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Showing results for tags 'neighbor'.
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Do you have a neighbor or neighbor cars when you park your car as in the same cars parking side by side with yours when you park your car in your regular places like your home carpark or your workplace carpark? What's the reason you like to park beside this particular car/cars? E.g. Won't slam doors on mine, real neighbors, park together against community car theft/crimes, like the car.
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http://news.asiaone.com/news/singapore/neighbour-hell-gives-ang-mo-kio-residents-sleepless-nights After watching the clip, I am rather angry... with the lady downstair.. the knocking is really deafening.. Guys, how you all handle this kinda situation.. No racist comment please. I am a chinese.. This malay family really have high tolerant.. I really can't handle such knocking~~
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My neighbor rented out his whole unit legally 2 yrs ago before going oversea for study. He informed me about it. But recently, I think the tenant inside there are getting out of control. It's a 3room HDB. sometimes I see, pinoy lady dressing skimpily moving in and out of the flat, sometimes PRC ladies dress as restaurant workers.... the wooden door is always open, like a dorm. The bicycles parking at the corridor are almost invading to my door area. I don't have my neighbor contact and reporting to HDB will surely sour me and my neighbor's relation.... any idea how to go about it?
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Home > Breaking News > Courts and Crime > Story Sep 30, 2008 $1,500 fine for mischief By ELENA CHONG A RENOVATION contractor was fined $1,500 on Tuesday for using a bunch of keys to scratch a neighbour's car. Low Swee Heng, 43, admitted to committing mischief on 63-year-old David Au Ming Lai's car at the basement carpark of Queensway, Queensway Tower, on Feb 22. A court heard that Low returned home at about 11.15pm and found Mr Au's car parked in an inconsiderate manner. He then used his car keys and scratched the victim's car, causing damage of about $1,000. A closed-circuit television camera installed at the carpark had captured the whole incident. Pleading for leniency, Low told District Judge Wong Peck that he had written numerous notes on the victim's windscreen over the way he had parked his car and blocking him from taking things out from his car. Low could have been jailed for up to three months or fined or both. http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNew...ory_284330.html so exp.. mike as well just punch him. only $1K fine.
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July 5, 2008 The other view, with a nuisance cat to boot... I REFER to Mr Laurie K. Gilbert's letter, 'Building noise driving this foreign talent away' (June 25). My family owns the house physically attached to Mr Gilbert's tenanted house. We have lived in this neighbourhood since October 1981. Over the years, many neighbours have renovated. As long as the legal noise limits are observed, urban renewal must be accepted as a matter of give and take. Today, I rebuild my home. Tomorrow, it may be your neighbour. Mr Gilbert alleges that my noisy renovations forced his business associate, Mr Malcolm Cromie, out of Singapore. Mr Gilbert has not told the whole story. One Sunday morning about two months ago, Mr Cromie caused a commotion when he marched up to the front gate of my home at 3am. His actions probably woke the neighbourhood as well. As a result, we initiated civil proceedings. But, Mr Gilbert now says Mr Cromie has left Singapore. I also wish to make the following points: Singapore is a country where the law is applied fairly. 'Great contributions' by a foreigner, as Mr Gilbert implies in describing his contributions, do not entitle him to preferential treatment. Mr Gilbert has a pet black cat. It uses my garden as a toilet, scratches and dirties our cars, hides in corners then dashes out to startle people. We put up with this nuisance for more than two years in a spirit of good neighbourliness. When asked to rein in his cat, Mr Gilbert's reply was, 'It's just a kitten', and we were expected to put up with it. Now, we only ask the same forbearance from him. In conclusion, my reply to Mr Gilbert is: 'Be fair to your neighbours.' Chua Chee Pin http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BForum/Sto...ory_254805.html