Wednesday, June 18, 2025
30 C
Singapore
Home Blog Page 3315

Beer sales fizzle in Vietnam as drink-driving law hits bars

0
Wikipedia image

by Quy Le BUI

Beer sales in Vietnam are down ahead of the lunar new year, bar owners said, as a tough new drink-driving law threatens to put a lid on celebrations in one of the world’s fastest-growing markets for the cold stuff.

In the run-up to Vietnam’s Tet holiday, open-air ‘bia hoi’ bars are normally packed with rowdy customers sloshing back jugs of the country’s favourite tipple.

But in many bars in Hanoi, rows of chairs sit empty and some managers complained business is way down since a zero-tolerance policy was introduced on January 1.

Nguyen Thi Hanh, a manager at a bia hoi in downtown Hanoi, said she would struggle to pay staff this month.

“The new regulation is horrible. The number of customers has dropped significantly, by around 80 percent,” she said.

“If the situation carries on like this, we can only hold up for one to two months.”

The strict new law came is part of an effort to change the drinking culture in a country where swigging a few beers before dashing home on a motorbike is common — and where road accidents are a leading killer.

More than 30 per cent of traffic accidents among men in Vietnam are due to excessive drinking, according to the World Health Organization.

Under the new law, motorbike drivers who have been drinking will be fined up to $345, while car drivers under the influence could face a penalty of up to $1,800. Both face two-year licence suspensions.

Even bicyclists face up to $25 for riding after drinking.

Traffic police said they fined around 6,300 drivers across the country in the two weeks after the law was introduced. Fatal accidents dropped by around 13 percent compared to the previous fortnight.

Bar manager Tran Anh Minh said takings were down by 50 percent at his bia hoi and they were trying to help customers by offering to keep vehicles overnight or driving them home.

One of his few patrons, Nguyen Tien Dung, said he had barely been out to drink in recent days and had only come to have a few with a friend because the bar was close to home.

“I support the new regulation but it was introduced quite fast,” he said, nursing a beer in the deserted bar.

“The habits of Vietnamese people can’t be changed right away.”

With a population of 93 million people, Vietnam is among Asia’s top 10 alcohol consumers, according to SSI Securities asset management firm.

Beer consumption is expected to hit 4.2 billion litres (1.1 billion gallons) in 2020, and the country is Southeast Asia’s biggest beer market.

© Agence France-Presse

Macau confirms virus case and orders casino staff to mask up

0
Flu - Photo by CDC on Unsplash

Macau on Wednesday reported its first confirmed case of the new SARS-like coronavirus as authorities announced all staff in the city’s bustling casinos had been ordered to wear face masks.

The former Portuguese colony is a huge draw for mainland tourists as the only place in China that allows gambling.

With the Lunar New Year approaching this weekend, a huge influx of mainland tourists is expected in the city.

Asian countries have ramped up measures to block the spread of the new virus, which emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan and has so far killed at least nine people.

On Wednesday, Macau announced its first confirmed case — a 52-year-old businesswoman from Wuhan who arrived in the city by high-speed rail on Sunday, via the neighbouring city of Zhuhai.

“A series of tests found that she was positive for the coronavirus and had symptoms of pneumonia,” Lei Chin-lon, the head of Macau’s health bureau, told reporters.

The woman had been staying at the New Orient Landmark Hotel with two friends who were being monitored since her admission to hospital on Tuesday.

Ao Ieong Iu, Macau’s Secretary for Social Affairs and Culture, said staff in all casinos would be required to wear masks while anyone arriving at entry ports along the city’s border with the mainland would need to fill out health declaration forms.

“We have not banned tourism groups from Wuhan but we are not encouraging them,” Ao Ieong said.

“We will stay in close contact with tourism agencies and require them to notify us of all groups going to and coming from Wuhan,” she added.

© Agence France-Presse

Rift between Lee cousins widens: Shengwu removes Hongyi from his Facebook friends list

0
Photos: YT screencaptures

The relationship between Singapore founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew’s grandsons Li Shengwu and Li Hongyi appears to be as fractured as ever.

Shengwu revealed on Facebook this evening (22 Jan) that he has removed Hongyi from his Facebook friends list.

Hongyi, 32, is the son of Lee Kuan Yew’s eldest son, current Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, while Shengwu, 34, is the eldest son of Lee Hsien Yang — Lee Kuan Yew’s youngest son.

Shengwu and Hongyi were once described as “very close”. The cousins, who drew attention when they delivered eulogies at their grandfather’s funeral in 2015, were both in the west coast of the United States at one point as Shengwu was pursuing his PhD at Stanford University and Hongyi was working at Google in Silicon Valley.

Cracks in their relationship, however, became public in 2017 — the year that the Lee family feud spilled into the public domain and the year that the Government initiated legal action against Shengwu over a private Facebook post that was made during the family feud.

In December 2017, Shengwu revealed that he was no longer on speaking terms with Hongyi but that they remained Facebook friends.

Hong Kong–based Chinese-language digital news outlet Initium Media reported that Shengwu wore a “bitter smile” as he said: “We are no longer on speaking terms, but he is still among my Facebook friends, I did not remove him.”

Shengwu has now decided to remove Hongyi from his Facebook friends list. He also asserted that he will no longer be participating in the legal proceedings brought against him by the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) since he finds its conduct unfair.

Shengwu said this evening: “I will continue to be active on Facebook, and will continue to regard my friends-only Facebook posts as private. However, I have removed my cousin Li Hongyi from my Facebook friends list.”

Although the exact origins of the rift between them remain unclear, there is speculation that their relationship fractured around the time the Oxley Road dispute broke out between Lee Kuan Yew’s children in 2017.

That year, Lee Hsien Yang and his sister Lee Wei Ling accused their elder brother, PM Lee, of using state organs against them and of abusing his power to preserve their family home against their father’s willed desire to demolish the house, in order to bolster his grip on power.

The younger siblings also accused PM Lee of grooming Hongyi for politics. Hongyi responded to the allegations and claimed that he really had no interest in politics.

Shengwu, however, pointed out that Hongyi’s comments on a potential entry into Singapore politics were “vague”. He told the press: “He only said he has no interest in politics, but my uncle Lee Hsien Loong also once said he wasn’t interested in politics when he was in his 20s. These words can easily be taken back.”

PM Lee later cleared himself of the charges that his siblings levelled against him in Parliament -– an arena where his siblings had no opportunity to speak for themselves. He added that he would not sue his siblings for defamation as doing so would “besmirch” his parents’ names.

Despite a ceasefire that the younger siblings offered, the family appears to remain estranged. In 2018, PM Lee said that the family feud remained unresolved and that his siblings had not communicated with him recently.

Describing the family feud as being in “abeyance”, PM Lee said: “I’m not sure if it’s solved,” before adding that he was still saddened by the dispute over the siblings’ family home, but expressed hope that relations with his siblings will improve in future, when “emotions have subsided”.

He added: “Perhaps one day, when emotions have subsided, some movement will be possible.”

Lee Hsien Yang responded and revealed that PM Lee had not made any effort to reach out to resolve matters in private. Taking issue with his brother’s words, Lee Hsien Yang hit back: “Our brother says he is unsure that the feud is solved. Notwithstanding his public statements, Hsien Loong has made no attempt to reach out to us to resolve matters in private.

“Meanwhile, the Attorney-General is busy prosecuting Hsien Loong’s nephew for his private correspondence. The AGC’s letters make repeated reference to the family feud.” 

The Attorney-General’s Chambers has also lodged a complaint against Lee Hsien Yang’s wife, Lee Suet Fern, accusing her of being involved in the preparation of her father-in-law’s last will while her husband was one of the beneficiaries. Lee Wei Ling and Lee Hsien Yang have vehemently denied the claims against Lee Suet Fern.

While Lee Suet Fern is set to fight the claims against her in a disciplinary tribunal, her son has said that he will no longer dignify the legal proceedings brought on against him due to the conduct of the AGC. He wrote on Facebook today:

“I have an announcement to make regarding the Singapore state’s prosecution against me. As you may remember, in 2017, during the events widely known as ‘Oxleygate’, my uncle Lee Hsien Loong was accused by his siblings of abusing state power to bully them and to subvert his own father’s dying wish.
“Shortly after, the Singapore Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC) started prosecuting me for allegedly “scandalising the judiciary” in a private Facebook post. This prosecution has continued for years, and during that time the AGC has submitted thousands of pages of legal documents over one paragraph on social media.
“Recently, the AGC applied to strike out parts of my own defense affidavit, with the result that they will not be considered at the trial. Moreover, they demanded that these parts be sealed in the court record, so that the public cannot know what the removed parts contain.
“This is not an isolated incident, but part of a broader pattern of unusual conduct by the AGC. For instance, when arguing jurisdiction in the court of appeals, the AGC argued that a new piece of legislation should be retroactively applied against me. The court saw it as unfair for the new legislation to apply retrospectively.
“In light of these events, I have decided that I will not continue to participate in the proceedings against me. I will not dignify the AGC’s conduct by my participation.”

I have an announcement to make regarding the Singapore state’s prosecution against me. As you may remember, in 2017,…

Posted by Shengwu Li on Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Historian says “it would be a devastating blow for Hongyi’s credibility” if he faced off with Lee Hsien Yang in next GE

Li Shengwu and Li Hongyi are no longer on speaking terms but remain Facebook friends

The relationship between Ho Ching and the younger Lee siblings appears to be as fractured as ever

Women in power in the European Union

0
Merkel in 2007 - Wikipedia

Senior Greek judge Ekaterini Sakellaropoulou will join a small group of women leading European Union countries when she is confirmed as president Wednesday.

Once her nomination is approved by parliament, Sakellaropoulou, 63, will be the first woman in Greece to hold the largely ceremonial post.

Here are the EU’s other sitting women leaders, excluding queens.

Merkel ‘most powerful’
Angela Merkel became Germany’s first woman chancellor when she was elected in 2005 and has led Europe’s biggest economy ever since, winning a fourth four-year term in March 2018.

She was, however, weakened in legislative elections in 2017 when her conservative CDU/CSU bloc registered a historically low score. It took five months to form a coalition government.

Merkel, 65, has been named “the world’s most powerful woman” several times by Forbes magazine. She will step down in 2021.

Series of firsts
BELGIUM: King Philippe in October 2019 chose 44-year-old francophone liberal Sophie Wilmes as interim prime minister, the first woman to hold the post.

The linguistically-divided kingdom does not, however, have a fully functioning government. The last coalition collapsed in December 2018 and negotiations on a new executive have stalled.

CROATIA: Conservative Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic, 51, was elected president in January 2015, the first woman in Croatia to hold the largely ceremonial position.

But she hands over on February 18 to social democrat Zoran Milanovic, who won January elections.

ESTONIA: Former EU auditor Kersti Kaljulaid, 50, became in October 2016 the first female president of the Baltic state, elected by parliament to the largely ceremonial role.

SLOVAKIA: Liberal lawyer and anti-graft campaigner Zuzana Caputova, 46, took office in June 2019 as Slovakia’s first woman president. A political novice, she had comfortably beaten the ruling party’s candidate in March elections.

Youngest
DENMARK: Social Democrat leader Mette Frederiksen became prime minister in June 2019 after general elections. At 41, she was the youngest prime minister in the history of the country.

Denmark’s first woman prime minister was Helle Thorning-Schmidt, also from the Social Democrats, who served from 2011 to 2015.

FINLAND: Social Democrat Sanna Marin in December 2019 became, at the age of 34, the youngest sitting prime minister in the world — at least until January 2020. That was when Austria’s Sebastian Kurz was sworn in at the age of 33 for a second term as head of government.

Marin is Finland’s third female prime minister.

Wider Europe
Elsewhere in Europe, but outside the EU, other women currently in power are: Norway’s Prime Minister Erna Solberg; Iceland’s Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir; Georgia President Salome Zurabishvili; and Serbia’s Prime Minister Ana Brnabic.

© Agence France-Presse

What’s next in the Senate impeachment trial of President Trump

0
Facebook screengrab/Donald J. Trump

The US Senate voted along party lines on Tuesday to set the rules for President Donald Trump’s historic impeachment trial.

By a 53 to 47 vote, the Republican-controlled Senate approved an “organizing resolution” for the trial proposed by Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Before approving the rules, the Senate voted down several amendments proposed by Democrats seeking to subpoena witnesses and documents from the White House and State Department.

These are the next phases in Trump’s impeachment trial, just the third of a president in US history:

Opening arguments
The Democratic members of the House of Representatives chosen to present the impeachment case against Trump will deliver opening arguments to the Senate beginning on Wednesday.

They will have a total of 24 hours over three days to present their case that Trump should be impeached for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress over his attempt to get Ukraine to investigate political rival Joe Biden.

McConnell had initially planned to compress the 24 hours of argument into two days, which could have led the sessions to go well past midnight.

But McConnell extended the time to three days under pressure from some fellow Republicans.

Following the House presentation, Trump’s defense team, led by White House counsel Pat Cipollone, will have 24 hours over three days to present their rebuttal.

Written questions
Following opening arguments, senators will have a total of 16 hours to ask questions in writing to House prosecutors or the White House defense team.

The written questions from the senators will be read out loud in the chamber by US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who is presiding over the trial.

Witnesses and documents
Following the question period, House prosecutors and the White House defense team will have two hours each to argue for or against subpoenaing witnesses or documents.

The Senate will then vote on whether any witnesses or documents should be subpoenaed. A simple majority vote of 51 senators will decide the issue.

House Democrats have said they want former National Security Advisor John Bolton and White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and two others to testify.

If there is an agreement to hear witnesses, they will first be deposed behind closed doors. The Senate will then decide whether they will be allowed to testify publicly.

Senate vote
Following the conclusion of deliberations, the Senate will vote on each of the two articles of impeachment.

A two-thirds majority of the senators present is required for conviction. Conviction on just a single article is enough to remove Trump from office.

With Republicans holding a 53 to 47 majority in the Senate, Trump — barring the unexpected — is likely to be acquitted.

The Senate vote could possibly be held late next week — ahead of Trump’s planned February 4 appearance before a joint session of Congress for the annual State of the Union speech.

© Agence France-Presse

China warns virus could mutate and spread as death toll rises

0
Colorized transmission electron micrograph of Avian influenza A H5N1 viruses (seen in gold) grown in MDCK cells (seen in green). Avian influenza A viruses do not usually infect humans; however, several instances of human infections and outbreaks have been reported since 1997. When such infections occur, public health authorities monitor these situations closely. - Wikipedia

by Beiyi SEOW

A new virus that has killed nine people, infected hundreds and reached the United States could mutate and spread, China warned Wednesday, as authorities scrambled to contain the disease during the Lunar New Year travel season.

The coronavirus has caused alarm for its similarity to SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome), which killed nearly 650 people across mainland China and Hong Kong in 2002-2003.

In Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, authorities cancelled large public events, called on visitors to stay away and urged residents not to leave the central Chinese city of 11 million people.

The illness is mainly transmitted via the respiratory tract and there “is the possibility of viral mutation and further spread of the disease”, National Health Commission vice-minister Li Bin told a news conference in Beijing.

He added that 1,394 people are still under medical observation, while 765 others have been discharged.

The World Health Organization (WHO) will hold an emergency meeting Wednesday to determine whether to declare a rare global public health emergency over the disease, which has now been detected in the United States, Taiwan, Thailand, Japan, South Korea and Macau.

The first case in the United States — a Seattle resident in his 30s — is in good condition, American officials said.

The Chinese government has classified the outbreak in the same category as the SARS epidemic, meaning compulsory isolation for those diagnosed with the illness and the potential to implement quarantine measures.

But they still have not been able to confirm the exact source of the virus, which has infected at least 440 people across the country.

“We will step up research efforts to identify the source and transmission of the disease,” Li said, although he said experts believe “the cases are mostly linked to Wuhan”.

Plane passengers are facing screening measures at five US airports and a host of transport hubs across Asia.

North Korea will ban foreign tourists entirely to protect itself against the virus, according to a major tour operator.

Virus source
A prominent expert from China’s National Health Commission confirmed this week that the virus can be passed between people.

However, animals are suspected to be the primary source of the outbreak.

“We already know that the disease originated from a market which conducted illegal transaction of wild animals,” said Gao Fu, director of the Chinese centre for disease control and prevention.

He said it was clear “this virus is adapting and mutating”.

Countries have been intensifying efforts to stop the spread of the pathogen — known by its technical name 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) — as the number of cases jumped.

This week, China celebrates the Lunar New Year, the most important event in the Chinese calendar, with hundreds of millions of people travelling across the country to celebrate with family. Many also venture abroad.

Containment
On Wednesday, the commission announced measures to contain the disease, including sterilisation and ventilation at airports and bus stations, as well as inside planes and trains.

People are being urged to wash their hands regularly, avoid crowded places, get plenty of fresh air, and wear a mask if they have a cough.

Anyone with a cough or fever was urged to go to hospital.

Surgical masks and antibacterial products were starting to sell out on some popular online sites and pharmacies.

“These days, I wear masks even in places that are not too crowded, although I wouldn’t have done so in the past,” said Wang Suping, 50, who works at a Beijing arts school.

At the city’s main international airport, the majority of people were wearing masks.

Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Airlines said they agreed to allow staff to wear surgical masks on mainland China flights, adding they would offer masks and antiseptic wipes to passengers travelling from Wuhan to the city.

Wuhan police were conducting vehicle spot checks for live poultry or wild animals leaving and entering the city, state media said. Officials also screened people on roads, the airport and the train station for fevers.

“If it’s not necessary we suggest that people don’t come to Wuhan,” Mayor Zhou Xianwang told state broadcaster CCTV.

The local government has cancelled major public activities and banned tour groups from heading out of the city.

Hong Kong and British scientists have estimated that between 1,300 and 1,700 people in Wuhan may have been infected.

© Agence France-Presse

Li Shengwu refuses to take part in proceedings for allegedly “scandalising the judiciary”, removes cousin Li Hongyi from Facebook friends list

0
Photo: Lee Hsien Loong, Li Shengwu (YouTube screengrab)

In a Facebook post this evening (Jan 22), shared by his father Lee Hsien Yang, Mr Li Shengwu announced his refusal to continue to participate in the proceedings against him by the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) for “scandalising the judiciary”.

Mr Li wrote: “I have an announcement to make regarding the Singapore state’s prosecution against me.”

He added that the AGC had prosecuted him for allegedly “scandalising the judiciary” in a private Facebook post. “This prosecution has continued for years, and during that time the AGC has submitted thousands of pages of legal documents over one paragraph on social media,” he wrote.

Mr Li also mentioned that the AGC had recently applied to strike out parts of his defence affidavit, with the result that they will not be considered at the trial. He wrote that the AGC “demanded that these parts be sealed in the court record, so that the public cannot know what the removed parts contain”.

“This is not an isolated incident, but part of a broader pattern of unusual conduct by the AGC. For instance, when arguing jurisdiction in the Court of Appeal, the AGC argued that a new piece of legislation should be retroactively applied against me. The court saw it as unfair for the new legislation to apply retrospectively,” he added.

Mr Li ended his post with this declaration: “In light of these events, I have decided that I will not continue to participate in the proceedings against me. I will not dignify the AGC’s conduct by my participation.”

Mr Li also announced that he had removed his cousin Li Hongyi from his Facebook friends list.

Mr Li is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Harvard University. Last year, he hired a top British lawyer to advise him in his contempt of court case. Queen’s Counsel David Pannick is one of the lawyers who won a landmark case this week against British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s suspension of Parliament before the deadline to exit the European Union.

/TISG

Town Council says it did not make police report against single mum for S&CC arrears

0
Photo: FB/Gilbert Goh

The Marsiling-Yew Tee Town Council on Tuesday (Jan 21) clarified that it did not make a police report which led to the arrest of a resident who owed Service and Conservancy Charges (S&CC).

A warrant of arrest was ordered by the court in December 2016 after the woman did not turn up for a court hearing regarding her arrears of S$2,150.

In a Facebook post by socio-political activist Gilbert Goh, he wrote that he was approached by the woman’s brother for help and that he “felt shocked” to learn that the woman who had a 16-year-old son was arrested at her office.

While he also added that she stayed in the police lock-up for close to 10 hours before being released, the police said that the woman was arrested on Dec 14, 2017 and she was held for 1.5 hours.

In a Facebook post, Marsiling-Yew Tee Town Council shared that: “the Town Council sent out a total of 6 notifications by post between December 2016 and October 2017 and conducted house visits in August 2016 and November 2017 in our attempt to reach out to the resident.

Upon further engaging the resident, partial payment of the S&CC arrears was made, and the resident signed an installment plan on 19 December 2017”.

According to what the woman told Mr Goh, she worked as a sales promoter earning a monthly salary of about S$1,000. He added: “each time she couldn’t pay the monthly instalment of $159, the town council will send in a legal reminder which costs about $200 – further aggravating the S & C default”.

The Town Council’s full statement:

Marsiling-Yew Tee Town Council (MYTTC) would like to make the following clarifications regarding a few articles shared via social media concerning a resident living in a 5-room flat.

The resident has been in arrears for Service & Conservancy Charges (S&CC) for several years, which despite attempts at engaging the resident, the Town Council unfortunately had to undertake legal recourse.

In December 2016, a warrant of arrest (WOA) was instructed by the Court when the resident did not attend a mandated court hearing.

To avoid subjecting residents to a Court-instructed arrest by the Warrant Enforcement Unit, the Town Council proactively sends separate notifications to the resident to appeal for their cooperation to contact the Town Council for an instalment plan with the aim of withdrawing the legal proceedings.

In this case, the Town Council sent out a total of 6 notifications by post between December 2016 and October 2017 and conducted house visits in August 2016 and November 2017 in our attempt to reach out to the resident.

Upon further engaging the resident, partial payment of the S&CC arrears was made, and the resident signed an instalment plan on 19 December 2017. The Town Council immediately withdrew the court proceedings and updated the Warrant Enforcement Unit on the same day.

At no time did the Town Council lodge a police report to arrest the resident for S&CC arrears.

The Town Council has been actively helping the resident over the past few years. The latest instalment plan made in November 2019 allowed the resident to gradually pay off the S&CC arrears while keeping up with the current monthly payment. The Town Council will also work with grassroots partners to further assist the resident.

The Town Council would like to encourage residents who face difficulty with their S&CC to approach us early so that we can work together to avoid the arrears from growing.

We would like to thank the public for the feedback and we trust that the above clarifications will help to address the concerns raised.

Read related: Single mum arrested at her office for having unpaid Service and Conservancy Charges

Stefanie Sun’s celebratory concert tour to include Singapore

0
Stefanie Sun will be having a concert tour this year. Picture: Instagram

Singaporean pop star Stefanie Sun will be going on a concert tour to celebrate her two decades as a singer.

It has been planned from June and will include a stop in Singapore.

It will be called Super Soltice. In Chinese, it means “Just Before Sunset”, which refers to the first line of her new single Eternal Love.

Information about the tour has yet to be released.

The 41-year-old Sun’s last tour, Kepler, was from 2014 to 2015. One show was held at Singapore’s National Stadium on July 5, 2014.

In line with the 20th anniversary, Sun has written on social media about her journey in the entertainment industry.

Her singing career began with the debut of her first album, Yan Zi (2000). As the music industry at that time was focused in Taiwan, she decided to head there. She said: “Who knew that the sentence ‘No 22-year-old girl sings like her’ could start a 20-year-long journey?”

Sun said that, after she moved to Taiwan, she had to go through a demanding work schedule. In five years, she released one album per year. Some years, she released two albums per year. The work was “like a mountain”.

Every media outlet wanted exclusive news. She was often on TV and radio.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B7iSXqwn2TJ/?utm_source=ig_embed

Sun wanted more freedom but found meaning and focus in life with the support of her family.

Later, there was work in China and Sun kept going on. But when it got harder, she created some space for herself.
The Singaporean songstress married Dutch-Indonesian businessman Nadim van der Ros in 2011. They have a son, who is seven, and a one-year-old daughter.
Sun said she worked hard at being a mother, even when the new responsibility caught her off-guard.
Stefanie Sun is celebrating 20 years in the entertainment industry. Picture: Instagram
She said that now she was working towards the 20th anniversary and that she told herself that the emotions, love, darkness, fullness and emptiness of all these years were worth putting in order.

Early this month, Sun and Taiwanese rock band Mayday released a new version of their 2000 hit, Tenderness.

 

Tempered glass table shatters injuring several people

0
Credit: Stephanie Chu's Facebook page

A couple had a bad experience when a glass table top shattered while they were having dinner with friends.

The woman Stephanie Chu whose home the dinner was at said that seeing the glass top shatter and getting herself burnt by hot soup was traumatising.

Speaking to TISG, the owner says they rejected offers to replace the glass top with a new one and wanted monetary compensation instead.

“The company offered for (sic) a table top replacement. They called us back with monetary compensation out of good will. But we rejected it as well as it was clearly insufficient for the damages anyway,” she says to TISG in a conversation via Facebook messenger.

“But my husband n (sic) I rejected it. I am sure u understand why,” she says, adding that, “We hang up the phone. (sic). “The incident was reported in several news portals. It happened on Jan 19 during a pre-Chinese New Year celebration with friends.

The dinner party turned into a bloody ordeal last Sunday after the tempered glass tabletop shattered, wounding the guests.

“About 30 minutes into the dinner, my dining table “EXPLODED” and the entire tempered glass top shattered into pieces. Now, steamboat lovers would know the potential devastation when a hotpot pot were to be toppled/spilled over. Now x10 (sic) of the damage because of the sudden shatter with glass flying everywhere,” wrote Chu.

In shock, Ms Chu managed to act quickly though, calling the ambulance and paramedics who came down to rescue them, she says.

“With all my guests injured, some with cuts bigger than the size of an eye. I myself was brought to NTF for treatment of 2nd degree burns,” she wrote on Facebook.

https://www.facebook.com/615127133/posts/10156444244982134/?d=n

Courtesy: Stephanie Chu’s Facebook Page

Speaking to TISG, she made a request that the dangers of such an incident be emphasised.

She said the table top was made of tempered glass and should not have shattered.

After reading some of the comments, she says she realised that some people thought that it was ordinary glass.

“Please help us by stating the full functionality of tempered glass. Plus, according to the company’s director, they said that it is their strongest glass product in their company,” she said.

She insisted that they are not asking for any compensation for trauma and so on.
“But the company did not contact us to follow up.

“They even told the reporters that they r (sic) still in talks with us. Which is not true.”

She said some readers misunderstood the situation and some people are pushing the blame on them.
“They are pushing the blame to consumers, stating that we misused our table which we did not. In terms of overloading the table, I had a trolley to place my food items,” she said.