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Friday, June 26, 2015

PUTRAJAYA GOES BONKERS: Now, man wearing ‘CUTE PINK SHORTS’ kicked out from KLIA’s Lost & Found

PUTRAJAYA GOES BONKERS: Now, man wearing ‘CUTE PINK SHORTS’ kicked out from KLIA’s Lost & Found
KUALA LUMPUR - If you think it was only the women who were asked to cover up over “indecent” dressing, think again.
In a rare case of unintentional gender equality, a man was asked to cover up at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport’s Lost and Found department after he showed up wearing “cute pink shorts (knee length) and sandals”.
While Wilson Ng was asked to cover up last month, he decided to share his account following the spate of incidents involving women and the dress code.
In his blog, Placesandfoods.com, Ng said he left his bag at KLIA after returning from Taipei with his family and was subsequently told to reclaim it at the Lost and Found Department.
He said upon registering at the Aviation Security (AVSEC) office, he was told by the security guard to go home and change his clothes as there was a “dress code to enter the KLIA building and the lost and found baggage office.”
“This took me by surprise and I was shocked and upset over their request as my house was not near KLIA. I told the guard that I was not told about any dress code when I called up a day before there was nothing mentioned about the dress code and there is nothing mentioned on the website as well.
“Because I insisted they told me that they have pants and shoes that I could wear. So I wore the pants that I could not zip and shoes without socks, I went to get my security tag and went into the lost and found baggage office,” he wrote.
Ng said as he was leaving the premise, he saw a Caucasian tourist cursing the officers, as he was apparently wearing shorts and sandals.
“To me, rules are rules and I will follow the rules, full stop. But they should have a notice on their website about the dress code. I am not angry at the security officers as they are just doing their job.”
Ng’s revelation comes in the wake of a woman being told to wear a sarong at a Road Transport Department (JPJ) office earlier this month before she could be attended to.
On Monday, two women, one of whom was a journalist, were denied entry to the Selangor State Secretariat building after being allegedly told they were indecently dressed.
A day after, a woman visiting a patient at the Sungai Buloh hospital was instructed to wrap a towel around her waist before she could enter the ward as she was wearing shorts.
Yesterday, a woman wearing a knee-length skirt, was allegedly denied entry into the court complex in Penang. - http://www.therakyatpost.com/

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