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Kendall Jenner appears on Vogue China cover

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Model and reality star Kendall Jenner has graced another Vogue cover as her modelling career continues to soar.

Jenner 25 looked angelic in the photos taken in a garden filled with pink and red roses. Autumn de Wilde, the Emma film director, was in charge of the February 2021 cover of Vogue China. During the shoot, the crew practised social distancing. Jenner looked more natural than she has for recent covers, wearing little eye makeup and blush.

The beauty had a tranquil expression with few smiles which lent a 1960s beatnik air. Jenner looked elegant in a floral dress with a black background for the cover. In recent months, the model was seen in Lake Tahoe and Aspen filming the last episode of her family’s hit TV series, Keeping Up With The Kardashians. Jenner’s shoot comes out amid claims that her elder sister Kim Kardashian is divorcing husband Kanye West. Media outlets Page Six and TMZ have speculated on a split and on the division of their assets.

Together Kardashian and West have four children, North, Saint, Chicago and Psalm. Despite it all, the one thing that is staying together is the Kardashian/Jenner sisters. The family signed a multi-year content deal with Hulu in November. Reports in September last year say the Keeping Up With The Kardashians series will end in 2021 after 14 years on E!

Kendall Jenner has a successful modelling career. Picture: Instagram

Kim Kardashian West, Kourtney Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Kendall, Kylie Jenner and matriarch Kris Jenner will feature on the Disney-owned streaming platform in the US and Star, a new international streaming service just unveiled by Disney. Reports say the famous family will release content in early 2021.

Kris tweeted: ‘Excited to announce our new multi-year partnership with Hulu and Star and what’s coming in 2021.’

Announcing the end of ‘Keeping Up with the Kardashians’, Kim wrote in a statement: ‘It is with heavy hearts that we’ve made the difficult decision as a family to say goodbye to ‘Keeping Up with the Kardashians’.

‘After what will be 14 years, 20 seasons, hundreds of episodes and numerous spin-off shows, we are beyond grateful to all of you who’ve watched us for all of these years – through the good times, the bad times, the happiness, the tears, and the many relationships and children.

‘We’ll forever cherish the wonderful memories and countless people we’ve met along the way.’

Kim thanked everyone who has been a part of the programme over the years and credited the series with ‘changing [her] life forever’.

She added: ‘Thank you to the thousands of individuals and businesses that have been a part of this experience and, most importantly, a very special thank you to Ryan Seacrest for believing in us, E! for being our partner, and our production team at Bunim/Murray, who’ve spent countless hours documenting our lives.

‘Our last season will air early next year in 2021.

‘Without ‘Keeping Up with The Kardashians’, I wouldn’t be where I am today. I am so incredibly grateful to everyone who has watched and supported me and my family these past 14 incredible years.

‘This show made us who we are and I will be forever in debt to everyone who played a role in shaping our careers and changing our lives forever.’

Civil servant acquitted after being accused of bumping into LRT commuter’s backside

A 30-year-old civil servant facing an indecent assault charge was acquitted in court on Tuesday (5 January), after he was accused of deliberately bumping a woman’s buttocks during an LRT ride on 13 Aug 2019.

The female commuter claimed that she boarded a Punggol LRT train from Kadaloor station at 8am that day. The train was crowded but the woman said she felt like something was brushing against her right hip for about three minutes.

At first, she thought that someone had accidentally touched her and used her elbow to push back. But the sensation returned and she began to suspect that someone was groping her since it felt like a hand was touching her backside.

According to her statement, the woman said that she spotted the defendant standing behind her when she used her phone’s reflection to check who is standing behind her. Claiming that the man’s left hand was quite close to her right hip at the time, the woman secretly took three to four photos of the defendant with her mobile phone.

Stating that her suspicions intensified when the man looked at her camera, the woman said she grew even more suspicious when the man alighted the MRT at Punggol station but looked back at her when he was taking the escalator.

Outraged, the woman posted the man’s photo on social media and publicly accused him of groping her. A former colleague noticed the post and helped the woman call the police. A police officer told the commuters to take note of the man’s clothing and notify the police if she sees him again.

Just two days after the incident, the victim saw the man on board the LRT and promptly notified the police. The man – Mr Tay Jia Jun – was arrested the next day.

In court, Mr Tay vehemently denied the charge against him and represented himself, without engaging a defense lawyer. Pleading not guilty, the civil servant argued that he was in a “half dream and half awake” state when he took the LRT that morning.

Pointing out he would have used his palm directly to touch the woman if he really had bad intentions, the man argued that he was not accused of committing the same crime the second time he met the woman. He also stressed that tests showed his DNA was not found on the victim’s skirt and that he had a habit of looking around him when he takes the escalator.

Although the prosecution called Mr Tay’s explanations illogical and unbelievable, Judge Ong Chin Rhu ultimately ruled in favour of the defendant and released him.

Ruling that the prosecution had not proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt, Judge Ong said that she did not find the woman to be “unusually convincing”. She said:

“I wish to emphasise that I arrived at this conclusion not because I found (her) to be a witness who lacked credibility… On the contrary, I found (her) to be candid and frank… readily (admitting) to the gaps or limitations of her own observations and knowledge, including the fact she never specifically saw who or what touched her.”

She added that the trial centered upon whether the “bumps” the woman felt on her backside were caused by Mr Tay and that it is reasonable to expect that there could have been other commuters directly behind since the train was so crowded.

Mr Tay told reporters after the hearing: “I did not commit the crime…I felt that the law is just and fair, that is why I didn’t engage a lawyer.”

Lee Hsien Yang shares a post that says TraceTogether “will only be used for contact tracing”

Singapore—Ever since the Minister of State for Home Affairs Desmond Tan said in Parliament on Monday (Jan 4) that the Singapore Police Force (SPF) is empowered under the CPC to obtain data for criminal investigations from TraceTogether, many in Singapore have been abuzz with security and privacy concerns.

What has complicated the issue is that Mr Tan’s statement seemingly contradicts what was said by Minister-in-charge of the Smart Nation Initiative and Foreign Affairs Minister Dr Vivian Balaksrishnan last June, “TraceTogether app, TraceTogether running on a device, and the data generated, is purely for contact-tracing. Period.”

Dr Balaksrishnan has admitted that he had not thought of the CPC when he had made his remarks last June, as well as clarified that the “TT app and token were not designed to allow any government agency to track the user,” and that, “We do not take the trust of Singaporeans lightly,” but the issue is still being discussed in online spaces.

Late on Wednesday night (Jan 6), Mr Lee Hsien Yang, the brother of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, waded into the fray, sharing a post that showed that Senior Minister and Coordinating Minister for National Security Teo Chee Hean, had also said something similar to what Dr Balakrishnan said last June.

The post Mr Lee shared was from activist Kirsten Han. Ms Han had put up a photo of a transcript from Parliament from June 4, 2020, entitled “Safeguarding of Personal Data Collected by Contact-tracing Apps.”

The transcript reads, “Mr Murali Pillai asked the Prime Minister what steps has the Government taken to ensure that personal data of persons collated through apps such as TraceTogether for the purposes of contact tracing to contain the spread of COVID-19 will be protected and not used for any other purpose.”

Answering on behalf of PM Lee, the Senior Minister said, “The close contacts data gathered by TraceTogether will be stored only on the user’s phone in the first instance, and accessed by MOH only if the individual tests positive for COVID-19. It will only be used for contact tracing.”

Mr Teo reiterated this in Parliament on Oct 5 of last year when he said that the data on TraceTogether would be kept for up to 25 days and shared with the Ministry of Health “for contact tracing in the unfortunate (and hopefully unlikely) circumstance that the user tests positive for COVID-19.”

Ms Han wrote on her post “there were also reassurances made in Parliament last year about how data collected via TraceTogether would ‘only be used for contact tracing.’

Did Teo Chee Hean, the former Minister for Home Affairs and current Coordinating Minister for National Security, also forget about the Criminal Procedure Code?”

/TISG

Read also: TraceTogether app data: Vivian Balakrishnan admits he had not thought of CPC

TraceTogether app data: Vivian Balakrishnan admits he had not thought of CPC

‘Democracy under siege’: International press condemn Trump

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The chaos unleashed on the US Capitol by Donald Trump’s supporters dominated front pages across the world Thursday, with headlines such as “Trump sets fire to Washington”, “Democracy under siege”, and “The Coup of Madness”.

For the most part the international press laid the blame squarely at the outgoing president’s feet, accusing him of having encouraged the violence.

In Britain, “Trump supporters storm heart of American democracy” was the headline in The Times, describing how, “Democrats and Republicans alike pulled on gas masks and sheltered under desks and staff hid in offices.”

“Democracy under siege”, wrote The Daily Telegraph, reporting “unprecedented scenes of violence and chaos” in Washington as “hordes of Trump supporters” stormed the Capitol.

For The Guardian, it represented “the most dramatic challenge to the US democratic system since the civil war”.

Day of shame
“Chaos” and “shame” were words that came up again and again in the main European newspapers.

Die Welt led an editorial by its correspondent Clemens Wergin with “Day of shame for American democracy”.

“The US has experienced its first tentative violent coup d’etat”, he wrote, adding that “the president, his lies, and a spineless Republican party are politically responsible”.

Süddeutsche Zeitung, under the headline “The coup of madness”, also talked of “Washington’s shame”, while in Spain, El Pais wrote that Trump had “encouraged the chaos”.

The Italian daily La Repubblica went even further, drawing a parallel with Italian dictator Benito Mussolini’s ascension to power in the 1920s.

“America — all of America — watched on in horror as the equivalent of The March on Rome unfolded in Washington on live television — the invasion of the Capitol, the attack on democracy’s sacredness itself”, began Mario Platero’s article.

La Corriere della Serra delved into the profile of the Trump-supporting Proud Boys — “right-wing extremists, but also women, and young people. Called upon directly by Trump. Who then tried to dial down the pressure on television: ‘We are the party of law and order.’ But too late.”

“Trump: a strategy of chaos” was the front page of French daily Liberation, reinforcing the point in its inside pages with the title “Trump sets fire to Washington.”

“Donald Trump’s assault on American democracy became concrete as well as symbolic on Wednesday, when supporters of his, worked up into a white-hot rage by his speech, managed to break into the Capitol,” the article read.

Narcissism
In Le Figaro, columnist Philippe Gelie reflected that “Donald Trump could have come out on top — as a strong “president of the people” with a contested, but not negligable, record. Instead of that, his narcissism got the better of his dignity; he has manhandled institutions, trampled on democracy, divided his camp and thrown his presidency in a ditch.”

“The United States has fallen to the level of Latin-American countries”, was the self-deprecating observation from the Brazilian O Globo.

“The target was the Capitol, not the Twin Towers, but this was also terrorism,” Eliane Cantanhêde wrote in O Estado de S. Paulo, another Brazilian paper. “Domestic terrorism, internal, against the Capitol, the flames fanned by President Donald Trump himself.”

Egyptian daily Al-Ahram wrote that the scenes showed “the sacrifice of American democracy, the death of its liberty, and the plummeting of the values it has ceaselessly tried to export around the world and used as a reason to interfere in other countries’ affairs”.

© Agence France-Presse

Japan to declare virus state of emergency in Tokyo region

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by Hiroshi HIYAMA

Japan’s government will declare a coronavirus state of emergency in the greater Tokyo area on Thursday, as media said the capital would again report a record daily number of infections.

The new month-long restrictions will be far less strict than the harsh lockdowns seen in other parts of the world, and softer than even Japan’s first state of emergency last spring.

They will primarily target restaurants and bars, which are being asked to stop serving alcohol by 7 pm and close an hour later, with residents also requested to avoid non-essential outings after 8 pm.

Businesses in Tokyo and three surrounding areas that petitioned the government to make the move will be urged to maximise teleworking, with the goal of reducing commuter traffic by 70 percent.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is expected to officially announce the measures late Thursday, but the minister in charge of Japan’s pandemic response outlined the expected shape of the declaration, warning that Tokyo’s medical system was “stretched thin”.

“Every day we are seeing record numbers of infections. We have a very serious sense of crisis,” Yasutoshi Nishimura said.

Local media said Tokyo would more than 2,400 new cases on Thursday, shattering the previous record of 1,591 logged a day earlier.

Still, Japan’s outbreak remains comparatively small, with just over 3,700 deaths since the country’s first infection was detected in January 2020.

The government had been reluctant to call a state of emergency for fear of sending the economy into reverse shortly after it emerged from recession. Greater Tokyo accounts for a third of Japan’s GDP.

“A contraction of GDP in Q1 is inevitable” with the new measure, Masamichi Adachi, Japan chief economist at UBS Securities told AFP.

“Balancing economic and public health concerns is difficult… it’s a very difficult situation to manage for any leader.”

Six-month Olympic countdown
Suga’s approval ratings have nosedived over his handling of the new wave of infections — particularly his government’s controversial backing of a domestic travel campaign despite spiking case numbers.

He has said this emergency will be more limited and focused than last year’s, despite warnings from medical experts that the measures may be insufficient.

Schools will not close and major events will be permitted, with the cap for spectators revised down to 5,000 people or 50 percent capacity, whichever is smaller.

Japanese law does not currently allow authorities to enforce cooperation with the requests, though the government is planning legislation permitting fines for businesses that do not comply.

For now, subsidies will be offered to businesses that close early, and the government could name-and-shame those that fail to do so.

The measure comes with just over six months to go until the virus-postponed Tokyo 2020 Olympics are due to open, and Suga this week insisted he was still committed to holding the Games as “proof of mankind’s victory over the virus”.

But the emergency is likely to harden public opinion, with a majority opposed to holding the Games this year even before the third wave worsened.

Tokyo 2020 organisers said Thursday they would delay a planned display of the Olympic and Paralympic torches in the capital. The torches were due to be exhibited to the public before the countrywide torch relay starts on March 25.

Japan has yet to approve a coronavirus vaccine, with Suga saying this week he hoped the first jabs could begin in late February.

© Agence France-Presse

US Congress certifies Biden win over Trump

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by Shaun Tandon, Camille Camdessus and Michael Mathes

Congress formally certified Joe Biden as the next US president on Thursday, dealing a hammer blow to Donald Trump whose supporters stormed the Capitol hours earlier,  triggering unprecedented scenes of mayhem in the seat of American democracy.

Lawmakers in the Senate and House of Representatives successfully beat back Republican efforts to deny Biden the electoral votes needed to win, prompting loud cheers when the certification was announced.

The affirmation of Biden’s 306-232 victory over Trump in November essentially closes the door on the unparalleled and deeply controversial effort by Trump and his loyalists to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

The president immediately released a statement pledging an “orderly transition” but suggesting he would remain in frontline politics, amid speculation that he may run again in 2024.

“Even though I totally disagree with the outcome of the election, and the facts bear me out, nevertheless there will be an orderly transition on January 20th,” he said.

“I have always said we would continue our fight to ensure that only legal votes were counted. While this represents the end of the greatest first term in presidential history, it’s only the beginning of our fight to Make America Great Again!”

The certification came hours after a mob breached the US Capitol and sent lawmakers scrambling for safety. They were able to return hours later, shaken but determined to complete the task.

Egged on in an extraordinary rally across town by an aggrieved Trump, a flag-waving mob had broken down barricades outside the Capitol and swarmed inside, rampaging through offices and onto the usually solemn legislative floors.

Security forces fired tear gas in a four-hour operation to clear the Capitol. Police said that one woman, reportedly a female Trump partisan from southern California, was shot and killed and that three other people died in the area in circumstances that were unclear.

One Trump backer in jeans and a baseball cap was pictured propping a leg up on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s desk, as throngs climbed onto risers set up for Biden’s inauguration.

Another held a banner that read: “We the people will bring DC to its knees/We have the power.”

Biden called the violence an “insurrection” and demanded that Trump immediately go on national television to tell the rioters to stand down.

“Our democracy’s under unprecedented assault,” Biden said in his home state of Delaware.

“This is not dissent. It’s disorder. It’s chaos. It borders on sedition. And it must end now.”

Trump soon afterward released a video in which he called on the mob to leave but repeated his unfounded claims of election fraud.

“We have to have peace. So go home. We love you — you’re very special,” he said.

In a significant new crackdown, social media companies pulled down the video on charges it aggravated violence and Twitter temporarily suspended his account, warning the tweet-loving tycoon of a permanent ban if he does not conform to rules on civic integrity.

Democracy ‘death spiral
The chaos at the Capitol came a day after Biden enjoyed a new triumph, with his Democrats projected to win two Senate seats in runoffs in Georgia — handing the party full control of Congress and dramatically increasing Biden’s ability to pass legislation, starting with new Covid-19 relief.

Historians said it was the first time that the Capitol had been taken over since 1814 when the British burned it during the War of 1812.

For more than two centuries, the joint session of Congress has been a quiet, ceremonial event that formally certifies the election winner.

But Trump urged members of his Republican Party to dispute the outcome.

Congress rejected challenges to Biden’s win in Arizona and Pennsylvania. Efforts were made to challenge the counts in Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin, but after the mob violence Senate Republicans dropped objections to Biden’s wins there, eliminating any need for debate.

Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell, closely aligned with Trump throughout his presidency, had tried to prevent the challenges. He noted that the election results were not even close, and that dozens of courts had thrown out lawsuits alleging irregularities.

“If this election were overturned by mere allegations from the losing side, our democracy would enter a death spiral,” McConnell said.

But Senator Josh Hawley, who has taken the lead on the effort and is seen as a future Republican presidential aspirant, insisted on going ahead even after the mob attack.

“Violence is not how you achieve change,” the 41-year-old senator said, insisting that he wanted to offer a “lawful process” to Trump supporters to assess their unfounded claims of fraud.

Everlasting shame
Senator Mitt Romney, one of Trump’s most vocal critics inside the Republican Party, pointedly said that the best way to respect voters “is to tell them the truth.”

“Those who continue to support this dangerous gambit,” Romney said, “will forever be seen as being complicit in an unprecedented attack against our democracy.”

With Democrats already in control of the House of Representatives, there was never any chance that Congress would overturn Biden’s victory.

Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer, who is set to become majority leader after Tuesday’s election victories, described the violence as an attempted coup and said it would be remembered in US history much like the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

“This mob was in good part President Trump’s doing, incited by his words, his lies,” Schumer said, adding that Trump would bear “everlasting shame.”

Former president Barack Obama called the violence “a moment of great dishonor and shame for our nation.”

“But we’d be kidding ourselves if we treated it as a total surprise,” Obama said, adding that it was “incited” by Trump, “who has continued to baselessly lie about the outcome of a lawful election.”

Former president George W. Bush also did not mince words, saying: “This is how election results are disputed in a banana republic — not our democratic republic.”

Calls to remove Trump 
Trump has only two weeks left in office but, with little on his public schedule for weeks and multiple reports he is losing his grip on reality, several news reports said his cabinet was whispering about removing him as unfit for office under the 25th Amendment to the Constitution.

“President Trump’s willingness to incite violence and social unrest to overturn the election results by force clearly meet this standard,” all Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee wrote in a letter to Vice President Mike Pence.

In an angry, rambling speech outside the White House before the violence, Trump urged his supporters to march to the Capitol and demanded that Pence, who ceremonially led the session, intervene to reverse their loss.

The vice president refused, and it was ultimately Pence standing before the joint session of Congress who announced his and Trump’s loss to Biden and incoming Vice President Kamala Harris.

Thousands of Trump supporters headed to Washington at his urging in recent days, with downtown businesses boarding up in fear of violence and Mayor Muriel Bowser ordering a curfew Wednesday night.

© Agence France-Presse

Asian nations toughen virus fight as pandemic rages worldwide

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by AFP Bureaus

Countries in Asia were stepping up their fight against the coronavirus again on Thursday in a fresh effort to suppress an illness they had previously tamed, joining Europe in imposing new curbs.

Japan was set to declare a state of emergency in Tokyo ahead of the release of figures expected to show a record number of infections, while China reported its highest single-day case number since July.

It comes a day after the world clocked up a record number of deaths in a single day and the European Union approved a second vaccine.

There was also no slowing of the spread in North America where Canada was forced to order its first curfew of the pandemic in a push to halt a second wave.

The global outbreak shows no signs of abating, with more than 1.8 million people known to have died worldwide from 86 million confirmed cases.

Japan’s outbreak has not been as severe as those in Europe and the US, but on Thursday the government was forced to announce new restrictions in the capital region that it said would last a month, primarily targeting restaurants and bars.

The curbs will be far less strict than the harsh lockdowns seen in other parts of the world. Businesses are being asked to stop serving alcohol by 7 pm and close an hour later, and residents have been requested to avoid non-essential outings after 8 pm.

Local media said Tokyo would report more than 2,400 new cases on Thursday, shattering the previous record of 1,591 logged a day earlier.

The minister in charge of Japan’s pandemic response warned that Tokyo’s medical system was “stretched thin”.

Can’t leave the city
In neighbouring China, authorities reported 63 new infections Thursday — the highest daily tally since July — as authorities tried to stamp out an outbreak in a city of 11 million near Beijing.

The government in the city of Shijiazhuang in China’s northern Hebei province has imposed school closures, cut travel links and begun mass testing as cases spike.

“I did the nucleic acid test last night, but don’t have the results yet. Without it I can’t leave the city,” one young woman told state broadcaster CCTV.

One district in the city has been sealed off while major highways leading into the area have been closed and inter-city bus travel halted.

Experts see mass vaccinations as the best route back to normality, but the first rollouts have coincided with alarming spikes in deaths and caseloads across many parts of the world.

The latest global numbers make for grim reading. On Wednesday, a record 15,769 Covid-19 deaths were recorded around the world in the space of 24 hours.

In North America, the virus continues to rage, with Mexico on Wednesday reporting more than 1,100 deaths and over 13,000 infections.

In Canada, authorities in Quebec imposed a curfew on the province of eight million from 8 pm to 5 am that will last four weeks, and violators could face fines of up to Can$6,000 (US$4,700).

A curfew of this scale has not been ordered in Canada since the Spanish flu a century ago, according to historians.

The province joined Ontario — Canada’s economic engine with a population of 14 million — in restricting people’s movements and daily routines.

Lockdowns in Europe
The EU on Wednesday cleared the Moderna vaccine for use in the 27-nation bloc, following the approval last month of the Pfizer-BioNTech jab.

Several European governments have been criticised for slow rollouts, with the Netherlands only delivering its first shots on Wednesday.

The EU as a whole has so far shifted more than one million doses — fewer than Britain has managed.

And the vaccines have not yet relieved weary Europeans from the burden of stay-at-home orders, curfews, closed shops and shuttered schools.

A new lockdown came into force in Britain on Wednesday, and Ireland followed suit shortly after.

“We simply have to suppress this surge,” Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin told reporters.

© Agence France-Presse

China goes online to mock ‘beautiful sight’ of US Capitol chaos

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China’s internet erupted in mirth at America’s troubled democracy after supporters of President Donald Trump broke into the US Capitol, comparing the chaos to the Hong Kong anti-government protests of 2019.

On Thursday morning, state media tabloid Global Times tweeted side-by-side photo comparisons of Hong Kong protesters occupying the city’s Legislative Council Complex in July 2019 with Wednesday’s Washington riots.

The latter saw hardcore Trump fans invade the US Capitol to protest the election defeat, taking selfies, scuffling with security and ransacking parts of the building.

“@SpeakerPelosi once referred to the Hong Kong riots as ‘a beautiful sight to behold’,” the Global Times said in the tweet, referring to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s June 2019 comment about Hong Kong’s mass pro-democracy demonstrations, which were mostly peaceful at that time.

“It remains yet to be seen whether she will say the same about the recent developments in Capitol Hill.”

China’s Communist Youth League also described the unrest as a “beautiful sight” on the Twitter-like Weibo platform.

The hashtag “Trump supporters storm US Capitol” pinballed across Weibo on Thursday, racking up 230 million views, as users compared the global support for Hong Kong’s protesters with the outpouring of condemnation for the pro-Trump mob.

“At present, all European countries’ leaders have shown double standards and condemned it (Washington rioting),” read one Weibo comment which gained over 5,000 likes.

“I don’t know what kind of double-standard reports will be carried by Hong Kong or Taiwan media this time.”

“What happened in the Hong Kong Legislative Council last year is being repeated in the US Capitol,” wrote another user in a comment with over 4,500 likes.

While the tactics were similar, there are stark differences in the causes and motivations of the two legislature stormings.

Hong Kong protesters broke into their legislature to demand full democracy and halt an unpopular bill that was being pushed through by the city’s unelected leadership.

The semi-autonomous Chinese city is not a democracy, the cause of years of popular protests.

China has since responded with a crackdown, imposing a harsh security law on the restless city, arresting scores of critics and smothering dissent.

In contrast, those storming the US Capitol were trying to overturn the results of what has been declared a free and fair presidential election.

US President-elect Joe Biden said the US rioters were undermining democracy by trying to overturn Trump’s defeat in November’s election.

© Agence France-Presse

Sengkang GRC MPs take on deputy roles within new Workers’ Party CEC

The four Members of Parliament (MPs) representing Sengkang GRC have been given deputy roles in the new Workers’ Party (WP) Central Executive Committee (CEC), according to a list of appointment holders released by the opposition party on Wednesday (6 Jan).

The four MPs – He Ting Ru, Jamus Lim, Raeesah Khan and Louis Chua – were among five new members who were elected into the party’s highest decision making body in the biennial internal election that took place on 27 Dec. Dr Lim was made deputy head of the policy research team while Mr Chua is the deputy head of the WP’s media team.

Ms Khan has taken over the deputy treasurer from former Punggol East MP Lee Li Lian. Ms Lee, who mentored the young MPs and serves as one of the Sengkang GRC town councillors, is no longer in the CEC.

Ms He was made a deputy organising secretary, alongside longtime party member Kenneth Foo Seck Guan who served in the same role from 2016 to 2018.

Mr Foo’s East Coast GRC running mate, Nicole Seah, is the only other new entrant to the CEC aside from the Sengkang GRC MPs. She was chosen as the president of WP’s youth wing.

WP chief Pritam Singh and chairman Sylvia Lim were re-elected to their respective roles on 27 Dec and the remaining 12 appointments in the party’s leadership were approved during a CEC meeting on Tuesday (5 Jan).

Former WP secretary-general Low Thia Khiang and ex-Hougang SMC MP Png Eng Huat continue as committee members. Aljunied GRC MP Faisal Manap and Hougang MP Dennis Tan retained their posts as vice-chairman and party organising secretary, respectively.

Aljunied GRC MP Gerald Giam also continues to be the party’s treasurer, with an additional new role as the head of the WP’s policy research team. His colleague Leon Perera was made the head of the media team.

Grace Fu: Smoking to be banned from all hawker centres

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All hawker centres will eventually become smoke-free.

Minister for Sustainability and the Environment (MSE) Grace Fu said in a written reply in Parliament on Monday (Jan 4) that the move comes to protect diners from second-hand tobacco smoke and create a more pleasant dining environment.

Ms Fu pointed out that as of December 2020, out of a total of 114 hawker centres, 87 are currently smoke free. She added that the MSE has required all hawker centres constructed since 2015 to adhere to such a status.

She also noted that 27 out of the 114 hawker centres have smoking corners, which will eventually be phased out during repairs or redecoration works.

As an incentive, Ms Fu said that hawker centres which are undergoing the Toilet Improvement Programme (TIP) can qualify for increased funding if their smoking corners are rescinded.

She also urged Town Councils to apply for the TIP to upgrade the hawker centre toilets and rescind smoking corners at the same time.

Netizens who commented on the issue online were mixed.

Some worried about “the elderly who had been smoking their whole life, who can’t read English or access fb?”

 

Others said that whereas previously smokers would congregate at a designated smoking corner, now they would step out and smoke at places convenient to them. /TISG