Jumat, 08 September 2023

Morning Briefing: Top stories from The Straits Times on Sept 9, 2023 - The Straits Times

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  1. Morning Briefing: Top stories from The Straits Times on Sept 9, 2023  The Straits Times
  2. Asean news headlines as at 9pm on Friday (Sept 8)  The Star Online
  3. Morning Briefing: Top stories from The Straits Times on Sept 8, 2023  The Straits Times
  4. Asean news headlines as at 9pm on Wednesday (Sept 6)  The Star Online
  5. Evening Update: Today's headlines from The Straits Times on Sept 8, 2023  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2023-09-09 00:29:42Z
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G20 summit: Division over Ukraine crisis casts doubt on joint declaration - CNA

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2023-09-08 13:40:34Z
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Hong Kong's Historic Storm Could Cost City at Least $100 Million - Bloomberg

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  1. Hong Kong's Historic Storm Could Cost City at Least $100 Million  Bloomberg
  2. Hong Kong, Shenzhen deluged by heaviest rain on record  The Straits Times
  3. Record rainfall floods Hongkong, Shenzhen streets and train stations  CNA
  4. Hong Kong flooded by heaviest rainfall in 140 years  Bangkok Post
  5. Hong Kong's historic storm could cost city at least $136m  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2023-09-08 05:14:18Z
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Japan's Mount Fuji 'screaming' from too many tourists - CNA

MOUNT FUJI: With its millions of visitors every year and the buses, supply trucks, noodle shops and fridge magnets, Japan's Mount Fuji is no longer the peaceful pilgrimage site it once was.

Now authorities have had enough, saying the number of hikers trekking up the world-famous volcano - night and day - is dangerous and an ecological embarrassment.

"Mount Fuji is screaming," the governor of the local region said last week.

Hailing its religious importance and its inspiration to artists, in 2013 UNESCO added the "internationally recognised icon of Japan" to its World Heritage List.

But as has happened in places such as Bruges in Belgium or Rio de Janeiro's Sugarloaf Mountain, the designation has been both a blessing and a curse.

Visitor numbers more than doubled between 2012 and 2019 to 5.1 million, and that's just for Yamanashi prefecture, the main starting point.

DAY AND NIGHT

It's not just during the day that a stream of people trudges through the black volcanic grit on their way up the 3,776m mountain.

At night, long lines of people - on their way up to see the sunrise - trek upwards with torches on their heads.

The main starting-off point is a car park that can only be reached by taxi or buses that take a couple of hours from Tokyo, around 100km away.

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2023-09-08 03:31:00Z
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65-year-old Australian cycles over 9000km from Australia to Singapore - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE – A weather-beaten man and his equally weather-beaten bicycle arrived at the Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal on Wednesday morning. His journey to Singapore did not start just an hour ago from Batam, Indonesia.

Dr Ian Wallis set off from his home in Australia’s capital city Canberra on May 1. In the past four months, he had cycled for more than 9,000km across many places in Australia, Timor-Leste and Indonesia. He took the plane only when he had to fly across the Timor Sea from Darwin to Dili, and hopped onto the ferry when getting from island to island in Indonesia.

On the 129th day of his journey, the 65-year-old retired Australian scientist arrived in Singapore. His wife Cora, 56, flew in from Australia earlier and greeted him at the arrival hall. Both are avid cyclists who love the outdoors.

Looking spirited and energetic, Dr Wallis gamely posed for The Straits Times with his Thorn Nomad bicycle. He also showed ST what he carried with him in his bags – two of them mounted on his bicycle’s front wheels, two on the back wheels and one on the handlebar.

He said the items include his diary, bicycle pump, bolt to attach his bicycle saddle to the seat post, puncture repair kit, spare spokes, chain lube, spare chain links, a few tools, cycling knicks and a sleeping sheet to protect him from filthy bedding in hotels.

Dr Wallis has been documenting his adventures on his blog. While he does long-distance cycling mainly to satiate his appetite for exploration, he said he is also using his trips as an opportunity to raise funds for Australia’s indigo foundation, a non-profit group that he said has lent support to “a youth organisation in Timor-Leste that confronts sexual harassment, and an organisation in Indonesia that funds bursaries (for) girls from female-led households to attend university”.

Dr Wallis added that he had donated everything that had been given to him in kind.

“Many caravan parks let me pitch my tent for free. I donated that money, usually A$30 (S$26) to indigo. This occurred many times,” he said.

He also tries to keep his own expenses low while on the road. His average spending per day is about A$40, and he projects that this trip will cost him around A$5,000 when it comes to an end back in Canberra in September.

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2023-09-08 04:30:00Z
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Kamis, 07 September 2023

Record rainfall causes flooding in Hong Kong days after typhoon - CNA

HONG KONG: Record rainfall in Hong Kong caused widespread flooding in the early hours of Friday (Sep 8), disrupting road and rail traffic just days after the city dodged major damage from a super typhoon.

The Hong Kong Observatory, the city's weather agency, reported hourly rainfall of 158.1mm at its headquarters in the hour leading up to midnight, the highest since records began in 1884.

Late on Thursday, authorities in the city said various districts had been flooded and emergency services were conducting rescue operations. Members of the public were instructed to stay in a safe place.

"Heavy rain will bring flash floods," the observatory warned. "Residents living in close proximity to rivers should stay alert to weather conditions and should consider evacuation" if their homes are flooded, it added.

No injuries were reported in the early hours of Friday. 

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2023-09-07 20:58:00Z
2413950413

Many Asean air force chiefs to skip Myanmar meeting - Bangkok Post

Thailand will attend but regional bloc remains divided on dealing with military junta

Many Asean air force chiefs to skip Myanmar meeting
Local residents and defence group members cremate bodies in Pa Zi Gyi on April 13, two days after an air strike in the Sagaing region of Myanmar killed about 170 people. (Photo supplied)

Several Southeast Asian air force commanders plan to shun an upcoming meeting chaired by Myanmar’s military rulers but Thailand will be represented at the talks.

The annual Asean Air Chiefs Conference usually gathers top air force leaders from the 10-nation bloc to discuss cooperation in defence, combating extremism, and disaster relief.

Myanmar is the current chair of the group and is scheduled to host the meeting next week, but at least three Association of Southeast Asian Nations countries told AFP they would not send their top officials.

The junta has been accused of war crimes over air strikes carried out by its jets — mostly Chinese- and Russian-built — in support of ground troops battling opponents of its 2021 coup.

Its air force chief Htun Aung, who will chair the conference, has been sanctioned by the United States and Britain.

ACM Alongkorn Vannarot, who will be retiring as chief of the Royal Thai Air Force at the end of this month, will make the trip to neighbouring Myanmar, a Ministry of Defence official told AFP.

While Asean has halted high-level meetings with Myanmar’s generals, Thailand has pursued its own bilateral talks with the junta and also engaged India and China in parallel discussions abouyt Myanmar in recent months, further dividing the bloc.

The air force chiefs of the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia will not attend the meeting, officials told AFP.

Malaysia’s air force chief will not attend, a spokesperson said, while the Philippine commander plans to send a video message to his counterpart rather than go in person.

Indonesia’s air force chief “will not be attending and won’t be sending anyone to represent him either”, air force spokesperson Agung Sasongkojati told AFP without giving a reason.

At the Asean leaders’ summit in Jakarta this week, the group accused the junta of targeting civilians in the grinding conflict sparked by its coup, and of ignoring a peace plan agreed with the bloc to end violence.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi said there had been “no significant progress” in the five-point plan agreed with the junta more than two years ago.

Asean has barred junta officials from high-level meetings over their refusal to engage with the plan and their opponents.

Cambodian air force commander Soeng Samnang declined to comment on whether he would attend the Myanmar meeting, and the defence ministry could not be reached for comment.

The air forces of Singapore, Brunei and Vietnam did not respond to requests for comment.

War crime claims

Amnesty International said last year the junta was using air strikes as “collective punishment” against civilians supporting anti-coup fighters, and in March the United Nations said the military had carried out more than 300 air strikes in the past year.

Also in March, the junta held a parade to mark Armed Forces Day, with flyovers by Russian-made Yak and Sukhoi Su-30 jets.

The military bombed a gathering in northern Sagaing region in April that media and local residents said killed about 170 people, sparking renewed global condemnation of the isolated junta.

Human Rights Watch said it had evidence the military had used a thermobaric “vacuum bomb” in the attack, saying it likely amounted to a war crime.

Air strikes on a concert held by a major ethnic rebel group in northern Kachin state killed around 50 people last October.

The junta has said that reports civilians were among the dead were “rumours”.

AFP has contacted a Myanmar junta spokesman for comment.

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2023-09-07 13:20:00Z
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