Rabu, 16 Desember 2020

Singapore's hawker culture clinches spot on Unesco's intangible cultural heritage list - TODAYonline

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  1. Singapore's hawker culture clinches spot on Unesco's intangible cultural heritage list  TODAYonline
  2. Singapore hawker culture listed as UNESCO intangible cultural heritage  CNA
  3. S'pore hawkers hope inclusion in Unesco's intangible heritage list will keep sector thriving  The Straits Times
  4. South Korea's lantern lighting festival recognised by UNESCO  Al Jazeera English
  5. Singapore's hawker culture gets the nod to be included on UNESCO intangible cultural heritage list  Yahoo News Singapore
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-12-16 14:21:42Z
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Singapore hawker culture listed as UNESCO intangible cultural heritage - CNA

SINGAPORE: It’s official - Singapore hawker culture is now on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list, joining the likes of French cuisine, Thai massage and yoga.

The listing - a first for Singapore - was confirmed at the 15th session Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage held in Paris this week.

The inscription on Wednesday (Dec 16) comes two years after the intention to nominate hawker culture for the UNESCO list was announced at the 2018 National Day Rally. The nomination documents were submitted to UNESCO in March last year.

READ: Singapore hawker culture a step closer to being on UNESCO intangible cultural heritage list

Minister for Community, Culture and Youth Edwin Tong thanked all hawkers and Singaporeans for their "overwhelming support" of the nomination of hawker culture to the UNESCO list in a pre-recorded speech after the inscription.

"Singapore's hawker culture is a source of pride for Singapore and all Singaporeans. It reflects our living heritage and multiculturalism," said Mr Tong.

"It is an integral part of the daily lives of everyone in Singapore, regardless of age, race or background."

Mr Tong added that the inscription reminds Singaporeans of the values of "resilience, adaptability and unity".

"We pledge to do our part to safeguard our intangible cultural heritage, as well as to contribute to the dialogue and collaboration in line with the spirit of the convention," he added, referring to the Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage which Singapore ratified in 2018.

READ: Does hawker culture have a future in Singapore? Yes, but perhaps not as we know it​​​​​​​

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said in a Facebook post that went up soon after the announcement that Singaporeans should celebrate by ordering their favourite hawker dish this week.

"The biggest thanks must go to the generations of hawkers for nourishing a nation’s stomach and spirits. This recognition would not have come without their sweat, toil and dedication to their profession," he wrote.

Mr Yeo Hiang Meng, president of the Federation of Merchants’ Associations (FMAS) called the recognition of hawker culture "great news for all Singaporeans".

"For our hawkers, it is a recognition of their dedication to perfecting their craft and their contribution to Singapore’s rich food heritage," he said.

READ: With UNESCO listing in sight, will new breed of ‘hawkerpreneurs’ rejuvenate or erode hawker culture?

To celebrate the successful inscription, the SG HawkerFest will be held from Dec 26 to Jan 11 next year. 

There will be an online treasure hunt through a web application, and participants can also share ideas on the infrastructure and features that they hope to see in hawker centres of the future.

Participants will be awarded virtual badges for completed quizzes that can be exchanged for dining vouchers redeemable at 29 hawker centres islandwide.

There are more than 460 items on the representative list of intangible cultural heritage of humanity and dozens more are being added this year.

The UNESCO session to consider the other nominations is ongoing and will continue for the rest of the week.

The UN body says that the representative list recognises the diverse cultural practices and expressions of humanity, and seeks to raise awareness of their importance.

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2020-12-16 14:15:00Z
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Singapore's hawker culture added to Unesco list of intangible cultural heritage - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Hawker culture in Singapore has been officially added to the Unesco Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

In virtual proceedings that took place on Wednesday night (Dec 16), a 24-member committee unanimously accepted Singapore's application.

The process took all of three minutes, after nearly three years of work by Singapore. As Singapore’s application fulfilled all criteria, it was decided that there was no need for debate on hawker culture’s inscription on the list at the 15th session of the intergovernmental committee.

The successful nomination means Singapore now has its first item on the intangible cultural heritage list, which currently has 463 entries including yoga in India and Belgian beer.

It is also the country's second entry to any Unesco list. The first came in 2015 when the Singapore Botanic Gardens was designated as a Unesco World Heritage Site.

Mr Edwin Tong, Minister for Culture, Community and Youth, in a pre-recorded video, gave short remarks to the international audience on the historic occasion on Wednesday, following the announcement of the official result.

Speaking to representatives from 117 states and non-governmental organisations, he said: "Singapore's hawker culture is a source of pride for Singapore and all Singaporeans. It reflects our living heritage and multiculturalism, and is an integral part of the daily lives of everyone in Singapore regardless of age, race or background.

"I thank all our hawkers and Singaporeans for their overwhelming support of this nomination... We pledge to do our part to safeguard our intangible cultural heritage."

Having hawker culture on the list commits Singapore to protecting and promoting it. The country will have to submit a report every six years to Unesco, showing the efforts made to safeguard and transmit hawker culture to future generations.

Both President Halimah Yacob and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong took to Facebook to thank those involved in the nomination process. 

Madam Halimah said hawker culture has shaped Singaporean identity in many ways, and contributed to the diversity of Singapore’s multicultural society. 

Mr Lee said the nomination journey had been a fruitful one. “The biggest thanks must go to the generations of hawkers for nourishing a nation’s stomach and spirits. This recognition would not have come without their sweat, toil and dedication to their profession,” he said. 

Mr Yeo Hiang Meng, president of the Federation of Merchants' Associations (FMAS), which, together with the National Heritage Board and the National Environment Agency helmed the Unesco application, said the result will give hawkers' prestige a boost, both locally and internationally.

He said: "For our hawkers, it is a recognition of their dedication to perfecting their craft and their contribution to Singapore's rich food heritage. FMAS will continue to work with the authorities to look into ways to rejuvenate and sustain the hawker trade, and safeguard our hawker culture."

The intervention is timely for the hawker sector here, which has in recent years found it difficult to attract young people to a trade that calls for 16-hour work days in hot, cramped stalls.

The authorities have sought, through traineeship programmes and monetary subsidies, to lower the barriers to entry for young aspiring hawkers. Since 2013, the median age for new entrants has been lowered to 46, although the overall median age for hawkers nationwide remains 59.

Singapore's submission - Hawker Culture In Singapore: Community Dining And Culinary Practices In A Multicultural Urban Context - was made in March last year, although preparations began earlier, in February 2018.

To celebrate the global recognition, the authorities said a three-week SG HawkerFest will be launched on Dec 26.

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, activities will mostly take place online. These include online treasure hunts and quizzes that can be completed and then used to redeem vouchers that can be used at 29 participating hawker centres.

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2020-12-16 14:09:31Z
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Indonesia to offer free Covid-19 vaccines to all, President Joko to get it first - The Straits Times

JAKARTA - President Joko Widodo announced on Wednesday (Dec 16) that he will be the first recipient of a Covid-19 vaccine in Indonesia and the vaccination will be available free to all Indonesians.

"I want to emphasise once again that I will become the first one to be vaccinated. This is to build trust and certainty among the public that the vaccines are safe," he said in an address from the presidential palace live-streamed on YouTube.

Mr Joko, 59, also said that after receiving a lot of suggestions and recalculating state finances, he decided the vaccines would be free for Indonesians.

"I've ordered the Finance Minister to prioritise (the vaccination programme) and reallocate (the state budget) to provide free vaccines so there's no reason that the people can't access them," he said.

An online survey by the Health Ministry found out that around 64.8 per cent of participants were keen to receive vaccination once the vaccines are made available to the public, while 27.6 per cent were doubtful about the government’s vaccination plan and almost 7.6 per cent rejected it.

Only 35 per cent of those wanting to get the shots were willing to pay for them, while 38 per cent would not want to pay and the rest were undecided.

The survey, involving more than 115,000 participants across the archipelago, was carried out along with the Indonesian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation from Sept 19 to 30 with support from Unicef and the World Health Organisation.

Indonesia, which has the world's fourth largest population, of around 270 million, welcomed the first batch of the Covid-19 vaccines, totalling 1.2 million doses from China's Sinovac Biotech, on Dec 6.

It hopes to begin inoculating its young working population aged 18 to 59, who are considered most mobile because of their occupations.

It has targeted 246 million doses to cover 107 million people, or 67 per cent of the target group, representing nearly 40 per cent of its total population.

Sinovac and Novavax are set to help fulfil 155.5 million doses. Indonesia is in talks with other manufacturers, such as Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Covax, to source the rest.

A roll-out date will be set after its drug monitoring agency BPOM gives emergency use authorisation, which is expected early next year.

Under its current plan, Indonesians working on the front line in the battle against the pandemic, such as healthcare workers, the police and military personnel, are set to get the shots first.

This strategy is in contrast with that of other countries that have begun providing the vaccines to the elderly and vulnerable first, such as Britain, which began its vaccination programme with a 91-year-old woman last week.

The United States kicked off its vaccination programme this week, in line with the recommendation from its Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to provide vaccines to healthcare workers and residents of nursing homes, followed by people with pre-existing medical conditions.

Health Minister Terawan Agus Putranto said earlier that the elderly, those with existing health issues and pregnant women are not put on Indonesia's priority list for the vaccination programme because it does not have the data to guarantee the vaccine's safety for them. The Sinovac shots were tested only on people aged between 18 and 59 years old.

Indonesia has recorded 636,154 Covid-19 cases and 19,248 deaths as of Wednesday, the worst on both counts in South-east Asia.

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2020-12-16 11:51:45Z
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Indonesia to offer free Covid-19 vaccines to all, President Joko to get it first - The Straits Times

JAKARTA - President Joko Widodo announced on Wednesday (Dec 16) that he will be the first recipient of a Covid-19 vaccine in Indonesia and the vaccination will be available free to all Indonesians.

"I want to emphasise once again that I will become the first one to be vaccinated. This is to build trust and certainty among the public that the vaccines are safe," he said in an address from the presidential palace live-streamed on YouTube.

Mr Joko, 59, also said that after receiving a lot of suggestions and recalculating state finances, he decided the vaccines would be free for Indonesians.

"I've ordered the Finance Minister to prioritise (the vaccination programme) and reallocate (the state budget) to provide free vaccines so there's no reason that the people can't access them," he said.

An online survey by the Health Ministry found out that around 64.8 per cent of participants were keen to receive vaccination once the vaccines are made available to the public, while 27.6 per cent were doubtful about the government’s vaccination plan and almost 7.6 per cent rejected it.

Only 35 per cent of those wanting to get the shots were willing to pay for them, while 38 per cent would not want to pay and the rest were undecided.

The survey, involving more than 115,000 participants across the archipelago, was carried out along with the Indonesian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation from Sept 19 to 30 with support from Unicef and the World Health Organisation.

Indonesia, which has the world's fourth largest population, of around 270 million, welcomed the first batch of the Covid-19 vaccines, totalling 1.2 million doses from China's Sinovac Biotech, on Dec 6.

It hopes to begin inoculating its young working population aged 18 to 59, who are considered most mobile because of their occupations.

It has targeted 246 million doses to cover 107 million people, or 67 per cent of the target group, representing nearly 40 per cent of its total population.

Sinovac and Novavax are set to help fulfil 155.5 million doses. Indonesia is in talks with other manufacturers, such as Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Covax, to source the rest.

A roll-out date will be set after its drug monitoring agency BPOM gives emergency use authorisation, which is expected early next year.

Under its current plan, Indonesians working on the front line in the battle against the pandemic, such as healthcare workers, the police and military personnel, are set to get the shots first.

This strategy is in contrast with that of other countries that have begun providing the vaccines to the elderly and vulnerable first, such as Britain, which began its vaccination programme with a 91-year-old woman last week.

The United States kicked off its vaccination programme this week, in line with the recommendation from its Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to provide vaccines to healthcare workers and residents of nursing homes, followed by people with pre-existing medical conditions.

Health Minister Terawan Agus Putranto said earlier that the elderly, those with existing health issues and pregnant women are not put on Indonesia's priority list for the vaccination programme because it does not have the data to guarantee the vaccine's safety for them. The Sinovac shots were tested only on people aged between 18 and 59 years old.

Indonesia has recorded 636,154 Covid-19 cases and 19,248 deaths as of Wednesday, the worst on both counts in South-east Asia.

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2020-12-16 09:01:03Z
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Jokowi to be the first to receive COVID-19 vaccine in Indonesia, vaccines will be free for all - CNA

JAKARTA: Indonesian President Joko Widodo has volunteered to be the first person in the country to receive COVID-19 vaccine.

He also said that the vaccines will be available to citizens at "no fee whatsoever" in a video uploaded on the State Palace’s YouTube channel on Wednesday (Dec 16).

The country had received 1.2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine from China’s Sinovac Biotech on Dec 6 and is set to receive raw materials to produce 15 million doses from the same company later this month.

The CoronaVac vaccine, however, is still in its late-stage trials in Indonesia as well as Brazil, Chile and Turkey. Indonesia’s Food and Drug Monitoring Agency (BPOM) will only give its stamp of approval on the vaccine's quality, safety and effectiveness when the clinical trial results are out.

In a government survey in September, about 65 per cent of the respondents said they were willing to be inoculated. However, only 35 per cent of those who said they wished to be vaccinated were willing to pay. 

Mr Widodo, known popularly as Jokowi, said in the video: “I will personally become the first recipient (of the vaccine) to boost trust among the people that the vaccines used are safe.”

READ: Indonesia has 1.2 million COVID-19 vaccine doses in its possession now. What's next?

The government had earlier planned to offer the vaccines for free to around 32 million health workers, military and police personnel, as well as civil servants, while the rest of the people would have to pay to have themselves inoculated.

Indonesia has a population of over 260 million.  

The decision had drawn criticism, with some people highlighting the fact that other countries are providing the vaccines for free.

“After receiving inputs from citizens and after we conducted recalculation regarding state coffers, I can say that COVID-19 vaccines for citizens will be free. Free and no fee whatsoever,” Jokowi said.

“Therefore, I instructed all Cabinet members, ministries, agencies and regional governments to prioritise vaccination in their 2021 budget. I also instruct the finance minister to prioritise and reallocate other expenses to ensure the availability of these free vaccines so there will be no reason for people not to get vaccinated.”

BPOM, the food and drug agency, has said that the earliest the vaccine can be administered is when the clinical trial results are known by the end of January.

Apart from vaccines from Sinovac Biotech, Indonesia is also working with US drug maker Pfizer, British-Swedish pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca and global vaccine programme COVAX.

Indonesia is one of the worst countries to be affected by the pandemic with more than 600,000 cases and close to 20,000 deaths. 

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

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2020-12-16 08:51:25Z
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Japan beauty firm DHC under fire after CEO uses racial slur for Koreans - CNA

TOKYO: A major Japanese cosmetics firm faced online boycott calls on Wednesday (Dec 16) after its CEO used a racial slur for Koreans, and boasted his firm was "pure Japanese".

DHC's Yoshiaki Yoshida made the comments in a message on the company's website in which he attacked rival Suntory, a major beverage manufacturer that competes with DHC in the health supplement sector.

"For some reason, the models hired for Suntory's commercials are almost all Korean-Japanese. So that's why it seems they're mocked on the Internet as 'Chontory'," he wrote.

"Chon" is a derogatory term for Koreans in Japan, widely regarded as discriminatory.

Yoshida went on to write that DHC's employees by comparison were all "pure Japanese".

Discrimination against Koreans in Japan goes back decades, against a backdrop of tense ties between Seoul and Tokyo over issues related to wartime history.

The post was published last month, but only caught the public's attention this week, causing anger among many Japanese Twitter users, who began using the hashtag "I no longer buy products from discriminatory DHC".

The firm, which also operates in South Korea, Taiwan, the United Kingdom and the United States, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

"I can no longer trust the products of such a company. I'm against discrimination!" one Twitter user wrote.

"They can't do business without discriminating against minorities, consumers and other firms? I'll say no to such a shallow company," wrote another.

READ: Osaka surprised by impact of her call for racial justice

WATCH - Deciphering Japan: Being Japanese

Japan has laws against hate speech, but a justice ministry official contacted by AFP said it would only intervene if a formal complaint was filed.

"The ministry's primary policy on the issue is to launch campaigns against hate speech in general," he said.

During Tokyo's 1910 to 1945 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula, millions of Koreans moved to Japan, either voluntarily or against their will.

When Japan surrendered at the end of World War II, hundreds of thousands of ethnic Koreans remained, and many suffered discrimination and hardship.

The social media reaction against DHC comes after a recent Nike advert highlighting racism and bullying in Japan - including against a child wearing a traditional Korean outfit - also caused a stir online.

Although the advert had been liked more than 91,000 times on Nike Japan's YouTube channel by Wednesday, it had also been disliked by over 69,000 viewers.

Some accused Nike of anti-Japanese sentiment, and even called for a boycott of its products.

Japan remains a fairly homogeneous country, and mixed-race children can often face prejudice, although attitudes among younger generations are changing.

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2020-12-16 08:37:14Z
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