Watch : Blind and autistic singer gets Golden Buzzer in ‘America’s Got Talent’

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Watch : Blind and autistic singer gets Golden Buzzer in ‘America’s Got Talent’

ASEAN+ May 30, 2019 13:45

By Philippine Daily Inquirer
Asia News Network

2,494 Viewed

A blind and autistic young singer earned a Golden Buzzer in “America’s Got Talent” after inspiring judges and audiences with a rendition of Donny Hathaway’s “A Song For You.”

Kodi Lee, 22, was accompanied on Wednesday to the stage by his mother Tina who explained his condition to the judges.

“Kodi is blind and autistic. We found out that he loved music really early on. He listened and his eyes just went huge. And he started singing, and that’s when I was in tears, because that’s when I realized, ‘Oh my gosh! He is an entertainer,’” Tina said.

“Through music and performing, he was able to withstand living in this world, because when you’re autistic, it’s really hard to do what everybody else does. It has actually saved his life, playing music,” she added.

Kodi then sat on the piano and received a small pep talk from his mom before performing.

The performance not only received applause from the audiences, but also a standing ovation from judges Gabrielle Union, Simon Cowell, Julianne Hough and Howie Mandel.

“First of all I will tell you that all four judges and everybody in this room were up on their feet. You were wonderful. Not only do we feel the authenticity of what you do but you’re a great inspiration and a great talent and it was amazing,” Mandel told Kodi.

Hough, who was wiping her tears, was also all praises for Kodi saying, “I know everybody needs a voice and an expression and I really feel your heart, your passion. Your voice blew all of us away.”

“I’m a new judge this season and I’m also a new mom this year and it’s the toughest job I’ve ever had and the most rewarding job I’ve ever had. You just want to give your kids the moon, the stars and the rainbows,” Union said.

“Tonight, I’m going to give you something special,” she added, as she pressed the Golden Buzzer which advances Kodi straight to the live finals in Hollywood.

Dr M: Malaysia to use Huawei technology as much as possible

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Photo : Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad
Photo : Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad

Dr M: Malaysia to use Huawei technology as much as possible

ASEAN+ May 30, 2019 13:24

By The Star
Asia News Network

3,545 Viewed

PETALING JAYA: Malaysia will make use of Huawei’s technology as much as possible, Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad told the Future of Asia conference in Tokyo, amidst ongoing trade tensions between the United States and China.

Nikkei Asian Review reported that while countries including Japan and Australia were avoiding the use of Huawei equipment as they introduced new 5G mobile networks, Dr Mahathir said Malaysia had no intention of shunning the Chinese company.

“Huawei’s research is far bigger than Malaysia’s capability,” Dr Mahathir said in the conference hosted by Nikkei.

“We will make use of their technology as much as possible,” he said, adding that Huawei had achieved tremendous advancement over American technology.

Dr Mahathir reportedly said he was not concerned over allegations of espionage activities, because “we are an open book.”

According to Nikkei, Dr Mahathir urged the United States to make concessions in its disputes with China, including the spat over Huawei Technologies.

He warned that a failure to negotiate could lead to military conflict.

Dr Mahathir said the United States must accept that its strong research and development capability could also now be found in the East.

“‘If I am not ahead, I will ban you, I will send warships’ – that is not competition,” Dr Mahathir said, adding: “That is making a threat.”

At the same time, Dr Mahathir also spoke out against Beijing’s military advances in the South China Sea.

“No warships should be stationed in the South China Sea,” he said, adding that “a slight incident could lead to war.

“When two giants are fighting each other, we see that it is the grass that gets trampled,” he said.

Myanmar says it is readying for return of Rohingya refugees, next step up to Dhaka

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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Members of Bangladesh's Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, the Armed Forces of Bangladesh and the Bangladesh fire services organize a drill on disaster management at the Rohingya refugee camp in Ukhia on May 23, 2019. (Photo by AFP)
Members of Bangladesh’s Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, the Armed Forces of Bangladesh and the Bangladesh fire services organize a drill on disaster management at the Rohingya refugee camp in Ukhia on May 23, 2019. (Photo by AFP)

Myanmar says it is readying for return of Rohingya refugees, next step up to Dhaka

ASEAN+ May 30, 2019 01:00

By KHINE KYAW
THE NATION
YANGON

IN RESPONSE to widespread accusations that Myanmar government’s lacks the political will to welcome back Rohingya who fled violence in Rakhine state, Myanmar has pledged to accept more returnees after coming to an agreement with Bangladesh authorities, a cabinet member said Wednesday.

“Earlier, we promised to accept 300 returnees on a daily basis. With the help of technology, we are now trying to accept more [returnees],” Union Minister Dr Win Myat Aye, vice chairman of Union Enterprise for Humanitarian Assistance, Resettlement and Development in Rakhine (UEHRD), told The Nation in a phone interview.

More than 900,000 stateless Rohingya refugees live in crowded settlements in Cox’s Bazar. It is estimated that 741,000 of them have fled from Myanmar since August 2017, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

The repatriation plan reached by Nay Pyi Taw and Dhaka to have the first of batch of 2,000 returnees has hit a stalemate since last November due to the refugees’ fears for their safety upon their return. The minister said there is “no limit” to how many returnees would be accepted, as it would need more discussion between the two countries. The refugees’ willingness to come back is more important, he said.

The minister denied accusations that Myanmar does not want to welcome back the Rohingya. He said the repatriation process could begin once Bangladesh accepted it. “We are now ready for this [repatriation of returnees], and Asean has acknowledged that. Now, we are awaiting Bangladesh’s decision and cooperation,” he said, adding that the timeline is up to Dhaka as well. In a bid to extend cooperation with international partners to make a success of the repatriation process, Myanmar on Tuesday re-signed a memorandum of understanding with the UNHCR and the United Nations Development Programme. The tripartite agreement was first signed in Nay Pyi Taw on June 6 last year, and has been extended for one more year.

Voluntary, safe and sustainable

“This MoU aims at creating conducive conditions for the voluntary, safe and sustainable repatriation of refugees and to create resilient livelihoods for all communities living in northern Rakhine state,” said a joint statement issued after the signing. Win Myat Aye stressed three core areas in which Myanmar agreed to cooperate with Asean during Asean secretary-general Lim Jock Hoi’s recent visit. Myanmar would prioritise capacity building, information dissemination and basic needs in order to speed up the repatriation process.

“First, capacity building programmes will begin soon. For that, we will supply some necessary equipment including computers, and ensure we improve our staff’s skills so they can quickly facilitate the process in a systematic way,” he said.

“The second core area is information dissemination. People from the other side (refugees who are now in Bangladesh) do not know anything about our readiness for the repatriation process. They do not have any access to the correct information there. So, we will find proper ways to disseminate the right information to the returnees.

“Lastly, we will provide all residents, including returnees, with the basic needs – health, education, shelter and creating jobs, etc. We will cooperate with Asean to ensure those living in Rakhine state have the equal right to basic needs, regardless of race and religion.”

The minister called for participation by returnees to make repatriation successful. He urged them to participate in the process of issuing National Verification Cards (NVC), which the Immigration Department handles.

“At the moment, most of the refugees mistakenly stick to a misleading belief that NVC card holders could be treated as foreigners,” he said. “Due to the lack of information, they still do not believe that NVC cards mean a lot in their path to citizenship. Such a belief is totally wrong, because issuing the NVC cards is the very first step in officially providing them with the right to citizenship.”

He stressed that the returnees would be entitled to citizenship only after being issued the NVC card. “It is not something that they [returnees] should be afraid of. It is part of the process that everyone has to go through to become a citizen of Myanmar,” he said. Myanmar could allow international assessment teams to observe the real situation on the ground, he said.

“The initial assessment that Asean [in March] recently undertook was totally independent, as they managed to observe things without a single interference by our government,” he said. “We just took them to the conflict-hit areas and ensured security for them, which means our security forces just took care of safeguarding them from any potential harm that may occur in a considerably conflict-hit zone.” He said Myanmar fully respected the freedom of the assessment team and supported them to freely observe the real truth on the ground. The minister said the comprehensive assessment of Asean would begin on the very first day of repatriation, which is expected soon.

Man fined $300 for shooting 2 rubber bands onto public road

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Under the Environmental Public Health Act, the maximum fine for a littering offence is $2,000 for the first court conviction, $4,000 for the second, and $10,000 for the third and subsequent convictions. First-time offenders are usually fined $300.PHO
Under the Environmental Public Health Act, the maximum fine for a littering offence is $2,000 for the first court conviction, $4,000 for the second, and $10,000 for the third and subsequent convictions. First-time offenders are usually fined $300.PHO

Man fined $300 for shooting 2 rubber bands onto public road

Breaking News May 29, 2019 19:02

By The Straits Times
Asia News Network

2,752 Viewed

SINGAPORE – A man was fined $300 for littering after he was caught shooting two rubber bands onto a public road, drawing debate from netizens.

A photo of the ticket issued by the National Environment Agency (NEA) has gone viral on Facebook.

Several netizens expressed surprise that a littering ticket was issued for rubber bands.

Others expressed their approval of the fine, saying that litterbugs should be punished regardless of the size of the item thrown.

In a statement on Monday (May 27), NEA confirmed that the offence was committed on May 23.

“NEA is aware of the images circulating online of enforcement tickets issued for leaving behind drink cans and throwing rubber bands in a public place,” the agency said.

NEA enforcement officers observed the man walking towards his vehicle and shooting two rubber bands one after another, which landed on a public road.

“Our officers thus informed him of the littering offence and issued him an enforcement ticket,” the agency said.

The photo of the ticket stated that the offender has to pay the fine by noon on July 8. The agency confirmed that the image was not doctored.

NEA added that two men were fined $300 each for leaving drink cans on a wooden box outside a unit at Woodlands MRT station in a separate incident on May 16.

The two offenders paid their fines on May 20.

“We would like to remind the public that littering has environmental consequences, and keeping our environment clean by not littering is a gracious and socially responsible thing to do,” the agency said.

Professor Paulin Tay Straughan, Dean of Students and Professor of Sociology (Practice) at Singapore Management University, told The Straits Times: “As long as it was intentional and he had no intention of picking it up, since he left it there, it is littering. If he littered, then it is against the law,” she said.

Around 39,000 people were fined for littering last year, according to NEA’s statistics issued earlier this month, 7,000 more than in 2017.

Under the Environmental Public Health Act, the maximum fine for a littering offence is $2,000 for the first court conviction, $4,000 for the second, and $10,000 for the third and subsequent convictions. First-time offenders will be issued with a $300 fine.

Repeat offenders prosecuted in court may be issued a fine or corrective work order, or both.

Deal or no deal? British leadership rivals at odds over Brexit plan

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File photo : UK daily newspapers photographed as an illustration in London on May 25 shows front page headlines reporting on the resignation speech of Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May.//AFP
File photo : UK daily newspapers photographed as an illustration in London on May 25 shows front page headlines reporting on the resignation speech of Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May.//AFP

Deal or no deal? British leadership rivals at odds over Brexit plan

ASEAN+ May 29, 2019 16:28

By AFP

2,256 Viewed

London – The race to replace Theresa May as British prime minister in a contest due to end in July has 11 declared contenders so far.

Here is a look at the hopefuls in the Conservative Party leadership battle and their stances on Brexit, with Britain currently due to leave the EU on October 31:

– In favour of no-deal –

— ESTHER McVEY

    The 51-year-old Brexit supporter and former television presenter, McVey resigned as work and pensions secretary last year over Brexit compromises. A blue-collar Conservative, she wants a clean break with Brussels.

– Open to no-deal in October –

    — BORIS JOHNSON

A former mayor of London, Johnson says he would get Britain out of the European Union, “deal or no deal”.

A key figure in the 2016 Brexit campaign, he served as foreign minister afterwards but resigned after falling out with May over the government’s Brexit strategy.

Charismatic and popular with grassroots Conservatives, the 54-year-old has maintained his public profile by writing a weekly column in The Daily Telegraph newspaper.

    — DOMINIC RAAB

An ardent eurosceptic with a black belt in karate, the 45-year-old former Brexit minister resigned in protest at the Brexit deal struck with the EU by May.

He says Britain should be ready to walk away from the EU without an agreement while still trying to negotiate a better deal than the one May signed.

— ANDREA LEADSOM

Leadsom stole a march on her rivals by quitting her position as leader of the House of Commons last week, hastening the prime minister’s demise and staking out her pro-Brexit credentials.

The 56-year-old got down to the final two in the 2016 leadership race, but pulled out before the decision was handed over to party members, with whom she was popular, after coming under fire for saying that being a mother would give her an advantage as prime minister over the childless May.

— JAMES CLEVERLY

The Conservative Party’s former deputy chairman, 49, is an army lieutenant colonel who entered parliament in 2015. A junior figure in the Brexit ministry, he says it would be best to leave with a deal, urging the EU to be flexible, but is prepared to lead Britain out without a deal if necessary.

– No to no-deal in October –

— JEREMY HUNT

The foreign secretary supported remaining in the European Union in the 2016 referendum but has switched since then.

A former businessman who speaks fluent Japanese, he is a resilient politician, having headed up the National Health Service for six years during a funding crisis.

The 52-year-old has said he will push hard for a new deal with Brussels without taking the possibility of a no-deal outcome off the table.

– Against no-deal –

    — MATT HANCOCK

The 40-year-old health secretary is one the party’s rising stars, a moderate who is widely seen as competent at his job and skillful at handling the media.

He is one of several ministers who opposed Brexit during the 2016 referendum before switching sides and defending the withdrawal agreement May struck with the EU.

He entered government in 2013 and has moved up the ladder quickly.

— RORY STEWART

The international development secretary, 46, is a former Foreign Office official who served in the coalition administration in Iraq following the US-led invasion in 2003. Says no-deal policy would be “damaging”.

– Yet to say –

— MICHAEL GOVE

Brexit campaigner Gove initially supported Johnson’s leadership bid in 2016. His last-minute decision to enter the race himself caused both men to lose out to May.

After a year in the political wilderness, he was appointed environment minister in 2017.

The cerebral 51-year-old is among the most ardent eurosceptics left in May’s government but is seen as a possible unifying figure between the two wings of the party.

— SAJID JAVID

A former investment banker and the son of a Pakistani immigrant bus driver, Javid, 49, wants to be the face of a modern, multicultural and meritocratic Britain.

On the economically liberal wing of the Conservative Party, Javid voted for Britain to stay in the EU in 2016 but has since become an advocate of Brexit.

— KIT MALTHOUSE

A former deputy London mayor to Johnson, the 52-year-old is running as a Brexit unity candidate, having headed up the so-called Malthouse Compromise strategy designed to keep the party together and get a deal over the line.

A well-planned, grisly murder

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  • In this photo taken on April 12, Bangladeshi women hold placards and photographs of schoolgirl Nusrat Jahan Rafi at a protest in Dhaka, following her murder by being set on fire after she had reported a sexual assault.//AFP
  • File photo : Nusrat Jahan Rafi

A well-planned, grisly murder

ASEAN+ May 29, 2019 14:57

By The Daily Star
Asia News Network

2,096 Viewed

DHAKA, Bangladesh – On the orders of a head teacher, sixteen people, split into five groups, took part in the brutal killing of Feni madrasa student Nusrat Jahan Rafi after hatching the murder plot for three days, reveal police.

The mastermind, Sonagazi Islamia Senior Fazil Madrasa principal Siraj Ud Doula gave instructions from jail while his accomplices, including two local Awami League leaders and several madrasa students, executed the plot on April 6.

Siraj plotted to murder Nusrat by setting her afire as she refused to withdraw a case filed against him over sexual assault on her on March 27.

Banaj Kumar Majumder, chief of the Police Bureau of Investigation (PBI), said all this before the media yesterday after finalising the charge sheet against the 16.

The Plot

Four days after Siraj’s arrest on March 27, his associates Shahadat Hossain Shamim, Nuruddin and several others went to jail to meet him. Siraj instructed them to put pressure on Nusrat’s family members and even threaten them, if necessary, to make her withdraw the case against him.

Siraj’s men then formed a committee to free him with Nuruddin and Shahadat as its convener and joint convener. The committee’s task was to do whatever necessary to free him.

One of Siraj’s associates, Sonagazi municipality councillor and local AL leader Maksud Alam, gave Shahadat Tk 10,000 for carrying out the committee’s activities.

Failing to persuade Nusrat to withdraw the case, Shahadat, Nuruddin, madrasa teacher Hafez Abdul Kader and several other committee members met Siraj again at jail on April 3.

Siraj asked them to increase pressure on Nusrat and her family, and if necessary, kill her by setting her afire, said the PBI chief.

From the Tk 10,000 given by Maksud, Shahadat gave some money to his relative Kamrunnahar Moni to buy burkas.

Later, Shahadat and other accomplices of Siraj met at a tin-shed room beside the madrasa on April 4 and discussed the plot to kill Nusrat.

Nuruddin, Jabed, Jubayer, Umme Sultana Poppy and Moni, among others, were present there.

As per plan, Shahadat, who owns a mobile-credit recharge shop at Bhuiya Bazar, bought one litre of kerosene from a shop around 5:00pm on April 5 and carried it home in two black polybags.

The Fateful Day

The following day, Siraj’s associate Shahadat, Nuruddin and Kader entered the madrasa between 7:00am and 7:30am.

Shahadat brought a glass from the principal’s room and kept it with a black plastic bag full of kerosene in front of the washroom on the rooftop of the cyclone centre inside the madrasa compound.

Moni brought three burkas and four pairs of gloves, and kept those in a room on the third floor of the cyclone centre. Two other accused — Mohiuddin Shakil and Mohammad Shamim — stood guard in front of the centre so that no one could enter the building, according to the PBI.

Four other accused, Iftekhar Uddin Rana, Imran Hossain Mamun, Abdur Rahim Sharif and Kader took position in front of the madrasa main gate to make sure that only students could enter the madrasa compound.

One of Siraj’s associates, Sonagazi upazila AL president Ruhul Amin, was tasked with dealing with police and keeping an eye on the situation outside the madrasa.

Shahadat, Jabed and Jubayer entered the madrasa around 9:30am and put on burkas on the third floor of the cyclone centre.

Soon after Nusrat entered the madrasa to take the Alim exam, Poppy told her that someone was beating up one of her friends on the cyclone centre rooftop.

Nusrat rushed to her exam hall, some 15 yards from the main gate, and kept her belongings at the hall. She then ran towards the cyclone centre.

Poppy followed Nusrat and stopped her on the second floor. She then asked Nusrat to withdraw the case against Siraj but Nusrat refused.

As Nusrat and Poppy climbed the stairs to the rooftop, Shahadat, Jubayer, Jabed and Moni followed them from the third floor. They threatened Nusrat, asking her to withdraw the case. They also told her to sign a blank paper but she refused, said the PBI chief.

Shahadat then gagged Nusrat. Jabed and Jubayer tore Nusrat’s scarf into two. They bound her legs with one piece and her hands with the other.

Jabed then brought the plastic bag full of kerosene and the glass. He filled the glass with kerosene and poured it on Nusrat. He kept doing it until the bag was empty.

Instructed by Shahadat, Jabed struck a matchstick and set Nusrat ablaze. At the time of the incident, Jabed and the other accused addressed Poppy as Shampa to create confusion about their identities, said Banaj.

After setting fire to Nusrat, Poppy and Moni rushed to their exam hall while Shahadat and Jubayer got down to the second floor and changed their clothes.

They then scaled the boundary wall, dumped the burkas into the nearby madrasa pond and escaped.

Jabed, however, did not take off burka. Wearing it, he came out of the madrasa through the main gate. He took it off at the bank building beside the madrasa.

Nusrat came down from the rooftop after she managed to free her hands and legs from the scarf that got burnt in fire, said the PBI chief.

Police later took her to hospital. With 75 percent burns, Nusrat died at the burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital on April 10, triggering a huge public outcry across the country.

Hot : Arrest warrant issued for Myanmar firebrand monk Wirathu

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Myanmar nationalist Buddhist monk Wirathu.//EPA-EFE
Myanmar nationalist Buddhist monk Wirathu.//EPA-EFE

Hot :  Arrest warrant issued for Myanmar firebrand monk Wirathu

ASEAN+ May 29, 2019 14:33

By AFP

2,291 Viewed

Yangon – Myanmar police issued an arrest warrant Tuesday evening for an ultra-nationalist monk known as the “Buddhist Bin Laden” for his vitriol against Islam and particularly the Rohingya Muslim community.

    Wirathu has long been the face of the country’s Buddhist nationalist movement, notorious for espousing hate against the Rohingya minority.

A warrant was “filed and applied directly at western district court against him (Wirathu) under article 124(a),” police spokesman Myo Thu Soe told AFP late on Tuesday.

He said he was unable to give specific details about the reasons behind the warrant.

    The law prohibits anyone who “attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the Government” and carries a maximum jail sentence of three years.

Wirathu’s monastery is in Mandalay but his whereabouts Tuesday or when he might be detained were unknown.

In 2013 the hardliner appeared on the cover of “Time” magazine as “The Face of Buddhist Terror”.

He has called for boycotts of Muslim-owned businesses and restrictions of marriages between Buddhists and Muslims.

A council of senior monks stopped him temporarily from speaking in public but the firebrand abbot has spoken at a string of pro-military rallies since the ban ended in March last year.

Facebook kicked him off the platform in January 2018 after a string of incendiary posts targeting the Rohingya.

Rights groups say these helped whip up animosity towards the community, laying the foundations for a military crackdown in 2017 that forced about 740,000 to flee over the border to Bangladesh.

Like many in Myanmar, Wirathu pejoratively refers to the minority as “Bengali”, implying the group are illegal immigrants.

Refugees’ testimonies of mass killings, rapes and arson spurred UN investigators to call for the prosecution of top generals for “genocide” and the International Criminal Court (ICC) is conducting a preliminary probe.

“The day when the ICC comes here… is the day that Wirathu holds a gun,” he said in a speech to a rally of hardline nationalists in October last year.

A firebrand Buddhist monk in Sri Lanka, Galagodaatte Gnanasara, has maintained close ties with Wirathu.

Gnanasara was freed from prison in Sri Lanka last week following a presidential pardon.

Latest : Japan police search home of stabbing attacker

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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  • eople pay their respects next to flower tributes at the crime scene where a man stabbed 19 people, including children, in Kawasaki on May 29.//AFP
  • People pay their respects next to flower tributes at the crime scene where a man stabbed 19 people, including children, in Kawasaki on May 29.//AFP
  • A woman lays flowers at the crime scene where a man stabbed 19 people, including children, in Kawasaki on May 29.//AFP

 Latest : Japan police search home of stabbing attacker

ASEAN+ May 29, 2019 12:21

By AFP

Tokyo – Japanese police on Wednesday searched the home of the man behind a stabbing rampage in the town of Kawasaki a day earlier that killed two people, including a child.

    The 51-year-old attacker, identified by police as Ryuichi Iwasaki, died after stabbing himself during the rampage, and his motives for the horrifying assault remain unclear.

On Wednesday morning, police searched his home, not far from the scene of the morning attack, seizing unspecified material, public broadcaster NHK reported.

Local media said Iwasaki was living with relatives in their 80s, but gave no further details. His occupation was unknown.

Police had no comment on the investigation and declined to offer any further details about the attacker.

The rampage in the town south of Tokyo on Tuesday morning killed two people — 11-year-old schoolgirl Hanako Kuribayashi and a 39-year-old parent, identified as government official Satoshi Oyama, a Myanmar specialist.

Seventeen more people, mainly young children, were injured, according to authorities.

Iwasaki crept silently up behind pupils of the Caritas Gakuen (school) as they waited for their school bus and began slashing randomly at them armed with knives in both hands, before fatally stabbing himself in the neck.

Local media citing police sources said Wednesday that the attack took less than 20 seconds to unfold and that two additional knives were discovered inside the attacker’s backpack, which he had left at a nearby convenience store.

 

– Motive still unclear –

 

But there were few other details about the attacker and his motive for the assault, with neighbours telling local media that they knew little about the man.

A female neighbour told Kyodo news agency that Iwasaki had said good morning to her 40 minutes before carrying out the attack, an interaction she described as unusual.

The news agency said Iwasaki was believed to have gone to local schools, but there was no confirmation.

A man who identified himself as having taught Iwasaki in junior high school, when the suspect was around 14, told NHK he was “not the kind of child who stands out”.

“He and his friends would shove each other playfully, but he didn’t attack anyone violently,” the teacher said.

In the wake of the attack, Japan’s government said it would review measures to ensure the safety of children travelling to and from school.

Japan has one of the lowest rates of violent crime in the developed world, and it is common for even young children to take public transport alone to get to and from school.

“The whole government will work in unison to ensure the children’s safety,” government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters after a ministerial meeting on the issue.

The attack shocked Japan, where violent crime is vanishingly rare, in part because of strict regulations on gun ownership.

On Wednesday morning, people were still arriving at the scene of the attack to lay flowers and other tributes to those killed.

Mourners in Japan sometimes bring drinks or food that the deceased enjoyed to their gravesites, and bottles of soda and juice could be seen Wednesday at the scene of the attack.

The Caritas school will be closed for the rest of the week, and officials said on Tuesday that they would offer students mental health support after the attack.

Senior Myanmar officials say they are now ready to welcome Rohingya returnees

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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  • Asean chief Lim Jock Hoi (left) shakes hand with Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi in Nay Pyi Taw on Monday evening

Senior Myanmar officials say they are now ready to welcome Rohingya returnees

ASEAN+ May 29, 2019 10:00

By Khine Kyaw
The Nation
Yangon

With Asean turning its focus on the repatriation process for Rohingyas during Secretary-General Dato Lim Jock Hoi’s recent visit to Myanmar, senior officials have said that they are now ready to welcome the returnees.

Union Minister Dr Win Myat Aye, vice chairman of Union Enterprise for Humanitarian Assistance, Resettlement and Development in Rakhine (UEHRD), told The Nation on Tuesday that Myanmar had been actively cooperating with Asean on this issue, allowing the Asean Emergency Response and Assessment Team (Asean-ERAT) to do some field work on the ground from March 4 to 13 this year.

“They visited Rakhine State and conducted an initial survey for the repatriation of displaced persons,” he said.

“They managed to write a report on their findings, and he AHA Centre [Asean Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster Management] made a presentation on that report at the second high-level coordination meeting on Monday,” he added.

The minister said the report, titled “Preliminary Needs Assessment (PNA)”, described the actual situation in Rakhine State and the government’s systematic programme and readiness to conduct the repatriation work.

“They will submit that report to the Asean Summit next month [in Bangkok]. We are now finding proper ways to further strengthen our cooperation with Asean on the repatriation process of Rohingyas,” he explained.

He lauded Asean’s support to Myanmar in its efforts to address long-standing issues in conflict-hit Rakhine State, and said he considered the Asean chief’s visit as a “step forward”.

In order to observe the real situation happening on the ground, a high-level delegation led by Secretary-General Hoi visited Rakhine State last December, following a decision made at the 33rd Asean Summit.

Win Myat Aye on Monday discussed with Hoi Asean’s cooperation in the repatriation process.

Hoi said the initial survey report’s recommendations would be jointly implemented and a more complete assessment would be made when the repatriation begins.

He pledged to cooperate more in the stability and long-term development work in Rakhine State.

“These practical measures would contribute to creating a conducive environment to pave the way for the repatriation,” Asean said in a statement.

Asean Secretaryh Hoi is in Rakhine state 

The meeting agreed to immediately implement a number of “low-hanging fruits” identified in the report: to undertake an in-country capacity-building programme for Asean-ERAT based in Myanmar to support the repatriation process when it commences; and to establish a technical working group, comprising representatives of the Asean Secretariat, the AHA Centre, the UEHRD, the Department of Disaster Management, and other relevant Myanmar officials and experts, to discuss the detailed modalities of implementation of recommendations on the potential areas of collaboration identified in the PNA report.

During his visit, Hoi also met with State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi in Nay Pyi Taw on Monday evening.

During the meeting, they exchanged views on the recent developments in Rakhine State and on the possible areas of collaboration between Myanmar and Asean in resolving the humanitarian situation, as well as the outcomes and implementation of the recommendations of the PNA report, according to the Myanmar State Counsellor Office.

Hoi yesterday also discussed with Kyaw Tin, union minister for International Cooperation, the role of Asean in the process of Rohingya repatriation.

Myanmar frees soldiers jailed for Rohingya massacre

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30370132

File photo : Reuters journalists Wa Lone (L) and Kyaw Soe Oo gesture as they walk to Insein prison gate after being freed in a presidential amnesty in Yangon on May 7.//AFP
File photo : Reuters journalists Wa Lone (L) and Kyaw Soe Oo gesture as they walk to Insein prison gate after being freed in a presidential amnesty in Yangon on May 7.//AFP

Myanmar frees soldiers jailed for Rohingya massacre

ASEAN+ May 28, 2019 16:36

By AFP

Yangon – Seven soldiers jailed for killing a group of Rohingya Muslims have been freed from a Myanmar jail despite serving less time than two reporters imprisoned for exposing the massacre.

    Prisons department director general Myint Soe told journalists the soldiers were “no longer in detention”, declining to give any further information.

Four officers and three soldiers were sentenced in 2018 to 10 years with hard labour for killing 10 Rohingya villagers, with army chief Min Aung Hlaing and civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi holding up the sentence as evidence of accountability within the military.

Reuters journalists Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, who helped expose the killing, were jailed last September for seven years on charges linked to their reporting.

    They were granted a presidential pardon this month after spending over 500 days behind bars.

The killings unfolded during a bloody army crackdown in 2017 that forced some 740,000 Rohingya to flee across the border into Bangladesh.

UN investigators say the violence warrants the prosecution of top generals for “genocide” and the International Criminal Court (ICC) has started a preliminary probe.

Phil Robertson, Human Rights Watch Deputy Asia Director, condemned the soldiers’ release.

He said it reveals the armed forces “don’t consider the Rohingya to be human” and were “never committed to seeing anyone accountable for their crimes”.

Myanmar’s social media, however, lit up with support for the soldiers.

In Myanmar the Rohingya — often referred to as “Bengali” — are widely seen as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and the Reuters duo garnered little sympathy for their investigation into the killings.

“The two journalists who are traitors to the country were released so why not release the soldiers?” posted Aung Min Thu.

“No country should jail security forces for killing terrorists,” said Maung Thein.

The military has always justified its crackdown in 2017 as a means of rooting out Rohingya insurgents.