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Pulau Babi
Hi everyone. I heard there is a island call Pulau Babi.
Understand there are still some activities going on there. Any senior can advise? hope to try out one day. Thanking in advance. |
#2
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Re: Pulau Babi
12 March 2006
Special Island For Singaporeans and Their Indonesian Sex Partners Mr Wang does not really have a lot to say about the article below. Mr Wang is posting it here just so that he can refer to it in future - when anyone starts talking about how AIDS is mainly due to gay Singaporeans' promiscuous activity; or how young Singaporeans are so very lacking in moral values today. Then Mr Wang can point to the straight Singaporean uncles and ah peks below and offer the ill-informed some food for thought. Sunday Times, March 12, 2006 Mistress island Welcome to Pulau Amat Belanda, second home to many Singapore men who visit their 'weekend wives' there By Arlina Arshad THERE is an island near Batam that receives, almost exclusively, male Singaporean visitors. When the men get off the boat, they pay 25,000 rupiah (about $5) to register with the security men. Their passports are checked, and details such as their names, IC numbers and Singapore addresses noted. Then they head to the homes of their 'weekend wives', rooms rented in stilted wooden houses. This is Pulau Amat Belanda, 30 minutes by boat from Sekupang port in Batam, an island that is a red-light district all on its own. Almost every male visitor to the Indonesian island has an 'exclusive' relationship with a woman there, to whom they give a cash allowance of between two million and five million rupiah ($350 to $900) every month to keep them from straying. Of the 35 'guaranteed' Indonesian women there, 15 are married to Singaporeans - middle-aged Chinese bachelors, widowers or divorcees. The wedding is a simple ceremony involving 'paperwork with police and immigration department, and fees of several million rupiahs', said Mr Yusran Zabaruddin, 26, secretary to the island's village headman. 'It's a quiet affair, without the typical wedding parades and beating of kompangs (hand-drums). Official Indonesian marriage books are then issued to the couples.' The rest of the women simply have a long-term relationship with the men, some of whom have wives back home. Other men visiting the island are barred from getting close to them, or risk being kicked out by the security men. It was on Pulau Amat Belanda that the first HIV case in Batam was discovered. In 1993, a Javanese sex worker and a Singaporean man tested positive there for HIV, the virus which causes Aids. The island is more popularly known to locals as Pulau Babi, or Pig Island. History has it that local Chinese used to rear pigs there in the 1970s and supply them to Singapore via wooden sampans. The island consists of a mere 3ha of land and 2ha of beach and sea area, on which there are 56 wooden houses on stilts. Johan (not his real name), a Singaporean in his 40s, likes the laid-back lifestyle there. First, there is no way the women can cheat, as 'the only way to get in and out of this island is by boat so the girls can't run anywhere', he said. Then there are the 'security men', appointed by the local authorities to look after the welfare of both the women and visitors. Besides the weekend wives, there are also about 100 'freelancers' living on the island. Women The Sunday Times spoke to hail from other parts of the country. A portion of what they earn is sent to their families in Java and Sumatra. Many have told their families and children that they work in shops and factories in Batam. They would not mention working on the infamous Pulau Amat Belanda, which was named after its 'big-sized, fair-skinned and sharp-nosed' Malaysian owner Ahmad, who resembled an Orang Belanda, or Dutchman. Some of the couples buy the cheap houses on the island and rent out rooms to 'freelancers' for 250,000 to 300,000 rupiah a month, and to visitors for 30,000 rupiah a day. Madam Kokom, 28, and her Singaporean shopkeeper husband bought a house there for $7,000 after they tied the knot five years ago. She earns more than $200 a month from renting out six rooms, which covers food and utility bills. 'My husband visits twice or thrice a month and he will bring rice and other groceries,' she said. Madam Kokom, who has a young son in Sumatra from a previous marriage, said she is selling the house so she can move to Belakang Padang island, a five-minute boat ride away. One of the 34 villages on Belakang Padang is called Kampung Tanjung, where she said other weekend wives of Singaporeans live. 'I have a family in Sumatra to support and I can't depend on the rental income forever. Maybe I can earn more if I open a shop in the villages,' she added. On a visit to the island last Saturday, The Sunday Times saw four elderly Singaporean men flirting with their wives over a dinner of rice and seafood at one of the island's five restaurants. One balding man proclaimed his love for his partner aloud, saying: 'Saya cinta awak', which means 'I love you' in Malay. The security register logged 21 Singaporean men that day. Said village headman Amir Das Pasiribu, 68: 'Singaporean men who come here are old and lonely. 'Over here, the women do not discriminate against them even if they are old or blue-collar workers. 'They are respectful and perhaps that's why many Singaporean men are drawn here.' Many of the 'freelancers' are not too happy to serve the older men, who they say are sexually insatiable, but they are still hoping to settle down with a Singaporean one day. As 20-year-old Ningsih said: 'It is not easy servicing different men; better to just stick with one.'
__________________
I will have headache if I dont see a strange piece of pussy every day For INCOMPLETE LIST OF MASSAGE CENTRES IN BATAM See link below http://www.sammyboyforum.com/showthr...6580&page=1281 |
#3
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Thank you for the info newyorker 88.
Seems like a deserted island. |
#4
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Re: Pulau Babi
Bro, hows the situation there at Pulau babi now? Still the same as reported on 12 march 06?
__________________
Plse dont upz me Thank you |
#5
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Re: Pulau Babi
Quote:
Today its haunted with decomposing corpses everywhere! |
#6
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Re: Pulau Babi
Serious?
__________________
Plse dont upz me Thank you |
#7
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Re: Pulau Babi
Ha ha ! that means during Chinese 7th month
the place will be very active and happening ! |
#8
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Re: Pulau Babi
Quote:
fr Sekupang, walk to nearby jetty 150m and motorboat to Pulau Belakang Padang(about 8-10k Rp). Take tricycle or walk to end of Is.. Take sampan 5k to P. Babi. Ask around, they all know P. Babi. |
#9
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Re: Pulau Babi
Tks for the info. After fasting month may just go there look see look see out of curiosity.
__________________
Plse dont upz me Thank you |
#10
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Re: Pulau Babi
Quote:
food from small shops there. U wont last 2 nites. |
#11
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Re: Pulau Babi
Hahaha.... Don't expect it to be the same as those established cheong places like T Balai, Batam or even close to T Pinang. Take a sampan from Sekupang to Pulau Babi at your own risk during monsoon season.
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#12
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Re: Pulau Babi
some documentary on this island
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#13
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Re: Pulau Babi
__________________
Plse dont upz me Thank you |
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