Tag: Asian

  • Scotland’s first minister congratulates Sunak and presses for independence

    Sunak won the Conservative Party leadership election, and Scotland’s first minister has congratulated him, saying she will do her best “to build a constructive working relationship with him in the interests of those we serve,” but she has also renewed calls for Scottish independence.

    “That he becomes the first British Asian to become PM is a genuinely significant moment,” Nicola Sturgeon tweeted.

    “As for the politics, I’d suggest one immediate decision he should take and one he certainly should not. He should call an early General Election. And he should not – must not – unleash another round of austerity. Our public services will not withstand that,” she said.

    “For Scotland, of course, he becomes another PM we did not and, without doubt, would not vote for even if given the chance. To escape the damage of Westminster governments with no mandate here, and take our future into our own hands, Scotland needs independence.

     

  • BTS could perform while doing military service

    Military service may not prevent BTS from performing, the South Korean defense minister has said.

    Normally, all men in the country must serve in the military between the ages of 18 and 28, for about 20 months.

    In 2020, exceptions were made for BTS members to delay their service until they were 30.

    With the oldest member of the K-pop band, J, turning 30 next year, the issue has come into focus in South Korea.

    There is a parliamentary debate in the country over shortening service to three weeks.

    And speaking about BTS, minister Lee Jong-sup said: “There would be a way to give them a chance to practice and perform together.”

    Military service is controversial in South Korea, as men must fulfill their duties as part of efforts to defend against nuclear-armed neighbor North Korea.

    Over the years, some men have won exemptions – either being allowed to put off service or do shorter service – including Olympics and Asian Games medal winners and classical musicians and dancers who win top prizes at certain competitions.

    Tottenham footballer Son Heung-min completed his three-week mandatory military service in 2020 - and won an award for the best performance.

    Son had earned an exemption from the mandatory 21-month military service after helping South Korea win the 2018 Asian Games.

    Son Heung-min winning a best performance prize among all traineesIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption

    Son Heung-min won the best performance prize among all trainees

    BTS announced in June they were taking a break to grow and pursue solo projects for a while but said they were not splitting for good.

    At a parliamentary session, defense minister Lee Jong-sup said that by allowing BTS to continue performing, the military could serve national interests without affecting the shrinking pool of resources due to low birth rates.

    “As many people highly value [artists serving] in the military, that may help boost their popularity even more,” he said.

    BTS has been credited as being one of the big influences in spreading Korean culture across the world, with the Oxford dictionary announcing last year it was adding 26 Korean words to its edition.

    They were named as the world’s best-selling artists of 2021 in a chart recently compiled by the music industry body the IFPI.

    The band became the first Asian band to win artist of the year at the American Music Awards last year and met US President Joe Biden at the White House in May to discuss hate crimes targeting Asians.

    BTS’ representatives told Radio 1 Newsbeat they did not have a comment.

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Coronavirus: Asian nations face virus battle amid WHO warning

    Many Asian nations are facing an increasing battle to stem the spread of coronavirus, amid a World Health Organization warning that some needed to take “aggressive measures”.

    Malaysia, Sri Lanka and the Philippines are among nations imposing strict border controls.

    Cases in the South Asian subcontinent are still below 500 but there are fears a spike could overwhelm health systems.

    There are 185,000 cases globally, with 7,500 confirmed deaths.

    Some nations and territories that had seen success in controlling the virus or slowing its arrival, including South Korea, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, have seen new spikes, amid fears, people returning from abroad are importing the virus.

    Asian stocks have continued to fall as worries about the coronavirus pandemic eclipsed hopes that major stimulus plans would ease the impact of the outbreak.

    What was the WHO warning?

    It was issued for the organisation’s South East Asia region, although this contains 11 nations spread widely, including Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Bangladesh and North Korea.

    Poonam Khetrapal Singh, regional director of the WHO South East Asia region, said on Tuesday that “more clusters of virus transmission are being confirmed”.

    “We need to immediately scale up all efforts to prevent the virus from infecting more people,” Dr Khetrapal Singh said. “We clearly need to do more, and urgently.”

    The WHO said the numbers in its South East Asia region showed that “some countries are clearly heading towards community transmission of Covid-19”.

    It called for continued efforts to “detect, test, treat, isolate and trace contacts”.

    Dr Khetrapal Singh said “practising social distancing [could] not be emphasised enough… this alone has the potential to substantially reduce transmission”.

    “We need to act now,” she said.

    Many regional countries inside and outside the WHO’s definition of South East Asia have had a slow response to the outbreak, only taking drastic measures in recent weeks or days as the number of cases continue to grow.

    Where are the infections increasing? Almost all nations are seeing increases, although the rates vary widely.

    China still has the highest number of confirmed cases, with more than 80,000, but its new infections are almost exclusively from people arriving from abroad and are very low.

    South Korea has also been praised for its attempts to control the virus and its 8,413 cases have seen it fall below Germany to sixth in the running list of cases compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

    It has been ahead of other nations by testing thousands of people and had seen a downward trend in new infections.

    But there are now small clusters breaking out across the country, with 93 more cases in the past 24 hours. Dozens of sick and elderly patients in a hospital in Daegu were infected.

    Taiwan announced its largest single-day increase in new cases – 23 – bringing the total to 100.

    The trend was mirrored in Hong Kong – 14 cases in a single day is the highest in the territory, all but one brought in from abroad.

    Indonesia on Wednesday also announced its biggest daily rise, 55 more cases taking the total to 227, with 19 deaths.

    Pakistan’s cases have now risen to 245, with the total of reported cases for the South Asian subcontinent reaching 482.

    Thailand reported 35 new cases on Wednesday, taking its total infections to 212, officials said. Four of the cases were linked to an entertainment venue and 13 to a boxing bout, both in Bangkok.

    Malaysia has warned of a fresh spike in cases, saying there is only a “slim chance” of breaking the chain of infections.

    A mass Muslim gathering last month is linked to nearly two-thirds of its infections and thousands of attendees are yet to be tested.

    Myanmar and Laos have both not reported any cases – though experts have seriously doubted the credibility of this.

    A spokesperson for Myanmar’s government claimed that people’s “lifestyle and diet” had protected them from the virus. But it has imposed restrictions on arrivals and the UK government is now advising against all but essential travel there.

    There are also no reported cases of the virus in Timor-Leste.

    What are the nations doing?

    From Wednesday, Malaysia is preventing citizens from traveling overseas and visitors from entering until 31 March at least.

    Many Malaysians who commute to work in Singapore had to queue to cross the border before the midnight deadline, and will have to stay there.

    Streets in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur were largely empty and supermarket chains are enforcing limits on purchases of staples.

    Thailand has closed schools, bars, cinemas and other entertainment centres.

    The Philippines, which has 202 cases and 17 deaths, has imposed some of the toughest movement controls, effectively quarantining about half of its 107 million population.

    But it reversed a decision to ban all international flights, and foreign nationals may now fly out, although arrivals will face strict quarantine protocols.

    Taiwan will on Thursday ban foreigners from entering, apart from in some exceptional cases. Everyone arriving, including Taiwanese, will have to go into quarantine for 14 days.

    Japanese media report that visas issued to European travellers will be invalidated and people arriving from 38 nations will have to self-quarantine.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Asian stock markets tumble after oil prices crash

    Asian stock markets fell sharply on Monday spooked by a major crash in oil prices and weak economic data.

    In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell more than 5% while in Australia, the ASX 200 slumped 7.3%, its biggest daily drop since 2008.

    Markets have been rattled by the threat of a price war between oil exporting group Opec and its main ally Russia.

    Asian investors also reacted to a slump in Chinese export figures and the shrinking of the Japanese economy.

    Global markets have already seen heightened volatility over fears of a major economic hit from the coronavirus outbreak.

    With oil prices crashing more than 30% on Monday, energy firms have seen some of the biggest share price falls.

    Australia-listed Oil Search’s share price dropped by 31% while energy firm Santos saw its shares drop more than a quarter in value (27%).

    Oil and other commodity companies make up a large part of the Australian stock market.

    In China, its benchmark Shanghai Composite fell almost 2%, while in Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index plummeted 3.7% in early trading on Monday.

    “China will make its contribution to the thunder clouds hanging over markets as Monday starts,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at broker OANDA.

    On Saturday, China released import and export figures for the first two months of the year. Exports fell by 17.2% while imports dropped by 4%. This gave the Chinese economy a trade deficit of $7.1 billion as it struggles with the economic impact of the coronavirus outbreak.

    “China may slowly be returning to work, but manufacturers will now likely be facing an international fall in demand, with coronavirus now well-established outside of Chinese shores,” added Mr Halley.

    In Japan, market sentiment was hit by GDP data that showed a plunge in economic growth of -7.1% in the fourth quarter of 2019.

    Source: bbc.com