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Japanese naval ship welcomed at Muara Port

Lyna Mohamad

JS Suzutsuki, a naval ship of Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, made a port call at Muara Port yesterday where it was welcomed by the Royal Brunei Navy (RBN) on arrival.

The Japanese naval ship will be in the country for three days and carries 230 Japanese naval personnel and 30 commissioned officers, under the command of Commander of Escort Division 8 Captain Takahiro Iigatani.

Meanwhile, Chargé d’Affaires ad interim of the Embassy of Japan in Brunei Darussalam Suda Atsushi, upon going onboard was welcomed by the Commanding Officer of JS Suzutsuki.

They were joined by three officers from RBN and discussed challenges faced by the region and the way forward to maintain regional stability.

The ceremony concluded with Captain Takahiro Ligatani and Commanding Officer of Naval Training Centre Commander Mohammad Zouhdy bin Haji Abdul Razak exchanging tokens and reaffirming the close ties between the two navies.

The visit by the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force aims to develop and foster basic knowledge and skills as well international perspectives and promote friendly relations with port call countries.

Personnel from JS Suzutsuki in a group photo with the invited guests. PHOTOS: JAPANESE EMBASSY IN BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
Royal Brunei Navy personnel welcome JS Suzutsuki personnel

Lee, Shin, Lopez share lead at LPGA’s first full-field event

GOLD CANYON, ARIZONA (AP) – Alison Lee and Jenny Shin each reeled off four straight birdies in the middle of their rounds and joined Gaby Lopez at 7-under 65 yesterday to share a one-stroke lead after the first round of the LPGA Drive on Championship.

Lee, a 28-year-old American looking for her first tour win, birdied four of her first five holes. And, after a bogey at No 16, her seventh hole, she pieced together a four straight birdies and five in the next six holes to reach 8 under at Superstition Mountain Golf Club before a bogey on her final hole dropped her into a three-way tie for the top spot of a crowded leaderboard.

Shin, a 30-year-old from South Korea looking for her first win since 2016, posted seven birdies from Nos 8 through 18 to earn a share of the lead in the tour’s first full-field event of the season.

Lopez had a bogey-free round. The 29-year-old Mexican started on the back nine and made the turn at 4-under par before adding three birdies on the front side to tie for the lead.

Wei-Ling Hsu and England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff were tied for fourth after opening 66s. Ten players are tied for sixth place at 5 under, as 114 golfers in the 142-player field carded a score of even par or better. Play was suspended with one group left on the course, but none of the players threatening the leaders.

Lee, who made the cut in 22 of her 24 events last season with a T-5 as her best finish at the Women’s Scottish Open, felt she left some shots on the course.

“This sounds cliche, but I just feel like it was one of those days,” Lee said. “Golf just was easy. I honestly was playing so good I feel like I could have shot a lower round out there today.”

Gaby Lopez. PHOTO: AP

One day of ‘freedom’

STEPNOE, KYRGYZSTAN (AFP) – Alyona and a dozen women are dancing in a small sunny garden, to applause from their fellow inmates in Kyrgyzstan’s only female penal colony.

In prison for homicide, drug trafficking or theft, the women celebrate the Nowruz festival marking the arrival of spring.

Alyona, one of the best dancers, then swaps her red high heels for sneakers and starts feeding her 18-month-old baby who was born in jail.

“Of course it’s a holiday, but for me it’s still a day like any other: I can’t be with the people I love,” she told AFP.

A Russian citizen, she is one of around 200 women aged 17 to 70 in the prison in the village of Stepnoe, not far from the capital Bishkek.

For Nowruz, an ancient Persian holiday celebrated in Muslim countries from Asia to the Balkans, the prisoners are allowed to put on a day of performances.

Photos show Kyrgyz female prisoners taking part in celebrations of Nowruz at the women’s colony Number 2 in the village of Stepnoye, outside Bishkek, Kazakhstan. PHOTOS: AFP

Female prisoners take part in the celebration

“We try to cheer people up, for them to feel like free women and not like inmates,” said Zamira Bekmurzaeva, one of the prison officials.

Under the wardens’ careful watch, bemused inmates look on as the dance shows are followed by wrestling competitions, a popular sport in Kyrgyzstan.

Shouts and cheers drown out the loudspeakers blasting pop music as prisoners go up against each other, rolling around on a blanket serving as an impromptu tatami mat.

“We organise events for every holiday, we try to help detainees forget, at least for one day, that they’re in prison,” said Bekmurzaeva.

The penal colony was built more than 60 years ago, at a time when the Central Asian country was still part of the Soviet Union. There is no running water or television in the cells, and toilets and showers are located outside.

Natalya, 65, who has spent a decade behind bars for heroin possession, still has one year and seven months to go.

“When I was dancing, I was happy,” she said. “I try not to get discouraged, I think about my children and grandchildren who are waiting for me at home, where we also celebrated Nowruz.”

Alyona is happy that she is allowed to keep her prison-born child with her.

The young mother praises the help she has received from the prison administration.

“We get favourable conditions, and everything we need for my child,” she said.

She initially considered giving up her baby.

“I was afraid of bringing him into this prison, of how he was going to live, of what he was going to eat, of what clothes he was going to wear, of other inmates,” she explained.

A single mum with no relatives who could take care of her child, she advocates for deferred sentences for young mothers.

“I’ve seen mothers in tears, forced to give their children up, sometimes to orphanages,” she said.

If all goes well, she will be freed before the next Nowruz celebrations.

But Alyona is anxious about her son’s adaptation to the outside world.

“My son is afraid of people, he doesn’t see anyone, he’s only lived between these walls,” she said.

“He has never seen a car in his life,” she added, with tears in her eyes.

Court blocks COVID-19 vaccine for govt workers

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – United States (US) President Joe Biden’s order that federal employees get vaccinated against COVID-19 was blocked on Thursday by a federal appeals court.

The 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans rejected arguments that Biden, as the nation’s chief executive, has the same authority as the CEO of a private corporation to require that employees be vaccinated.

The ruling from the full appeals court, 16 full-time judges at the time the case was argued, reversed an earlier ruling by a three-judge 5th Circuit panel that had upheld the vaccination requirement. Judge Andrew Oldham, nominated to the court by then-President Donald Trump, wrote the opinion for a 10-member majority.

The ruling maintains the status quo for federal employee vaccines. It upholds a preliminary injunction blocking the mandate issued by a federal judge in January 2022.

At that point, the administration said nearly 98 per cent of covered employees had been vaccinated. And, Oldham noted, with the preliminary injunction arguments done, the case will return to that court for further arguments, when “both sides will have to grapple with the White House’s announcement that the COVID emergency will finally end on May 11, 2023”.

File photo shows United States President Joe Biden receiving his first dose of the coronavirus vaccine in 2020. PHOTO: AP

Opponents of the policy said it was an encroachment on federal workers’ lives that neither the Constitution nor federal statutes authorise. Biden issued an executive order in September 2021 requiring vaccinations for all executive branch agency employees, with exceptions for medical and religious reasons.

The requirement kicked in the following November. US District Judge Jeffrey Brown, who was appointed to the District Court for the Southern District of Texas by Trump, issued a nationwide injunction against the requirement the following January.

The case then went to the 5th Circuit. One panel of three 5th Circuit judges refused to immediately block the law. But a different panel, after hearing arguments, upheld Biden’s position.

The broader court majority agreed, saying federal law does not preclude court jurisdiction over cases involving “private, irreversible medical decisions made in consultation with private medical professionals outside the federal workplace”.

Crazy for dupes

AFP – Welcome to the age of the dupe – the imitations, or even copies, of big-brand products, sometimes coming dangerously close to counterfeiting.

It’s a trend that’s growing on social media, to the extent that people are now proudly unearthing these low-cost versions of bags, clothes, shoes and beauty products, drawing their inspiration from the runways.

Not everyone can afford to invest in a Prada bag – far from it – so the average person sometimes turns to similar pieces, similar in style anyway, sold at low-cost prices.

The concept is certainly not new, with imitations being made for several decades, if not more. But it has perhaps never before been a subject of such pride.

The boundary between imitations and counterfeits is sometimes a little blurry, but what’s today known as dupes are everywhere on social networks, much to the delight of users who are only too happy to find low-cost substitutes of products from major luxury brands.

And dupes are to be found in all sectors, from cosmetics to food, but especially in fashion, where these imitations now seem to be everywhere. Welcome to the age of the dupe.

NEARLY THREE BILLION VIEWS

From sneakers, handbags, clothes, perfumes and underwear, to day creams and even to packets of chips, these days, all products seem to have their dupe(s) on social networks.

Just look at the countless videos with the #dupe hashtag, which has no less than 2.8 billion views on TikTok. And that’s without counting its variants: #makeupdupe, #perfumedupe, #skincaredupe, #leggingsdupe, #fashiondupe, #zaradupe, and #fentydupe, each of which has several million views, and offers access to even more precise results.

There’s even a #dupechallenge hashtag, with nearly 60 million views, which involves going to stores, most often major retailers, to look for the best dupes. So while the idea of the dupe might not be new, it’s definitely taking on a new dimension, since finding copies, imitations or products inspired by those from big brands, seems to have become a new sport, and especially a source of pride, whereas it was previously a source of shame, if not embarrassment.

Social network users, TikTok users in the lead, are now going all out to get their hands on cheap clothes and accessories inspired by Prada, Gucci or Fendi, and even by mainstream brands like Skims, Fenty or Zara.

It’s a strong trend that testifies to the countless number of “duplicates” in circulation, and – unexpectedly – to the fact that even the brands that dupe are now themselves being duped.

Amazing, but true.

DUPING THE DUPERS

It is difficult to put a precise date on the beginnings of this dupe craze, but from spring 2022, the ‘Zara vs Shein’ challenge was clearly paving the way for the trend to take off.

With some 60 million views, this challenge involved showing off, side by side, similar – even almost identical – clothes bought at the two fashion giants.

Often, users are happy to have spent two or three times less at Shein, the Chinese behemoth of ultra fast-fashion.

Paradoxically, there are also many videos that showcase the dupes found at Zara inspired by other fashion brands. An endless circle, in short.

The challenge, which served for some to denounce the many copies made by Shein, has, however, mainly resulted in an unprecedented craze for these low-cost versions of products of all kinds.

A handful of social media users have even made this their trademark, with accounts entirely dedicated to dupes in fashion and beauty.

They promise to seek out dupes on the market for others to snap up at will.

On Instagram, there are many such accounts. For example, Dupes Mode, followed by more than 10,000 people, focusses on (very) similar products at (very) different prices.

But it’s not the only one, since these accounts are multiplying at high speed on many social networks, testifying to the growing interest in a market that seems to know no limits… especially when inflation is raging.

‘DOUPE’ – THE JOKE THAT SAYS IT ALL ABOUT THE SCALE OF THE TREND

And the craze is not about to stop, especially since few luxury fashion houses or other major ready-to-wear brands seem to be speaking out against it.

In early January, the user Blythe Snyder went viral on TikTok thanks to a video with over three million views. While shopping at Target, the young woman began listing the number of dupes on the shelves – Skims, Prada, Gucci, Balenciaga, Fendi – emphasising the word “dupe” which she pronounced as an exaggerated “doupe”.

It didn’t take much for other users to follow suit and start heading to well-known retailers to find their own “doupes”, using the same ironic pronunciation.

This game, or perhaps joke, goes some way to highlighting how much dupes are now well and truly everywhere, and that they appeal more than ever to younger generations.

A phenomenon that is growing at a time when fast-fashion and other low-cost fashion brands are being criticised for their lack of ethics, and the mountains of textile waste they generate around the world.

A recent report from the Changing Markets Foundation reveals that, each year, Kenya receives a quarter of a million used items of clothing made of synthetic plastic fibre, too dirty or damaged to be reused, from France alone, leading to “serious sanitary and environmental problems for vulnerable populations”.

These low-cost versions are mostly inspired by the products of big brands, rather than copying or imitating them outright.

After all, the end product is branded with the name of the brand selling it – and not that of the original creator.

Ultimately, this isn’t a question of counterfeiting, even if the border between dupes and fakes is sometimes rather blurred, and these new practices can still raise questions.

Faced with such confusion, shoppers should keep their wits about them to avoid being duped by dupes.

Encourage early retirement to address unemployment

I would like to applaud the authorities for introducing the National Retirement Scheme (SPK) to replace the Employees Trust Fund (TAP) and Supplemental Contributory Pension (SCP) in a bid to improve on the current pension fund.

It is a timely move, especially given that the new scheme takes into account the inflation rate to ensure the well-being of retirees.

However, in my view, the authorities should review the retirement age, which is currently set at 60. While the country is pushing for economic growth and market expansion, it will take time before we see the benefits of our efforts.

In the meantime, the job market remains rather anaemic, so much so that a lot of youth have trouble securing employment straight out of school.

One of the reasons, I believe, lies in the retirement age. A lot of us in our 50s are still in the workforce, making job opportunities few and far between.

Perhaps it would be better to encourage retirement at the age of 55, to free up the job slots for the next generation. In some way, it is like killing two birds with one stone by addressing the employment or underemployment issue and allowing people who have worked their whole lives to enjoy their hard-earned pensions a little earlier.

As Muslims, we believe a person is only destined to live for 60 or 70 years. With the change in retirement age, it would allow us to prepare for the hereafter, such as performing umrah, haj and other religious obligations, while we are still healthy enough to do so.

Ready To Rest

Myanmar arrests about 150 Rohingya fleeing to Malaysia

YANGON (AFP) – Myanmar authorities arrested some 150 Rohingya suspected of trying to flee to Malaysia, an official told AFP yesterday.

The group of men, women and children was arrested in Thanbyuzayat township in southern Myanmar, the official said, requesting anonymity as they were not authorised to talk to the media.

The official did not specify why the group had been arrested, but it faces restrictions on travelling within Myanmar, where rights groups said they live in apartheid-like conditions.

“They were hiding nearby in hilly forest between two villages… We started arresting them since late last night after we got a tip-off,” the security source said. According to initial reports, the group had travelled by boat from western Rakhine state and planned to travel on to Thailand and then Malaysia by road, the official said.

A number of non-Rohingya suspected of trafficking the group were also arrested, and police were looking for around 30 more people, according to the source.

A military crackdown in Myanmar in 2017 sent hundreds of thousands of Rohingya fleeing into neighbouring Bangladesh with harrowing stories of murder and arson.

Myanmar is facing genocide accusations at the United Nations’ top court following the mass exodus.

The arrests come days after the junta said it would begin welcoming back members of the minority living in Bangladesh as soon as next month in a pilot repatriation programme. The plan would see Myanmar “repatriate about 1,500 displaced persons”, state media yesterday quoted a senior border affairs official as saying.

The border official did not give a specific timetable and added Myanmar had “not received any response yet” to the plan.

The returning Rohingya would be placed in a “transit camp for a short period” before being resettled in 15 villages, the official said.

Thousands of Rohingya risk their lives each year making perilous journeys from camps in Bangladesh and Myanmar to reach Malaysia and Indonesia.

Team Japan bound for promotional video

James Kon

Following the successful visit by an 11-member delegation from Atami City in Shizuoka prefecture, Japan to Brunei Darussalam in January to promote the tourism industry between the two countries, a second local team left for the Japanese city on a 10-day visit to film a promotional video.

The Brunei team which embarked on the special tour hosted by Atami City in Shizuoka prefecture in collaboration with Ojiya City, Niigata prefecture, was welcomed by the mayor of Atami City Saito Sakae on arrival.

The tour will focus on traditional hotels, food, culture, the Gotemba Outlet shopping mall and natural resources like hot spring and Mount Fuji. The team includes Sunshine Borneo Tours & Travel General Manager Georgina Wong Mei Chin and Marketing Manager Michelle Chen Pei Vun. Advisor to the president for Brunei Affairs of Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA) Okouchi Hiroshi said, “The first group’s promotional video by At-Taqwa Travel Tours team last week was a success.“

“The team includes influencer Mohammad Najib. The official promotional video will be released soon,” he said. “We can support Royal Brunei Airlines’ (RB) Narita direct flight by collaborating with the RB team. Our next plan is to invite Japanese travel agents to Brunei to shoot a promotional video for the Japanese side.”

Sunshine Borneo Tours & Travel Sdn Bhd Advisor Peter Wong, Marketing Manager Michelle Chen Pei Vun, and General Manager Georgina Wong Mei Chin with Advisor to the President for Brunei Affairs of Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA) Okouchi Hiroshi in a group photo. PHOTO: JAMES KON

Crusaders beat ACT, Chiefs still unbeaten in Super Rugby

WELLINGTON,  NEW ZEALAND (AP) – Leicester Fainga’anuku scored two tries yesterday to bring his tally to five in his last two matches as the Crusaders produced a 35-17 win over the previously unbeaten ACT Brumbies in Super Rugby Pacific.

In a later match, the Hamilton, New Zealand-based Chiefs remained the only unbeaten side with a 24-14 win over the New South Wales Waratahs in Sydney.

The win was a gift from the Christchurch-based Crusaders to their head coach, and soon-to-be All Blacks, Scott Robertson.

Robertson was named this week as the next All Blacks head coach, to replace Ian Foster after the World Cup in France in October. He might have been pleased with the result in Christchurch if not the performance: The Crusaders dropped a lot of ball and made several other unusual errors. He would have noted Fainga’anuku’s performance, which adds to the depth of talent available to the All Blacks on the wing.

The winger scored a try in each half and both from the same set move off a lineout. Hooker Codie Taylor threw to the lineout in the sixth minute, looped around the back to take the scrumhalf’s pass and fired a short pass to Fainga’anuku, who crashed through three tackles to score.

Jake Gordon from the Waratahs runs to score a try during the Super Rugby rugby match between the Waratahs and the Chiefs. PHOTO: AP

The Crusaders repeated the move in the 58th. Taylor again passed to Fainga’anuku and the big, powerful winger waded and twisted his way through tackles to score.

Taylor scored the vital try himself. The Brumbies had driven over the Crusaders’ line just before the halftime siren sounded and the referee ruled that he had called for the goalline drop out before time expired.

The Crusaders were able to play on, regain possession, force a lineout near the Brumbies line and drive Taylor over to lead 21-3 at the break.

With Fainga’anuku’s try and another just before fulltime for Christian Lio-Willie, the Crusaders took a bonus point from a win by five tries to two.

The Brumbies were under-strength, having left several Wallabies players at home to rest under Rugby Australia’s guidelines for test players in a test World Cup year.

They were outplayed in the first half by the Crusaders, who dominated scrums in the absence of Brumbies captain James Slipper and whose fast line speed on defense upset the Brumbies’ attack.

But the Brumbies were better in the second half, hitting the defensive line harder and creating ruptures that lead to tries for scrumhalf Ryan Longergan and winger Corey Toole. Toole’s try cut the Crusaders’ lead to 28-17 but the later try from Lio-Willie snuffed out their chances.

“Regardless of who turned up tonight we knew the Brumbies were going to front up, especially with their set piece and breakdown work,” Crusaders captain Scott Barrett said. “I’m just proud of our boys, they aced it. “

The Chiefs and Waratahs were level at 7-7 at halftime before the visiting team pulled away in the second half. Winger Emoni Narawa scored two tries for the Chiefs, including a 54-minute effort that gave the team a 17-7 lead.

A runaway 40-metre intercept try by Waratahs captain Jake Gordon in the 17th minute offset an early cross from Chiefs five-eighth Bryn Gatland.

Michael Hooper, in his 133rd Super Rugby game, making the flanker the most-capped Waratahs back-rower, gave his side hope when he finished off a driving maul try on the hour. But Narawa’s second try five minutes from fulltime sealed victory for the Chiefs.

Eurozone economic growth hits 10-month high

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Economic growth in the eurozone accelerated in March and hit a 10-month high, according to a closely watched survey published yesterday, despite turmoil in the markets and concerns over banks.

The S&P Global Flash Eurozone purchasing managers’ index (PMI) showed the indicator at 54.1, up from 52.0 in February, thanks to the services sector.

A reading over 50 represents growth in economic activity.

Recession fears are receding in Europe after worries of a difficult winter due to sky-high energy prices following the invasion of Ukraine last year.

Inflation remains much higher than policymakers’ target but eurozone consumer prices have also fallen in recent months after a record high of 10.6 per cent last October.

The logo of the European currency Euro stands in front of the former European Central Bank headquarters in Frankfurt. PHOTO: AFP

There has been turbulence in global stock markets in recent weeks, however, over fears of a crisis in the banking system, but businesses remained optimistic.

“The survey is consistent with gross domestic product growth of 0.3 per cent in the first quarter, accelerating to an equivalent rate of 0.5 per cent in March alone,” said S&P’s chief business economist Chris Williamson.

“Business confidence is also so far showing encouraging resilience in the face of further interest rate hikes and the uncertainty caused by recent banking sector stress,” he added.

Hopes will also be raised by better figures coming out of Europe’s biggest economies.

Germany, the single currency area’s largest economy, saw the composite PMI rising from 50.7 in February to 52.6 the following month, S&P Global said.

In France, where activity is driven by domestic consumers and services, output also rose faster from 51.7 in the previous month to 54.0 in March.

“Overall, today’s data paint a resilient near-term picture for the European economy, but the weakness in business expectations suggests the outlook for H2 remains challenging,” senior economist at Oxford Economics Paolo Grignani said in a note.