Selasa, 21 Juli 2020

Hong Kong police swarm border town on anniversary of protest attack - CNA

HONG KONG: Riot police fanned out across a Hong Kong town on Tuesday (Jul 21) to stamp out rallies marking the one-year anniversary of an attack against protesters by government supporters which sent anti-Beijing sentiment soaring.

Officers used pepper spray to disperse small groups of protesters and reporters inside a mall in the town of Yuen Long, near the border with China.

Hundreds were detained and searched throughout the night, and police said at least five arrests made, as officers used loudhailers to warn people against "unlawful assembly".

At one point a police banner was raised saying crowds were in breach of a new security law Beijing imposed on the city after a man waved his own sign with the popular protest slogan: "Liberate Hong Kong. Revolution of our times."

Police said they issued 79 spot fines under emergency anti-coronavirus measures banning groups of more than four people. Activists and reporters wearing yellow press jackets were among those given tickets, AFP journalists saw.

READ: Hong Kong journalist live streams being attacked at train station

The attack inside Yuen Long station was a pivotal moment in last year's huge protests, compounding already swirling animosity towards the police and heralding a dramatic increase in political violence.

At least 40 people were injured when a group of stick-wielding men set upon protesters returning from a rally in the city.

Riot police enter a shopping mall in Yuen Long to dispere an attempt by anti-government protesters
Riot police enter a shopping mall in Yuen Long to dispere an attempt by anti-government protesters to rally. (Photo: AFP/Dale de la Rey)

Videos of bloody beatings went viral, sparking accusations that police were too slow to respond and had allowed the attackers to gather and depart unmolested.

The force denies allegations of collusion and says 37 people have been arrested over the attack - some with links to "triad" organised crime gangs.

Seven have been charged so far.

READ: 45 injured after mob attack at Hong Kong MTR station

In a statement on Tuesday, the police said they "understand the public's concern" and said the investigation had "high priority".

'UGLY SIDE'

More than 9,000 people have been arrested during protests over the last year, with some 1,500 charged.

Hong Kong police turned out in force to stamp out any attempt at protests in Yeung Long
Hong Kong police turned out in force to stamp out any attempt at protests in Yeung Long. (Photo: AFP/Dale de la Rey)

Local lawmaker Lam Cheuk-ting was one of those beaten in last year's attack.

He was among those fined on Tuesday while trying to hold a small rally outside the station.

"I believe the police cannot face their own dark and ugly side in the Jul 21 attack, so they prevent us legislators from speaking out for the people," he told reporters afterwards.

"But all Hong Kongers have seen it (the attack) clearly last year," he added.

Prostesters attend a rally at a shopping mall in Hong Kong
Protesters attend a rally at a shopping mall in Hong Kong on Jul 21, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Dale de la Rey)

Yuen Long is a blue-collar town in Hong Kong's rural New Territories bordering mainland China. It is a stronghold of staunchly pro-Beijing groups, as well as triad gangs.

The attack sparked huge protests by residents and left the community deeply divided.

READ: China vows 'forceful counter-attack' in escalating row with Britain over Hong Kong

"I feel helpless," a restaurant owner who gave just her first name Gigi told AFP on Tuesday.

"Everyone knows what happened on that day, and yet the government refuses to face the truth."

Riot police enter a shopping mall in Yuen Long
Riot police enter a shopping mall in Yuen Long, Hong Kong on Jul 21, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Dale de la Rey)

As she was speaking, another man shouted that protesters were trying to start a "colour revolution" - an accusation frequently levelled by Beijing.

Anger towards China now permeates swathes of semi-autonomous Hong Kong.

Last year's rallies raged for seven straight months, with violent clashes between police and protesters becoming routine.

In response, Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the city last month. China says it will restore stability and not hinder freedoms.

But the law has already been used to criminalise some forms of peaceful protesting, such as advocating for independence or greater autonomy.

Similar national security laws on the mainland are used to crush criticism of China's leaders.

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2020-07-21 18:38:19Z
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US defence secretary Mark Esper plans to visit China for talks - South China Morning Post

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  1. US defence secretary Mark Esper plans to visit China for talks  South China Morning Post
  2. South China Sea: Chinese air force ‘sends warning’ to US Navy with live-fire drills  Yahoo Singapore News
  3. 'We are a battleground now': In Southeast Asia, US-China tensions flare on social media  AsiaOne
  4. China alert: Japan prepares to scramble fighter jets against Beijing  Daily Express
  5. US defense secretary says he plans to visit China this year  Times of India
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-07-21 14:57:09Z
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Head of Indonesian peatland agency says he is 'very optimistic' there will be no forest fires this year - CNA

JAKARTA: The head of Indonesia’s Peatland Restoration Agency (BRG) Nazir Foead said that he is "very optimistic" there will be no fires this year in the peatlands under his supervision. 

Speaking to CNA in an exclusive interview on Monday (Jul 20), he said that the agency has improved the methods for preventing fires from happening this time round.

He said that BRG has set up about 150 sensors in non-concession peatlands that can measure the water and moisture level every hour.

These readings would indicate how susceptible the peatlands are to fires.  They will also give an indication if someone has purposely drained the peatland with the aim of setting fires to clear the land.

The BRG would send this information to relevant authorities, including law enforcers.

When asked how optimistic he is that no fires will happen this year, Mr Foead replied: "Very optimistic because we are working very hard.”

READ: Indonesia on high alert for forest fires until November as dry season is delayed: Environment minister

READ: COVID-19 hampers Indonesia's fight against forest fires as haze season looms

The meteorological, climatological, and geophysical agency (BMKG) has predicted a wetter dry season this year, which would also lower the chances of forest and land fires happening.

Despite this, the other government agencies have warned the BRG to remain vigilant, especially amid COVID-19, said Mr Foead.

The pandemic has brought economic hardship as a result of social restrictions put in place to curb the disease and now millions in Indonesia are out of jobs.

“They warned us. They said that those capitalists (brokers) who want to use this opportunity to clear land using fires will find it cheaper to pay people to burn land,” he said.

“(Because) people need more money.”

firefighters battling a forest fire near Pekanbaru sep 29
This picture taken on Sep 19, 2019 shows firefighters battling a forest fire near Pekanbaru, Riau. Indonesia is battling forest fires causing toxic haze across southeast Asia with aircraft, artificial rain and even prayer, President Joko Widodo said during a visit to a hard-hit area. (Photo: AFP/Wahyudi)

Authorities have long said that forest and land fires are man-made to clear land, worsened by dry weather.

“So they (authorities) warned us: ‘Be prudent, be prepared, you need to have a stronger intelligence, stronger patrols … The bad capitalists out there are trying to gain an advantage in the situation.

"There’s always those kinds of people and this year they can find easier and cheaper troops to do that,” Mr Foead said.

“So the danger is still high.”

After Indonesia experienced huge forest and land fires in 2015, which resulted in deaths, economic loss and transboundary haze, President Joko Widodo set up the BRG in Jan 2016 to prevent similar incidents. 

89% OF NON-CONCESSION PEATLAND HAS BEEN RESTORED

When the agency was first set up, Mr Foead said his team spent the first year planning how to restore peatlands which includes rewetting, revegetating, and revitalising economic livelihood in seven provinces where peatlands are mainly found.

Peatland is an accumulation of multiple layers of organic material such as mosses and plants.

Thus, when it gets burned, the fires would be harder to extinguish than fires on mineral soil as the flames would continue to smoulder beneath the surface.  

In the provinces of Riau, Jambi, South Sumatra, West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan and Papua, the BRG is continuously educating people about the importance of peatland restoration, he said.

There are about 2.6 million ha of peatland in the seven provinces, about 1.7 million ha of them are on concession lands which are the responsibility of companies.

The companies are mainly dealing with palm oil, pulp and paper as well as timber.

The environment and forestry ministry is responsible for overseeing peatland on concession lands, while the BRG is responsible for about 900,000 ha of peatland on non-concession lands which are community lands.

READ: It all begins with a lit match: Long odds in hunt for forest fire culprits in Indonesia

READ: Death toll rises as millions in Indonesia suffer from raging forest fires

Mr Foead said that 89 per cent of the peatland on non-concession land has been restored as of the end of 2019. The target set by the government is to achieve 100 per cent by the end of this year.

Mr Foead noted how local farmers have taken ownership of the peatlands and have even planted pineapples, vegetables and coffee on the lands.

Indonesia forest fire
Fire raging in Jambi, Indonesia on Sep 25, 2019. (Photo: Kiki Siregar)

Commenting on the remaining target, he said: “We are confident when it comes to the non-concession lands.”

However, he noted that forest and land fires are not only dependent on the moisture level of peatland. Tough law enforcement is also crucial to ensure people would not deliberately set fires anymore.

PEATLAND RESTORATION "CANNOT BE DONE QUICKLY"

Mr Foead told CNA that peatland restoration should be a long term effort, as the land cannot be rehabilitated in a short period of time.

He explained that if peatland has been drained since 1999, for example, it would need 10 or even 20 years to be restored.

“Based on cases abroad, there are even instances which take up to 30 years. Even those have not restored completely,” Mr Foead said.

 “So ecosystem restoration takes time. It cannot be done quickly.”

Burnt peatland in Jambi, Indonesia
Peatland that has been razed by fire. (Photo: Kiki Siregar) 

The BRG chief, who used to work for the World Wildlife Fund also said that his agency is trying new methods of peatland mapping, which combines coring with three-dimensional satellite images.

With an improved methodology, the agency will have access to land categorisation data. It can then take samples according to every category, which is a quicker and cheaper way of mapping.

READ: Firefighters on frontline of Indonesia’s peatland blaze face uphill battle

Considering the new technologies and methods the BRG now has, backed up by civil society, communities, and governments as well as policies, Mr Foead is hopeful that Indonesia can be a champion in peatland restoration.

“I would really like to see that we will prove this is the most effective way in protecting, maintaining and restoring peatlands.

“We have a lot to share with the world, mostly tropical countries that have huge peatlands. Or maybe any rehabilitation programme in any biome, not only peatlands but also wetland habitats, we can share a lot.”    

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2020-07-21 10:37:57Z
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Woman fined after failing to inform authorities about employer's unlawful business activities with North Korea - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - A secretary was aware that her Singapore-based firm and related companies were unlawfully supplying luxury items to North Korea, but she failed to alert the authorities as she feared losing her job .

Singaporean Lam Hon Lan, 40, was fined $6,000 on Tuesday (July 21) after pleading guilty to three charges under the United Nations Act involving perfumes and cosmetics worth more than $82,000.

The court considered 40 other similar charges involving goods worth nearly $500,000 during sentencing.

United Nations sanctions prohibit people in Singapore or Singaporeans outside the country from selling or supplying certain luxury items to anyone in North Korea.

Anyone with information about such transactions must alert the authorities.

Police said in an earlier statement that Lam, who was working for SCN Singapore at the time of the offences, also handled administrative matters for two other firms - Sindok Trading and Laurich International.

The court heard on Tuesday that these companies unlawfully supplied luxury items to four North Korean organisations from December 2010 to November 2016.

One of them, the Korean Bugsae Shop, was owned by North Korean Li Ik.

Li Ik's son, Li Hyon, had studied in Singapore before helping his father with the luxury goods business here.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Thiam Jia Min said the bulk of the luxury items were supplied by SCN Singapore directly to the shop.

They were shipped to North Korea by air through Beijing or via freight vessels via Dalian in China, as well as by hand through airport check-ins.

Lam's job included sourcing the luxury items and issuing export documents, as well as arranging for shipments to the North Korean organisations.

The offences came to light after Singapore's Commercial Affairs Department received information that SCN Singapore had "significant sales" to more than one entity in North Korea.

Li Hyon, 32, was jailed for four weeks last month after pleading guilty to four counts of engaging in a conspiracy with other people and two companies - including SCN Singapore - to deliver luxury goods such as cosmetics and spirits to North Korea.

The cases involving SCN Singapore,Sindok Trading and Laurich International are pending.

Committing offences under the Act before March 10, 2014, can bring jail terms of up to five years and fines. Offences committed after March 10, 2014, can result in jail sentences of up to 10 years and fines.

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2020-07-21 10:21:40Z
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Head of Indonesian peatland agency says he is 'very optimistic' there will be no forest fires this year - CNA

JAKARTA: The head of Indonesia’s Peatland Restoration Agency (BRG) Nazir Foead said that he is "very optimistic" there will be no fires this year in the peatlands under his supervision. 

Speaking to CNA in an exclusive interview on Monday (Jul 20), he said that the agency has improved the methods for preventing fires from happening this time round.

He said that BRG has set up about 150 sensors in non-concession peatlands that can measure the water and moisture level every hour.

These readings would indicate how susceptible the peatlands are to fires.  They will also give an indication if someone has purposely drained the peatland with the aim of setting fires to clear the land.

The BRG would send this information to relevant authorities, including law enforcers.

When asked how optimistic he is that no fires will happen this year, Mr Foead replied: "Very optimistic because we are working very hard.”

READ: Indonesia on high alert for forest fires until November as dry season is delayed: Environment minister

READ: COVID-19 hampers Indonesia's fight against forest fires as haze season looms

The meteorological, climatological, and geophysical agency (BMKG) has predicted a wetter dry season this year, which would also lower the chances of forest and land fires happening.

Despite this, the other government agencies have warned the BRG to remain vigilant, especially amid COVID-19, said Mr Foead.

The pandemic has brought economic hardship as a result of social restrictions put in place to curb the disease and now millions in Indonesia are out of jobs.

“They warned us. They said that those capitalists (brokers) who want to use this opportunity to clear land using fires will find it cheaper to pay people to burn land,” he said.

“(Because) people need more money.”

firefighters battling a forest fire near Pekanbaru sep 29
This picture taken on Sep 19, 2019 shows firefighters battling a forest fire near Pekanbaru, Riau. Indonesia is battling forest fires causing toxic haze across southeast Asia with aircraft, artificial rain and even prayer, President Joko Widodo said during a visit to a hard-hit area. (Photo: AFP/Wahyudi)

Authorities have long said that forest and land fires are man-made to clear land, worsened by dry weather.

“So they (authorities) warned us: ‘Be prudent, be prepared, you need to have a stronger intelligence, stronger patrols … The bad capitalists out there are trying to gain an advantage in the situation.

"There’s always those kinds of people and this year they can find easier and cheaper troops to do that,” Mr Foead said.

“So the danger is still high.”

After Indonesia experienced huge forest and land fires in 2015, which resulted in deaths, economic loss and transboundary haze, President Joko Widodo set up the BRG in Jan 2016 to prevent similar incidents. 

89% OF NON-CONCESSION PEATLAND HAS BEEN RESTORED

When the agency was first set up, Mr Foead said his team spent the first year planning how to restore peatlands which includes rewetting, revegetating, and revitalising economic livelihood in seven provinces where peatlands are mainly found.

Peatland is an accumulation of multiple layers of organic material such as mosses and plants.

Thus, when it gets burned, the fires would be harder to extinguish than fires on mineral soil as the flames would continue to smoulder beneath the surface.  

In the provinces of Riau, Jambi, South Sumatra, West Kalimantan, Central Kalimantan, South Kalimantan and Papua, the BRG is continuously educating people about the importance of peatland restoration, he said.

There are about 2.6 million ha of peatland in the seven provinces, about 1.7 million ha of them are on concession lands which are the responsibility of companies.

The companies are mainly dealing with palm oil, pulp and paper as well as timber.

The environment and forestry ministry is responsible for overseeing peatland on concession lands, while the BRG is responsible for about 900,000 ha of peatland on non-concession lands which are community lands.

READ: It all begins with a lit match: Long odds in hunt for forest fire culprits in Indonesia

READ: Death toll rises as millions in Indonesia suffer from raging forest fires

Mr Foead said that 89 per cent of the peatland on non-concession land has been restored as of the end of 2019. The target set by the government is to achieve 100 per cent by the end of this year.

Mr Foead noted how local farmers have taken ownership of the peatlands and have even planted pineapples, vegetables and coffee on the lands.

Indonesia forest fire
Fire raging in Jambi, Indonesia on Sep 25, 2019. (Photo: Kiki Siregar)

Commenting on the remaining target, he said: “We are confident when it comes to the non-concession lands.”

However, he noted that forest and land fires are not only dependent on the moisture level of peatland. Tough law enforcement is also crucial to ensure people would not deliberately set fires anymore.

PEATLAND RESTORATION "CANNOT BE DONE QUICKLY"

Mr Foead told CNA that peatland restoration should be a long term effort, as the land cannot be rehabilitated in a short period of time.

He explained that if peatland has been drained since 1999, for example, it would need 10 or even 20 years to be restored.

“Based on cases abroad, there are even instances which take up to 30 years. Even those have not restored completely,” Mr Foead said.

 “So ecosystem restoration takes time. It cannot be done quickly.”

Burnt peatland in Jambi, Indonesia
Peatland that has been razed by fire. (Photo: Kiki Siregar) 

The BRG chief, who used to work for the World Wildlife Fund also said that his agency is trying new methods of peatland mapping, which combines coring with three-dimensional satellite images.

With an improved methodology, the agency will have access to land categorisation data. It can then take samples according to every category, which is a quicker and cheaper way of mapping.

READ: Firefighters on frontline of Indonesia’s peatland blaze face uphill battle

Considering the new technologies and methods the BRG now has, backed up by civil society, communities, and governments as well as policies, Mr Foead is hopeful that Indonesia can be a champion in peatland restoration.

“I would really like to see that we will prove this is the most effective way in protecting, maintaining and restoring peatlands.

“We have a lot to share with the world, mostly tropical countries that have huge peatlands. Or maybe any rehabilitation programme in any biome, not only peatlands but also wetland habitats, we can share a lot.”    

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2020-07-21 09:43:31Z
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Coronavirus: Possible but not certain vaccine can be rolled out this year, says Oxford developer - The Straits Times

LONDON (REUTERS) - The University of Oxford’s possible Covid-19 vaccine could be rolled out by the end of the year but there is no certainty that will happen, the lead developer of the vaccine said on Tuesday (July 21).

The experimental vaccine, which has been licensed to AstraZeneca, produced an immune response in early-stage clinical trials, data showed on Monday, preserving hopes it could be in use by the end of the year. 

“The end of the year target for getting vaccine roll-out, it’s a possibility but there’s absolutely no certainty about that because we need three things to happen,” Sarah Gilbert told BBC Radio.  She said it needed to be shown to work in late-stage trials, there needed to be large quantities manufactured and regulators had to agree quickly to license it for emergency use. 

“All of these three things have to happen and come together before we can start seeing large numbers of people vaccinated,” she said. 

The Oxford scientists had eyed a million doses of the potential vaccine to be produced by September. 

Although the deal with AstraZeneca has provided manufacturing capacity to do that, the lower prevalence of the novel coronavirus in Britain has complicated the process of proving its efficacy. 

Late-stage trials are under way in Brazil and South Africa and are due to start in the United States. 

“The crucial thing is that we get enough people exposed to the virus who’ve also had the vaccine that we can actually get some proper adjudication of whether it prevents the disease and remains safe,” John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine at the University of Oxford, told BBC Radio. 

“We’re hopeful, particularly given the low incident rates in the UK that the individuals recruited in Brazil and South Africa will ultimately be able to provide us with the data.”

There are no approved vaccines for Covid-19, but the World Health Organisation has said AstraZeneca’s shot is one of the leading candidates. 

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2020-07-21 08:26:41Z
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Los Angeles' egg sandwich brand Eggslut to open in Singapore in 2021 - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Popular Los Angeles egg sandwich brand Eggslut is set to debut in Singapore early next year (2021).

In a press release sent exclusively to The Straits Times, South Korea-based global food company SPC Group announced that it "holds the exclusive license" to operate Eggslut in Singapore. The outlet's location is yet to be confirmed.

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2020-07-21 04:30:00Z
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