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Junta chief calls on Thais to view 'patriotic' Korean drama

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BANGKOK – A hit South Korean drama about a gun-toting soldier saving lives in a far away land has won over Thailand’s mercurial junta chief, who on Thursday called on citizens to watch the show.

Former army chief turned Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha seized power in a 2014 coup and has often portrayed himself as an officer duty-bound to save Thailand from years of political chaos, even penning two pop songs and commissioning a series of short films to spread his patriotic message.

Now he has urged Thais to watch “Descendants of the Sun”, a drama that is winning over scores of viewers in South Korea, China, Japan and beyond.

“What I have seen is that they have inserted a sense of patriotism, sacrifice, obeying orders and being a dutiful citizen,” he told delegates at a government function on Thursday morning.

“So please watch it and if anyone wants to make such a drama I will financially sponsor it to make people love government officials, uncorrupted officials and make the Thai people love each other,” he added.

The so-called Hallyu (Korean Wave) of TV shows and pop music has conquered most of Asia and, in recent years, found new, devoted fans in the Middle East, Latin America and North Africa.

“Descendants of the Sun” tells the story of an army captain sent on a peacekeeping mission to a distant fictional country, battling shady henchmen to save his love interest.

It has proved particularly popular with Chinese viewers.

Korean dramas normally begin airing before later episodes are filmed to allow for ratings-boosting script adjustments.

But the show’s producers recorded “Descendants of the Sun” in its entirety to pass Beijing’s strict censorship rules, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported.

It is a tactic that seems to have worked.

On Saturday China’s public security ministry issued a tongue-in-cheek posting on the Twitter-like Weibo platform, saying thousands of women were suffering from “Song Joong-Ki Sickness” – a reference to the dashing lead actor.

But Song Joong-ki was Prime Minister Prayut’s one criticism of the show who he described as “very good looking with a boyish look”.

“In real life a captain must shoulder a lot of burden and would look older,” he mused.

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Thursday, March 17, 2016 – 15:49
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Twitter campaign to help women fight cyber bullying

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With more women and girls suffering online bullying and harassment in recent years, Twitter Singapore launched a campaign to help them fight back yesterday.

#PositionOfStrength will include a series of workshops on Internet safety and empowerment in partnership with the Singapore Council of Women’s Organisations (SCWO) and Young Women’s Leadership Connection (YWLC).

These will teach women how to respond to, and protect themselves from, online harassment and abuse, among other things.

Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Grace Fu was guest of honour at the campaign’s launch at Twitter Singapore’s Raffles Place office yesterday.

Noting how data released by a local cyber-wellness research company last year showed a 4 per cent increase in cyber-bullying encounters among girls aged 13 to 15 from 2013, she said such behaviour can cause “great stress, fear, loss of self-esteem and sadly, even loss of lives”.

“We can find more ways to make the Web women-friendly (and) we can find more ways to make the world women-friendly,” she added.

The free 90-minute workshops will be conducted in May, August, and October and it is hoped that between 70 and 150 women will attend each one. It is the first time that the Twitter workshops have been introduced in South-east Asia. Similar ones have been held in Australia, Dublin, Dubai and India.

“Twitter and other social media platforms surface the reality of the human condition that we don’t always see, and I noticed a lot of misogyny coming through,” said Ms Julie Inman-Grant, 47, Twitter’s director of public policy for Australia and South-East Asia. “We really need to find a way for our users to be able to deal with negativity when they encounter it.”

She added that Twitter has been improving online tools that can protect users’ safety. For example, a mute function was introduced in 2014, allowing a user to hide another’s abusive tweets.

Film-maker Tan Siok Siok, 44, who spoke in a panel discussion at last night’s launch, said social media can also be used as a tool for women to create positive identities. “Women are often depicted as passive objects on social media – of cyber bullying, harassment and sexual fantasy,” she said. “But social media enforces an equal opportunity (for women) to become dynamic subjects who can shape and invent their own identities online.”


This article was first published on March 17, 2016.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.

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Friday, March 18, 2016 – 15:39
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Hepatitis C outbreak: Disciplinary action taken against MOH, SGH staff

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For 12 staff in leadership positions, Singapore General Hospital says disciplinary sanctions meted out include stern warnings and financial penalties for gaps in their roles in managing the outbreak or in infection control.  

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Ikea recalls Gothem lamp bases due to risk of electric shock

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If you’ve bought a Gothem lamp base from furniture giant Ikea, immediately stop using it and bring it back to any of its stores for a full refund.

In a statement on Thursday (March 17), Ikea said that it is recalling all Gothem floor and table lamp bases due to the “risk of electric shock”, after some examples of damaged cables in the lamp bases were found.

“Damaged cables can lead to the metal body of the lamp base becoming electrically live and thereby being a safety hazard,” said the statement.

One thing to note: The Gothem lamp bases have not been sold in Singapore and no incidents have been reported here.

While Ikea said it has not received any reports of people getting hurt, it has received reports from two customers and one store co-worker who have gotten electric shocks.

All three models of Gothem lamp bases – two table lamp bases and one floor lamp base – are affected and Ikea urges all customers to return it to any Ikea store even if the lamp base is working.

The Gothem lamp bases can be returned to any Ikea store for a full refund. Proof of purchase is not required for the refund, added the statement.

For more information, contact Ikea’s customer relations at 6786-6868.

sujint@sph.com.sg

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Thursday, March 17, 2016 – 15:18
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Golf: Koh is first Singaporean to play Korean LPGA Tour event

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When she tees off next Friday on the first day of The Dalat at 1200 Ladies’ Championship in Vietnam, Koh Sock Hwee will become the first Singaporean golfer to play in the Korean LPGA Tour.

“Korean golfers are really dominant in the LPGA at the moment, so I felt that this would be a good experience to learn from them and to improve my own game,” said the 27-year-old. “I am really trying to get into as many overseas tournaments as possible, so this was a good opportunity for me which came along at the right time.”

Koh, who turned professional a month ago, says that she does not feel pressured by her status as the face of women’s golf in Singapore.

“I try not to give it much thought and instead focus on my own game. The pressure to perform comes from my own expectations,” she said. “Hopefully, down the road, there will be other female golfers. It would be fun to have another Singaporean golfer to share my experiences with.”

This will be her first tournament outside Singapore since turning pro.

“This is my first time travelling overseas without the national team, so it is definitely going to be different from what I am used to. I had never even heard of Dalat before being invited to this tournament, so I am really eager to explore a new place and a new course.”

Koh hopes that this tournament will be a first step in a successful season.

“I am hoping to take part in many more overseas tournaments this year, as there are not many tournaments within Singapore itself. Later in the year I hope to be taking part in a few more international competitions, as well as the Tour’s qualifying tournament later in the year.”

Through the LPGA qualifying tournament, she is hoping to become the first Singaporean player to earn membership. The first stage of the event will be at the Mission Hills Country Club in California in August.

At the HSBC Women’s Champions here early this month, she finished tied for 59th place, the first time in the tournament’s history that a Singaporean golfer did not finished last.

Koh will be looking to build on the momentum she gained from that performance. However, her main focus is on her own game.

“I am hoping to make the cut next week, but I am trying not to think too much about it,” she said. “I just want to go out there and play my best.”


This article was first published on March 17, 2016.
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.

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Friday, March 18, 2016 – 15:05
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Ikea recalls Gothem lamp base, after electric shock incidents

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March 17, 2016 3:06 PM

SINGAPORE – Furniture store Ikea has issued a recall of its Gothem lamp bases, after they were found to have caused electric shocks.



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Dystopian film about Hong Kong in 2025 touches nerve with Beijing

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HONG KONG – “Ten Years”, a film which portrays a dystopian future Hong Kong under tight Chinese Communist Party control, has been a hit in Hong Kong and abroad, selling out cinemas, sparking discussions and being screened at international film festivals.

But Chinese state media has criticised the film and that has aroused new concern about mainland influence over Hong Kong despite a “one country, two systems” formula meant to preserve the city’s autonomy. “Ten Years” is a series of five short films packaged as a feature-length show. Set in the year 2025, the film includes scenes of a self-immolation in front of Hong Kong’s British Consulate and an assassination attempt in a city election.

The scenes, while fictional, underscore tension simmering between mainland China and the former British colony that returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

The film has been nominated for Best Picture at the Hong Kong Film Awards, Hong Kong’s equivalent of the Oscars, due to be announced on April 3.

Its makers say their project began before pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong in late 2014 that exacerbated longstanding concern in the city about creeping mainland control. “We were just trying to produce a film that we thought was true and reflected what is really happening in Hong Kong,” said”Ten Years” executive producer Andrew Choi. “Our intent was not to be a political film.” China’s state-controlled Global Times denounced “Ten Years”in a January editorial as absurd and pessimistic and said it was a “thought virus”.

Soon after, screenings of the film stopped in Hong Kong cinemas. Cinema operators told the film-makers they could no longer show it because of scheduling issues.

But some people doubted that explanation. “It was breaking all kinds of box office records. Almost every single show at every theatre … was full,” Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, School of Film and Television Chairman Shu Kei told Reuters. “But even with that smashing record, suddenly the cinema would tell the film makers, ‘no, we are not going to book the film’.” Just days before the Film Awards, speculation is swirling that the show will not be broadcast in the mainland because of the Best Picture nomination for “Ten Years”.

Media in Hong Kong, Taiwan and the United States have reported that state-run China Central Television and the Chinese social media and online entertainment company Tencent, which have the rights to broadcast the awards, have decided not to beam it to the mainland.

The companies did not respond to requests for comment and the awards organiser, the Hong Kong Film Awards Association, declined to comment.

Of the two offices that oversee Hong Kong for the Chinese government, the Liaison Office in Hong Kong did not respond to a request for comment, while the Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office was not available for comment. “Ten Years” was made on a budget of HK$500,000 by an essentially volunteer crew. It made more than HK$6 million (US$800,000 or S$1 million) in box office receipts.

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Thursday, March 17, 2016 – 14:25
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Changi named World's Best Airport for fourth year running

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Changi Airport has been crowned the World’s Best Airport for the fourth consecutive time in an annual global survey which polls air travellers.

It beat South Korea’s Incheon Airport and Munich Airport in Germany, which placed second and third on the list of top 10 airports at this year’s Skytrax World Airport Awards in Germany.

More than 13.25 million travellers participated in the Skytrax survey, which is recognised as the industry’s biggest exercise.

Travellers nominated their favourite airports for ease of transfer, shopping, immigration and passenger facilities, among other areas.

This is the seventh time in 16 years that Changi has nabbed the top spot. It also clinched the best airport award for leisure amenities.

Amenities in Changi include gardens and cinemas. It also has free sightseeing tours for visitors.

Mr Edward Plaisted, chief executive of London-based Skytrax, said Changi’s win is a clear testament to its popularity among air travellers.

He said the “leisure and entertainment facilities are unique features of Changi Airport, and underline its dedication to truly satisfy customers”.

Changi will increase its current annual passenger handling capacity of 66 million by 19 million in 2018, after Terminal 4 and the Jewel complex are completed.

Mr Jayson Goh, senior vice-president of airport operations management at Changi Airport Group (CAG), said steps are being taken to ensure service standards are maintained, such as motivating frontline staff through staff appreciation awards.

CAG also responds to feedback from its Facebook page and feedback screens throughout the airport, he said. This led to the installation of amenities such as more charging points in non-departure areas.

Better design can improve customer experience, said Mr Goh, who cited how CAG connected soap dispensers in its toilets to a central reserve, ensuring that travellers will never encounter an empty soap dispenser.

Said CAG chief executive Lee Seow Hiang: “We do not take this recognition for granted… It is the effort and commitment of the entire airport community that drives Changi’s success.”


This article was first published on March 17, 2016.
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Thursday, March 17, 2016 – 17:00
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Financial advisory firms fined almost $1m for anti-competitive behaviour

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SINGAPORE – Ten financial advisory firms have been found guilty by Singapore’s competition watchdog of infringing the Competition Act by forcing their competitor to withdraw an offer to halve commissions on insurance products. For their actions, the 10…

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10 financial advisers fined for anti-competitive behaviour

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The 10 firms were fined between S$5,000 and S$405,114 by the Comptition Commission of Singapore in what is the first case of anti-competition in the financial services sector.

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