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‘Queen of Trash’ in dock in Sweden’s biggest toxic waste scandal

The so-called "Skultunatippen" ("the Skultuna dump") is pictured on October 18, 2023 in Skultuna, one of the several places in central Sweden that the company "NMT Think Pink" has turned into a garbage dump. Eleven people go on trial in Sweden on September 3, 2024 accused of illegally dumping toxic waste at 21 different sites, polluting the air, soil and water in the country's biggest environmental crime case. The company NMT Think Pink is accused of dumping or burying some 200,000 tonnes of construction waste from the Stockholm area at sites across the country from 2015 to 2020, with no intention of processing it correctly. (Photo by Fredrik SANDBERG / TT News Agency / AFP) / Sweden OUT
A fire at a landfill is pictured on September 05, 2021 in Botkyrka, south of Stockholm, one of the several places in Sweden that the company NMT Think Pink has turned into a garbage dump. PHOTO: AFP

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Eleven people go on trial in Sweden on Tuesday accused of illegally dumping toxic waste in the country’s biggest-ever environmental crime case.

A once-acclaimed waste management company is accused of dumping or burying some 200,000 tonnes of waste from the Stockholm area at 21 sites, with no intention of processing it correctly.

Among those charged with “aggravated environmental crime” is its former chief executive Bella Nilsson, who once called herself the “Queen of Trash”.

High levels of PCBs, lead, mercury, arsenic and other chemicals were released into the air, soil and water, prosecutors said, endangering the “health of humans, animals and plant life”.

They say the now-bankrupt NMT Think Pink “collected waste with no intention or ability to handle it in line with environmental legislation”.

The so-called ‘Skultunatippen’ (‘the Skultuna dump’) is pictured on October 18, 2023 in Skultuna, one of the several places in central Sweden that the company NMT Think Pink has turned into a garbage dump. PHOTO: AFP

The waste consisted of everything from building materials to electronics, metals, plastics, wood, tyres and toys.

Think Pink left the piles “unsorted” and abandoned, according to the charge sheet.

Nilsson’s ex-husband Thomas, the company’s founder, and Leif Ivan Karlsson, an eccentric entrepreneur who starred in a reality show about his over-the-top lifestyle, are also among those indicted, along with “waste broker” Robert Silversten.

An environmental consultant who helped the company pass inspections, Magnus Karlsson, has been charged as an accessory.

All 11 accused have denied committing any crime.

In its heyday from 2018 to 2020, the company’s fuschia-coloured construction waste sacks could be seen on many a Stockholm sidewalk, and the company twice won a prestigious Swedish business prize.

Burning dumps 
Think Pink was hired by municipalities, construction companies, apartment co-ops and private individuals to recycle and dispose of building waste.

But the business came crashing down in 2020 when its owners were arrested.

Bella Nilsson – who has now changed her name to Fariba Vancor – has previously told Swedish media that the company acted in line with the law, and insisted she is the victim of a plot by business rivals.

“She has an explanation for all of this,” her lawyer Jan Tibbling told the Dagens Nyheter daily on Monday.

Considered Sweden’s largest environmental crime case, the police investigation runs to more than 45,000 pages, with 150 witnesses due to testify.

One prosecutor, Linda Schon, told Dagens Nyheter that they had to limit the charges to 21 sites because they were running out of time.

“There may have been a number of sites we haven’t been able to investigate,” but “we believe that 21 sites is enough to show that the crimes were systematic,” she said.

Several municipalities have sought damages for clean-up and decontamination costs, totalling 260 million kronor (USD25.4 million).

One of the biggest claims is from the Botkyrka council, where two Think Pink waste piles burned for months in 2020 and 2021 after spontaneously combusting. One was near two nature reserves.

The trial, which begins at 9.30am local time (0730 GMT) is expected to last until May 2025.

 

China school bus crashes into crowd, kills 11 including students

PHOTO: ENVATO

BEIJING (AFP) – A school bus ploughed into a crowd of people outside a middle school in eastern China on Tuesday, killing 11 parents and students, state media reported.

State broadcaster CCTV said the driver “lost control” of the vehicle as it approached the school in Shandong province’s Tai’an city at 7.27am.

The bus ran into a group of parents and children on the side of the road, according to CCTV.

“As of now, (the incident) has caused the deaths of 11 people, of whom six were parents and five were students,” the broadcaster reported in an update just after 11.30am.

It said one other person was in a “critical” condition, while the vital signs of another 12 people were “stable”.

Photos and videos circulating on social media showed people in blood-soaked clothes lying in the road near a hulking grey bus.

Several adults knelt over children sprawled unmoving on the ground, while other people could be heard screaming in the background.

“They’re all dead, it’s so heartbreaking,” a woman’s voice could be heard saying off-camera in one clip of the aftermath of the crash.

“I’d have been killed too if I’d stood there, but luckily I ran away fast,” she said.

AFP was able to geolocate several of the social media photos and videos to the school in Shandong where the crash took place.

The driver was being held by local police and the cause of the incident was “under investigation”, CCTV said.

Many public schools in China reopened for the new academic year this week.

Deadly traffic accidents occur frequently in the country due to lax safety standards and widespread disorderly driving.

In July, police said a vehicle crashed into pedestrians in the central city of Changsha, killing eight people and injuring five.

A 55-year-old suspect living in the area was detained pending an investigation, but it was not clear if the incident was intentional or not.

 

Sinner and Medvedev set up US Open quarter-final clash

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 02: Daniil Medvedev of Russia returns a shot against Nuno Borges of Portugal during their Men's Singles Fourth Round match on Day Eight of the 2024 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 02, 2024 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Al Bello/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by AL BELLO / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) – World number one Jannik Sinner and former champion Daniil Medvedev set up a US Open quarter-final showdown on Monday as both men look to exploit the hole left by the shock exits of Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz.

Jannik Sinner hits a return to Tommy Paul during their men’s singles round of 16 match on day eight of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City. PHOTO: AFP

Australian Open champion Sinner made the last eight for the second time by seeing off US 14th seed Tommy Paul 7-6 (7/3), 7-6 (7/5), 6-1.

Medvedev, the 2021 champion and runner-up to Djokovic last year, outclassed Portugal’s Nuno Borges 6-0, 6-1, 6-3 to reach the quarter-finals for the fifth time in six years.

Women’s world number one Iga Swiatek, meanwhile, stayed on course for a sixth Grand Slam title with a straight-sets win over Russia’s Liudmila Samsonova.

The Italian Sinner recovered from 4-1 down in the first set to see off Paul, who had been hoping to join compatriots Taylor Fritz and Frances Tiafoe in the quarter-finals in New York.

Tommy Paul returns a shot against Jannik Sinner. PHOTO: AFP

“It will be another tough match with Daniil. There will be a lot of rallies so I have to be ready physically,” said Sinner.

Medvedev is the only former champion left after the first week defeats of four-time winner Djokovic and 2022 champion Alcaraz.

The world number five easily downed 34th-ranked Borges, whose challenge fizzled out under the weight of 51 unforced errors while Medvedev broke serve eight times.

Sinner and Medvedev will be meeting for the fourth time this year.

Sinner came back from two sets to love down to defeat the mercurial Russian in the Australian Open final and came out on top in the Miami semi-finals.

Medvedev then triumphed at Wimbledon in a five-set quarter-final.

“I will try to think more about Wimbledon than the Australian Open,” said Medvedev.

Daniil Medvedev returns a shot against Nuno Borges during their Men’s Singles Fourth Round match on Day Eight of the 2024 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. PHOTO: AFP

“With Jannik, I feel like we know our games, what we will try to bring to the table, and then it comes to always this moment’s deuce, breakpoint, maybe try to surprise him or not, what he will do, what I will do.”

Draper hails ‘icon’ Murray 
Jack Draper became the first British man since Andy Murray in 2016 to reach the quarter-finals by seeing off Tomas Machac of the Czech Republic 6-3, 6-1, 6-2.

The 22-year-old left-hander has only dropped serve once over four matches on his way to a maiden Slam quarter-final, winning 47 of 48 service games and saving 20 of 21 break points.

Draper hailed the influence of Murray, the former world number one and 2012 US Open champion who retired from tennis following the Paris Olympics.

“He’s a legend and an icon and if I have half the career that he had I will be a happy man,” said the 25th seed, who goes on to face Alex de Minaur.

The 10th-seeded De Minaur won an all-Australian battle with Jordan Thompson 6-0, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5.

Poland’s Iga Swiatek hits a return to Russia’s Liudmila Samsonova during their women’s singles round of 16 match on day eight of the US Open tennis tournament. PHOTO: AFP

Four-time French Open winner Swiatek, the 2022 champion in New York, celebrated her 100th Grand Slam match by cantering to a 6-4, 6-1 win over 16th-ranked Samsonova.

The Pole will take on American sixth seed Jessica Pegula for a place in the semi-finals.

“There will be some long rallies and intense hitting,” predicted Swiatek of facing Pegula, who she also beat in the quarter-finals on her way to the title two years ago.

Pegula made the last eight for the second time with a 6-4, 6-2 victory over Russia’s Diana Shnaider.

Beatriz Haddad Maia became the first Brazilian woman to reach the quarter-finals since Maria Bueno in 1968 when she defeated 2014 runner-up Caroline Wozniacki.

The 22nd-ranked left-hander converted a third match point to defeat the former world number one 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.

She will next face 2023 semi-finalist Karolina Muchova, who knocked out French Open and Wimbledon runner-up Jasmine Paolini, the fifth seed, 6-3, 6-3.

Muchova, ranked 52 and who only returned to the tour in June after 10 months out with a wrist injury, has yet to drop a set and knocked out two-time champion Naomi Osaka in the second round.

 

Australia sees record August temperatures, second-warmest winter

This picture taken on August 30, 2024 shows a tourist taking a selfie in front of surfers and swimmers on a winter's day at Sydney's Bondi Beach. Australia has sweltered through its second-warmest winter on record, according to meteorologists, as the country's southeast cleans up after extreme storms. (Photo by DAVID GRAY / AFP)
A tourist taking a selfie in front of surfers and swimmers on a winter’s day at Sydney’s Bondi Beach. PHOTO: AFP

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australia just sweltered through its warmest August on record, meteorologists have confirmed, with temperatures smashing the long-term average by more than three degrees Celsius.

Bureau of Meteorology data showed that last month was the hottest August since records began in 1910, with several parts of the continent logging their highest-ever maximum and minimum temperatures.

The area-averaged mean temperature across Australia was 3.03 degrees Celsius (5.5 degrees Fahrenheit) higher than the long-term average, the bureau said.

From the west coast to the east, record temperatures were recorded, including an all-time winter high of 41.6 degrees Celsius (106.7 degrees Fahrenheit) at a military base on the rugged and remote northwest coast.

The antipodean winter runs from the beginning of June until the end of August.

In all, this winter was Australia’s second-warmest on record, after 2023.

The Bureau of Meteorology said Australia’s mean winter temperature was 1.48 degrees Celsius (2.66 degrees Fahrenheit) above average.

“Both daytime and night-time temperatures were more than 10 degrees Celsius above August average for large parts of the country,” the bureau said Monday.

About 18 per cent of Australia is desert, and searing heat is common year-round away from temperate zones.

But data shows average temperatures for Australia steadily rising, with climate change fuelling more intense bushfires, floods, drought and heatwaves.

Australia’s climate is heavily influenced by three cyclical climate patterns: changes in Indian Ocean temperatures, changes in a belt of wind that moves between Australia and Antarctica, and changes in Pacific weather patterns known as El Nino and La Nina.

All three of these phenomena are affected by human-induced climate change, according to research by Australia’s state-backed Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

Climate scientists have already predicted that 2024 will be the Earth’s hottest year on record.

Temperature records have tumbled worldwide as human-caused carbon emissions have risen.

This week alone, record temperatures have been recorded in Finland’s Lapland, Shanghai and Japan.

Man gets jail, whipping for molesting grandniece

PHOTO: ENVATO
Judge Pengiran Masni Pengiran Haji Bahar on Tuesday sentenced a 42-year-old Bruneian to 7 years, 6 months jail with 4 whippings for outraging the modesty of his 13-year-old grandniece.
 
The judge said that the defendant’s acts were tantamount to a gross breach of trust to the victim who is his grandniece, the person whom the victim trusted and of vulnerable age.
“This betrayal will significantly damage her trust,” the judge said.
 
She added, “One can imagine that it must be a traumatic experience for a 13-year-old girl. A deterrent sentence is imperative to protect the young and the vulnerable victim”.
 
The incidents in July and August, were detailed in court by Prosecutor Aeny Zullizam.
 
The defendant, who lives in Mukim Kota Batu, was entrusted with the care of the victim during her visits to her father’s house, which is located nearby.
 
The victim’s parents are divorced.
 
Despite this position of trust, the court heard that the defendant used criminal force against the young girl on two separate occasions.
 
On the first occasion, on July 11, the defendant invited the victim to his house and agreed to come over assuming that she would be spending time with the defendant’s daughter, her cousin. When she arrived, he hugged her from behind and proceeded to inappropriately touch her. The victim managed to escape and returned to her father’s house immediately afterward.
 
The second incident occurred on August 7. The victim visited the defendant’s house again, where he forcefully made her sit on his lap before committing further indecent acts. The court heard that the defendant instructed her not to tell anyone about the incident and gave her BND10 a few days later.
 
The matter came to light on August 11, when the victim confided in her mother about the abuse. Her mother promptly lodged a police report, leading to the defendant’s arrest.
 
During the investigation, the defendant confessed to the offences. The court also noted that he has no prior criminal record. – FADLEY FAISAL
 
 

Family keeps up Beirut dessert tradition

Samir Makari holds a tray of mufataka, a traditional Beiruti sweet, at his shop in the Lebanese capital on August 29, 2024. A kind of rice pudding made with turmeric, tahini sesame paste, sugar and pine nuts, mufataka is traditional in Beirut but less known even outside the city. (Photo by ANWAR AMRO / AFP)
Samir Makari holds a tray of ‘mufataka’, a traditional Beiruti sweet, at his shop in the Lebanese capital. PHOTO: AFP

BEIRUT (AFP) – At a shop nestled in a busy, crowded Beirut district, Hasan El-Makary is weighing out containers of warm, fragrant mufataka, a traditional sweet in the Lebanese capital that is rarely found in stores.

“I’ve been in this shop for 50 years, but we started specialising in mufataka 30 years ago,” Makary said from the humble shop with its ageing decor and low ceiling.

A kind of rice pudding made with turmeric, tahini sesame paste, sugar and pine nuts, mufataka is traditional in Beirut but less known even outside the city.

Hasan El-Makary weighs mufataka, a traditional Beiruti sweet, at his shop. PHOTO: AFP

Makary, 73, said he used to sell other sweets but as demand grew for mufataka, he abandoned the rest and now just makes the yellow pudding, together with his cousin, who is also his business partner.

“At the beginning you add turmeric, that’s the main thing, then tahini, sugar and rice… we cook it slowly on fire,” he said.

 

The rice must be soaked overnight, and Makary said he comes to the shop at 5am to make the dish, which takes around four hours and requires regular stirring.

He said his father started making mufataka despite initially believing people would not pay money for a dish that is normally prepared at home.

Plastic containers of the pudding, which is eaten with a spoon, dotted trays and tables across the shop, waiting for customers who peered through a window to place their order from the busy street outside.

Samir Makari packs mufataka, a traditional Beiruti sweet, into a plastic container. PHOTO: AFP

Customer Iman Chehab, 55, was picking up mufataka for her mother, who used to make it herself.

“She is elderly now and she can’t stir… it takes a lot of work,” said Chehab, who works in human resources management.

The dish is “something traditional for us who are from Beirut”, she told AFP.

Places like Makary’s shop “are the old face of Beirut that we love and always want to remember”, she added.

Heritage
A few bustling neighbourhoods away, Samir Makari, 35, is carrying on the family tradition.

At a gleaming shop also selling Arabic sweets like baklava, Makari attends to a huge copper pot of mufataka behind the counter, stirring it with a long, wooden-handled implement.

Samir Makari pours tahini sesame paste in a container as he prepares to make mufataka. PHOTO: AFP

He weighs out and mixes the sugar, tahini paste and pine nuts in a second pot, later combining it all.

Mufataka used to be made just once a year on the last Wednesday in April, with families gathering by the sea at Beirut’s public beach, father and son said.

The occasion was “Job’s Wednesday”, a reference to the biblical figure also mentioned in the Koran and who is renowned for his patience, the younger Makari said, noting the virtue is also required for making mufataka.

On the wall of his shop, which he runs with his brother, were photos of his father and his grandfather at work.

He said he sometimes makes mufataka twice a day depending on demand, with some customers taking it outside Beirut to introduce it to those who do not know the dish.

At the original store, the elder Makary said he was happy his children had kept up the tradition.

Mufataka is part of “my heritage”, he said, and the family has “taken it from generation to generation”.

Samir Makari stirs a pot as he makes mufataka. PHOTO: AFP

 

Cathay inspects A350 fleet after engine component failure

A signage for Cathay Pacific Airways at the departures hall of Hong Kong International Airport in Hong Kong, on March 8, 2023. A Cathay Pacific jetliner aborted its takeoff at Hong Kong International Airport early Saturday, June 24, 2023, and 11 passengers were injured while evacuating the aircraft, the airline said. PHOTO: AP

HONG KONG (AFP) – Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific has temporarily grounded its fleet of A350 aircraft for inspections after a “first of its type” engine component failure forced a flight to Zurich to turn back on Monday.

Cathay is conducting fleet-wide inspection of its 48 Airbus A350 aircraft and “a number of aircraft will be out of service for several days”, the airline said in a statement Monday night.

The airline has cancelled 24 return flights operating up until the end of Tuesday, it added.

The move came after a Cathay flight to Zurich on Monday was forced to return and the company identified an engine component failure, it said, without saying which component.

“This component was the first of its type to suffer such failure on any A350 aircraft worldwide,” the airline said.

A precautionary fleet-wide inspection found a number of the same engine components that needed to be replaced, according to Cathay.

Cathay engineering director Keith Brown said the company was liaising with Hong Kong’s aviation authorities as well as the aircraft and engine manufacturers.

“Each aircraft is undergoing a rigorous inspection,” Brown said, according to the statement.

“Upon completion, the aircraft cleared for operation will return to service, while those identified with technical issues will undergo further repair and maintenance work.”

Cathay is among the largest operators worldwide of the A350 jet.

Engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce told Bloomberg News that it was “committed to working closely with the airline, aircraft manufacturer and the relevant authorities to support their investigation into this incident”.

Rolls-Royce shares traded down 6.47 per cent in London on Monday.

The engine manufacturer said this year that it was investing more than GBP1 billion (USD1.3 billion) to upgrade its lineup of commercial aircraft engines.

Last November, Emirates chief executive Tim Clark expressed concerns about the durability and longevity of A350 engines.

 

Brunei Sports School athletes shine at Kota Kinabalu meet

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The Ministry of Education’s contingent from Sports School Brunei Darussalam returned home victorious after an impressive performance at the 2nd Kinabalu RS Athletics League 2024, held from August 31 to September 1 at the Keningau Sports Complex in Sabah.

The contingent, comprising eight student-athletes, secured a total of four medals—two gold and two bronze.

Among the standout performers were Nurazizatul Shareena binti Ashari and Nur Afroz Dameea binti Md Zainal Areif, who, along with their teammates, clinched gold in the Girls’ 4×100 metres relay for the Under-18 category.

Nurazizatul Shareena (R) and Nur Afroz Dameea (L) in the interview. PHOTO: FADLEY FAISAL

The duo attributed their success to rigorous training, disciplined diet, and consistent prayers. They expressed their aspirations to represent Brunei Darussalam at national and international levels, including the Asian School Games and possibly the Olympics.

Another gold medal was won by Qurratul Ain @ Nur Aida binti Irwan in the Girls’ Long Jump Category for Under-18. She also set a new personal best with a leap of 4.45 metres.

Quratul Ain during the interview. PHOTO: FADLEY FAISAL

Additionally, Qurratul Ain bagged a bronze in the Girls’ 200-metre Under-15 event with a time of 30.39 seconds. She described the experience of competing against over 2,000 athletes as overwhelming and shared her hope to participate in the 2025 Asian School Games, aiming to win the Brunei Darussalam School Games this year.

Norjoleha binti Johari, who was also part of the gold-winning 4×100 metres relay team, won another bronze in the Girls’ 200 metres Under-18 category, finishing with a time of 30.38 seconds.

The athletes’ achievements were celebrated upon their return to Brunei Darussalam.

Group photo of the returning athletes with MoE and school officials. PHOTO: FADLEY FAISAL

Present at Brunei International Airport to welcome the team on Tuesday were Acting Assistant Director, Head of Student Affairs Section, Department of Schools, Ministry of Education Pengiran Ali Shafie bin Pg Haji Abas; Principal of Sports School Hajah Nor Aisah binti Haji Mohd Salleh; Deputy Principal of Sports at Sports School Haji Mohd Azrin bin Haji Aji; and Deputy Academic Principal of Sports School Norjalina binti Haji Jaafar.

The Kinabalu RS Athletics League is one of Sabah’s largest and most prestigious athletics championships, with 2,424 participants from 70 teams across Brunei Darussalam, Sabah, and Sarawak. The Brunei Darussalam Sports School contingent was led by Coach Mohd Yussof bin Yaakub. Their outstanding performance, highlighted by nine personal best records set by six students, has brought pride to Brunei’s athletics community. – FADLEY FAISAL

Would Samsung benefit from Intel exit from foundry race?

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger introduces Intel Foundry during the Intel Foundry Direct Connect event in San Jose, California. PHOTO: INTEL

ANN/THE KOREA HERALD – Facing its worst earnings crisis in its 56-year history, Intel is reportedly reconsidering its lackluster foundry business, where it has set the goal of beating Samsung Electronics to become the industry’s No 2 by 2030.

For Samsung, which is seeking to carve out its share in the foundry market dominated by TSMC, Intel’s exit could be beneficial, removing a potential threat, according to experts.

On Sunday, Bloomberg reported that Intel, the world’s leading chipmaker, is reviewing various scenarios to recover from losses, including a potential separation or sale of its foundry division.

In the second quarter of this year, the company reported operating losses of USD2.8 billion in the foundry business alone, and it is projected to have an even worse year.

The company restarted its foundry business in 2021 under incumbent CEO Pat Gelsinger, after having previously withdrawn from the market in 2018. With the company taking over 70 percent share in the global central processing unit market, it would be able to secure orders to match those of Samsung merely by making its own chips, the company leadership believed.

Despite its small market share, the company has been aggressively investing in the foundry business, reportedly acquiring all of ASML’s stock of the most advanced High Numerical Aperture NA Extreme Ultraviolet chipmaking equipment manufactured this year.

In January, it also announced it will be building the world’s most advanced chip production facility with a 1.5-nanometre process node in Germany.

But the high cost of chip manufacturing and with their CPU sales shaken by surging demand for graphic processing units in the era of artificial intelligence, the company has been reporting consecutive losses.

In 2021, Intel posted operating losses of USD2.1 billion, followed by USD7 billion in 2023. In the first half of this year, the accumulated operating losses amounted to USD5.3 billion.

Intel is also struggling with securing big tech clients. Its biggest client remains Intel itself.

According to Counterpoint Research, Samsung Electronics took 13 percent of the global foundry market to stand as the No 2. TSMC maintained its dominant lead with 62 per cent. Intel is out of the top 10.

With TSMC having ties with major tech giants, Samsung also faces similar difficulties in attracting new clients for its foundry business. The company is seeing increasing orders from startups and automotive firms, but not big tech firms.

One breakthrough could be AI chips, experts say.

On August 26, IBM introduced its new AI chips for servers – the IBM Telum II Processor and IBM Spyre Accelerator – and said the upcoming chips are to be manufactured by Samsung, at Hot Chips 2024. The chips will be built on Samsung’s 5nm process node, IBM said.

“It is not easy for Samsung to catch up on all fronts of the logic chip sector. Instead of overtaking TSMC’s clients, it would be better for the company to identify the potential clients in the AI sector and secure their orders,” said Kim Yang-paeng, a researcher at the Korea Institute of Industrial Economics and Trade.

In the event that Intel decides to sell its foundry business, Samsung could expand its foundry business as the buyer. TSMC and Samsung are viewed as likely potential buyers, given they are the only firms capable of handling the microlevel processes in advanced chip manufacturing.

Being an Integrated Device Manufacturer, doing both design and manufacturing in chips, some industry observers say Samsung’s goal to beat TSMC by 2030 is an unrealistic goal.

Samsung has been seen slowing down investments in its foundry business and concentrating its resources to boost its footing in the memory chip sector. The company is expected to increase memory chip production facilities at its plant in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, scrapping the original plan to build a foundry facility there.

India’s ‘Mollywood’ cinema rocked by MeToo abuse claims

Indian National Congress (INC) party workers wear masks of celebrities from the country's Kerala-based Mollywood film industry during a protest against the government's action over alleged sexual allegations within the industry, in Kochi on August 30, 2024. Terrified for her safety, Indian actress Sreelekha Mitra remembers pushing chairs and a sofa against her hotel door after she said an award-winning veteran director sexually harassed her. (Photo by Arun CHANDRABOSE / AFP)

NEW DELHI (AFP)Terrified for her safety, Indian actress Sreelekha Mitra remembers pushing chairs and a sofa against her hotel door after she said an award-winning veteran director sexually harassed her.

Mitra waited 15 years to speak out about the incident, one of several cases exposing the dark underbelly of India’s Malayalam-language “Mollywood” film industry that has won awards at Cannes.

Her revelation was spurred by an explosive government report documenting widespread sexual harassment in an industry dominated by powerful and wealthy men who believe that an actress willing to kiss on screen would do the same in real life.

“That entire night I stayed awake,” Mitra, 51, told AFP.

Mitra was invited to a gathering at the director’s house, where she said he lured her into his room for a phone call with a cinematographer.

“He started playing with my hair and neck… I knew if I did not say anything then, his hand would roam around other parts of my body,” she said, describing events from 2009, when she was 36.

She left and returned to her hotel.

“The intentions behind his moves were pretty clear to me… I was petrified.”

Her case and close to a dozen others have triggered a MeToo reckoning in the industry, with at least 10 prominent figures accused, according to Indian media.

Kerala-based Mollywood is known for critically acclaimed movies with strong and progressive themes, a change from the big dance and song numbers of India’s giant Hindi-language Bollywood in Mumbai.

The industry is prolific, producing up to 200 films a year, loved not only by southern India’s 37 million Malayalam speakers, but also dubbed and streamed across the rest of India — and abroad.

Internationally, its films have won awards, including the 1999 satire Marana Simhasanam (“Throne of Death”), winner of the Camera d’Or at Cannes.

This year’s “Manjummel Boys”, a survival thriller, took USD29 million at the box office, the highest-grossing Malayalam movie ever and the fifth-most successful in India this year.

A man rides past posters of regional movies from India’s Kerala-based Mollywood film industry, displayed along a street amid protests against alleged sexual allegations within the industry, in Kochi on August 30, 2024. PHOTO: AFP
‘Worst evil’ 

 

The industry report, released August 19, said women actors faced the widespread “worst evil” of sexual harassment.

The report was released by the Hema Committee, headed by a former high court judge, set up after a leading Malayalam actress reported she was sexually assaulted in 2017.

Gopalakrishnan Padmanabhan, a prominent Malayalam actor better known by his stage name Dileep, was arrested for allegedly orchestrating the assault.

He was imprisoned for three months before being released on bail. The case continues.

But the release of the report has opened discussion on the far wider issue of chronic violence against women, encouraging people like Mitra to speak out in public for the first time.

It said that women who considered speaking out about sexual assault were silenced by threats to their life, and to their families.

Indian National Congress (INC) party workers wear masks of celebrities from the country’s Kerala-based Mollywood film industry during a protest against the government’s action over alleged sexual allegations within the industry, in Kochi on August 30, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

Award-winning actress Parvathy Thiruvothu, 36, called the investigation a “game changer” and a “historic moment”.

“There was this idea that women working in the industry should feel grateful for having been given an opportunity by the men who were hiring them,” said Thiruvothu, a member of the campaign group Women in Cinema Collective.

‘Shaking everything’ 

 

Allegations of abuse in Indian cinema are not new.

It witnessed a wave in 2018, shortly after the 2017 MeToo movement erupted in Hollywood against disgraced US movie producer Harvey Weinstein.

But Thiruvothu called the latest allegations more than “MeToo Part Two.”

“It’s shaking everything,” she told AFP.

“It isn’t an individual-to-individual complaint anymore. It’s about a systemic structure that has continued to fail women.”

Since the report, several top actors have been accused.

The Association of Malayalam Movie Artists was dissolved following the resignation of its chief on “moral grounds” with some members among the accused.

Ranjith Balakrishnan, 59, chairman of the state’s film academy, has also quit.

Balakrishnan, who denies any wrongdoing, was the man Mitra accused of sexual harassment.

Police have filed a case against him for outraging a woman’s modesty, a non-bailable offence.

Mitra, who until the release of the report had only mentioned the incident to an industry colleague, told AFP that Balakrishnan had misused “his power”.

Thiruvothu offered a message to all women in the film industry who have survived sexual assault.

“You are a skilled artist… do not listen to anyone who tells you to find another job if it is so difficult for you,” she said.

“This is your industry, as much as it is anybody else’s. Speak up, so that we are taking the space that is rightfully ours.”