March 26, 2016 10:49 PM
SINGAPORE – The Republic’s approach to women empowerment is not about setting gender quotas in boardrooms and schools, but to look at the “substance” of the gender representation.
March 26, 2016 10:49 PM
SINGAPORE – The Republic’s approach to women empowerment is not about setting gender quotas in boardrooms and schools, but to look at the “substance” of the gender representation.
When you’re a cop in a country of 1.3 billion people, playing hide-and-seek with suspected criminals can be a daunting task.
Researchers at a Chinese university say they have the solution: drive-and-seek.
A team at the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China’s Police Equipment Joint Research Lab have developed a high-tech vehicle for police equipped with a facial-recognition system that can pick criminal suspects out of a crowd, state media reported this week.
The SUV, unveiled in the southwestern city of Chengdu on Wednesday, is mounted with a 360-degree rooftop camera array that automatically scans faces within a 60-metre radius, according to the state-run Sichuan Daily (in Chinese).
The system determines the gender, age and race of each face, compares it against faces stored in the police database, and alerts the driver if a match is made – all while travelling at speeds of up to 120 kilometers per hour (75mph) – according the reports.
“As long as you get at least three-quarters of the face, you can make an ID,” Yin Guangqiang, director of the Police Equipment Joint Research Lab, told the newspaper. He added that the system can also recognise license plate numbers and car types, and can be set to scan for just “one type of person.”
Read the full article here.
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HAVANA – Cuba had never seen the Rolling Stones before, and after Mick Jagger rocked and seduced hundreds of thousands in Havana on Friday, the communist island is likely never to be quite the same again.
A crowd flowed across the Cuban capital’s Ciudad Deportiva, a huge sports complex with a capacity of 450,000.
The human tide then spilled further into the streets, some even standing thick on neighbouring rooftops.
When fans raised their phones and cameras to get snapshots of Jagger strutting across the giant stage, the flashes looked like a new galaxy.
This was the British superstars’ first concert in Cuba. It was the first gig, in fact, by any rock band of such stature, with a production featuring giant video screens and a sound system that got the crowd jumping, arms swaying, to classic after classic, from “Angie” to “Paint it Black.” But the night was about much more than music.
Friday’s free concert turned history on its head, in a country where just a few decades ago, all rock music was considered part of an enemy plot against the communist state.
“We know that years ago it was difficult to hear our music in Cuba, but here we are playing,” Jagger said in Spanish, prompting huge cheers.
“I think that truly the times are changing,” he said. “That’s true, isn’t it?” The crowd erupted during songs like “Out of Control” and “Satisfaction,” with people of all ages singing along to the choruses and jumping up and down in rhythm to thunderous guitar solos.
“It’s so amazing that they came to Cuba and united such a variety of people, young and old,” said Andres Enda, 24, a dancer.
“Change is already coming – the fact they’re here shows that.” Jagger, 72, Keith Richards, 72, Charlie Watts, 74, and Ronnie Wood, 68, flew in late Thursday, just two days after US President Barack Obama ended his historic visit aimed at overcoming more than a half-century of US-Cuban hostility.
The twin events added up to a tumultuous week for Cuba, run by Fidel Castro and now his brother Raul ever since their guerrilla army deposed a hated, US-backed regime in 1959.
Although Jagger’s comment about changing times was his only overtly political statement, the whole concert seemed like a massive declaration by Cubans that they want to join the world.
Flags from many countries floated above the crowd, Cubans young and old sang along in English, and the adoration for the aging rockers seemed to be about more than just the enjoying good music.
Between the 1960s and 1990s, rock ‘n roll was discouraged to varying degrees in Cuba, leading during the most repressive years to clandestine listening sessions and an underground trade in smuggled recordings.
Those restrictions have gone, but the ban on political and media freedoms has not, while the ramshackle communist economy and decades-old US economic embargo have forced many into lives of stiflingly few opportunities.
The crowd danced, swayed and for one long spell joined Jagger in intense back-and-forth singing, seemingly sending a message that the time has come to move on.
“Mick Jagger showed his optimism here,” said Sofia Fernandez de Cossio, 19. “There’s a lot of optimism now. You notice it in the country. People are more positive.” The Stones’ show was among the most ambitious ever staged in Cuba, requiring 61 sea containers and a packed Boeing 747 filled with gear and equipment.
It was not clear whether many more big bands would be coming soon, however.
The island woefully lacks infrastructure, remains under the US embargo, and most Cubans are in any case too poor to pay regular concert ticket prices.
Cuban police were out in large numbers, but remained discreetly to the sides during the concert. Many fans ignored an alcohol ban, bringing in bottles of rum to drink, as well as puffing on fat Cuban cigars.
While the Stones’ technical teams were operating state-of-the-art light and sound systems, the Cuban contribution was tellingly basic.
As nearly everywhere else in Cuba, there was no wi-fi signal at the sports complex, and as soon as the crowds grew, cellphones went dead. Metal cabins positioned over ordinary street drains served as public toilets.
After the show, the group tweeted: “Thank you Cuba for an incredible, unforgettable show! It was wonderful to see all of you!” – a message also sent in Spanish – with the hashtag #StonesCuba.
The Stones had called on fans via Twitter to vote for one of four songs – “Get Off My Cloud,” “All Down the Line,” “She’s So Cold,” and “You Got Me Rocking” – to be included on the playlist.
But few in Cuba, where Internet is not widely available, would have been able to even see Twitter, let alone vote.

SAPPORO, Japan – The latest piece of Japan’s bullet train network opened Saturday, providing the missing link that many hope will give rise to a new economic corridor stretching north from Tokyo.
Called the Hokkaido Shinkansen, the new, roughly 149km stretch reduces rail travel time between Tokyo and the southern tail of Hokkaido, Japan’s northernmost big island, by about an hour.
Built at a cost of 550 billion yen (S$6.6 billion), it connects Shin-Aomori Station at the northern tip of Japan’s main island with the rebuilt Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto Station in Hokkaido. (The cost excludes the underwater Seikan Tunnel, the engineering feat that links these two islands).
It also creates an unbroken chain of ultrahigh-speed rail service from Kagoshima on Japan’s southernmost big island all the way to Hokkaido.
Trains will make 13 round trips a day on the new line, 10 of which will direct service from Tokyo to the new northern terminus – a roughly 863km journey – in as little as 4 hours and 2 minutes. The trip from Sendai, the biggest city in the northeastern region of Tohoku, will take two and a half hours.
Read the full article here.

KUALA LUMPUR – Westports Malaysia Dragons have clinched their first Asean Basketball League (ABL) title after beating Singapore Slingers in Game Five of the Finals.
With the five-game series tied at 2-2, the Dragons banked on a roaring home crowd at the Maba Stadium for a 77-65 win.
Jason Brickman led the Dragons with 22 points and centre Reginald Johnson also came up big with 21 points.
For the Slingers, Justin Howard led the scoring with 27 points and Kris Rosales knocked down 22 but they had little help from the rest of the team.

TAIPEI – Taiwan’s opposition Nationalist Party, known in Chinese as the Kuomintang, picked as its new leader a woman it had ditched as its presidential candidate weeks before January’s election after a wave of criticism of her campaign.
Pro-China Hung Hsiu-chu, a one-time schoolteacher known by the nickname “Little Hot Chili Pepper”, won 56 per cent of the vote, a Nationalist Party spokeswoman said, beating three other candidates.
“Thanks to so many comrades’ support … giving me a chance to bend down and pick up the first brick to lead the Nationalist Party to rebuild our home from the debris,” Hung told a news conference.
“In the face of such a difficult and hard future situation, as long as we have courage there is no difficulty we cannot overcome. Please join me and work with me,” she added.
Hung’s victory marks a comeback for a woman who, in October, was removed as her party’s candidate for January’s presidential election after a campaign riddled with gaffes and political attacks.
The change made no difference, however, as her replacement, Eric Chu, still ended up being trounced in by Tsai Ing-wen of the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). Chu resigned as party chief after the defeat.
Tsai will take over as president in May from Ma Ying-jeou who has held the position for the Nationalists since 2008.
The Nationalist Party ruled China before being forced to flee to Taiwan in 1949 at the end of a bloody civil war with the Chinese Communist Party. Beijing claims Taiwan as a renegade province to be brought under its control by force if necessary.

The Singaporean side miss out on their first-ever ASEAN Basketball League title.
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SINGAPORE – Two men have been arrested for unlawful entry into Singapore.
The Police Coast Guard detected them swimming at the sea off Poyan Reservoir at 3.31am on Saturday and intercepted them minutes later after deploying land and sea resources, said…
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SINGAPORE – The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) has announced its campaign slogan for the Bukit Batok by-election: “Now is the time”.
On its campaign card, which was posted on its Facebook page this afternoon (March 26), is a list of initiatives that the party pledges to fulfil within 100 days of getting elected.
Among the promises are to publish an interim financial report and to announce a Bukit Batok Town Council budgetary plan.
SDP secretary-general Chee Soon Juan, 53, will contest the seat in the Single Member Constituency, which was vacated by the People’s Action Party’s (PAP) David Ong who resigned amid allegations of an extramarital affair.
Lawyer Murali Pillai, 48, will be the PAP’s candidate.
huizhen@sph.com.sg

March 26, 2016 8:31 PM
SINGAPORE – A new road linking Punggol and Pasir Ris will allow residents to travel directly between the two towns, doing away with the need to go onto Tampines Expressway (TPE).