug 15 2020, 05:08 PM

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Very interesting

In my opinion they should improve and increase quality and quantity of food

Prison being a punishment is one thing, but for a country as well to do as SG, the least that can be done is provide a nutritionally balanced diet for inmates of the State
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 06:48 PM

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QUOTE(WindDragon @ Aug 15 2020, 03:35 PM)
Wadddaaaafukkkkkk can play iPad for 90 mins each day? Got bed and toilet and can play basketball ? Omg this is not a prison
*
malaysia prison have tv and newspaper???
lznce2679
post Aug 15 2020, 07:05 PM

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pandan rice..
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post Aug 15 2020, 07:10 PM

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i remember one of /k been to jail and shared his experience..He did a AMA session here...good read that one..
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post Aug 15 2020, 07:17 PM

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Keep coffee and tea to make mee siam? Stopped reading there
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 07:31 PM

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QUOTE(Starbucki @ Aug 15 2020, 07:17 PM)
Keep coffee and tea to make mee siam? Stopped reading there
*
Why???
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 07:36 PM

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QUOTE(M4A1 @ Aug 15 2020, 03:28 PM)
No internet

Hmmm
*
Have

They can write e letter..

1 hour 30 minites read e books

Watch tv somemore
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post Aug 15 2020, 07:41 PM

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wtf... was expecting video, instead TS kasi wall of text..

user posted image
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post Aug 15 2020, 07:43 PM

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QUOTE(plouffle0789 @ Aug 15 2020, 03:09 PM)
A Day In The Life Of A Changi Prison Inmate
January 14, 2020
Prison dramas are a Hollywood favourite, but besides the occasional Crimewatch footage, Singaporeans rarely get a look at Changi Prison Complex.
This begs the question: for the 23,000 inmates being housed in Singapore’s very own prison, what is life like?
Changi Prison Complex
Known to the world as a high-rise, high-tech and above all, claustrophobic facility, Changi Prison has a reputation for inhumane conditions and violating international standards. Are the horror stories really true? Beyond the notion of prison, how do people cope with the lifestyle?
Samuel*, an ex-inmate, likened Changi Prison to an abandoned school. The peeling walls and rows of cells lining the concrete floors look bleak, but the prison is kept clean by the inmates. The complex is divided in clusters, each resembling a HDB block. Every level of the cell is a different housing unit.
The 24-year-old served a three-month stint in Cluster B3 after committing a drug-related crime. Samuel described Changi Prison as a regimented hotel where one could do some reflection and self-discovery. To be exact, an “eat, pray, love with restrictions” – not exactly the vicious prison life you would expect.
His experience isn’t all-compassing though, as the rules and schedules vary from cluster to cluster, which is determined by severity of crime, length of imprisonment and luck.
6AM: Lights On

There are no clocks in prison. Time is indicated by the schedule, announced over an intercom. White fluorescent lights flicker on at 6am sharp. Inmates are given time to wash up, pray or even snooze. The cells come with an en-suite toilet bowl and a shower head, so there is no need to step out.
Just like school, a bell rings to signal the start of the day at 7:30am.

The first muster check commences. Prisoners are to greet the officers and stand beside their bunks while they do a head count. During this time, inmates can report sick or inform the management of any maintenance issues.
Next up, breakfast at 7.45am. All meals are prepared by the napohs, the inmates who work in the kitchen, and served through a doggy door in the cell.
The menu never changes – 4 slices of bread with a stingy serving of either butter or jam and a cup of 3-in-1 Super brand coffee or teh to wash it down.
Source
12PM: Lunch
Lunch is served at 12pm after the second muster check. Lunch is usually vegetarian cai fan, with rice, 1 vegetable and 1 side dish, alternating between

tofu, beancurd and fishcake.

Hot dogs are an occasional treat.
On Wednesdays and Saturdays, rice is swapped out for noodles, either mee goreng (a favourite),

bee hoon or

hor fun.
This is when inmates get innovative, with old-timers keeping their coffee or tea from breakfast to make mee siam or mee rebus from the noodles.
The menu gets an upgrade on holidays. Samuel reports a spread of pandan rice, curry chicken and a fried chicken drumstick on Hari Raya, accompanied by

an hour of festive music.
Food in Changi Prison isn’t the grey slop you would expect, but that doesn’t mean it’s nutritious. After some time, inmates can even feel their hair and nails weakening from the lack of vitamins.
The vegetables are almost expired and aren’t green,
so quantity is key.
Unfortunately, sharing food is a chargeable offence. “Just like communism,” Samuel jokes. Befriending the cookies, or prison workers, comes with perks. Samuel sometimes gets extra food from one of the cookies who serve the food to every cell. Cookies also help out with various housekeeping duties.
2PM: “Outdoor” Activities
2pm is the most anticipated time of the day. Inmates are ushered into the corridor outside the cells, where they wait for their turn at outdoor yard time.
On Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, it’s 1 hour of television and 1 hour of exercise.
Wednesdays and Fridays promise 2 whole hours of IMDA-approved television.
The officers regulate 3 English programmes and 2 in Chinese, Malay or Tamil weekly.
Day room activities also include shaving (inmates have to check with officers for permission to shave intimate areas), reading newspapers, an assortment of board games like
chess, Carom, checkers and Scrabble and chit chat.
Popular conversation topics range from tagging life and gang gossip to kopitiam food recommendations. A mobile library (essentially a shelf) comes in once every 3 weeks on Wednesdays.
Yard time is the only time inmates get to breathe some fresh air. The yard is located on the roof of the block, consisting of
a sepak takraw court beside a

basketball court.
It is built like a bird cage, with barbed wire fencing on all sides, even covering the top of the court.
No complaints though; the unlucky ones housed on level 1 and 2 don’t get the luxury of sunshine as they spend yard time in an

indoor sports hall.
T-shirts aren’t allowed in the yard, and inmates have to undergo a strip search before exercise. Another yard time rule is that the

sepak takraw ball can’t be used to play soccer
due to safety reasons, a rule that is often challenged and reinforced with exasperation.
Games are carried out tournament-style, which can get overly-competitive. In a scuffle Samuel witnessed over a basketball match, a blaring alarm sounded out within a minute. All inmates had to drop to the floor with their hands above their heads. Those involved were then arrested, charged and transferred elsewhere.

Consequences for misbehaviour include solitary or caning.
During this time, an officer will shout jiak you, Hokkien for ‘eat medicine’. Babas, or nurses, will administer the medicine in zip lock bags to those with medical conditions. The officers will watch them swallow the medicine. Some prisoners hide the pills in their mouths for later use.
On weekends, yard time is replaced by religious classes conducted by volunteers in classrooms. Muslim, Buddhist and Roman Catholic classes are held on Saturdays and Christian classes on Sundays.
Most join religious classes just for time out of the cell.
Christian classes are popular as there is an additional Christian bible study class on
Tuesday,

which means double out-of-cell time. However, some do end up converting religions in prison. For others, these classes act as a counselling session or an outlet.
4.30PM: Dinner
An early dinner is served at 4.30pm.
The meal consists of 3 servings of
rice,

vegetables rotating between beansprouts,

bitter gourd,

eggplant,

kangkong or cauliflower

and baked chicken or fish.
Occasionally, cheers will be heard from the cells, which means that there’s curry chicken.
Samuel says that prison curry is
extremely thick and flavourful,

even going as far as to deem it the

best curry chicken he has ever had.
Special diets such as low-sugar, low-protein, non-spicy are available to accommodate to medical conditions. Fruits, usually

an orange or banana

comes with

both lunch and dinner
as an attempt to encourage a balanced diet.
When the kitchen closes for cleaning once a month, dinner is something called a ‘6 pack’ – a measly packet of old-school buns with various fillings such as
red bean.
Source

Coping With 22 Hours Of Lock Up
Besides yard time and religious classes, most of the day is spent within the four narrow walls of the cell. It is very literally imprisonment – even 30 seconds of open-door time is greatly appreciated. How do prisoners keep themselves occupied?
Long-term inmates usually have jobs that pay in credit

after 6 months. Credit can be used to buy snacks like
Nutella, toiletries or miscellaneous items

from the e-kiosk, such as family photos for the homesick.
A trend among old-timers would be to customise their all-blue uniform with their names (or nicknames), a novelty service available at the e-kiosk as well.
For those like Samuel who don’t work, time passes a little slower. They exercise, pore over Sudoku and crosswords books (requested from visitors), confide in their cell mates, or even manage to play chess, fashioned out of rice and magazine.
One unanimous pastime of the inmates is karaoke; it’s common to hear inmates from different cells singing the popular songs in unison.
It helps that there are tablets

provided to inmates for 90 minutes every night, where they can play games like Find the Item, learn subjects like Physics and Biology online,

read e-books and write e-letters via the prison portal.
On top of weekly visits, a tele-visit room allows loved ones to hold a 30-minute video call inmates from the visit points around Singapore.
Spending 22 hours in a confined space can get brutal, but there is community. Inmates lend support to each other to keep morale up. Long-term inmates usually comfort newcomers, sometimes with tough love. People are considerate; be it sharing their tablet time with those who are taking it harder or
flushing with a pail of water to avoid waking their cellmates up.
???????
Lights go off everyday at 9pm, leaving the complex pitch-black.
The first day usually calls for some crying, but eventually it’s easy to fall into the routine of fitful sleep (no thanks to cell mate’s loud snoring) on the cool floor instead of the uncomfortable mat provided. Rinse and repeat at 6am.
*Not his real name.
*
If char seaw gonna break the law , better have a good plan , like stashing money all the over world and getting your ass on a plane after you commit the crime (hopefully profitable)
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 07:53 PM

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QUOTE(Aud power @ Aug 15 2020, 07:43 PM)
If char seaw gonna break the law , better have a good plan , like stashing money all the over world and getting your ass on a plane after you commit the crime (hopefully profitable)
*
Not understand
MrBlackie33
post Aug 15 2020, 08:36 PM

Shhhhhhh
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interesting, read the whole article
i believe most of the sg inmates hav either commited drug or sex related crime lol
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 15 2020, 11:15 PM

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QUOTE(MrBlackie33 @ Aug 15 2020, 08:36 PM)
interesting, read the whole article
i believe most of the sg inmates hav either commited drug or sex related crime lol
*
Why???


Fighting also many

Traffic offence also a lot

kamfoo
post Aug 16 2020, 03:10 AM

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Any video?
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 16 2020, 08:24 AM

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QUOTE(kamfoo @ Aug 16 2020, 03:10 AM)
Any video?
*
Movie have

Jack neo
WindDragon
post Aug 16 2020, 10:17 AM

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QUOTE(plouffle0789 @ Aug 15 2020, 06:48 PM)
malaysia prison have tv and newspaper???
*
no tv no newspaper.

QUOTE(youngblood29us @ Aug 15 2020, 07:10 PM)
i remember one of /k been to jail and shared his experience..He did a AMA session here...good read that one..
*
thanks! that was me
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 16 2020, 07:34 PM

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QUOTE(WindDragon @ Aug 16 2020, 10:17 AM)
no tv no newspaper.
thanks! that was me
*
basketball??
Mr.Robert
post Aug 16 2020, 07:46 PM

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QUOTE(WindDragon @ Aug 16 2020, 10:17 AM)
no tv no newspaper.
thanks! that was me
*
Can masturbate?
WindDragon
post Aug 16 2020, 08:18 PM

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QUOTE(plouffle0789 @ Aug 16 2020, 07:34 PM)
basketball??
*
No.....no basketball.....

QUOTE(Mr.Robert @ Aug 16 2020, 07:46 PM)
Can masturbate?
*
Of course can, if you dare to do it in front of 80 people.
Or you can try to wake up at 3am or something and do it in front of whoever is awake then.
TSplouffle0789
post Aug 23 2020, 01:49 PM

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QUOTE(KLthinker91 @ Aug 15 2020, 05:08 PM)
Very interesting

In my opinion they should improve and increase quality and quantity of food

Prison being a punishment is one thing, but for a country as well to do as SG, the least that can be done is provide a nutritionally balanced diet for inmates of the State
*
6am until 9pm

singapore prison
KLthinker91
post Aug 23 2020, 05:13 PM

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QUOTE(plouffle0789 @ Aug 23 2020, 01:49 PM)
6am until 9pm

singapore prison
*
What the hell does that have to do with food?
TSplouffle0789
post Nov 9 2020, 09:42 PM

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healthy
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post Nov 9 2020, 10:16 PM

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POS (4634)
POS MALAYSIA BHD



GDEX (0078)
GD EXPRESS CARRIER BHD



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GD EXPRESS CARRIER BHD ("GDEX" OR THE "COMPANY")

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FREE WARRANTS IN GDEX ("WARRANTS C") ON THE BASIS OF

ONE (1) WARRANT C FOR EVERY EIGHT (8) EXISTING ORDINARY SHARES IN GDEX

HELD ON AN ENTITLEMENT DATE TO BE DETERMINED AND ANNOUNCED LATER ("PROPOSED FREE WARRANTS ISSUE")



2020-11-06


11.11 sales figures will be the immediate catalyst ???

This post has been edited by plouffle0789: Nov 9 2020, 10:17 PM

 

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