Monday, September 30, 2024
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Malaysian manufacturing stays strong despite global challenges

Back view portrait of unrecognizable female worker looking at interior of factory workshop from above, copy space

ANN/THE STAR – Despite facing headwinds such as inflationary pressures, volatile demand and global uncertainties, the Malaysian manufacturing sector has managed to sustain stability.

This is revealed in the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM) Business Conditions Survey which noted that the manufacturing sector had delivered a commendable performance in the first half of 2024.

Moving forward for the rest of the year, FMM said optimism is growing and will potentially be driven by any global economic recovery and supportive government initiatives.

“Key indicators, including business activity and production volumes, point to strong growth as respondents gear up to meet rising demand locally and globally. However, rising production costs and a cautious approach to workforce expansion highlight the challenges that remain as the sector continues to manage a complex global and domestic terrain,” it said.

The survey, which drew 616 respondents nationwide, was conducted from July 3 to August 9, 2024 and tracked business confidence via the FMM Business Conditions Index (FMM BCI) covering the actual performance in the first half and the anticipated outlook for the second half.

A steel factory in Pahang, Malaysia. PHOTO: XINHUA

The current general business activity index increased by 4.49 per cent in the first half of 2024, reflecting continued stability and improving sentiment within the manufacturing sector, it said.

This is the index’s second consecutive increase since the first half of 2023.

Some 26 per cent of the survey’s respondents enjoyed higher sales in the first half of 2024 and sales have remained steady for another 42 per cent of respondents.

“This moderate growth can be attributed to steady demand from abroad, despite global economic uncertainties,” it said.

The cost of production index picked up a point to stand at 155 in the first half of 2024.

The survey revealed 62 per cent of respondents put up with higher production costs in the first half of 2024.

It said the rising raw material and energy costs, coupled with higher wages, may have contributed to this modest rise.

“Despite these challenges, survey respondents are likely controlling costs through efficiency improvements and strategic investments in technology, helping to limit the overall increase in production expenses,” FMM said.

Date set for Malaysian police station attack case

Police officers display seized items in the case. PHOTO: BERNAMA

JOHOR BAHRU (BERNAMA) – The Sessions Court in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, on Monday set September 24 for a re-mention of a case involving terrorism-related charges faced by five family members of the suspect in the Ulu Tiram police station attack last May.

Judge Rasidah Roslee set the date after Deputy Public Prosecutor Yazid Mustaqim Roslan, requested more time to submit an expert report before the case is transferred to the Kuala Lumpur High Court.

The five accused are Radin Imran Radin Mohd Yassin, 62, who is the father of the suspect in the attack; his mother, Rosna Jantan, 59; and his siblings, Radin Romyullah Radin Imran, 34; Farhah Sobrina Radin Imran, 23; and Mariah Radin Imran, 19.

On June 19, they were charged in the same court with nine separate offences, including encouraging terrorist acts by instilling the ideology of terrorism linked to the Islamic State (IS) group.

In the incident at 2.45am, on May 17, Constable Ahmad Azza Fahmi Azhar, 22, and Constable Muhamad Syafiq Ahmad Said, 24, died after being attacked by a masked suspect armed with a machete, while Corporal Mohd Hasif Roslan, 38, was injured.

The suspect was shot dead in the incident.

Police officers display seized items in the case. PHOTO: BERNAMA

Salah hints at Liverpool exit

Liverpool's Mohamed Salah. PHOTO: AP

Manchester (AFP) – Mohamed Salah hinted this will be his final season at Liverpool after scoring his 15th goal against Manchester United in a resounding 3-0 win for the visitors at Old Trafford on Sunday.

Salah has less than a year left to run on his contract at Anfield and said no discussions have taken place with the club on extending his deal.

The Egyptian has written himself into the record books of the English giants, scoring 214 goals since joining in 2017.

“I had a good summer and had a long time to myself to try to stay positive because as you know it’s my last year at the club,” Salah told Sky Sports.

“I just want to enjoy it and I don’t want to think about it. I feel like I’m free to play football and then we’ll see what happens next year.”

Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah. PHOTO: AP

Salah set up two goals for Luis Diaz before extending his record as the top goalscorer in meetings between United and Liverpool by scoring for the seventh consecutive game at Old Trafford.

“To be fair I was coming to the game, it could be the last time (playing at Old Trafford),” he said.

“Nobody in the club has talked to me about contracts. It is not up to me, it is up to the club.”  Salah signed a three-year deal in 2022 that reportedly made him the highest paid player in the club’s history, worth more than GBP18 million a year.

But he has been consistently linked with a lucrative move to the Saudi Pro League.

A year ago Liverpool reportedly rejected a bid of GBP150 million from Al-Ittihad.

The 32-year-old is just one of three major Liverpool players out of contract at the end of the season, along with captain Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold.

However, on the field all is well for the Reds as new manager Arne Slot has made a serene start to the daunting task of replacing Jurgen Klopp.

Ten Hag backs Man Utd to come good this season

Manchester United's head coach Erik ten Hag. PHOTO: AP

Manchester (AFP) – Erik ten Hag said he is no “Harry Potter” to magic up quick fixes for Manchester United after a demoralising 3-0 home defeat by Liverpool on Sunday night.

The Dutchman is already under pressure just three games into the new Premier League season after also losing 2-1 last weekend at Brighton.

A shock FA Cup final win over Manchester City in May helped keep Ten Hag in his job despite finishing eighth last season – United’s lowest ever Premier League finish.

The former Ajax boss was even handed a contract extension and backed with a GBP200 million spend on new players during the transfer window.

But hope of a new dawn has not lasted at Old Trafford as Liverpool strolled to victory in Arne Slot’s first major test since replacing Jurgen Klopp.

“It’s not like I’m Harry Potter, that is what you have to acknowledge,” Ten Hag said in his post-match press conference.

“We just had a third game in the season, again we have to build a new team.

Manchester United’s head coach Erik ten Hag. PHOTO: AP

“We will build this new team, we have young players, also we have now players to build in the season. Today we had two or three players that didn’t start of the season and they didn’t play 90 minutes.

“We will be fine. It’s clear we have to improve, but at the end of the season I’m quite confident that we will have a big chance to lift another trophy.”

In one of the most glaring hallmarks of United’s struggles last season, Casemiro was the fall guy for Liverpool’s first two goals. The Brazilian twice lost possession before Luis Diaz fired home and the five-time Champions League winner was replaced at half-time by 20-year-old Toby Collyer.

“I think that in football everyone has to take responsibility,” added Ten Hag on whether he can continued to field Casemiro given the five-time Champions League winner’s decline.

“He’s a great character. He has won everything in his career. I’m sure he will keep contributing to our team.

“Casemiro is always winning, so he will be there.”

United have not even challenged to win the Premier League in the 11 years since legendary former manager Alex Ferguson retired.

Another season fighting for other silverware already appears the best that they can hope for with a six-point deficit to Liverpool and defending champions City.

“It hurts, especially for our fans,” said Ten Hag.

“We have to be humble, we have to give the compliments to Liverpool and we have to move on.”

Liverpool’s Luis Diaz scores his side’s opening goal during the English Premier League match against Manchester United. PHOTO: AP

 

 

Ferrari’s Leclerc wins Italian Grand Prix

Winner Ferrari's driver Charles Leclerc celebrates on the podium. PHOTO: AFP

Monza (AFP) – Charles Leclerc won the Italian Grand Prix on Sunday night to delight Ferrari’s massed ranks of fans as Lando Norris again chipped away at struggling champion Max Verstappen’s lead in the Formula One drivers’ standings.

Monegasque Leclerc claimed victory at Monza for the second time after winning in 2019, holding off McLaren pair Oscar Piastri and Norris in a thrilling race in which Verstappen finished nearly 38 seconds off the pace in sixth.

Huge roars engulfed the stands as Leclerc took the chequered flag for his second win over the season, after his own home Monaco GP, after holding out on a set of hard tyres he had changed during his one and only pit stop on the 16th lap.

“I thought that the first time would feel like this and the second time wouldn’t feel as special,” said Leclerc as he basked in the cheers of fans who made the track a joyous, noisy sea of red after the race.

“But wow the emotions in the last few laps; Monaco and Monza are the two races I want to win every year and I’ve managed to win them this year. It is so, so special.”

Winner Ferrari’s driver Charles Leclerc celebrates on the podium. PHOTO: AFP

All of Leclerc’s major rivals, apart from teammate Carlos Sainz who ended up finishing fourth ahead of his Ferrari replacement Lewis Hamilton, pitted twice and McLaren were hoping that the Ferrari pair would do the same.

Instead Leclerc managed to keep his tyres in good enough condition to stay ahead and in the end finish the race comfortably in front of Piastri, who had taken the race lead early on after an overtake manoeuvre on Norris which was as daring as it was tactically questionable.

“Not going to lie it hurts a lot. I did a lot of things right today,” said Australian Piastri.

“Happy with the race, the pace I achieved but when you finish second it hurts.”

Briton Norris – who clocked the fastest lap right at the end – will be disappointed by his finish after starting on pole but he managed to chop Verstappen’s championship lead to 62 points with eight races remaining as his Dutch rival’s barren run continued.

“We considered (pitting once) the whole race but it was impossible with our graining. Just disappointed. Ferrari did a better job, so hats off to them,” said Norris.

Verstappen has now failed to win any of the last six GPs after claiming the honours in seven of the first 10, and his and Red Bull’s dominance of F1 looks increasingly in question.

A fourth straight world title looked a near certainty when Verstappen won in Spain back in June, but since then he has only finished on the podium twice.

And his teammate Sergio Perez finishing in eighth meant that McLaren are now only eight points behind Red Bull in the constructor’s standings and look favourites to win it for the first time since 1998.

Argentine rookie Franco Colapinto, who replaced axed Logan Sargeant for Williams following his disastrous showing at the Dutch Grand Prix last weekend, finish in 12th in his F1 debut.

Earlier Leonardo Fornaroli became the first Italian to win the F3 title, the 19-year-old doing so without winning a single race in this year’s championship.

Trident driver Fornaroli overtook Australian Christian Mansell on the final corner of the 10-race season to grab third place and snatch the title from Gabriele Mini by two points.

Gabriel Bortoleto won the F2 race in dramatic fashion after starting last on the grid, cutting Isack Hadjar’s lead at the top of the stands to just 10.5 points with three races remaining in the season.

Fans celebrate Ferrari’s driver Charles Leclerc’s victory after the Italian Formula One Grand Prix race. PHOTO: AFP

Inside the ‘golden age’ of alien hunting at the Green Bank Telescope

Green Bank ObservatoryÕs 140 foot decommissioned telescope is seen while being updated in the US National Radio Quiet Zone May 20, 2024, in Green Bank, West Virginia. Nestled between mountains in a secluded corner of West Virginia, a giant awakens: the Green Bank Telescope begins its nightly vigil, scanning the cosmos for secrets. If intelligent life exists beyond Earth, there's a good chance the teams analyzing the data from the world's largest, fully steerable radio astronomy facility will be the first to know. "People have been asking themselves the question, 'Are we alone in the universe?' ever since they first gazed up at the night sky and wondered if there were other worlds out there," says Steve Croft, project scientist for the Breakthrough Listen initiative. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP)
Green Bank Observatory’s 140 foot decommissioned telescope is seen while being updated in the US National Radio Quiet Zone. PHOTO: AFP

(AFP) – If intelligent life exists beyond Earth, there’s a good chance the teams analysing the data from the world’s largest, fully steerable radio astronomy facility will be the first to know.

“People have been asking themselves the question, ‘Are we alone in the universe?’ ever since they first gazed up at the night sky and wondered if there were other worlds out there,” says Steve Croft, project scientist for the Breakthrough Listen initiative.

For the past decade, this groundbreaking scientific endeavor has partnered with a pioneering, US government-funded site built in the 1950s to search for “technosignatures” – traces of technology that originate far beyond our own solar system.

The search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or “SETI,” was long dismissed as the realm of eccentrics and was even cut off from federal funding by Congress thirty years ago.

A runner passes the 20-meter radio telescope at the Green Bank Observatory. PHOTO: AFP

But today, the field is experiencing a renaissance and seeing an influx of graduates, bolstered by advances in artificial intelligence and machine learning, as well as recent discoveries showing that nearly every star in the night sky hosts planets, many of which are Earth-like.

“It feels to me like this is something of a golden age,” says Croft, an Oxford-trained radio astronomer who began his career studying astrophysical phenomena, from supermassive black holes to the emissions of exploding stars.

Is ET calling? 

The story of the “National Radio Quiet Zone” dates back to 1958, when the US federal government designated a region in West Virginia to help astronomers shield their sensitive equipment from interference.

This means no radio signals, no cellphone coverage, and limited WiFi for the surrounding community. Even the vehicles transporting staff to and from the telescope must run on diesel, as gas cars’ spark plugs generate electrical interference.

“I think the community takes a certain pride in having a premier scientific facility right here,” says Paul Vosteen, who has worked at the observatory for the past eight years.

The CHIME Outrigger telescope is seen with one of the original 185 Foot radio telescopes at the Green Bank Observatory in the US National Radio Quiet Zone. PHOTO: AFP

Radio astronomy began by happy accident when American physicist Karl Jansky discovered radio waves coming from the center of our galaxy, the Milky Way, in 1933.

Since then, it has allowed astronomers to peer beyond the planets, stars, and dust visible through optical telescopes.

From discovering pulsars to conducting sensitive observations of atomic hydrogen that shed new light on galaxy formation – and more recently, detecting fast radio bursts – radio astronomy has been key to numerous advances.

There’s also a long-standing theory that if other civilisations exist, they might emit radio waves, just as ours has since the dawn of radio communication in the 19th Century.

In Carl Sagan’s novel Contact, humanity is first alerted to extraterrestrial presence by a retransmission of Adolf Hitler’s opening speech at the 1936 Summer Olympics – the first TV signal strong enough to escape Earth’s ionosphere.

A framework for estimating the number of detectable civilisations scattered across the galaxy is found in the “Drake Equation,” devised by the legendary astronomer Frank Drake. Now one of the most recognised formulas in science, it’s even a popular tattoo and T-shirt choice among alien enthusiasts.

A grad student works in the library at the Green Bank Observatory in the US National Radio Quiet Zone. PHOTO: AFP

Chances are improving 

Each year, for a week in late spring, Breakthrough Listen’s team from the University of California, Berkeley, makes a pilgrimage to the telescope during a period of track maintenance for the 17-million-pound structure.

“It’s a relaxing time; every time I’m here, it’s nice being in the National Radio Quiet Zone because there’s no cellphone, no television — it’s a kind of focused environment,” says Matt Lebofsky, lead system administrator.

“Sometimes we need to metaphorically kick the tires, do things ourselves to get a ground truth about how our servers are behaving.”

Inside the server room, the sound of 6,000 whirring hard drives holding 40 petabytes of data-equivalent to 40,000 laptops-makes it impossible to speak without shouting.

“We’re essentially looking for ‘weird things’ in the data,” Croft explains, something that suggests life forms might be trying to reach out, or that scientists are picking up their accidental transmissions.

There have been a few moments of heightened excitement in the SETI community, including the 1977 detection of the so-called “Wow!” signal from the constellation Sagittarius, which remains unexplained.

Catherine Tounzen, Green Bank Telescope operator, works in the control room at the Green Bank Observatory in the US National Radio Quiet Zone. PHOTO: AFP

More recently, in 2020, the team identified Breakthrough Listen Candidate 1 from the nearest star system, Proxima Centauri, but after extensive analysis, it was concluded to be human radio interference.

“It’s not deflating at all,” insists Lebofsky. On the contrary, he feels more optimistic than ever, given the vast amounts of data now being collected and processed compared to the early days. “I feel like the chances are improving exponentially every year.”

 

Tropical storm triggers landslides in Philippines, 11 dead

Youths wade in a storm surge along Manila Bay amid heavy rains brought by Tropical Storm Yagi in Manila on September 2, 2024. (Photo by JAM STA ROSA / AFP)
Youths wade in a storm surge along Manila Bay amid heavy rains brought by a tropical storm in Manila. PHOTO: AFP

MANILA (AFP) – Floods and landslides killed 11 people after a fierce tropical storm dumped heavy rain on the Philippines for a second day, officials said Monday.

Tropical Storm Yagi brushed past the Bicol region southeast of Manila overnight Sunday and was expected to make a landfall later Monday on the northeast coast of the main island of Luzon.

As a precaution, schools and government offices across the capital Manila were shut for the day, while ferry services in affected areas were suspended and 29 domestic flights cancelled due to the weather.

Three people, including a pregnant woman, were killed in a landslide Monday in Antipolo, near the equally rain-soaked capital, city information officer Relly Bonifacio told AFP.

He said the bodies of four other people, all drowning victims, were recovered on Monday in three other areas of the hilly community, hours after creeks overflowed overnight.

The Bicol city of Naga was also hard-hit, with a man electrocuted as floodwaters rose and a baby girl drowning, rescuers said.

“The floods were above head height in some areas,” Joshua Tuazon of the city’s public safety office told AFP, adding that hundreds of residents had been rescued.

More than 300 people remained at evacuation camps Monday, with local officials saying the floodwaters in the city of 210,000 people were slow to ebb.

Two landslides killed two people and damaged five houses in the central city of Cebu on Sunday, the local disaster office there told AFP.

Yagi tore northwards off the coast of Luzon on Monday afternoon with sustained winds of 85 kilometres an hour, up from 75 kilometres an hour earlier in the day, the state weather service said in an updated bulletin.

It was due to make landfall in the northern province of Isabela later in the day, with four towns and about 33,000 people in its path.

Local officials were advised to prepare communities to evacuate flood-prone areas, provincial disaster chief Constante Foronda told AFP.

The weather service also warned of a “minimal to moderate risk” of huge coastal waves threatening communities as the storm hits land.

About 20 big storms and typhoons hit the Philippines or its surrounding waters each year, damaging homes and infrastructure and killing dozens of people.

Pedestrians hold their umbrellas amid heavy rains brought by a tropical storm. PHOTO: AFP

Schools and government offices across the capital Manila were shut down for the day as a precaution, while ferry services in affected areas were suspended and 29 domestic flights were cancelled due to bad weather.

About 20 big storms and typhoons hit the Philippines or its surrounding waters each year, damaging homes and infrastructure and killing dozens of people.

Tropical Storm Yagi to indirectly influence Brunei weather: BDMD

Location and track of Tropical Storm Yagi from the Joint Typhoon Warning Centre. PHOTO: BDMD

Tropical Storm Yagi is expected to indirectly influence the weather in Brunei Darussalam, said the meteorological department on Monday.

“As of 11am on Monday, Tropical Storm Yagi was observed at coordinates 15.2°N 122.6°E, near Northern Philippines, approximately 1400 kilometres away from Brunei Darussalam,” said the Brunei Darussalam Meteorological Department on Monday.

“Tropical Storm Yagi is forecast to move Northwestwards and away from our country,” said the department. 

The department said the Sultanate is expected to have slightly windy conditions in the next few days, with showers or thundershowers, especially at sea. 

The department noted that windspeeds can reach up to 50-kilometres per hour during or near heavy thundershowers. Meanwhile, the sea condition over Brunei waters is generally at slight to moderate state, with wave heights of 0.7 metres to 1.2 metres. 

The department advised the public to take precautionary actions with respect to the forecast active weather condition. Sea condition is dangerous to small boat operations during gusty showers conditions.

Public, road users and fishermen are advised to always be up to date with the latest weather forecast, advisory and warning issued by Brunei Darussalam Meteorological Department, and to take necessary actions to ensure safety.

Five students awarded Sultan’s Scholar

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His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien, Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam awarded the Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Sultan’s Scholar 2024/2025 scholarship to five exceptional students during a ceremony on Monday at Istana Nurul Iman.

Also in attendance at the ceremony were His Royal Highness Prince Haji Al-Muhtadee Billah, the Crown Prince and Senior Minister at the Prime Minister’s Office, and His Royal Highness Prince ‘Abdul Malik, Chairman of the Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Committee of Governors.

His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien, Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam; His Royal Highness Prince Haji Al-Muhtadee Billah, the Crown Prince and Senior Minister at the Prime Minister’s Office; and His Royal Highness Prince ‘Abdul Malik, Chairman of the Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Committee of Governors in a group photo with the scholarship recipients. PHOTOS: MUIZ MATDANI

The five recipients of the prestigious Sultan’s Scholar 2024/2025 scholarship are Dayang Nur Hidayah Haziyah binti Handrie, a former Jerudong International School (JIS) student who will be pursuing her Bachelor’s degree studies in Environmental Geoscience at University College, London; Awang Muhammad Asfa Radhi bin Mohammad Yusran who graduated from Tutong Sixth Form Centre and will be continuing his studies in Bachelor’s Degree in Engineering (Honours) (Chemical Engineering) at University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia; Awang Muhammad Nafeez bin Haji Arbaie who graduated from Paduka Seri Begawan Sultan Science College and will be taking Bachelor’s Degree in Data Science and Decisions at University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Awang Muhammad Afiq bin Abdul Rahman who completed his studies in JIS and will be pursuing his Bachelor’s Degree in Mathematics at University College London, United Kingdom; and Awangku Mohammad Idris Fadhlee bin Pengiran Dato Seri Paduka Haji Mohammad Tashim who graduated from Sekolah Menengah Arab Laki-Laki Hassanal Bolkiah and will be pursuing the Bachelor’s level in the Sharia major Islamiyyah at Al-Azhar University, Arab Republic of Egypt.

(ABOVE & BELOW) His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien, Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam with a scholarship recipient and his parents. Also in the photo is His Royal Highness Prince Haji Al-Muhtadee Billah, the Crown Prince and Senior Minister at the Prime Minister’s Office.

 

Following the recitation of Doa Selamat read by State Mufti Pehin Datu Seri Maharaja Dato Paduka Seri Setia (Dr) Ustaz Haji Awang Abdul Aziz bin Juned, His Majesty also mingled with the recipients.

(ABOVE & BELOW) His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah ibni Al-Marhum Sultan Haji Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien Sa’adul Khairi Waddien, Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Brunei Darussalam in conversation with recipients. Also present are His Royal Highness Prince Haji Al-Muhtadee Billah, the Crown Prince and Senior Minister at the Prime Minister’s Office and His Royal Highness Prince ‘Abdul Malik, Chairman of the Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Committee of Governors.

Also present were Administrative Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah, Board of Directors of Yayasan  Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah, Steering Committee for  “Sultan’s Scholar” Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Scholarship scheme, Permanent Secretaries and Deputy Permanent Secretaries of Ministry of Education and Ministry of Religious Affairs as well several “Sultan’s Scholar” Yayasan Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Alumni. – JAMES KON