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WP’s Jamus Lim assures Anchorvale resident: “No issue is too small”

Singapore — Member of Parliament Jamus Lim (Workers’ Party — Sengkang GRC), who had been on a holiday break, recently resumed house visits in his Anchorvale ward of the GRC.

In one of them, he told a resident named Slamat that no issue is too small and promised that he would do his best to help.

On Jan 9 (Saturday), Associate Professor Lim wrote in a Facebook post that he had resumed house visits to families living in the Block 329 to 331 cluster.

A/Prof Lim wrote that as he was on his way, he met Mr Slamat, “who invited us into his place for some Coke”.

The resident had seen the MP and his team during Meet-the-People Sessions (MPS). He  had wanted to approach the MP to talk to him about “certain estate-related issues he was facing” but “felt embarrassed” as there were other people there who were dealing with “with more pressing matters”.

The MP wrote: “I reassured him that no issue — whether those requesting MP representation, or those related to daily living in the town — was too small, and that I would do my best to help resolve any of these. After all, it is not just my duty to do so, but also a privilege to be in a position where I can help make things better.”

Indeed, many members of the WP have sprung into action recently, given that two of the MPs from the Sengkang GRC team, Ms He Ting Ru and Ms Raeesah Khan, are currently on maternity leave.

Ms Khan, who is responsible for Compassvale ward in the GRC, gave birth to her second child on Jan 2, while Ms He, who is responsible for Buangkok, had her third son shortly before the end of 2020.

Other WP politicians are helping out in their absence.

Last week, former WP MP Lee Li Lian stood in for Ms Khan at her MPS. She said in a Facebook post: “It was great meeting residents and hearing their stories. Hopefully our appeal letters can bring them some assistance.”

On Saturday (Jan 9), WP leader Pritam Singh wrote that former WP secretary-general  Low Thia Khiang had taken a precinct walk in Buangkok ward that morning, while Mr Singh had walked a precinct in Compassvale after doing so in his own precinct in the Eunos ward of Aljunied GRC.

He posted a photo of himself and Mr Low in front of a Sengkang Town Council sign.

The WP head added that, aside from Ms Lee helping out with the duties at Compassvale, party chairman Sylvia Lim was doing the same in Buangkok for house visits and Meet-the-People Sessions.

Facebook screengrab: Pritam Singh

On Dec 24, he had written in a Facebook post that several WP members would “on a rotational basis and for as long as required, support Ru and Raeesah’s work in Sengkang GRC by standing in for their weekly Meet-the-People Sessions, house visits and estate walks”.

Among them are Mr Low; Aljunied GRC MPs Leon Perera, Muhamad Faisal bin Abdul Manap, Ms Lim and Mr Singh; Hougang SMC MP Dennis Tan; former WP MPs Lee and Png Eng Huat; former NCMP Yee Jenn Jong; and WP members Ron Tan, Nicole Seah,  Terence Tan and Kenneth Foo. /TISG

Read also: Ex-MP Lee Li Lian stands in for Raeesah Khan at Sengkang GRC

Ex-MP Lee Li Lian stands in for Raeesah Khan at Sengkang GRC

Reckless driving along ECP leads to car flipping over and crashing into railing

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Singapore – A BMW was caught on dashcam over-speeding with three other vehicles before losing control and crashing on to the road divider.

On Saturday (Jan 9), Facebook page ROADS.sg uploaded footage caught on a vehicle’s camera of three cars speeding along East Coast Parkway (ECP) around 1:30 am on the same day.

The caption reads, “3 (sic) cars were speeding, and one crashed into the railings and flipped.” SG Road Vigilante added that a BMW was involved in the accident.

The video showed three cars fast approaching the cam car taking the middle lane, as taken from its rear camera. A bump could be heard before the front camera showed a vehicle sliding across the three lanes from the far right and onto the road divider.

The BMW hit the bushes on the middle divider and flipped over before crashing to the other side. Debris from the vehicle also hit the cam car as the passengers voiced their concern over the footage audio.

“Police can charge these drivers for reckless driving; the vehicles are often seized and kept in the Traffic Police pound during the course of investigation and prosecution,” noted the caption. “This can last two years or more.”

Members from the online community urged authorities to ban reckless motorists from the road and send them to jail for extended periods to prevent fatal accidents.

“Good evidence from camcar for TP to prosecute them for dangerous driving and endangering the lives of other road users,” said Facebook user Shahlan S Shahlan. “Fine, jail, license suspension, ultimately revoke (sic), car impounded whilst waiting for the court case.”

According to another member of the public, the accident happened on the ECP towards Changi Airport. “Almost hit my van. My family inside the van (sic). Police report done,” added the individual.

A channelnewsasia.com report on Jan 9 noted that the three people involved in the accident were taken to the hospital. Two women aged 23 and 24, and a 25-year-old man were conscious when taken to Changi General Hospital, said the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF).

Police investigations are ongoing.

Read related: Major accident along SLE, off-duty paramedics step in to help

Major accident along SLE, off-duty paramedics step in to help

Crew on crashed Indonesian passenger jet did not declare emergency: investigator

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by Haeril HALIM

The crew of an Indonesian passenger jet that crashed off Jakarta at the weekend with 62 people aboard did not declare an emergency or report technical problems before it suddenly plunged into the sea, an investigator said Monday.

So far, inspectors have so far been unable to say why the 26-year-old plane crashed just four minutes after takeoff, but they do know the location of the black boxes.

A recording of conversations with air traffic control pointed to routine exchanges, and there was no communication as the Sriwijaya Air Boeing 737-500 plunged about 10,000 feet (3,000 metres) in less than a minute before slamming into the Java Sea, said National Transportation Safety Committee investigator Nurcahyo Utomo.

“It’s like a normal conversation and nothing suspicious,” he told AFP.

“There’s no talk of an emergency or something like that.”

The preliminary data suggested it was “most likely” that the plane was intact when it hit the water Saturday, he added.

“But we don’t know at this stage” what caused the crash, Utomo said.

His comments came as divers searched waters off Jakarta for black boxes — cockpit voice and flight data recorders — that could be crucial to help explain why the plane went down.

Switched flight
There were 62 Indonesian passengers and crew aboard the half-full flight, including 10 children.

The jet’s captain, Afwan — a 54-year-old father of three, who like many Indonesians goes by one name — was a former air force pilot with decades of flying under his belt, according to local media.

Some of the 2,600 personnel working in the recovery effort involving dozens of boats and helicopters are hauling body parts, twisted piece of wreckage and passengers’ clothing from shallow waters about 23 metres (75 feet) deep.

Body bags filled with human remains are being taken to a police hospital where investigators hope to identify victims by matching DNA from their remains to living relatives.

Rapin Akbar, who gave a blood sample to the hospital, had five relatives on board including an older sister, a nephew and his wife and their seven-month-old baby.

They were flying back to Pontianak, the city on Indonesia’s section of Borneo island, about 90 minutes away.

“(My nephew) had planned to go back to Pontianak on Sunday but changed his mind and decided to fly on Saturday instead,” Akbar told AFP.

“He called me to say the flight was delayed and sent me a picture of their baby. It was (their) first.”

Black box data
Despite the name, black boxes are usually bright orange with reflective stripes, and all commercial planes are obliged to have them on board.

Built to survive at vast depths and in extreme heat, they are fitted with a beacon which can emit a signal for one month.

The devices record information about the speed, altitude and direction of the plane as well as flight crew conversations.

Black box data help explain nearly 90 percent of all crashes, according to aviation experts.

The probe into Saturday’s crash is likely to take months.

Aviation analysts said flight-tracking data showed the plane sharply deviated from its intended course before it went into a steep dive, with bad weather, pilot error and mechanical malfunction among the potential factors.

“Something quite dramatic has happened after takeoff,” said Stephen Wright, professor of aircraft systems at Finland’s Tampere University.

“The airspeed is far too low. The aircraft didn’t accelerate up to the correct speeds for continuous flight.”

Spotty safety record
Sriwijaya Air, which flies to destinations in Indonesia and Southeast Asia, has said little about the plane, which was previously flown by US-based Continental Airlines and United Airlines.

The Indonesian carrier has not recorded a fatal crash since it started operations in 2003.

But the nation’s fast-growing aviation sector has long been plagued by safety concerns, and its airlines were once banned from entering US and European airspace.

In October 2018, 189 people were killed when a Lion Air Boeing 737 MAX jet crashed near Jakarta.

That accident — and another in Ethiopia — saw Boeing hit with $2.5 billion in fines over claims it defrauded regulators overseeing the 737 MAX model, which was grounded worldwide following the accidents.

The 737 model that went down Saturday was first produced decades ago and was not a MAX variant.

In 2014, an AirAsia plane headed from Surabaya to Singapore crashed with the loss of 162 lives.

A year later more than 140 people, including scores on the ground, were killed when a military plane crashed shortly after take-off in Medan on Sumatra island.

© Agence France-Presse

Over half a million under lockdown as Beijing outbreak spreads

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More than half a million people were placed under lockdown in Beijing on Monday as the government imposed strict measures to stamp out a handful of Covid-19 cases.

China has largely brought the virus under control, but is tackling a number of local infections with lockdowns and mass testing.

Authorities are keen to stem any outbreak in the capital — home to over 20 million people — particularly ahead of a week-long national holiday next month.

All rural villages in Shunyi district on the outskirts of Beijing are locked down until a fresh round of mass testing has been completed, district official Zhi Xianwei said at a press briefing Monday.

The move means around 518,000 residents will not be permitted to leave their villages until they have undergone testing.

Officials also said locals would be under “closed management”, suggesting they will be barred from leaving their residential compounds.

The district, which has a total population of 1.2 million, is home to many rural migrant workers.

Zhi said officials would “knock on doors… all migrants will be classified and accounted for.”

Experts have not yet identified the source of the outbreak, but one asymptomatic case confirmed on Sunday was a driver for an online ride-hailing service, and the government has suspended all taxi-hailing services in the district.

Beijing reported one new case on Monday and has recorded 32 local transmissions of Covid-19 in total since December 19, mostly in Shunyi.

Shunyi residents already completed a round of mass testing in late December, when six villages and an industrial park were also locked down and delivery couriers were banned from entering residential estates.

Although the latest outbreak is modest compared to Beijing’s last cluster in June, when more than 300 were infected, officials are anxious to contain the spread of the virus before the country’s massive annual migration for the Lunar New Year holiday next month.

The Beijing government has cancelled large-scale events and urged residents not to leave the city over the holidays to minimise the risk of infection.

© Agence France-Presse

Japan sumo wrestler quits, saying coronavirus fears ignored

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A sumo wrestler in Japan said he had “no choice” but to quit the sport after his request to skip a tournament for fear of catching coronavirus was rejected.

The 22-year-old known as Kotokantetsu said the Japan Sumo Association had insisted he fight in the New Year Grand Sumo Tournament, which began on Sunday and lasts 15 days.

It has gone ahead in front of a reduced crowd despite at least six wrestlers — including record-breaking champion Hakuho — testing positive for the coronavirus last week.

“I had no choice but to compete or quit,” Kotokantetsu said in a tweet announcing his resignation on Saturday.

“The association said you can’t stay away from the tournament just because you fear the coronavirus,” added the wrestler, who competes in the second-lowest division.

He later said on YouTube he had previously undergone heart surgery and feared that infection would be a mortal danger.

The Japan Sumo Association declined to comment but its spokesman Shibatayama reportedly defended the decision.

“The association has taken safety measures. It does not stand to reason that you want to drop a tournament because you are afraid of the coronavirus,” he said, according to public broadcaster NHK.

A 28-year-old sumo wrestler died in Japan in May after contracting Covid-19 and suffering multiple organ failures.

Japan is currently battling a record surge in coronavirus infections and the government declared a month-long state of emergency in and around Tokyo last week to try and slow the spread of the disease.

In line with government guidelines, around 5,000 fans are being admitted to the New Year Grand Sumo tournament — about half the capacity of Tokyo’s Ryogoku Kokugikan arena.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has insisted Japan is still committed to holding the virus-postponed Tokyo Olympics this summer, saying the Games would be “proof that mankind overcame the virus”.

© Agence France-Presse

WHO to probe virus origins in China as nations struggle with surges

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by Laurie Chen, with AFP Bureaus

A World Health Organization team will finally reach China this week to start probing the origins of the coronavirus, more than a year after the pandemic began and following accusations Beijing tried to block the investigation.

Infection numbers surged across Europe, with Germany warning of the “hardest” days ahead as Britain raced to vaccinate as many people as possible to contain a virus that has infected close to 90 million people worldwide and killed nearly two million.

The human and economic toll of the pandemic has caused anger and frustration worldwide, giving even greater political significance to the WHO’s long-awaited investigation mission to China.

The 10-member WHO team will arrive Thursday and “conduct joint research cooperation on the origins of Covid-19 with Chinese scientists”, Beijing’s National Health Commission said in a statement that provided no further details.

Beijing has faced international criticism over its lack of transparency during the early days of the pandemic. The United States and Australia have led international calls for an independent inquiry, enraging China.

The announcement of the WHO team’s arrival came on the anniversary of the first death confirmed by China in the central city of Wuhan, where a wet market was identified as the first major outbreak of the disease that then spread around the world.

The anniversary of the first reported death passed by unmarked on Monday in Wuhan, where commuters move freely to work, and parks and riverside promenades buzz with visitors.

“Wuhan is the safest city in China now, even the whole world,” 66-year-old resident Xiong Liansheng told AFP.

Hospitals overwhelmed
The recovery of Wuhan is in sharp contrast to the many parts of the world where the pandemic is still raging, fuelled by new variants that are prompting governments from Israel to Australia to reimpose restrictions, including lockdowns and even curfews.

The surges in Europe and North America have hit even as Covid-19 vaccines were approved and rolled out in record time.

Virus deaths in Germany crossed 40,000 on Sunday, with Chancellor Angela Merkel warning that the country had yet to feel the full impact of socialising over Christmas and New Year period.

The coming weeks will be “the hardest phase of the pandemic” so far, Merkel said, with hospitals stretched to their limits.

Hospitals in Britain, which has one of the highest death tolls in Europe, were also close to being overwhelmed, and the surge in cases forced the government to reinforce its campaign to get people to abide by stay-at-home orders.

UK health authorities are rushing to give shots as many people as possible to meet a target of 15 million vaccinations among the most vulnerable by mid-February.

The surge in Mexico, which the fourth-highest death toll in the world, has left hospitals in a “critical” state, with paramedics struggling to even find beds for patients.

“For there to be room, one person has to be discharged or die,” said Angel Zuniga, a Red Cross coordinator in the city of Toluca.

“It’s tough but it’s the truth.”

Living without fear
Pope Francis and Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II became the latest high-profile figures over the weekend to join the global vaccination campaign as officials try to overcome scepticism over jabs developed in record time.

“There is a suicidal denial which I cannot explain, but today we have to get vaccinated,” the Pope said Sunday, denouncing opposition to shots.

While wealthier nations in Europe and North America have already started their vaccination drives, India — with the world’s second-biggest virus caseload — will begin giving shots to its 1.3 billion people from Saturday in a colossal and complex undertaking.

More than 150,000 Indians have died from Covid-19 and the economy is one of the worst-hit worldwide, with millions losing their livelihoods.

“I look forward to getting the vaccine and living without fear and the mask all the time,” migrant worker Shatrughan Sharma, 43, told AFP.

“The last year was very tough for us.”

© Agence France-Presse

England opens mass vaccination sites as virus spike fears spread

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Seven mass coronavirus vaccination sites opened across England on Monday as the government races to dose millions of people while a new strain of the disease runs rampant across the country.

The sites include football stadiums and a horse racing course, and are located in cities including Bristol, London, Newcastle and Manchester.

They are to vaccinate thousands per week and several more sites are expected to follow, according to NHS England.

Hospitals and pharmacies are set to begin offering the vaccine later this week, with the government hoping to have doses available for 12 million of England’s 56 million population by mid-February, starting with the most vulnerable.

More than 1.2 million people have already been vaccinated in England, since the roll-out began of the Pfizer-BioNTech jab on December 8. Britain has since approved the Oxford-AstraZeneca and Moderna jabs.

“We are mobilising the government, NHS (National Health Service) and the armed forces as part of a massive national effort,” said health minister Matt Hancock.

Care home residents, all those aged 70 or above, frontline health workers and clinically extremely vulnerable people are first in line for the vaccines.

Britain is grappling with its worst outbreak of the disease since it hit the country early last year.

The record case rates and daily death toll are being blamed on a new, more transmissible strain, which has piled pressure on the NHS, leading to warnings of shortages of critical care beds.

The state-run NHS risks being overwhelmed and the country is in its third lockdown until at least mid-February, with predictions the restrictions could last even longer.

“The next few weeks are going to be the worst weeks of this pandemic in terms of numbers into the NHS,” England’s chief medical officer Chris Whitty told BBC television on Monday.

Double down
“What we need to do, before the vaccines have had their effect… is we need to really double down” on observing lockdown measures, he added.

Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi also urged the public to follow the rules, which some have criticised for not being strict enough.

“In supermarkets, we need to make sure people actually wear masks and follow the one-way system rule,” he told Sky News.

“We don’t want to go any tougher because this is a pretty tough lockdown, but what we need is people to behave as if they’ve got the virus so we can bring this virus under control whilst we vaccinate.”

Britain on Saturday said it had recorded over three million coronavirus cases since the pandemic began last year, having on Friday reported a record 1,325 deaths over a 24-hour period of people who tested positive for the virus.

The full death toll now stands at more than 80,000, one of the highest in Europe alongside Italy.

© Agence France-Presse

The reason why Jacelyn Tay’s son put his alarm clock in the freezer

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Singaporean actress Jacelyn Tay, in an Instagram post dated Jan 8, says her four-years old son has been experimenting with some appliances, apparently trying to discover what makes toy cars and electronics work.

“Son, you really wanna be Einstein ah? (sic) Yesterday u put this alarm clock in the freezer (…) today u cut its wire… I know you have my scientific and curious genes (…) but just don’t set our house on fire”, she captioned the post.

It appears her son Zavier Wong’s curious experiment is making her a bit exasperated.

“It’s ok…Mama feels ok… Just don’t touch MY electrical appliances. This alarm clock costs $12. Since you never like toys that usually cost much more, it is more cost-effective to buy you real stuff for your R & D. (sic)”

Tay also showed the boy’s other experiments to further illustrate her point, including one where he removed the covers of toy cars presumably to check out how they’re wired and another that showed how he had detached the back cover of a dummy phone just by using Jacelyn’s hairdryer.

A netizen commented saying the actress should keep her robot cleaner away from Zavier. Tay then responded: “He did flip my robot cleaner over to see what was underneath. I warned him never to do any “experiment” on it”.

Netizens also reminded Tay to ban Zavier from touching her rice cooker, hairdryer and luxury watches.

Jacelyn Tay spends time with her curious son Zavier Wong. Picture: Instagram

Born on June 12 1975, Jacelyn Tay Siew Cheng is a Singapore actress.
She was prominently a full-time Mediacorp artiste from 1995 to 2006. She left Mediacorp after her contract expired, choosing not to renew it.

After penning two best-selling books – “Feel Good Look Good with Jacelyn” & “Make-up for Asian Women” in 2004 and 2005 respectively, Jacelyn further pursued a new career in the wellness industry in 2006 by setting up Body Inc. Holistic Wellness Centre.

She is currently a health coach, nutrition consultant, registered BFR Practitioner and founder of 3 Body Inc. outlets in Singapore. Body Inc. focuses on detox, weight management, antiquing, skin rejuvenation and holistic health.

Experts say recent uptick in Singapore infections “expected” due to border openings

Singapore—Given the rising cases of Covid-19 around the world, in addition to the country lifting travel restrictions for the sake of employment and tourism, the recent increase in local Covid-19 cases in Singapore was “expected,” some experts told The Straits Times (ST).

The uptick is also due to the authorities’ high success rate in identifying new cases in people coming into the country.

On Jan 10 (Sunday), there were 42 new cases of Covid-19, the highest daily count in nine months.  There have been a total of 562 imported cases from 31 different countries from Dec 15, 2020 to Jan 10, 2021.

New daily cases have recently been in the double digits, in comparison to October and November, when the daily count went down to single digits. This is due, in part, to the country beginning to allow visitors from several countries to come in since September.

In addition, more S-pass and work permit applications were also allowed from that point, in answer to labour shortages in different companies.

ST quotes Associate Professor Josip Car as saying that the uptick in cases in the country is an expected one, “given the intensification of the Covid-19 disease globally, especially with the discovery of the new and highly transmissible strain of the virus”.

Prof Car is the director of the Centre for Population Health Sciences at Nanyang Technological University’s Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine.

Case in point: the United Kingdom, where a sizeable surge in infections has been observed lately, is the third largest source of imported cases in Singapore.

India and Indonesia, the first and second largest sources of imported infections, are also reporting high numbers of daily cases.

Professor Dale Fisher, from the Department of Medicine in the National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine (who also chairs the World Health Organisation’s Global Outbreak and Alert and Response Network), told ST that many travellers from high-prevalence countries test positive for Covid-19 upon arrival.

However, when compared to the total number of all travellers serving SHN, the percentage that has tested positive has stayed low.

Of the 18,426 people serving SHN on Jan 3, only 35 tested positive for the infection, which amounts to only .002 per cent.

According to Prof Car, this is “a good sign that our detection measures are successful in screening out infected cases, given that community spread is still low”.

This also shows that measures to contain the infection and prevent community spread through measures implementing the SHN for travellers have been successful, the experts ST spoke to added.

They also said that unless global cases decrease or Singapore closes borders again, the number of imported cases is unlikely to decrease.

Associate Professor Alex Cook of the NUS Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health is quoted in ST as saying that if some travellers remain undetected the community’s safe management measures will be able to mitigate their impact.

As for the small rise in community cases, he says it was due to the further lifting of measures in Phase 3.

“Phase three is characterised by greater normalcy than phase two, which of course means the risk of transmission is higher.

We believe this can be countered by the safe management measures that we have in place now, though time will tell whether the balance is still right.”

/TISG

Read also: Covid-19 positive housewife failed to disclose meetings with close male friend

Covid-19 positive housewife failed to disclose meetings with close male friend

 

BLACKPINK’s Jennie is a ‘hot girl’ according to netizens

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BLACKPINK’s Jennie is the ideal example of the trendy ‘hot girl’ label says a netizen in an online community as reported by Media outlet Allkpop reported on January 11.

Based on the post, Jennie is the most ideal female idol that comes to mind when one thinks of ‘hot girl’, especially among third-generation girl groups.

The netizen shared in an online community that Jennie is the epitome of the ‘hot girl’ concept and that is trending online.

Hot Girl’ is becoming a popular slang among Korean netizens and it refers to a feminine, chic, sexy, confident, healthy and often Americanised image.

The title of the post reads ‘The female idol who is best suited to the label ‘hot girl’ among 3rd-generation girl groups’.

Some netizens agree with the post that BLACKPINK’s Jennie is the ideal example of the trendy ‘hot girl’ label.

Many left comments such as, “I knew it would be Jennie the moment I saw the title”, “I totally agree”.

Although there were other opinions, such as “I was thinking of [(G)I-DLE’s] Soojin”, “Isn’t it Nayeon?”, “I was thinking Hwa Sa”, “It’s probably only because she has this international vibe to her” and “Hm, I don’t know”, most of the reactions referred to her as the ultimate “hot girl” that you would likely see in a “high school teen movie”.

Other comments include: “Who can surpass Jennie’s atmosphere?”, “No one can say that Jennie wouldn’t be the main protagonist of a film that features such a concept”, “New generation Lee Hyori?”.

BLACKPINK is a South Korean girl group by YG Entertainment and comprises four members, Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé, Lisa. Their ages range from 23 to 25 years old.

The girl band debuted in August 2016 with their album entitled Square One. Each BLACKPINK member co-writes and co-produces their own music, and their music style includes a wide range of genres.

The group is the highest-charting female Korean act on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 13 with “Ice Cream” (2020), and on the Billboard 200, peaking at number two with The Album (2020).