Malaysian Maid In Hong Kong Wins RM12 Million Lottery

Citing a China Press story, The Star reported that a Malaysian maid working in Hong Kong had won more than HK$30 million (or RM12 million) in lottery money.

The middle-aged maid is employed at the mansion of casino tycoon Stanley Ho's fourth wife, Angela Leong.

According to her employer's family, the maid purchased a Mark Six lottery ticket on her birthday.

However, Angela Leong was reported saying she was unaware that any of her Malaysian workers had won the lottery.

The maid said she would continue to work as a maid at the mansion as she has for over 10 years as she did not want to part with Angela Leong's eldest daughter, Sabrina Ho Chiu-ying, whom she had cared for since she was a little girl.

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Ipoh's Secret



Ipoh's secret: smoked duck and boneless roast duck. You can only find these in Ipoh. It is such a well kept secret that normal Ipoh folk won't know where to buy these.

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Super Kiasu

Maximum security - 7 locks and a spanner. One can never be too careful living in Kuala Lumpur these days.

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How To Make A Powerful Chicken Ginseng Soup


This is a secret recipe given to my friend by her great great grandmother from Penang. You won't find this recipe anywhere else, so take note. This soup will increase your virility, improve your vitality, rejuvenate your body and calm your mind. Some people claim that it can even make a dead man come alive. Yes, its that powerful. However, please note that this concoction is for men only. According to Chinese old wifes' tales, women who drink this soup will grow a mustache, hair on their legs and chests - so beware.

Okay, enough of the small talk. Its very easy to brew this, just follow the steps. These are the ingredients:
  • 1 small hak kai (black chicken), cut into 6 pieces
  • 50g ginseng, any type (but not tongkat ali)
  • 100g fresh Huai Shan (Chinese yam), peeled and sliced
  • 50g Tong Sum
  • 6 Chinese dried dates
  • 1 tabespoon Kei Chi (Red Chinese raisins)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
Once you got all the ingredients ready, just dump them in a double-boiler pot. Pour in water, cover and boil for 2 hours. While waiting, go watch Astro, walk the dog or do whatever. Once the soup is done, dish it out into a bowl and wait for it to cool for 5 minutes before consuming.

For you guys still drinking sup kambing (local mutton soup) but without results, just try this powerful chicken ginseng soup. Then ask your wife or girlfriend to post comments here. *laughs*

[You can get the black Chicken from a supermarket and the other stuff from any Chinese medicine shop.]

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Evil Spirits Attack Widow's House

The Star reported Zainab Sulaiman’s house is infested with djinn (spirits) which are believed to have caused 200 mysterious fires in her home in Kampung Penambang Bunga Emas, near Kota Baru, in Kelantan.

On Wednesday night, a group of local Muslim exorcists called Darul Shifaq spent half the night in her house chanting Quranic verses in attempt to drive out the djinn but without success.

The group apparently also used holy water to cleanse her ancient keris (Malay dagger), swords, and brasswares where the spirits are believed to be "occupying".

According to the group leader, Zainab's ancient keris and swords, possibly inherited from her ancestors, could have been used by her forefathers in the practise of black magic.

Prior to this a Siamese medium had attempted to drive away the spirits but was also unsuccessful.

Apparently an American couple visited Zainab recently at night offering to help rid the house of the spirits but she politely declined because of language problems and feared the attempt of exorcising would anger the spirits further.

In a report by the Daily Chilli, the latest spiritualist to attempt to exorcise the house is Master Ong Q Leng from Penang. Master Ong uses Kung Fu (Chinese martial art) in the exorcism ritual. She went over to Zainab's house on Saturday to drive away djinns and seal the house to prevent them from coming back and causing trouble again.

Master Ong said she could sense the presence of evil the moment she stepped into the house. There are allegedly little djinns under the house while the larger ones are outside the premises.

Master Ong claimed that she able to chase away the small djinns but there is a 50-50 chance that they will return to cause trouble again.

Zainab is a widow who lives in the wooden house with her daughter-in-law and two grandchildren.

Related story: Exorcism Singapore style - watch these videos of a Chinese medium performing an exorcism.

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Beware Of Fake Car Parking Coupons

According to news reports, the Malacca City Council (MBMB) alerted motorists to be cautious about imitation car parking coupons being sold.

An MBMB spokesman said they should be wary of discounted or cheap parking sold by unauthorised private individuals and companies.

Apparently the fake parking coupons looks genuine except that there are no serial numbers on them.

The public is advised to purchase genuine parking coupons from MBMB booths or appointed agents.

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Witches To Put Curse On Government

video
Witchcraft has been recently recognised as a legitimate profession in Romania and witches, including astrologers and fortune tellers, have now to be registered and pay tax.

In protest of this new tax law, Romanian witches from the east and west will head to the southern plains and the Danube River to threaten the government with curses and hexes.
Romania has always had a strong tradition in witchcraft and it still does. Romanian witches are still plying their trade in casting spells, telling the future, selling amulets for protection and good fortune, curing illnesses or bad habits and even causing death of ones enemies.

In Romania, witchcraft is a multi-million dollar business. The Romanian TV used to be filled with advertisements of witches advertising spells, magic formulas and portions. As matters got out of control, the Romanian government had to ban the witchcraft advertisements on TV.

While white and black magic are just history in many countries, are still widely practised in Romania.

In remote Romanian villages, as in villages in Malaysia, people often go to a witch before they go to the doctor.

63 year old Queen witch Bratara Buzea, who was imprisoned in the 1970s for witchcraft under the previous communist government, is furious about the new tax law. She plans to cast a potent spell using a secret ritual in collaboration with many covens of witches in Romania. Apparently, she claims that her spells always work. We will have to wait and see how effective the spell is and its effect on the Romanian government.

In Malaysia, like Romania, people from different faiths and religious traditions still hold a strong belief in the supernatural. Malaysians still consult mediums, astrologers and bomohs (Malay shamans), even at the risk of being cheated by charlatans, to attain solutions to their daily and professional problems including using black magic. The effectiveness on these "traditional methods" are still difficult to determine as they produce no consistent results. There is still a roaring demand for the black arts in Malaysia from the common village folk and local celebrities to businessmen and politicians.

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Top 10 Secret Islands In The World

Looking for a romantic spot that is (almost) all yours?

Here are our top spots to reignite your love affair with desert islands, with picks from across the globe.

1. Socotra, Yemen

Socotra, Yemen Secret Island
Socotra, Yemen Secret Island
You just have to be intrigued by a destination that describes itself as “the most alien-looking place on earth”. Ripped from the coast of Gondwanaland by plate tectonics, the four desert islands that form the Socotra group are a treasure-house of biodiversity, with thousands of plant and animal species found nowhere else on earth. Topping the weird list are the barrel-trunked cucumber tree and the dragon’s blood tree, which oozes blood-red sap. Despite being closer to Africa than the Arabian Peninsula, Socotra is administered by Yemen, which keeps the islands off the tourist radar.
Modern-day Sinbads can fly to the tiny capital, Hadibu, from Sana’a and Aden with Yemenia Airlines.

2. Torres Strait Islands, Australia


Torres Strait Islands, Australia
Torres Strait Islands, Australia
As far as you can go in Oz without falling off the map, the Torres Strait Islands are Australia as it might have been if Europeans had never arrived. Spilling north from the tip of Cape York, the 274 islands in the Torres Strait preserve a unique tribal culture that bridges the divide between Aboriginal Australia and Papua New Guinea. The Great Barrier Reef is right on the doorstop and there are airstrips and hotels on Thursday Island and Horn Island, but access to other islands is at the discretion of local tribal councils.
Permits to visit outlying islands must be obtained at least one month in advance from the Torres Strait Regional Authority (www.tsra.gov.au).

3. Yaeyama Islands, Japan


Yaeyama Islands, Japan
Yaeyama Islands, Japan
If Godzilla should ever rise from the sea to destroy Tokyo and Osaka, there is only one place to ride out the storm – the idyllic Yaeyama Islands, tucked away at the very southern tip of the Japanese archipelago. Looking more like the Caribbean, the islands of Iriomote, Taketomi and Ishigaki serve up generous portions of sun, sea, sand and sushi. Ishigaki has the best of the beaches, while Taketomi is famous for its traditional Ryukyuan houses and Iriomote is a jungle playground with an open-air onsen (hot springs).
Japan Transocean Air flies daily from Tokyo to Ishigaki, which is connected to the other islands by regular ferries.

4. Îles du Salut, French Guiana


Îles du Salut, French Guiana
Îles du Salut, French Guiana
Most people have heard of Devil’s Island, but few would be able to stick a pin on a map. The smallest of the three Îles du Salut, this infamous former penal colony is separated from the coast of French Guiana by 11km of treacherous, shark-infested waters. Steve McQueen tried to escape the islands repeatedly in Papillon, but most modern visitors are willing castaways, lured here by waving palms, chattering macaws and spooky ruins from the penal colony days.
Access to the Îles du Salut is by catamaran from Kourou and the only place to stay is the clubhouse-style Auberge des Iles (www.ilesdusalut.com).

5. Ulleungdo, South Korea


Ulleungdo, South Korea
Ulleungdo, South Korea
It is easy to see the appeal of tiny Ulleungdo. Midway between South Korea and Japan, this rugged volcanic island is said to have no pollution, no thieves and no snakes – in other words, this is perfect hiking country. Ferries run daily from the mainland to the tiny port at Dodong-ri, where trails climb to the rocky summit of Seonginbong Peak (984m). If you want to really push the boat out, continue to the Dokdo islands – a tiny collection of outcrops that are hotly disputed between Japan and South Korea.
Perched beneath a towering cliff wall, Chusan Ilga Pension (www.chusanilga.com) offers comfortable but satisfyingly rustic accommodation on the rugged north coast.

6. San Blás Archipelago, Panama


San Blás Archipelago, Panama
San Blás Archipelago, Panama
Panama probably is not the first place that comes to mind when you think of the Caribbean, but this Central American nation has coral cays to rival anything in the Caymans or the Virgin Islands. Run as an autonomous province by the Kuna people, the San Blás Archipelago is a crescent of 365 tiny islands basking in the warm waters of the southern Caribbean. Forget luxury resorts – the only hotels are homestays in village houses and dinner is whatever the fishermen bring home in their canoes each evening.
Air Panama has regular flights to several San Blás islands, including the capital, El Porvenir.

7. Penghu Islands, Taiwan


Penghu Islands, Taiwan
Penghu Islands, Taiwan
If Taiwan is the other China, then the Penghu islands are the other Taiwan. Administered from Taipei, the 90 islands of the Penghu archipelago are known – within Taiwan at least – for their glorious scenery and “touching nostalgia”, which translates to unspoiled traditional Taiwanese culture. Outside of the capital, Makung, is a land of ox-carts, fish-traps, stone-walled fields, basalt cliffs and ancient temples dedicated to the sea goddess Matsu. If sun and sand are more your cup of shochu, the beaches and windsurfing are pretty impressive too.
From May to October, Penghu’s beaches are a nesting ground for endangered green turtles – locals leave turtle-shaped offerings at temples across Penghu as part of the Lantern Festival, 14 days after the New Year.

8. Bay Islands & Hog Islands, Honduras


Bay Islands & Hog Islands, Honduras
Bay Islands & Hog Islands, Honduras
Forget Pirates of the Caribbean – the sand-dusted islands that float off the coast of Honduras are the real deal. In their heyday, the islands of Roatán, Utila and Guanaja were home to 5000 cutthroats, brigands and buccaneers, including the infamous Henry Morgan (aka Blackbeard). These days, the Bay Islands are better known for their beaches, diving and laid-back tropical vibe. You can turn the volume down ever further at the nearby Cayos Cochinos (Hog Islands) – 13 languorous coral cays and one secluded resort in a sea of brilliant blue.
The driftwood Plantation Beach Resort (www.plantationbeachresort.com) is the Hog Islands’ only accommodation, but camping can be arranged on uninhabited islands.

9. Con Dao Islands, Vietnam


Con Dao Islands, Vietnam
Con Dao Islands, Vietnam
Another prison-turned-paradise, the Con Dao islands were home to the most notorious penal colony in Indochina, and continued its grim work until the end of the Vietnam War. Now preserved as Con Dao National Park, the 16 islands are a natural wonderland of dense jungles, jade-coloured waters and white-sand beaches, home to dugongs, dolphins, turtles and spectacular coral reefs. For now, tourist developments on the islands are limited to a single dive shop and a handful of resorts in Con Son township.
Timing is everything with Con Dao – the islands are lashed by squalls from the west from June to September and squalls from the east from September to January.

10. Ssese Islands, Uganda


Ssese Islands, Uganda
Ssese Islands, Uganda
Why would a landlocked African nation appear on a list of desert islands? Thank Lake Victoria. The Ssese Islands tick all the right boxes for an island paradise – golden beaches, whispering palm trees, exotic flora and fauna – they just happen to be in the middle of Africa’s largest lake. Most of the 84 islands in the Ssese group are undeveloped, but a handful of resorts and beach camps grace the sands of Buggala, Bukasa and Banda. Aside from basking in the sun, the main activities are combing the jungle for exotic creatures and canoeing across the lake.
Boats run daily to Kalangala on Buggala island from Entebbe, Kasenyi and Bukakata on the mainland.

Source: Gily Gily

What about islands in Malaysia ? Last year, Lonely Planet ranked Pulau Perhentian's beach as the 5th "Best Beach to Swing a Hammock" in the world. Here is the list of Malaysia's Top 10 beaches.

Another island worth mentioning is Mljet island in Croatia. According to some legends, Odysseus, on his way home from the Trojan War, spent seven years as love slave to Calypso on Mljet island.

Historical records suggest that Mljet was discovered by ancient Greco-Roman geographers, who wrote the first records and descriptions. Mljet contains one hotel - The Odisej (from the Greek Odysseus) in the north-west corner of the island. Ancient Greeks called the island "Melita" or "honey" which over the centuries evolved to become the Slavic name, Mljet

Mijet is a small island similar to Pulau Besar in Malacca. According to Malay folklore, legendary warrior Hang Tuah used the island as his base. There are many tales of bravery where Hang Tuah and his 4 warrior friends defeated numerous pirates on this island. And on this island he received his initial training from a penunggu (Spirit of a Malay holy man) in Silat (the Malay martial art) and was presented with the formula to make his famous dagger, the Taming Sari. Ancient Indian prince, Parameswara, was also known to have resided on the island when planing counter attacks against the Bugis warriors who attacked Malacca from Sulawesi, Indonesia.

This is a magical island, as it hosts many legends of Kings, warriors and penunggu. Villages have claimed to also have seen and spoken to mermaids while fishing in Pulau Besar.

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Malaysia Boleh !


This is a very busy Malaysian businessman who is teaching his son the ropes at a very young age.

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Pelacur Dalam Akuarium



The raid was conducted on 31 Disember 2010 at the premises in Jalan Kuchai Lama, Kuala Lumpur.

China Dolls are everywhere in Kuala Lumpur.

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Royal Indian Wedding In Kuala Lumpur

Sometime in mid December last year a couple in the city that created an antique Indian royal wedding at the cost of one million ringgit.

The protagonists for this wedding were Australian groom, Richard Menji and the Indian bride, Kanmani Mayer Nathen. They had dressed up as an Indian Prince and Princess and hosted a uniquely opulent wedding at the Dewan Wawasan Convention & Exhibition Centre (DWC) in Cheras last December.

Custom-made dress by Bollywood designer

The wedding cost as much as RM1,000,000, and the total number of tables for the wedding dinner was 119. It was also the first time in Malaysia that an Indian royal wedding ceremony was carried out. The layout for the wedding venue cost about RM600,000 and the gown by renowned Bollywood designer Sidney Sladen cost about RM30,000.

In addition, the wedding ceremony, with its gorgeous costumes and grand song and dance performances attracted the attention of the guests. They also performed traditional practice, for the bride wore a yellow rope necklace. The significance of the necklace implied the same thing as the wearing of a ring, meaning that the woman has gotten married.

Source: SinChew

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