View: 18207|Reply: 69
|
Kisah kembar warga asing bercinta dgn pemuda melayu (UPDATE CERITA)
[Copy link]
|
|
Post Last Edit by adorabelle1985 at 17-10-2011 15:41
Saya nak tanye pada sapa2 yang teringat ada satu kisah, kembar dari overseas (australia kot) yang bercinta dengan lelaki melayu..kalau tak silap diorang tu tahanan dalam kapal nak dihantar balik ke negara mereka. masa dalam kapal tu dia bercinta dengan pemuda melayu yang keje dalam kapal. Then diorang ada berenang sebab nak larikan diri..Kalau sapa2 tau kisah ni, boleh la share. |
Rate
-
1
View Rating Log
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
mana kau dengar citer ni?
Kalau perempuan Oz, silap2 minah kapal. Stowaway dalam kapal dah tu kena tangkap so hantar balik lah. Stowaway pasal dah bercinta dengan budak kapal yang selalu masuk sana. Minah kapal Oz ni tembam2, kaki minum, almost every kapal ada boyfriend. Janji dorang enjoy and dorang bukan mata duitan. Confirm balik, betul ker minah stowaway? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
pernah dengar cerita ni masuk kat paper dulu....
tp x tau apa dah jadi ngan diorang sekarang.... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 4# BabyR
Yes, cite ni mmg ada kat..masuk paper lagi and few years later ada reporter jejak balik kisah diorang,...diorang masih berhubung melalui surat..saya pun tak ingat. tgh gigih mencari ni |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 3# star_karat
dulu cite ni famous masuk dalam paper semuaa.. tapi lupa tahun bilee..bi tgh gigih mencari.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
last yg aku tau... kembor tu ade kat muo.... kije kat muo... yg bercinte ngan mamat tu (ade tande lahir dimuke) dah kawin ngan mamat tu... pernah terserempak ngan dorang mase minum kat kedai... dan pernah nampak yg dah kawin tu kene hon ngan bas ekspress mase dorang cross jalan naik moto c70... dan yg kawen ngan mamat tu... dah beranak.. dpt anak kembo gak.... kembo yg belum kawin tu tak tau ler dah kawen ke belum...
yg aku tau nih berlaku lebih 7-8 tahun yg lepas...
sekarang nih tak nampak lak dorang kat bando muo tu.....
mungkin dah pindah kot.... |
Rate
-
1
View Rating Log
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 7# muor76
Ingat tak nama diorang apa..or clue lain ke yang boleh carik dalam internet.. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 7# muor76
awak org muar jugak ke??? wah masa jumpa diorang tu, diorang muda ke ?/ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
emm cam menarik je kisah benar ni pertama kali dengar.... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
aku pun br pertama kali dengar |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply muor76
awak org muar jugak ke??? wah masa jumpa diorang tu, diorang muda ke ?/
adorabelle1985 Post at 17-10-2011 12:53
ye org muo..... yg laki tu maybe dah penghujung 30an kot skang...
mase jumpe tu maybe dia bru 30 atau penghujung 20an...
takde clue ler dlm internet nih...
sape ntah name mamat tu.... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sarah & Jane Ingham ..18 years old |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
secare ringkas cite dia nih camnih..
aweks kembo tu.. seludup masuk kapal yg mamat tu kije...
kire aweks tu tak ikot law ler...
kantul ngan mamat tu.. pastu mamat tu lak leh tangkap cintan ngan salah sorang kembo
pastu dorang bertiga nekad terjun kapal...
mase terjun tu salah sorang pompuan tu period.. dorang takut ikan jerung dtg ngap dorang
pastu.. sape ntah selamatkan dorang... pompuan tu kene anto balik ke negare.. mamat tu kene benti kije.. pasport dia tak ingat lak sape yg pegang
mase tu gomen negare pompuan tu tak bagi pompuan tu kuo negare..
mamat tu jadik sedih... sebab tak dpt jumpe awek yg dia tangkap cintan...
so dorang bercinte pakai surat jerk.. siap letak bedak cutticurra...
pastu dah lame lepas tu.. aku terserempak ngan kembo tu mase dorang kije kat depan warung besi kat muo... mase tu baru ler aku tau dorang dah leh masuk melesia..
mase tu aku tanye kawan aku yg biase ngan mamat tu.. kawan aku cakap kembo tu dok umah mamat tu...
pastu lame lepas tu.. mak kawan aku yang kije kat spital muo bagitau aku salah sorang kembo tu beranak.. dpt anak kembo...
itu ler citenyaaa.... |
Rate
-
1
View Rating Log
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 14# muor76
owh betul aa
aku dah cuba search tp dapat hok picisan , kembar tuh 18 thn laki tuh 28 thn |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 14# muor76
yes, aku ingat lagi dia tgh period,and takut ikan jerung datang makan diorang, sebab diorang berenang dalam lautan nak larikan diri,..thankss sebab tolong aku ingat kan cite ni..berhempas pulas aku carik info pasal diorang ni.. ada jugak org yang ingat |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply 15# outcast
akhirnya aku dah berjaya jejak kisah diorang..but baru sikit.
The story of stowaway sisters Sarah and Joanna Ingham proves the truth really is stranger than fiction. The 18-year-old twins fell for Malaysian sailor Ja'afar Bin Mohamed Zan, 28, when his container ship docked in Nelson in 1997 (here’s Joanne in Auckland a year later).
They hid on his boat, bound for Kuala Lumpar, but when they were discovered the threesome leapt overboard and survived 24 hours at sea before washing in a tropical wilderness in northern Queensland. There they braved crocodiles, snakes and wild pigs before they were eventually caught by police and sent back across the Tasman (here’s Sarah a year later). |
Rate
-
1
View Rating Log
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reply outcast
akhirnya aku dah berjaya jejak kisah diorang..but baru sikit.
The stor ...
adorabelle1985 Post at 17-10-2011 15:38
yup this one .. lawa gak ek |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Twins survive 20-mile shark ordeal
New Zealanders are known for their adventurous spirit but Sarah (above, right) and Joanne Ingham, teenaged twins from the Land of the Long White Cloud, have boosted their country's reputation with a fantastic journey.
The 18-year-old twins stowed away on a Malaysian container ship three months ago. They and a 27-year-old crewman, Ja'afar Bin Mohamed Zan, apparently jumped overboard on 20 April when the ship passed through Princess Charlotte Bay, off Australia's Queensland coast.
An extensive search across inhospitable outback failed to find them and it was thought that if the drop from the ship had not killed them, the 20-nautical-mile swim through shark- and crocodile-infested waters probably had.
However, against all the odds, they were found on Tuesday by Aborigines, who fed them and brought them to the town of Coen on the Cape York peninsula and alerted police.
They had lived for 19 days off shellfish.
Barry John Port, one of the few remaining Aboriginal trackers with the police service, said: "I think it is amazing that they survived. They were downhearted, tired and had sore feet and they were starving".
A Cairns Police Inspector, Ian Swan, said: "They've been examined and they're in quite good health."
The three were expected to face quick deportation, having cost the community thousands of dollars in search costs during their adventure. Matthew Brace |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kronologi kisah diorang
Voyage Of The Terrible Twins
Sydney Morning Herald
Thursday May 8, 1997
FOR MORE than two weeks, the three castaways kept a constant watch for surveillance planes from their makeshift camp on a remote Cape York Peninsula beach. Sarah and Joanne Ingham, 18, twin sisters from Kaiapoi, near Christchurch in New Zealand, and their companion, Ja'afar bin Mohamed Zan, 27, a Malay seaman, did not want to be spotted.
Sarah and Zan had been smitten with each other ever since the twins went on board a Malaysian container ship, Bunga Terasek, at Tauranga in New Zealand's Bay of Plenty on February 5.
Sarah told police in Cairns on Wednesday that she and her sister were invited on board and went to sleep, waking to find they were at sea. Police believe the pair planned to stow away and were harboured by Zan and several other crewmen.
The twins sailed to Singapore via Brisbane and Indonesia before being discovered by the ship's master on April 14, shortly after leaving Singapore for the return voyage. They were confined to the cook's cabin while the vessel's owners talked to immigration authorities in Australia and New Zealand about what to do with the pair. According to a senior crew member on the Bunga Terasek, the women were questioned by the captain, but to little effect. He describes them as "foul-mouthed little girls". "When they were first caught, they were very hostile. We tried to treat them like human beings, but I think it was the first time they had ever been treated like that."
He said the women described themselves not as stowaways but as "ship's hostesses", adding: "This is becoming a serious problem in Australian and New Zealand ports. The girls ring up and ask to come aboard."
ZAN, believing that the women would be handed over to authorities when the ship docked in Brisbane, hatched an escape plan. Early in the morning of April 20, Zan and the two women donned life-jackets and inflated lifebuoys. A rope connected the three and a fourth lifebuoy, to which two plastic containers were attached.
Inside the containers were two blankets, some fishing lines, flasks of fresh water, cigarettes and a few other essentials. The trio slipped quietly overboard into the tepid waters of the inner Great Barrier Reef, about 15 kilometres offshore from Port Stewart, 500 km north of Cairns.
For as long as 30 hours, the women told police (no firm timeframe has been established), they paddled and drifted westwards until they were washed ashore about 10 km south of Night Island. The coastal waters there are murky from wet season run-off from the mainland and known haunts of dangerous tiger sharks and saltwater crocodiles.
Police remain suspicious that they may have been picked up by a trawler or some other vessel and dropped ashore.
Contrary to early reports, the trio did not wander the wilds of Cape York after reaching land. They set up a camp of sorts and, as they pondered their next move, occupied themselves by fishing and collecting oysters and small sand crabs, which abound in the area.
They hid from the Coastwatch planes that fly daily along the coast, as well as the search aircraft dispatched when they were reported missing. Authorities abandoned the search after several days, believing the trio had probably perished when planes spotted empty lifebuoys on the sea surface. After deciding to head north, the trio came across a semi-permanent camp at Stoney Creek, a dry season home to the Creek Aboriginal family. The family had only just returned to the camp after the wet season.
On Tuesday morning, the family returned from a trip to buy food at Coen, 100 km to the west, to find three bedraggled and hungry visitors in camp who had helped themselves to food in their absence. The Creek family returned to Coen with the trio, who asked to be dropped off about a kilometre north of the town beside the Coen River.
Alerted by the Creeks, police and blacktrackers drove to the river, but when they appeared the three ran into the bush. "They didn't want to be found. They just ran away and hid from us," said Barry Port, a police blacktracker.
That night, the trio slipped back into town and broke into the Armbrust Store through a broken window, stealing a tent, a tarpaulin, clothes and a large quantity of food. "It was obvious they were thinking of not coming into contact with authority for a good while," said the store proprietor, Reece Gardiner. Police believe the three planned to make their way to Cairns, 450 km to the south-east, where they would eventually try to find work in banana plantations.
ON Wednesday morning, Port and another blacktracker, Tommy George (the pair are the only full-time blacktrackers still employed in Queensland) hit the trail again, but were confused at first because they were looking for bare footprints, when the trio were by then wearing new sandals they had stolen from the store.
When the blacktrackers realised that fresh sandal imprints in soft sand near the Coen River were made by the fugitives, they did not take long to find them.
Vivienne Gardiner , the co-owner of the Coen store, said: "The sandals let them down because they had a fairly prominent mark on the sole. As soon as the trackers saw them sandals, they said 'we know where they are'."
A search team of 25 people, including some on horseback, were combing the rough rocky country around the river. When the trio were spotted about 9 am, they again tried to run away but didn't get far.
"They couldn't run fast because their feet were all sore and they were all bruised and scratched," Port said.
They finally stopped when the team leader, Sergeant John Moran, shouted to them: "You can stop now because you are surrounded. This isn't a game any more."
Port said: "The first thing they asked for when we came up to them was a smoke. They looked scared and not very happy." |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|