The e-mail claims that the ministry requires all employers to submit a monthly declaration. . Read more at straitstimes.com.
Recipients are instructed to fill in the attached declaration form to indicate whether they have been paid their salary for the month of April and to submit the form before the end of May. Members of the public are advised to immediately lodge a police report if they have been affected by this scam. The scam e-mail, shown in a screenshot in MOM's Facebook post, claims that the ministry requires all employers to submit a monthly declaration to ensure all workers are paid their salary in a timely manner.
SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) on Monday (May 23) warned members of the public about a fake email from scammers impersonating its officers.
MOM has urged anyone who has been affected by the scam to lodge a police report immediately. "MOM does not send emails with ZIP file attachments," the ministry said. The email claimed that MOM requires employers to submit a declaration every month on salary payments, "to ensure that all workers continue to get paid salaries in a timely manner".
Leah Menzies, an 18-year-old college student, lost her mom when she was 7. Recently, she learned that her boyfriend knew her mom: He was her student.
"What gets me is that she was standing with my future boyfriend and she had no idea.” McLeodd was staring at a photo of himself and Menzies late mother. “I couldn’t figure out why he was being so dramatic.”
Australian teen Leah Menzies went viral online after a wholesome discovery about her boyfriend and her late mother. Menzies, 18, was left saddened when ...
In a follow-up video, Menzies clarified that she didn't know her boyfriend before dating him and so had no idea he had a connection to her mom. I asked him what happened thinking he was being dramatic about something but when I saw what he was pointing at I immediately started crying." Menzies, 18, was left saddened when realizing that her mom, who passed away 11 years ago, would be unable to meet her boyfriend.
The mother of twin 3-year-old boys was arrested last week after Odessa police said she left them alone for an unknown period of time.
According to the report, the man called the officer back and said his wife was on her way home. She was released Friday after posting two surety bonds totaling $6,000. Uhegbu arrived home at 9 a.m. and told the officer she’d only been gone about 15 minutes and explained she’d been picking up some medication, the report stated.