Rabu, 13 Juli 2022

Sri Lanka President Rajapaksa set to fly to Singapore via Maldives - government source - Reuters

Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya Rajapaksa presents his national statement as a part of the World Leaders' Summit at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, Britain November 1, 2021. Andy Buchanan/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

COLOMBO, July 13 (Reuters) - Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was expected to head to Singapore after fleeing to the Maldives in the early hours of Wednesday, a government source in Sri Lanka told Reuters, as protests continued in Colombo.

The source, who declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the subject, said Rajapaksa could send his resignation to the speaker of Sri Lankan parliament after landing in Singapore.

An aide to Rajapaksa and the Singapore government did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Reporting by Waruna Cudah Nimal Karunatilake, writing by Krishna N. Das, Editing by William Maclean

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2022-07-13 14:21:00Z
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Selasa, 12 Juli 2022

Not all Scandals Are Equal as Firms Face China's Cancel Culture - Bloomberg

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  1. Not all Scandals Are Equal as Firms Face China's Cancel Culture  Bloomberg
  2. How Brands Handle Getting Cancelled in China  The Business of Fashion
  3. View Full coverage on Google News

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2022-07-12 05:20:00Z
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Senin, 11 Juli 2022

Woman Up: From job interview to the boardroom, gender bias often follows women through each step of the career ladder - TODAY

SINGAPORE — At the start of this year, Valerie joined a multinational company in the finance sector as a fresh graduate in an analyst role.

Six months into the job, her manager ordered her to fetch him a glass of water. She found it offensive but she agreed to do so anyway because she was new and did not want to ruffle any feathers. 

“As I was about to take his water bottle, he said that he was joking and that women are always so eager to please men,” the 27-year-old recounted. 

She, like many other women who spoke to TODAY for this article, declined to be named as she is still working at the same company.

“I walked out and in response, he said ‘Women are always sulking’.” 

Yes, it’s 2022 and women are still receiving comments like these at work. 

In interviews with 13 working women and two women’s groups, TODAY found that gender discrimination is still alive and well across various industries, in companies big and small and faced by women at all levels of their career, whether rookie or board member. 

To be fair, women in Singapore have made huge strides at the workplace over the past several decades, with the Republic taking the top spot globally for having the highest percentage of female chief executive officers, according to a Deloitte report released this year. 

To further promote equality, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong announced during last year's National Day Rally that the Government will be introducing a set of laws to better protect workers against discrimination based on nationality, age, race, gender and disability.

And then in March this year, Parliament endorsed the first ever White Paper on women’s development, which included recommendations such as the introduction of new workplace fairness legislation and the entrenchment of flexible work arrangements and professional development programmes for women. 

Many companies, too, have taken steps over the past decade or so to implement initiatives such as diversity training and flexi-work programmes to promote gender equality.

But laws and policies can only do so much as long as some stubborn biases remain, many interviewees said. 

Women with decades of working experience told TODAY that they have certainly seen progress since they first started work, with greater awareness of gender discrimination and more opportunities for advancement.

But they add that women today face new challenges.

More are becoming professionals, while still bearing a disproportionate burden of household duties and caregiving. And so they are juggling more responsibilities overall and are sometimes penalised at work for it.

And the fact that there is more awareness about gender equality these days has also made discrimination harder to pin down and call out.

Several women told TODAY about situations where they strongly suspected that they were being subject to gender bias, but they had no real evidence because their colleagues were careful not to be overtly sexist.

This comes hand in hand with another trend highlighted by several female leaders of “diversity washing”, where organisations implement superficial diversity policies that look good for their brands but fail to effect any change. 

Ms Nurul Jihadah Hussain, the founder of The Codette Project, an initiative to support minority women in tech, said that too often, companies are quick to pat themselves on the back after hiring a few people from diverse backgrounds and call it a day.

"Companies are pointing at one or two individuals, who may be exceptions, and saying 'We are doing okay'. What they should do instead is to ask themselves: 'We have these individuals and that's great, but how can we do better?'"

In September last year, Manpower Minister Tan See Leng said that the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (Tafep) receives an annual average of 49 gender-related discrimination complaints between 2014 and first half of 2021, behind nationality and age-related discrimination complaints. 

Meanwhile, a 2020 survey by the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry that polled 384 respondents, 67 per cent of whom were women, found that four in 10 women had experienced gender discrimination in the workplace. However, only 12 per cent of them had made reports. 

In another survey published in 2021 by market research consultancy Blackbox, which polled 2,000 Singaporeans on their perceptions, attitudes and experiences with gender inequalities, 20 per cent of the female respondents said they had missed out on job promotions because of their gender. 

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2022-07-11 00:00:00Z
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Minggu, 10 Juli 2022

Commentary: Don't be so quick to take fish off the menu after possible link to higher cancer risk - CNA

Although the researchers adjusted their analyses for factors that could affect results – such as physical activity, smoking, family history of cancer and alcohol intake – the adjustment for daily UV exposure was only based on the average UV index for the suburb they lived in. 

This means there was no adjustment for UV exposure related to a person’s occupation. They also did not have information on the melanoma risk factors such as mole count, hair colour, history of severe sunburn or individual sun-related behaviours.

FISH COULD STILL CONTAIN CONTAMINANTS

This study does not prove eating fish causes melanoma. This is because it’s a “cohort study”, meaning people were observed over time to see whether they developed melanoma or not.

There was no intervention to feed them specific amounts of fish, which would not have been practical to do over 15 years anyway. Researchers did measure a range of behaviours at the beginning of the study (or “baseline”), such as dietary intake and physical activity levels. But these could have changed over time.

So the results are based on observation rather than cause and effect. This doesn’t mean observational results should be ignored, though.

Fish, especially fatty fish such as tuna, can contain contaminants such as mercury and PCBs. This could contribute to the findings that eating more fish is associated with a higher rate of both malignant melanoma and melanoma in-situ (skin cancer).

PCBs are readily absorbed into the body, accumulating in fat stores and staying there for years.

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2022-07-10 22:00:00Z
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Sabtu, 09 Juli 2022

Travel-starved Singaporeans are bumping into friends overseas amid holiday rush - South China Morning Post

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Travel-starved Singaporeans are bumping into friends overseas amid holiday rush  South China Morning Post
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2022-07-09 03:30:16Z
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Jumat, 08 Juli 2022

When drinking in K-dramas becomes a problem in reality - The Straits Times

SEOUL - The unmistakable green bottles stand tall on the table, growing in numbers as South Koreans drink the night away, bonding with colleagues or unwinding with friends.

These are bottles of soju - a clear, rice-based liquor with an alcohol- content of 15 to 20 per cent - also known as "Korean vodka".

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2022-07-08 21:00:00Z
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Delayed 'gaokao' exams begin in Shanghai after city's recent Covid-19 lockdown - South China Morning Post

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2022-07-08 11:16:25Z
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