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The killing of Ayeesha, together with several other high-profile cases of children who died from child abuse, including the 2014 Chin Swee Road child death, the 2016 Toa Payoh child abuse case and the 2020 Jurong child killing, brought widespread attention to the phenomenon of child abuse in Singapore, and it prompted the government to impose ...
Known as the Chin Swee Road child death case, the charred skeletal remains of a 30-month-old girl, whose given name was Umaisyah (c. July or August 2011 – c. March 2014), were first discovered hidden and sealed inside one of the metal cooking pots from a flat in Chin Swee Road on 10 September 2019.
Two people, including a child, were killed and at least 10 others were injured when a school bus without seatbelts and filled with pre-K students crashed in rural Texas on Friday, authorities said.
One of Liang's male classmates, Huang Chendong, revealed that he witnessed Liang getting on her school bus around 1:00 PM, and the school bus left the school with Liang, alone, sitting on the bus. The school bus driver was identified as Oh Laye Koh, a 34-year-old Singaporean who was married with one son and resided at Ang Mo Kio. He had driven ...
The 23-month-old child’s 15-year-old brother suffered serious injuries in the crash. Toddler killed when school bus crashes into side of pickup truck, Minnesota cops say Skip to main content
The victim’s mother, 47, is a case manager at the hospital with multiple children. She is a foster mother, according to police spokesperson Ryan Portmann. Police initially responded to a 911 ...
The 2020 Jurong child killing, together with several other high-profile cases of children abused to death, including the 2014 Chin Swee Road child death, the 2016 Toa Payoh child abuse case and the 2017 Ayeesha child abuse case, brought widespread attention to the phenomenon of child abuse in Singapore, and it prompted the government to impose ...
The control tower of Changi Airport, the TSIB office is located in Passenger Terminal 2 of that airport. The Transport Safety Investigation Bureau (TSIB) is a department within the Ministry of Transport of the Government of Singapore and is an independent investigation authority, responsible for the investigation of air, marine and land transport accidents and incidents in Singapore. [1]