Singaporean Man's Instagram Bomb Joke Delays 3 Scoot Flights

A Singaporean man's Instagram bomb joke delayed three Scoot flights from Changi Airport. He pleaded guilty, compensated S$1,946, and faces up to 7 years.

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Source: OT-Team(G), Malay Mail

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Many people enjoy making jokes on social media, but some subjects are no laughing matter—especially when aviation security is involved.

A 20-year-old Singaporean man has pleaded guilty after posting a fake bomb-related message on Instagram that triggered a security response at Changi Airport and delayed three Scoot flights.

The incident took place on the night of June 7, 2025. The man, identified in court as Rykes Tan Zhi Kai, was serving his national service at the time and was preparing to board a Scoot flight from Singapore to Taipei.

While waiting at Changi Airport, Tan took a selfie with a Scoot Boeing Dreamliner and uploaded it to his Instagram Story. He captioned the image with the message: “Im [sic] about to bomb this plane,” which he later claimed was intended as a joke.

After posting the image, a friend contacted him through Instagram to ask about it. Tan responded with another message that read: “This is automated message. Tan Zhi Kai, Rykes have successfully bombed the plane and is unable to contact you from now onwards.” He later told investigators that the remark was meant as a joke implying that he had died.

Although the post was shared only with his Instagram followers—most of whom were friends and acquaintances—the situation quickly escalated. At about 1 a.m. on June 8, police received an anonymous report regarding the post.

Given the potential implications for aviation security, authorities immediately launched an investigation and ordered additional screening measures for Scoot Dreamliner flights scheduled to depart between 12:10 a.m. and 1:50 a.m.

As a result, three flights—TR138 to Tianjin, TR186 to Qingdao, and TR720 to Athens—underwent enhanced security checks. All three flights were delayed and were eventually cleared for departure at around 3 a.m.

The disruption affected hundreds of passengers and generated additional operational costs for the airline. Scoot later reported losses of approximately S$1,946 as a result of the incident.

Tan had already boarded Scoot flight TR876 to Taipei with three companions before police received the report. He returned to Singapore several days later and was arrested on June 11, 2025.

The case was heard in court on June 4, 2026, where Tan pleaded guilty to one charge of communicating false information about a harmful act.

Prosecutors argued that deterrence was necessary because Changi Airport is a critical piece of public infrastructure used daily by large numbers of local and international travelers. They emphasized that any statement involving bombs or threats to aircraft—even when intended as a joke and posted on a personal social media account—can trigger public alarm, extensive security operations, and the diversion of significant public resources.

Tan’s lawyer told the court that his client had cooperated with authorities, pleaded guilty at an early stage, and fully compensated Scoot for its losses. The defense also noted that Tan remains in national service and intends to retake his Singapore-Cambridge GCE Advanced Level examinations.

The judge ordered both a probation suitability report and a reformative training suitability report before sentencing. The case has been adjourned, with Tan expected to return to court at a later date for mitigation and sentencing.

Under Singapore law, the offence carries a maximum penalty of seven years’ imprisonment, a fine of up to S$50,000, or both.

The case serves as a reminder that comments involving bombs, aircraft, or other security threats are treated seriously by authorities, regardless of whether they are intended as jokes. In the highly regulated aviation sector, even a single social media post can result in flight disruptions, financial losses, and criminal prosecution.

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WeChat Moments Rules : New Friend Visibility & Deleted Likes

WeChat's guide: new friends see past posts based on group settings; one-way deletion keeps likes, mutual deletes them; re-add restores all.

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Source: OT-Team(G), 微信派

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On June 26, WeChat’s official public account published a post titled “A Few Cold Facts About Moments,” addressing long-debated user questions about interaction retention after friend removal and visibility settings for new contacts. Here’s a clear breakdown of the rules.

  • Can a new friend see your past posts with group-based visibility?

Imagine this: you add a new colleague, and soon after, they like your recent post complaining about work—even though you distinctly set that post to be invisible to “Colleagues.”

What happened? Simple: you forgot to add them to the “Colleagues” group.

Here’s how it works:

  1. If you set a post as not visible to Group X, and your new friend is not in Group X → they can see it.

  2. If you set a post as visible to Group Y, and your new friend is not in Group Y → they cannot see it.

It sounds like a tongue-twister, but the rule is straightforward: a new friend’s access depends entirely on which groups they’ve been placed in. Group-based visibility applies to them just like anyone else.

Think of groups as different doors: some people get the living room, others get the bedroom. You hold the keys—but you have to remember to use them.

  • What happens to past interactions (likes and comments) after you delete a friend?

You delete someone. There’s a certain satisfaction in that digital declutter. But later, you might wonder: do their past likes and comments on your posts still show up?

  1. If you delete them (one-way): Past interactions remain intact on both sides. They may not even notice—until they send you a message and get the red exclamation point.

  2. If you both delete each other (mutual): Their likes and comments disappear from your Moments. Your own replies remain, but all traces of their activity are withdrawn.

So, if you’ve deleted someone and want to know whether they’ve deleted you too… just check if their past interactions still appear under your posts.

3.     Special cases:

  1. Mutual delete, then re-add: Once you re-add each other as friends, all past interactions are fully restored—not a single item lost.

  2. One-way delete, then replying to their old comment: You can still type a reply under their past comment, but it’s a one-way street—they won’t receive it. However, if you later reconcile and re-add each other, your reply will be delivered to them.

An analogy: The interactions between A and B are like items they bought together and left at a mutual friend C’s place. Only when both say “we don’t want this anymore” does C put it away. Moments is that friend C. The memory belongs to both—it stays until both agree it goes. And in the eyes of mutual friends, your past interactions remain visible as always.

  • WeChat never manages your social life for you.

Whether you group people or not—that’s your call. The platform doesn’t judge your relationships. Whether traces stay or vanish after deletion—that’s between two people. WeChat doesn’t unilaterally close the chapter for you.

It only provides tools, never answers. Because the answers were always yours to make.

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Shanghai Cape Verde Fans Cheer World Cup Underdog Clash vs Argentina

Cape Verde fans in Shanghai (17) cheer World Cup underdogs. Watch at The Shed & Cages. Next vs Argentina July 4, 6am CT. Join Blue Sharks' July 5 celebration.

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By Ned Kelly


When Cape Verde stunned European Champions Spain in a resilient goalless draw, it put the tiny African country on the world football map.

READ MORE: Cape Verde Just Gave the World Cup Its 1st Great Underdog Story


The tournament debutants went on to reach the knockout stage—at just over half a million people, the least populous nation to have ever achieved the feat.


Next, they meet defending champions Argentina.


Hoping they can pull off the ultimate upset is Daisy, who will be cheering them on in Shanghai with her fellow fans of the Blue Sharks—or Tubarões Azuis in Portuguese.


We caught up with the China-based Cape Verdean to find out more about the little island nation making big waves.


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Daisy with the World Cup


What first brought you to China?

I’ve been living in China since 2017. I came as a language student, completed my bachelor’s degree here, and now run my own sourcing and trading company in Shanghai.


How many people from Cape Verde are there in Shanghai?

We are 17 Cape Verdeans in the city right now, according to our WeChat group, 'Shanghai CV Survivors.'


There are also many other Cape Verdeans living in different cities across China.


We don’t have a consulate in Shanghai, but we do have our embassy in Beijing.


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Cheering on the Blue Sharks in The Shed


Where have you guys been watching the games?

So far, we’ve watched the games at The Shed and Cages.


The first game was incredibly emotional for us. People kept coming up asking, “Where are you from? What flag is this?”


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The Cape Verde crew in Cages


When we said Cape Verde, many of them had never even heard of our country. And once they realized we were playing against Spain, they were shocked.


I remember in the second half, the entire place started paying attention to the match—even people who were just there to play pool or have a drink.


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Blue Sharks' 40-year-old super keeper, Vozinha


They came over asking our goalkeeper’s name and were clapping every time he made a save. It was just amazing.


I even checked Vozinha’s social media during the match—he had around 340,000 followers at the time. By the end of the game, it had reached a million.


We couldn’t believe it.


Click above to see video


Were you guys as surprised as the rest of the world that Cape Verde did so well?

We weren’t as surprised as the rest of the world. We are proud, but we always knew that our team had been working hard for years.


Cape Verdeans grow up with football; it is part of our life. Football is like a magic box—you never really know what’s coming next. 


The whole world told us, “Go there, have fun, take it as a holiday, and enjoy your luck.”


We took that 1% chance and added 99% faith—and here we are today.


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Blue Sharks' Bubista winning African Coach of the Year at the 2025 CAF Awards


What do you put the success down to?

This success would not have been possible without our coach Bubista. He is the pillar of everything, alongside the hard work, better organization, and players gaining experience in stronger leagues abroad. 


The team has become more disciplined and confident.


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Image via Instagram @ohhosports


Did you read about the Chinese businessman helping goalkeeper Vozinha’s mother attend the game?

I actually know the Chinese businessman, Lin Jie, through my parents, as they do business together on the island I am from back home.


When I saw the video, I shared it with him on WeChat and he replied, “佛得角火了” (“Cape Verde is trending / on fire”).


It was a really touching gesture. It shows how football brings people together beyond borders and how emotional the game can be. 


And I truly believe such kindness is something you often find in China—people are very warm-hearted and willing to help.


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Cape Verde fans at WhyNot外岛精酿餐吧 in Beijing


World Champions Argentina up next—do you dare to dream?

It is a huge challenge against the Argentina national football team, especially knowing we will be facing Messi.


They are World Champions, but we believe our team will fight hard, stay organized, and take whatever chances we get.


But for me, playing against Spain, Uruguay, and now reaching the knockout stage to face Argentina is already beyond what we could have imagined.


It shows the world what Cape Verde can do—that the impossible is possible—and that football will always surprise us.


As our national anthem says: "A esperança é do tamanho do mar que nos abraça”—meaning, “Hope is as big as the sea that embraces us."


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Cape Verde fans outside WhyNot外岛精酿餐吧 in Beijing


What are your plans for the game?

The next game is on July 4, and our Independence Day is July 5, so we are planning to combine both moments and celebrate no matter the result.


We are already winners—history has been made for us.


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China-based Cape Verde fans at the NRG Stadium in Houston for the World Cup game against Saudi Arabia


Are fans of other nations welcome to join you, and if so, what chants should they learn?

Everyone is welcome to join us, as long as it is with respect. Football is about sharing moments.


"Força, Tubarões Azuis!" "Stay strong, Blue Sharks!"


"No bai Cabo Verde!" "Let's go, Cape Verde!"


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A China-based Cape Verde fan at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for the historic World Cup draw against Spain

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Cape Verde takes on Argentina at 6am Chinese time this Saturday, July 4.


FIFA World Cup

Where to Watch It In Shanghai

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