IN a bid to recover money that her former paramour allegedly owed some three decades ago, a woman in Ampang, Kuala Lumpur, splashed faeces and paint on his house to get him to pay up, China Press reported.
The nightmare began for driver Xie Wei Ming, 48, in March this year when his ex-girlfriend went to his parents’ house to collect a debt.
She claimed that Xie had borrowed RM1,500 to study for and pass his motorcycle test in 1996 – the year they dated.
When Xie refused to pay her, the woman started spreading rumours online that his family members were scammers and began asking for larger sums.
Beginning in July, the woman’s antics escalated and she started bringing a pail filled with urine, faeces and paint to his house in the wee hours of the morning.
CCTV footage showed the woman splashing the pail’s contents onto the door, wall and cars.
On her fourth attempt on Aug 11, she even boasted about her actions on TikTok, saying that she was “so excited that I just went to deliver some breakfast!”
Xie and his family have lodged 14 police reports, but no action has been taken.
“Police have yet to make an arrest and want us to settle the matter.”
Having lost contact for nearly three decades and with both starting their own families, Xie said he is perplexed as to why his ex-girlfriend is tormenting him now.
> The daily also reported that American-Taiwanese heartthrob Leehom Wang is rumoured to have a new girlfriend four years after his divorce.
During a recent post-concert celebration, a woman was seen dancing with Wang’s mother, who was smiling and appeared to enjoy her company.
When footage of the incident went viral, many fans suspected that she was Wang’s new partner.
Netizens managed to unearth the mysterious woman’s social media page, which showed her in photos with Wang’s parents.
In 2021, Wang’s ex-wife Lee Jinglei accused him of various misdeeds throughout their marriage, including infidelities, soliciting prostitutes and being verbally abusive towards her.
The above article is compiled from the vernacular newspapers (Bahasa Malaysia, Chinese and Tamil dailies). As such, stories are grouped according to the respective language/medium. Where a paragraph begins with this ' >'sign, it denotes a separate news item.
