Kamis, 09 Maret 2023

Chiang Mai air pollution worst in the world, masks distributed to residents - CNA

BANGKOK: Thailand’s popular tourist destination Chiang Mai was shrouded in unhealthy air on Thursday (Mar 9), with its air quality ranked the worst in the world. 

At 2pm local time, Chiang Mai’s Air Quality Index (AQI) reading in Chang Phueak subdistrict was recorded at 187 – an unhealthy level – according to the Air Quality and Noise Management Bureau of Thailand’s Pollution Control Department. 

The public was advised to monitor their health as well as reduce outdoor activities if they experience difficulty breathing, eye irritation or coughing.

"At-risk individuals should avoid strenuous physical activity, particularly outdoors, and consult doctors if symptoms worsen," the Air Quality and Noise Management Bureau said.

Chiang Mai’s air pollution was the worst in the world on IQAir – a technology partner of the United Nations Environmental Programme. IQAir’s city pollution rankings compare 95 global cities worldwide with measured PM2.5 data.

“PM2.5 concentration in Chiang Mai is currently 22.8 times the WHO annual air quality guideline value,” said IQAir on its website.

PM2.5 is one of the deadliest forms of air pollution – tiny particles with a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres or about 3 per cent the diameter of a human hair.

This means they can penetrate deep inside the lungs, where they either remain for long periods or pass into the bloodstream unfiltered. 

Long-term exposure to these particles can result in cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, and cancers.

Residents in Chiang Mai and other northern Thai provinces have been reeling from poor air quality for more than a week.

The Environmental and Pollution Control Office 1 (Chiang Mai) reported 46 hotspots in the province on Wednesday, with 35 of them located in forest areas. Eighty-one other hotspots were also reported in Chiang Rai, Lamphun and Mae Hong Son.

On Tuesday, Chiang Mai governor Nirat Pongsitthavorn ordered various provincial work units to reduce the impact of air pollution on public health, including distributing face masks capable of filtering out PM2.5 and setting up roadside emission check-points to limit black exhaust fumes.

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2023-03-09 06:54:00Z
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Court settles acrimonious custody battle over 11-year-old son with neurodevelopment disorders - CNA

SINGAPORE: After being together for almost 10 years, a couple's marriage broke down and they began fighting for custody of their 11-year-old son, who suffers from multiple neurodevelopment disorders.

Both sought sole custody, pointing fingers at each other, but a judge ordered them to look beyond the haze of their acrimony and to share custody of the boy in a judgment released on Thursday (Mar 9).

The couple got married in 2011 and had a son together. The woman earns about S$48,000 monthly as a director and head at an insurance company, while the man last drew a monthly salary of about S$37,000 in 2018, before he was made redundant. 

He has since been unemployed and draws rental income of about S$2,900 monthly.

Their son was diagnosed with refractory frontal lobe epilepsy at the age of three and has other neurodevelopmental disorders that affect his ability to read, write and count.

In 2018, he went for an operation to remove a lesion in the brain, in a hospital in the United Kingdom. 

When the couple returned to Singapore, they began sleeping in separate bedrooms. They subsequently filed for divorce, which was granted.

The man sought a personal protection order for himself and his son, claiming that his wife's "abusive behaviour" towards the child led to "a return of seizures" in the boy. 

He also claimed that the "level of therapists" obtained by his ex-wife was not needed or justified, and that his ex-wife was alienating his son from him by criticising him in front of the boy.

The woman, on the other hand, said their son is her sole priority and she is the parent who is involved in his daily life and schedules, paying for and arranging for all his therapies.

She said co-parenting was "impossible" as her ex-husband was constantly diminishing her as a mother and making allegations against her in front of the boy.

JUDGE'S VIEWS

Judge of the Appellate Division Debbie Ong ordered that both parents have joint custody of the child, named only as C in her judgment.

Justice Ong said she could see that both parents love their son deeply, and that the son displays love and affection to both parents.

"Both parents have their own strengths in how they parent and care for C," said Justice Ong. "Both parties must look much harder, beyond the haze of acrimony, in order to see clearly that C (needs) his parents to allow each other to have a place in caring for him."

She said the mother has shown her love by showering the boy with material comfort, providing him with many opportunities and access to various therapies and learning opportunities including engaging occupational therapists, a speech and language therapist and a play therapist.

"She is meticulous and organised, and has taken much initiative in ensuring that (her son's) medical and educational needs were attended to," said Justice Ong.

The father, on the other hand, is sensitive to his son's emotional needs, said the judge.

"He is empathetic to C's learning disabilities and tries to come up with creative solutions in engaging C," she said. 

"While the marital breakdown has adversely impacted the relationship between the parties, both parents must endeavour to recognise, accept and harness each other’s strengths in co-parenting C."

However, the judge said both parents must also acknowledge their weaknesses, and this requires them to have "a truly open and humble spirit".

She said the mother was very focused on ensuring that C receives different kinds of therapy, and may be less attuned to his other needs such as having more resting space between therapy sessions and classes.

"More is not always better," said Justice Ong. "While she had made efforts to try to teach C herself, particularly during the period of COVID-19 restrictions, this had also caused her much anxiety and stress, which may have resulted in her negative reactions in C’s presence." 

She said the father was aggrieved by the marital breakdown, and this may in turn have caused him to be lacking in the necessary insights in his parenting of C. 

"He opposed the wife's efforts in arranging for therapy and may not have sufficiently appreciated that some of the therapy arranged could afford C a structured, collaborative and supportive care environment," said Justice Ong.

She ordered the mother to have care and control of the boy from Saturday nights to Wednesday nights, and the father to have the rest of the time. 

They can adjust the care periods if they mutually agree, and they are to cooperate in facilitating C's attendance of educational or therapeutic sessions if it falls within their care and control time.

Care arrangements for special days such as birthdays and holidays are to be mutually agreed upon by the parents, with the judge reminding them to exercise flexibility and graciousness in making the arrangements.

If either parent wishes to take the boy overseas, they are to notify the other party with at least four weeks' prior notice in writing with relevant details. While the boy is overseas, the other parent is to have "liberal video call access" to him.

Both sides have agreed that there will be no maintenance for the ex-wife. 

Justice Ong found that C's reasonable monthly personal expenses excluding accommodation and household expenses amounted to S$8,170 and ordered both parents to share the amount equally.

"MUCH MORE TO THE LIFE AHEAD" 

She reminded the parents to approach the divorce proceedings as a "reorganisation of the family's living and financial arrangements instead of a forum to litigate over various matters".

"There is much more to the life ahead than a forensic account of monetary matters in the marriage," said Justice Ong.

When a marriage breaks up, the spouses' contributions, financial and non-financial, are translated into economic assets, she said, citing a past judgment.

"Apart from such economic assets, there are immeasurable 'gains' in a marriage that the court cannot divide," said Justice Ong. 

"These 'gains' are not insignificant, and include the relationship that parties had shared over the years, the life they built together, and most significantly, their children."

She said the family justice system does not belittle the pain that often overshadows the joy experienced in the days before the marriage was broken, but it does "exhort parties to reach deep to find a way forward".

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2023-03-09 07:41:00Z
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Rabu, 08 Maret 2023

Malaysia's ex-PM Muhyiddin summoned to anti-graft agency again - CNA

Anwar's office and the MACC did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

Anwar and Mr Muhyiddin went head-to-head in a tightly contested election in November that resulted in a hung parliament as neither candidate won a parliamentary majority.

Malaysia's constitutional monarch, King Al-Sultan Abdullah, then appointed Anwar as prime minister after he formed a coalition with other political parties.

Since the election, Mr Muhyiddin and his party have been subject to graft investigations.

Two leaders belonging to Mr Muhyiddin's party have been charged by the MACC with bribery over an economic recovery project launched by his government.

He was reportedly questioned by the MACC last month over a contract awarded to a relative when he was prime minister, which was said to be worth over a billion ringgit (US$221 million).

Then, he "vehemently" denied the accusation in a Facebook post, calling it an "evil slander".

The MACC has also frozen bank accounts belonging to Mr Muhyiddin's party. 

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2023-03-08 12:56:00Z
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China 'seriously concerned' by Taiwan president 'transit' plans amid reported US trip - CNA

"At present, various departments are communicating and preparing for relevant plans, and the planning of the related itinerary will be explained in a timely manner after the plan is finalised," it added, without elaborating.

Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said they were "seriously concerned about the news".

"We have lodged solemn representations with the US side and asked them to clarify," she added.

China is firmly opposed to any form of official exchanges between the US and Taiwan, she said, adding: "No one should underestimate the strong determination of the Chinese government and people to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity."

"The real threat to peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait is the separatist forces of Taiwan independence," Mao said.

China has rebuffed calls for talks from Tsai since she took office in 2016, believing her to be a separatist.

China has never ruled out using force to bring Taiwan under its control. Taiwan's government says the People's Republic of China has never ruled the island and so has no right to claim it, and that only its 23 million people can decide their future.

Taiwan is a constant source of friction between Beijing and Washington. China's foreign minister said on Tuesday Taiwan was the "first red line" that must not be crossed in Sino-US relations.

China staged military exercises around Taiwan in August following a visit to Taipei by then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The US has no formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan but is bound by law to provide the island with the means to defend itself. 

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2023-03-08 08:16:21Z
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Selasa, 07 Maret 2023

World War II forced labour victims lash out at South Korea's 'dirty money' plan - CNA

"I am 95 years old and I don't know if I die today or tomorrow. But never in my life have I felt so distressed," Yang Geum-deok, who worked at a Mitsubishi factory during the war, said at a rally in Seoul.

"Even if I die of hunger, I would not accept that dirty money," she yelled, waving a placard that said: "Mitsubishi must apologise and compensate!"

Seoul aims to resolve lingering issues stemming from Japan's brutal 1910-45 occupation of the Korean peninsula as it seeks closer ties with Tokyo in the face of growing threats from North Korea.

Around 780,000 Koreans were conscripted into forced labour by Japan during the colonial period, according to data from Seoul.

That number does not include Korean women forced into sexual slavery by Japanese troops.

"It was the Japanese who dragged us to Japan. Who do we turn to to demand an apology?" said victim Kim Sung-joo at the rally, which was also attended by opposition politicians.

South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol defended the plan on Tuesday, saying it was essential "for freedom, peace and prosperity, not only bilaterally but globally".

The two countries restored diplomatic ties with the signing of the 1965 treaty, which included a reparations package of about US$800 million in grants and cheap loans.

Japan has long insisted that the agreement settled all claims relating to the colonial period.

It is unclear whether Japanese companies will make any contributions, with Nippon Steel saying Monday: "Our company's understanding is that this issue has been resolved by the 1965 agreement".

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2023-03-07 08:09:00Z
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Senin, 06 Maret 2023

Ukraine moves to fortify embattled Bakhmut as Russia closes in - CNA

KYIV: Ukraine pledged on Monday (Mar 6) to bolster its defences in frontline Bakhmut, after reports that Kyiv was withdrawing from the city that has become a symbolic prize in the war.

But Ukrainian forces fighting to retain control of the salt-mining town told AFP that its capture by Russia was inevitable and that some units had already begun to pull back.

The eastern Ukrainian city has been badly damaged during the longest and bloodiest battle since Russia's more than year-long invasion.

Kyiv says the fighting is becoming increasingly difficult and analysts say its forces may have initiated a strategic retreat.

But President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with top commanders Monday and his office said they favoured "continuing the defensive operation and further strengthening our positions in Bakhmut".

Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhaylo Podolyak also told AFP there was a "consensus" within the military on the need to "continue defending" the city.

Neither side has said how many troops they have lost in the battle, with observers saying both Moscow and Kyiv are trying to exhaust each other.

Outside Bakhmut, some Ukrainian soldiers had lost hope that Kyiv would hold the city and looked set to retreat.

Near the town of Chasiv Yar, 10km west of Bakhmut, one soldier said he came to repair his tank after a month of fighting.

"Bakhmut will fall," he told AFP from the vehicle, fatigue showing on his face.

"RETREATING IN GROUPS"

"We are almost encircled. The units are progressively retreating in small groups."

He said the only path out of Bakhmut was over dirt roads that lead to Chasiv Yar. If tanks get bogged down there, he said, they could become a target for artillery fire.

But a senior Ukrainian official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that "considering the current positions" of Kyiv's forces near Bakhmut, it is "impossible to besiege" the city.

The US-based Institute for the Study of War has said Ukrainian forces may have initiated a strategic retreat from the town.

"Ukrainian forces are likely conducting a limited tactical withdrawal in Bakhmut, although it is still too early to assess Ukrainian intentions concerning a complete withdrawal from the city," it said in a recent analytical note.

The Ukrainian army said on Sunday that its troops had fought off "more than 130" Russian attacks in a single day around Bakhmut and said Moscow's forces were trying to encircle the city.

About 4,500 civilians remain in Bakhmut, Ukrainian officials have said.

In Chasiv Yar, an elderly woman named Antonina said she was scared but determined to stay in the village where she was born.

The 82-year-old said she survives on humanitarian aid and vegetables from her garden.

She said strikes were more intense at the end of last week.

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2023-03-06 16:24:00Z
1798550053

Wagner chief says Russian position at Bakhmut at risk without promised ammunition - CNA

"DEFENCE IS HOLDING"

A Russian victory in Bakhmut, with a pre-war population of about 70,000, would give it the first major prize in a costly winter offensive, after it called up hundreds of thousands of reservists last year. Russia says it would be a stepping stone to completing the capture of the Donbas industrial region, one of its most important objectives.

Volodymyr Nazarenko, a commander of Ukrainian troops in Bakhmut, said that there had been no order to retreat and "the defence is holding" in grim conditions.

"The situation in Bakhmut and around it is very much hell-like, as it is on the entire eastern front," Nazarenko said in a video posted on Telegram.

Ukraine's military said late on Sunday that Russian forces were attempting to advance on Bakhmut, shelling the city and nearby settlements of Ivanivske, Chasiv Yar, Kurdyumivka and Orikhovo-Vasylivka.

"The situation in Bakhmut can be described as critical," Ukrainian military analyst Oleh Zhdanov said in a video commentary.

To the north, Russian troops advanced towards the town of Bilohorivka, just inside the Luhansk region, and shelled several settlements in the direction of Kupiansk and Lyman, the Ukrainian military said.

Further south, it said that Russian forces made preparations for an offensive in the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, shelling dozens of towns and villages including the city of Kherson, causing civilian casualties.

A woman and two children were killed by Russian mortar bombs in a village in Kherson region, the head of Ukraine's presidential office said.

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2023-03-06 06:58:41Z
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