StreetFight3r 6th Gear September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 (edited) Singaporean driver pays RM28,000 in traffic fines in Johor Bahru JOHOR BAHRU: A Singaporean man paid outstanding fines of RM28,000 (S$9,200) in Johor Bahru on Sunday (Sep 29) after he was detained by the police. The man, who is in his 60s, has had 116 traffic summonses issued against him since 2000, said Bukit Aman traffic investigation and enforcement department deputy director Mohd Nadzri Hussain. A total of 3,174 fines were settled during the three-day operation, with Singaporeans making up 2,687 of the figure. “As of this morning, we managed to collect about RM611,000 in traffic fines and summonses at both locations," said Mohd Nadzri, adding that the amount collected is expected to reach RM75,000 by midnight. JOHOR BAHRU: A Singaporean man paid outstanding fines of RM28,000 (S$9,200) in Johor Bahru on Sunday (Sep 29) after he was detained by the police. The man, who is in his 60s, has had 116 traffic summonses issued against him since 2000, said Bukit Aman traffic investigation and enforcement department deputy director Mohd Nadzri Hussain. The 10th series of the operation which involved 116 personnel was conducted at the Gelang Patah R&R, Iskandar Puteri and at Muzium Tokoh, Jalan Lingkaran Dalam. There have been 247,278 outstanding traffic summonses recorded since 2000, said Mohd Nadzri. He reminded traffic offenders to check the status of their summonses and make payments at two kiosks at the traffic division office of the Johor Bahru selatan district police headquarters. For Singaporean drivers, payment can also be made at AXS machines. “Payments can also be made at the COPS traffic counter at all district police headquarters and summons checking can also be done through MyEg portal at www.myeg.com.my and rilek.com.my,” he said. Mohd Nazri said once the Vehicle Entry Permit (VEP) comes into force, traffic offenders from Singapore must first settle all their summonses before being allowed to return. Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/singaporean-driver-outstanding-fines-johor-vep-11953802 Edited September 29, 2019 by StreetFight3r ↡ Advertisement 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spurman Supercharged September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 A move against corruption in bolehland and mostly a timely reminder to us singaporeans do not speed liao in malaysia. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sx4falcon 5th Gear September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 How does they link all the 116 traffic offences to that man? Traffic offences was from year 2000. He had been driving the same car for the past 19 years? Or he had retained the same number plate? 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ceecookie 5th Gear September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 (edited) On 9/29/2019 at 10:51 AM, Spurman said: A move against corruption in bolehland and mostly a timely reminder to us singaporeans do not speed liao in malaysia. Expand Most of the AES speed cameras are easy to spot and have yellow warning signs posted before the cameras. Good tip is to tag along with a speeding msian car - if they slow down suddenly and obey speed limit for no apparent reasons, likely because of speed cam ahead. Edited September 29, 2019 by Ceecookie Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maxus-MIFA9 Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 This are the person that caused MY to implement VEP ..... and many here still waiting for the reply to install ... 🤕 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ct3833 Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 (edited) On 9/29/2019 at 10:51 AM, Spurman said: A move against corruption in bolehland and mostly a timely reminder to us singaporeans do not speed liao in malaysia. Expand If we expect foreigners to respect our law, then we must do the same reciprocal to respect theirs as well. Interestingly, if the boleh land could implement something to weed out all the u paid fines , we should feel really mbarrasing that we cant do anything to the errant drivers from the boleh land. Edited September 29, 2019 by Ct3833 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mkl22 Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 11:49 AM, Ct3833 said: If we expect foreigners to respect our law, then we must do the same reciprocal to respect theirs as well. Interestingly, if the boleh land could implement something to weed out all the u paid fines , we should feel really mbarrasing that we cant do anything to the errant drivers from the boleh land. Expand Can do. But ICA probably says up yours. I’m sure URA, LTA, TP, HDB all want to push ICA to help them collect. But ICA is probably busy as they are and short handed already. Then Kenna thrown this thankless task which doesn’t benefit them. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
macrosszero Turbocharged September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 11:49 AM, Ct3833 said: If we expect foreigners to respect our law, then we must do the same reciprocal to respect theirs as well. Interestingly, if the boleh land could implement something to weed out all the u paid fines , we should feel really mbarrasing that we cant do anything to the errant drivers from the boleh land. Expand Its high time that the LTA paid attention to the heavily-tinted Malaysian cars, motorbikes with bent license plates and tiny license plate characters with super tight spacing and irregular fonts, as well as straight pipes driving and riding around Singapore with impunity. Even if you don't want to enforce Singapore vehicle regulations upon them, at least turn them away at the checkpoints. 6 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fitvip Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 12:08 PM, Macrosszero said: Its high time that the LTA paid attention to the heavily-tinted Malaysian cars, motorbikes with bent license plates and tiny license plate characters with super tight spacing and irregular fonts, as well as straight pipes driving and riding around Singapore with impunity. Even if you don't want to enforce Singapore vehicle regulations upon them, at least turn them away at the checkpoints. Expand Agree with you. Some local cars have the same tint too. Talking about MY m/bikes, I just saw one with small font golden numbers. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Volvobrick Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 (edited) On 9/29/2019 at 12:08 PM, Macrosszero said: Its high time that the LTA paid attention to the heavily-tinted Malaysian cars, motorbikes with bent license plates and tiny license plate characters with super tight spacing and irregular fonts, as well as straight pipes driving and riding around Singapore with impunity. Even if you don't want to enforce Singapore vehicle regulations upon them, at least turn them away at the checkpoints. Expand Hopeless one lah.... PMDs so slow also cannot catch, Malaysian cars/bikes how to catch? Edited September 29, 2019 by Volvobrick 3 5 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
macrosszero Turbocharged September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 12:45 PM, Volvobrick said: Hopeless one lah.... PMDs so slow also cannot catch, Malaysian vars/bikes joe to catch? Expand Want or don’t want only. They got so many overzealous inspectors at VICOM they surely can send some over to Woodlands and Tuas. Want or don’t want only - call one GeBIZ contract and the service will appear. Else only know how to bully kakilang and close one eye to outsider! 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wt_know Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 did he not pull out the card abang, i only got RM50 left in my wallet and no credit card? muahahaha Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Voodooman Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 11:49 AM, Ct3833 said: If we expect foreigners to respect our law, then we must do the same reciprocal to respect theirs as well. Interestingly, if the boleh land could implement something to weed out all the u paid fines , we should feel really mbarrasing that we cant do anything to the errant drivers from the boleh land. Expand MY problem is most of the records, ie parking, speeding, state, federal, local offences are not linked into a single system, don’t think our ICA will unintentionally allow any foreign vehicle with unpaid fines from entering SG. We started first and MY has to respond lah Lol 50 Malaysian vehicles turned away due to outstanding fines https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/transport/50-malaysian-vehicles-turned-away-due-to-outstanding-fines?xtor=CS3-18&utm_source=STiPhone&utm_medium=share&utm_term=2019-09-29 21%3A09%3A16 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Voodooman Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 1:36 PM, Wt_know said: did he not pull out the card abang, i only got RM50 left in my wallet and no credit card? muahahaha Expand 9.3k? Can buy a 2 digit number plate. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ct3833 Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 1:36 PM, Wt_know said: did he not pull out the card abang, i only got RM50 left in my wallet and no credit card? muahahaha Expand The fact that he could chalk up 116 fines goes to reflect how recalcitrant he is when he cross the causeways. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wt_know Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 (edited) let ah gong collect $32M (RM96M) first then got talk ... unless sinkies all go over jb and then swap number plate? Edited September 29, 2019 by Wt_know Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tianmo Hypersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 On 9/29/2019 at 10:51 AM, Sx4falcon said: How does they link all the 116 traffic offences to that man? Traffic offences was from year 2000. He had been driving the same car for the past 19 years? Or he had retained the same number plate? Expand high chance some special numbers that is retained onto every new car lor. I am just surprise that they keep records for 19 years... 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wt_know Supersonic September 29, 2019 Share September 29, 2019 19 years never get caught today must be sibei sibei suay ... must go makan tao huay ... ↡ Advertisement 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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