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新加坡与马来西亚运动员跨国婚姻合规指南

来源:CNA Singapore

作者:东南亚合规中心编辑团队

TL;DR · 核心要点

本文非法规文件,而是CNA发布的体育人文报道,不涉及任何新出台的法律、税收、许可或监管要求。报道讲述新加坡与马来西亚两名 silat 运动员跨国恋爱、结婚及职业协作的真实故事,聚焦个人关系、体育精神与跨境生活安排。文中未提及任何强制性合规义务、政策变更、申报要求或监管措施。对企业的实际影响为零——该内容不构成监管指引,不触发企业任何法定义务,无需调整人力资源、税务、签证或 licensing 策略。

✅ 合规行动清单 · Compliance Checklist

  • 无需采取任何合规行动——本报道不构成法律、税务或监管要求。
  • 如涉及外籍员工跨境通勤(如新马两地训练),请按现行ICA/MOM政策办理工作准证与入境手续。
  • 关注新加坡体育局(SportSG)及马来西亚青年与体育部(KBS)后续发布的正式竞技伦理指南(如有)。
  • No regulatory action required — this article imposes zero legal or compliance obligations.
  • For cross-border athlete commutes (e.g., Singapore–Malaysia), ensure valid work passes (MOM) and immigration clearance (ICA/IMMIGRATION MALAYSIA).
  • Monitor official updates from SportSG (Singapore) and KBS (Malaysia) for future codes of conduct on dual-national representation.

English Summary

This CNA article is a human-interest sports feature, not an official regulatory instrument. It describes the personal relationship between two national-level silat athletes from Singapore and Malaysia — including marriage, training logistics, and competition ethics — but introduces no new laws, tax rules, licensing requirements, or compliance obligations. There are no deadlines, thresholds, enforcement mechanisms, or directives for businesses. Foreign companies operating in Singapore or Malaysia are unaffected: this content does not amend immigration policy, employment law, anti-conflict-of-interest regulations, or sports governance frameworks. No action is required.

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常见问题解答

这篇报道是否意味着新加坡出台了新的跨国婚姻或体育从业规定?+
不是。该报道仅为新闻特写,由CNA发布,不具法律效力,未引入任何新规、许可要求或合规义务。新加坡现行婚姻登记、工作准证及体育代表资格政策保持不变。
企业是否需要为类似跨国运动员员工调整HR政策?+
不需要。除非适用现有劳动法(如《就业法案》)、移民条例或行业守则,否则本故事不触发任何HR政策更新。企业应继续遵循MOM和ICA现行框架。
新加坡运动员代表他国参赛是否存在法律风险?+
根据现行规定,新加坡公民代表他国参赛可能违反国家体育协会章程或资助协议,但本文未提及相关处罚或新规。具体须以SportSG及所属总会(如SPSF)最新指引为准。
报道中提到的‘conflict of interest’是否构成监管警示?+
文中所述仅为个人职业伦理考量,非监管认定。新加坡暂无法律禁止运动员与他国选手建立私人关系;冲突管理仍属教练团队内部指导范畴。
企业能否引用此文作为合规依据向监管部门说明情况?+
不能。CNA是媒体机构,非立法或执法主体。企业须援引IRAS、MOM、ICA、MAS等法定机构发布的正式文件,而非新闻报道作为合规依据。

相关关键词

Singapore compliancecross-border marriagesports regulationCNA SingaporeSEA athlete rules
📄 官方原文参考(英文)点击展开
Advertisement Sport Different flags, same team: How two silat exponents from Singapore and Malaysia found love "He will support Malaysia (when Singapore faces Malaysia), but will always show up for me," said Siti Khadijah Shahrem. Siti Khadijah Shahrem represents Singapore, while Muhamad Helmi Basrol competes for Malaysia. (Photo: CNA/Matthew Mohan) New: You can now listen to articles. This audio is generated by an AI tool. Matthew Mohan Matthew Mohan 13 Mar 2026 06:00AM (Updated: 13 Mar 2026 10:45AM) Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Read a summary of this article on FAST. Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST SINGAPORE: Whenever Singapore athlete Siti Khadijah Shahrem competes, only two voices cut through the noise.One is that of her cornerman, and the other is that of a fellow silat exponent who represents a different country. But Muhamad Helmi Basrol is more than just a fellow athlete. The 26-year-old, who competes for Malaysia, is Khadijah’s confidante, support system and her husband. CNA Games Guess Word Crack the word, one row at a time Buzzword Create words using the given letters Mini Sudoku Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser Mini Crossword Small grid, big challenge Word Search Spot as many words as you can Show More Show Less “When you’ve (locked in), it is very quiet. But the only person I focus on besides my cornerman … is him,” Khadijah told CNA. “His voice accompanies me during my fights.”"LOVELY TO WATCH"An accomplished athlete, Khadijah has represented the country at various top international silat competitions. She clinched a bronze at the 2018 Asian Games, took various medals at the World Pencak Silat Championships (2018 and 2022) and was nominated for Sportswoman of the Year at the 2023 Singapore Sports Awards.The pair first got to know each other at the Asian Pencak Silat Championship in 2023.“There was a certain interest (in each other). We didn’t show it so much, but we started getting closer as friends,” said Khadijah.“We got comfortable with each other and from there, we looked forward to meeting each other at other competitions.” Muhamad Helmi Basrol and Siti Khadijah Shahrem got married last year. (Photo: kimoarchvs/Instagram) While the pair also admired the way each other competed, little did Khadijah know that her future husband was already a fan.“I always viewed her as an ‘idol’ when I watched her on TV, YouTube or TikTok,” said Helmi, who has won various medals at the Asian level. “And I liked her gameplay.”“I enjoy watching him fight and that drew my attention,” said Khadijah. “(I liked) the charisma he carries. I don’t usually enjoy watching other people fight … but he was lovely to watch.”SEEKING VALUABLE ADVICEWhile Khadijah and Helmi are no strangers to the taste of victory, it was the disappointment of defeat that brought them closer.After a 2024 competition where both fighters were eliminated early, they ran into each other in Kuala Lumpur and spent half a day together."(With him) I surprisingly found comfort that I never felt for very long. It's hard for me to open up, but it was easy for me to open up to him," she said.But as the relationship blossomed, there was the concern of a conflict of interest, given that the pair represent different countries.While they kept things under wraps at first, Khadijah sought the advice of her head coach Rafili Ramli."He gave me 100 per cent support but he also reminded me that ... at competition, you have to be professional," recalled Khadijah.Others in the community were also very supportive, said Helmi. This includes Helmi's coach Siti Rahmah, who was previously an opponent of Khadijah's. View this post on Instagram "She reminded us that we are each other's semangat (spirit), and from there, we both knew that our relationship was being blessed," Khadijah said.At international tournaments, the pair avoids hanging out with one another, but remains each other's pillars of support.Said Khadijah: "He will support Malaysia (when Singapore faces Malaysia), but will always show up for me."A SHOULDER TO LEAN ONHaving a spouse who is present through the highs and lows is invaluable, said Khadijah."If I cry, no one else can understand but him. He knows the pain of the sport, he knows the hardships that I went through. He knows how difficult the sport is.""It's best because I can take care of her," added Helmi.Khadijah recalled Helmi provided a "boost" when she was injured at the 2024 Asian Pencak Silat Championship."Despite knowing that I would perform poorly because I could not punch (well), I still had the confidence and comfort ... knowing he was there," she said."He doesn't turn my weakness around to criticise me. In the sporting world, where everything seems to be very competitive, what he does is give me the shoulder to lean on." Related: Singapore wraps up silat campaign with SEA Games gold on final day of event And when she made the switch from silat to wushu for the 2025 SEA Games, Helmi gave his full support, Khadijah said.She eventually became Singapore's first female wushu exponent to win a sanda medal at the SEA Games, after clinching joint-bronze. Helmi also finished with a silver in the silat class E (65-70kg) category.Currently, Helmi spends his weekdays at a national team training camp in Nilai while Khadijah, who trains in Singapore five times a week, regularly commutes across the Causeway. While the travelling may seem like a chore, it is just part of the sacrifice required to be an athlete, she said."We both still respect each other's dreams and goals," said Khadijah. "He wants me to achieve what I want." Source: CNA/mt(mi) Newsletter Recommended Read Subscribe to CNA's Recommended Read A single handpicked story that we think you shouldn't miss. Just one a day. Newsletter Morning Brief Subscribe to CNA’s Morning Brief An automated curation of our top stories to start your day. Sign up for our newsletters Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox Subscribe here Get the CNA app Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories Download here Get WhatsApp alerts Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app Join here Related Topics Team Singapore pencak silat Malaysia Advertisement Also worth reading Content is loading... Advertisement Expand to read the full story Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST