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Showing results for tags 'mistress'.
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Apparently, this is becoming a trend. Public humiliation of 'xiao san'. Watch the woman in black beat up the woman in blue who doesn't retaliate in any way.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhgDh_k2otk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhgDh_k2otk#t=49 This type of standard also want?
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Epic self pwn. Master Hui Jie (centre) is applying for an injunction to stop his mistress Ms Lim Sor Bee (right) from selling two properties under her name. She claims that their relationship soured after he started seeing a model (left). One of Singapore's most well-known geomancers is embroiled in a court battle with his mistress of 23 years over two properties worth more than $2.5 million. Better known as Master Hui Jie, Goh Chuen Meng, 47, of Hui Master International Geomancy is trying to prevent Ms Lim Sor Bee, 41, from selling a condominium unit he claims to own. Shin Min Daily News reported that the fengshui master claimed that Ms Lim, who is also the director of his geomancy company, was also trying to sell a Telok Kurau condominium unit he owned. Both properties are registered under Ms Lim's name. He also claims that he had paid for the properties but registered them under Ms Lim's name, after she suggested that he do so to avoid having to include the properties among matrimonial assets to be split in case he has a divorce with his wife. Ms Lim, however, claims that she had forked out $760,000 for the condominium unit in 2007, and $1.98 million for the terraced house in 2010. She also claims that Mr Goh had willingly helped to pay for part of the properties as "love gifts" to her to provide security for her future. Married since 1988, Mr Goh reportedly started an affair with Ms Lim, who was his personal assistant, a year after he got married. He and his Thai wife have a son and a daughter together. He also told the court that he had initially wanted a divorce but changed his mind after his wife got pregnant.
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By Maureen Koh The New Paper Tuesday, Feb 07, 2012 She is the other woman. No regrets, she said in an interview with The New Paper on Sunday in 2006. Well, none until she was unceremoniously dumped in 2010 after spending half her youth being a married man's mistress. Regret showed through her make-up during the hour-long interview with Ms Melissa Phua. She sums up the life she led since she was 24: "I am cash rich, but the money can't buy me love." And there is a permanent scar left on the 40-year-old stunner, who looks barely 30. Just as she now desperately wants to hide her tainted life, her long hair covers a 5cm-long scar on the right cheek. Without betraying any emotion, Ms Phua recalls: "The stupid wife came to our love nest, went ballistic and started smashing stuff. In the midst of trying to beat me up, she clawed my face." The love nest was a posh condominium apartment in District 9 which the man owned. After that attack, Ms Phua used it as an excuse to "threaten" the man, who is 29 years older, into calling it quits. Says the former model: "I saw it as a chance to escape. He had grown tired of me and the frequent sex had slowed down from five times a week to only once in a fortnight." Two years on, Ms Phua now lives in a terrace house she owns in District 10. She has investments in two other private properties. She zips around town in a Volkswagen Golf Cabriolet. When the high roller is not at the local casinos, she's at home watching Korean dramas. Her ex-lover, whom she met in December 1996 when she was modelling for a lingerie company at his company's function, "provided well" during their time together, she adds. He used to sit on the board of directors of a multi-national company, but she is unsure of what he is doing now. Ms Phua's "last-drawn monthly allowance" was $10,000 - that was on top of the platinum credit card "with no limit" she was given and a luxury sports car. And when she felt like travelling, she could just go wherever she fancied - on first class - and stay at the best hotels in the world. A significant change in her lifestyle now is that she no longer splurges on the latest designer brands. That, she claims, was merely a move to stash money away following her mother's advice on her death bed. Says Ms Phua: "My mother was very upset when she found out that I was kept, but she gradually accepted it. "The best advice she gave me was just before she died (in 2001) to make plans for my future in case he dumps me." According to the "relationship agreement" drawn up in 1997, - Ms Phua still keeps a copy - she will lose everything, except the car and whatever cash savings she has, if he suspects her of being unfaithful. She adds: "That's why I'd charge to my credit (card) things that my friends wanted and give them a 10 per cent discount in return for cash payment." Ms Phua also invested in gold jewellery and kept it away from him. She confesses that she has kept a string of other lovers, but would call it off whenever she felt that her ex-lover was getting suspicious. Since her new life began, Ms Phua has gone through three other relationships, but none lasted beyond 10 months. She explains: "Somehow, there's still a stigma. I could easily try to keep (the affair) a secret, but I prefer to lay my cards on the table." Unfortunately, the truth hurts. Ms Phua says: "Two of them broke up with me shortly after I revealed the truth. It didn't matter that this was history even before we met." The third boyfriend "struggled for several weeks before coming to terms with it". Until she dropped another bombshell: she can never have a baby. A clause in her arrangement with her ex-lover stated that she cannot get pregnant. This prompted Ms Phua to go for a ligation procedure after she moved into their love nest, three months after they met. She says: "It hurts me whenever I see my friends with their children, when they talk about their kids with such pride." Like a self-prophecy, Ms Phua repeats her words from her first interview in 2006: "I will be a lonely woman. "Because by then (now), it'd also be too late for me to find someone who'd love me." This article was first published in The New Paper. source http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest%2BNews...206-326166.html
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http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjg0MDkwOTcy.html http://forums.asiaone.com/showthread.php?p=633204 The following video on popular Chinese video sharing service Youku is currently amongst the top 5 most viewed videos of the day, having been viewed over 850k times since it was uploaded two days ago as it spreads on Chinese social networks like RenRen and QQ. Husband turns out to be
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hi all,need you guys advises,i recently found out that my father had a mistress outside.As a son wat should i do? should i break this news to my mum?i dun want to have a broken family... stress,help... thanks
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Could the son be the one who perished 14 cars/bikes at Woodlands a few days ago??... . Nah, he's still enjoying free meals. [/color] But once out, will have to let go steam, go around burning people's properties. Thanks to mom who moulded her to become one One day, she'll reap what she sow July 16, 2008 Woman gets jail for abetting son to burn relative's car By Elena Chong, Courts Correspondent A WOMAN was sentenced to six months' jail on Wednesday for abetting her son to burn a relative's car almost two years ago. But Teo Sew Eng, 53, immediately served notice to appeal and and was granted $15,000 bail. She had admitted to intentionallly helping her son, Louis Hong Hsieh Shuen, 17, to commit mischief by fire. Hong is currently serving a 24-month probation while his accomplice, Ho Ki Yeow, 18, was placed on 21 months' probation after admitting to burning his uncle's car at Block 7B Commonwealth Avenue around midnight on Oct 24, 2006. Teo was the mistress of businessman Anthony Hong Weng, Louis' father. After he died in 1998, Teo felt that her son should have received $300,000 from his late father but Mr Hong's sister, Dorothy Tan, said her brother had only left $100,000 to Louis. Teo provided a plastic bag containing a bottle of petrol, a packet of charcoal and a piece of face cloth to her son who set fire to the Nissan Sunny car at about 9pm on Oct 23 that year. Her lawyer, Mr Subhas Anandan, asked Community Court judge May Mesenas to consider calling for a pre-sentence report as his client was suffering from dysthymia, a chronic depressive disorder. However, the judge felt that probation was not appropriate as the offence was serious and carries a mandatory jail term of up to seven years and a fine. http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/...ory_258274.html