Monday, October 7, 2024
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Hefty fine for contraband possession

Fadley Faisal

The Magistrate’s Court yesterday ordered a local to settle a BND11,200 fine for possessing smuggled cigarettes and booze.

Nur Nadiah binti Muhammad Amiruddin @ Vidiana anak Badendang, 29, would have to serve 11 months’ jail in default of payment of the fine.

Senior Magistrate Dewi Norlelawati binti Haji Abdul Hamid heard from the Customs prosecutor that the defendant was found by the authorities to have in possession seven cartons and nine packets of cigarettes along with seven bottles of liquor at a terrace house in Kampong Sungai Bakong, Lumut at 10.45pm on October 27, 2021.

Bank Indonesia’s expanded mandate will not affect inflation framework

CNA – Indonesia’s central bank governor Perry Warjiyo said yesterday the passage of a law last year that expanded Bank Indonesia’s (BI) mandate would not affect its framework to tackle inflation.

Parliament in December passed into law a Bill that widened BI’s remit to include maintaining financial system stability to support sustainable economic growth, on top of its existing goal of keeping the rupiah currency stable, which includes curbing inflation. There have been concerns that the new law may disrupt BI’s autonomy, although government officials have repeatedly pledged the central bank would remain independent.

“We have been doing this all along. Now we are grateful the new law acknowledge(s) that legally,” Warjiyo said, referring to efforts to maintain financial and payment system stability through macroprudential and digital payment policies.

“We still do the inflation targeting framework,” he said.

Warjiyo made the comments, some of his first in public on BI’s wider mandate, at the bank’s annual investment forum. BI’s decision-making on its policy mix would continue to take into account many aspects, including economic growth, something the central bank has done since 2010, Warjiyo added.

The Bank Indonesia headquarters’ in Jakarta, Indonesia. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Before the passage of the law, BI typically set an inflation target range for each year and decided on a mix of policy to hit the target, while maintaining financial system stability.

BI has raised its benchmark interest rate by a total of 225 basis points since August to curb inflation that has been running above its target range.

Warjiyo repeated that barring any unforeseen circumstances, the rate hikes were sufficient to guide inflation back to within the two to four per cent target range in the second half of 2023. The December inflation rate was 5.51 per cent.

BI’s gross domestic product growth outlook for 2023 was the midpoint of 4.5 per cent to 5.3 per cent, down from 2022’s growth estimate of 5.1 per cent to 5.2 per cent, he said, matching previous forecasts.

Nine killed in Israel West Bank raid: Palestinian ministry

JENIN, PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES (AFP) – An Israeli raid on the occupied West Bank’s Jenin refugee camp yesterday killed nine Palestinians including an elderly woman, Palestinian officials said, also accusing the forces of using tear gas inside a hospital children’s ward.

The death toll rose to “nine martyrs including an elderly woman”, the Health Ministry said, with multiple wounded.

In a separate statement, Palestinian Health Minister Mai al-Kaila charged that “occupation forces stormed Jenin Government Hospital and intentionally fired tear gas canisters at the paediatric department in the hospital”.

She described the situation in the refugee camp as “critical” and said Israeli forces were preventing ambulances from reaching the wounded.

Yesterday’s fatalities bring the number of Palestinians killed in the West Bank so far this year to 29, including fighters and civilians, most of whom were shot by Israeli forces. Jenin Deputy Governor Kamal Abu al-Rub told AFP that residents were living in a “real state of war”.

“The Israeli army is destroying everything and shooting at everything that moves,” he told AFP.

The mounting toll follows the deadliest year in the Palestinian territory since United Nations records began in 2005.

At least 26 Israelis and 200 Palestinians were killed across Israel and the Palestinian territories in 2022, the majority in the West Bank, according to an AFP tally from official sources.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War.

The Palestinian presidency said yesterday’s raid on Jenin was happening “under international silence”.

“This is what encourages the occupation government to commit massacres against our people in full view of the world,” said spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudeinah.

US economy likely slowed but still posts solid growth in Q4

WASHINGTON (AP) – The United States (US) economy likely rolled out of 2022 with momentum, registering decent growth in the face of painful inflation, high interest rates and rising concern that a recession may be months away.

Economists have estimated that the gross domestic product (GDP) – the broadest measure of economic output – grew at a 2.3-per-cent annual pace from October through December, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet.

The Commerce Department issued its first of three estimates of fourth-quarter (Q4) GDP growth yesterday.

Despite a likely second straight quarter of expansion, the economy is widely expected to slow and then slide into a recession sometime in the coming months as increasingly high interest rates, engineered by the Federal Reserve (Fed), take a toll.

The Fed’s rate hikes have inflated borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, from mortgages to auto loans to corporate credit.

The housing market, which is especially vulnerable to higher loan rates, has been badly bruised: Sales of existing homes have dropped for 11 straight months. Investment in housing plunged at a 27 per cent annual rate from July through September.

And consumer spending, which fuels roughly 70 per cent of the entire economy, is likely to soften in the months ahead, along with the still-robust job market.

A container ship moored at the Port of Los Angeles. PHOTO: AP

The resilience of the labour market has been a major surprise. Last year, employers added 4.5 million jobs, second only to the 6.7 million that were added in 2021 in government records going back to 1940.

And last month’s unemployment rate, 3.5 per cent, matched a 53-year low. But the good times for America’s workers aren’t likely to last. As higher rates make borrowing and spending increasingly expensive across the economy, many consumers will spend less and employers will likely hire less.

Last year, the Fed raised its benchmark rate seven times in unusually large increments to try to curb the spike in consumer prices. Yet another Fed rate hike, though a smaller one, is expected next week.

The central bank has been responding to an inflation rate that remains stubbornly high even though it has been gradually easing. Year-over-year inflation was raging at a 9.1-per-cent rate in June, the highest level in more than 40 years.

It has since cooled – to 6.5 per cent in December – but is still far above the Fed’s two per cent annual target.

Another threat to the economy this year is rooted in politics: House Republicans could refuse to raise the federal debt limit if the Biden administration rejects their demand for broad spending cuts. A failure to raise the borrowing cap would prevent the federal government from being able to pay all its obligations and could shatter its credit.

Moody’s Analytics estimates that the resulting upheaval could wipe out nearly six million American jobs in a recession similar to the devastating one that was triggered by the 2007-2009 financial crisis. At least the economy is likely beginning the year on firmer footing than it did at the start of 2022.

Saving the sinking city

VENICE  (AFP) – As rising waters fuel fears that Venice may one day be entirely submerged, local children are being educated on how to protect the lagoon, a fragile ecosystem threatened by climate change.

On Torcello, an island located in the northern part of the lagoon, around 40 five-year-olds this week attended an outdoor lesson on the shores damaged by the waves from motorboats speeding to and from Venice.

As part of an initiative from UNESCO, the United Nations (UN) cultural agency, they splashed in the mud, made fish from recycled papier mache, took samples of sea water and drew pictures of the nature around them.

“We want the children to learn to observe nature and the lagoon, to learn to understand it, to love it and learn how better protect it,” said programme coordinator Francesca Santoro.

Venice is one of the world’s most extraordinary cities, a UNESCO heritage site that draws millions of tourists each year. But it is slowly drowning.

The landmark St Mark’s Square is regularly flood by “acqua alta”, high water events caused by abnormally high tides, providing good photos for visitors but threatening the city’s foundations.

ABOVE & BELOW: Tourists walk across elevated walkways outside St Mark’s Basilica; and a waiter sets up tables on a flooded St Mark’s square in Venice. PHOTOS: AFP

San Giorgio island (front), Venice and its basin

UNESCO warned in 2021 that it might place Venice on its endangered list, saying there was a need to manage tourist numbers. The city avoided that indignity by agreeing to ban large cruise ships in the lagoon.

With the education initiative, UNESCO hopes to encourage the next generation to think more deeply about how Venice can be preserved – and take action.

The project is part of a wider UNESCO educational programme launched in 2019, sponsored by luxury fashion brand Prada. Dubbed “Sea Beyond”, it is dedicated to the preservation of the sea and involves school children across the world.

The Venice scheme is backed by director of research at Venice’s ISMAR-CNR institute of marine science Georg Umgiesser, who believes this kind of hands-on experience with the lagoon will help people understand the impact of rising water levels.

“As a result of subsidence in Venice and rising waters, the average sea level has risen by 30 centimetres (cm) in the last 150 years and is expected to rise by another 50cm by the end of the century,” he told AFP.

St Mark’s Square, located in the lowest part of the city, is always first to flood, said the German oceanographer, who has lived in the Italian city for 40 years.

“In 2100, half of Venice risks being under water,” he warned.

The long-awaited MOSE flood defence system has been in place since October 2020, raising sluice gates to protect the lagoon when the waters in the Adriatic Sea reach 110cm above normal levels.

But this system was developed in the 1980s, before the acceleration of global warming. There are questions as to whether it will be enough to protect Venice in the decades to come.

“The MOSE was designed to close a maximum of 50 times a year,” said Umgiesser. “If sea levels continue to rise at this rate, from 2100, it would need to be triggered 300 to 400 times a year.”

At that point, the lagoon would essentially be closed off, preventing the exchange of water with the sea, which is essential for biodiversity.

James Harden, Tyrese Maxey lead 76ers past Nets

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – James Harden hit two three-pointers and had a driving layup in the final four minutes against his former Brooklyn teammates and the Philadelphia 76ers stretched their winning streak to six games, outscoring the Nets 137-133 yesterday.

Tyrese Maxey led the 76ers with 27 points, and Joel Embiid had 26. Harden added 23, and Philadelphia was 35 of 36 from the foul line.

“I don’t care about all that stuff,” Harden said when asked if it meant more to score against his former team.

Kyrie Irving had 30 for the Nets, who have lost five of the last seven games without Kevin Durant. The game was the first regular-season matchup between Embiid and former teammate Ben Simmons since a February 2022 trade.

Simmons missed the rest of the 2022 season with various injuries, then Embiid was injured and missed the Sixers’ win in Simmons’ Philadelphia return November 22.

“We’ll take the win, but that’s a good test for us,” Rivers said.

“We have to be better at handling our emotions, but you don’t want to be emotional. I thought we were caught up in that tonight.”

James Harden of the Philadelphia 76ers shoots a lay up past Nic Claxton. PHOTO: AFP

Colombia’s once most-wanted drug lord pleads guilty in US

NEW YORK (AP) – A Colombian man who was once one of the world’s most-wanted drug lords pleaded guilty on Wednesday to United States (US) smuggling charges, admitting that he led a cartel and paramilitary group that trafficked in cocaine and deadly violence.

“Tonnes of cocaine were moved with my permission or at my direction,” Dairo Antonio Úsuga, better known as Otoniel, told a Brooklyn federal court.

“There was a lot of violence with the guerillas and the criminal gangs,” he added, and acknowledged that “in military work, homicides were committed”.

Úsuga, 51, will face at least 20 years in prison when sentenced, prosecutors said. But the US government agreed not to seek a life sentence in order to secure his extradition from Colombia last year, according to US District Judge Dora Irizarry.

As part of his plea deal, he agreed to forfeit USD216 million.

Police escort Dairo Antonio Usuga also known as ‘Otoniel’ leader of the violent Clan del Golfo cartel. PHOTO: AP

Úsuga presided over the Gulf Clan, which terrorised much of northern Colombia to control major cocaine-smuggling routes. US authorities have called him one of the most dangerous drug traffickers on the planet, and he was Colombia’s most-wanted kingpin.

“With today’s guilty plea, the bloody reign of the most violent and significant Colombian narcotics trafficker since Pablo Escobar is over,” Brooklyn US Attorney Breon Peace said in a statement.

Defence lawyer Paul Nalven said Úsuga was “very remorseful” and portrayed him as “a child of the cycle of violence” that has wracked Colombia throughout his life. Úsuga, who has a fourth-grade education, was dragooned into guerrilla warfare at age 16, the attorney said.

After his arrest, Úsuga asked his cartel to stop attacking police, and he’s hoping something fruitful comes of the six-month cease-fire that recently took effect between President Gustavo Petro’s administration and five armed groups, including the Gulf Clan, in hopes of fostering a lasting peace.

“He’d like to see a better Colombia,” Nalven said.

The Gulf Clan, also known as the Gaitanist Self Defence Forces of Colombia, has thousands of military-garbed members who battle rival gangs, paramilitary groups, and Colombian authorities in order to keep a bloody hold on its turf near the Panama border, prosecutors said. Cocaine smuggling pays for it all – including, Úsuga admitted, through “taxes” that the group has charged on any cocaine produced, stored or transported through its territory.

Úsuga ordered the killing and torture of perceived enemies, offered bounties for slaying police and soldiers, and directed campaigns to go after them with military-grade weapons, according to prosecutors.

Nearly 50 pints of blood collected in donation drive

Rokiah Mahmud

Some 46 pints of blood were collected during a four-hour blood donation campaign organised by Jerudong Park Medical Centre (JPMC) at Annajat Complex in Beribi.

The campaign, which started at 10am and ended at 2pm, saw several blood donors roll their sleeves to support the campaign.

Apart from replenishing blood stocks, the campaign also served to assist people in need, especially those undergoing surgery and thalassaemia patients.

A donor gives blood at Annajat Complex. PHOTO: ROKIAH MAHMUD

A little effort goes a long way

Gretchen Reynolds

THE WASHINGTON POST – Lifting weights once a week for about 15 minutes, using six basic moves, could be all the resistance exercise most of us need to build and maintain full-body strength, according to a big study of muscles, might and practical time management.

The study followed almost 15,000 men and women, aged from 18 to 80, for up to about seven years and found that performing once weekly a stripped-down weight-training routine, focussed on machines available at almost any gym, increased people’s upper- and lower-body strength by as much as 60 per cent, whatever their age or gender.

The results suggest that a surprisingly small amount of weight training can produce outsize strength gains for most of us, but they also raise questions about why, then, so few of us ever lift at all.

THE BENEFITS OF WEIGHT TRAINING

Being strong is “obviously important” for health and long-term well-being, said an exercise scientist at Solent University in Southampton, England James Steele, who led the new study.

Strong people tend to live longer, for one thing. A 2022 review of studies about resistance training found that men and women who undertake strength training, no matter how infrequently, were about 15 per cent less likely to die prematurely than those who did not lift.

Resistance exercise also can reduce anxiety, aid in weight control, maintain and build muscle mass, improve thinking, control blood sugar, help prevent falls, and generally bulk up our metabolisms and moods, other studies show.

These effects often equal those of endurance activities, such as walking or cycling, and in some respects, especially related to muscles and metabolic health, may exceed them.

But many of us rarely lift much more than a finger. According to recent statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, fewer than a third of American adults say they regularly complete strength training at least two days a week, and the actual total is probably lower, because that number relies on people telling researchers about their exercise habits.

Knowing that people who rarely work out typically tell researchers they have too little time, Steele began wondering about how little resistance training might be enough for average exercisers.

Some past studies had suggested relatively small amounts of weekly lifting increase strength. But most of those studies had been brief and on a small scale, and had involved men, typically young.

Fortuitously, Steele heard about a large cache of weight-training data available from a health club chain headquartered in Europe specialising in weight training for everyone. Its programme consists exclusively of clients visiting once a week, performing six weight-training exercises under the supervision of a trainer, recording how much weight they lift, and going home.

The regimen did not vary from week to week or year to year, although the weights lifted would rise as people’s strength grew.

Now, Steele asked for and received anonymised data about 14,690 men and women, ranging from late teens to 80s in age, who belonged to the club and attended weekly for up to about seven years.

Each person’s weekly programme was consistent and simple. They completed one set each of six common exercises, in order: the chest press, pulldown, leg press, abdominal flexion, back extension, and either hip adduction or abduction (alternating these hip exercises from week to week), using machines available in most gyms.

During each exercise, people lifted the weight for 10 seconds and then returned the weight to its starting position during an additional 10 seconds, making sure to breathe throughout.

They repeated each set on an individual machine until they reached what researcher call “momentary failure”, meaning “they felt as if they could not immediately complete another repetition with proper form”, Steele said.

Trainers tracked people’s lifts and added weight once someone could easily complete more than about six repetitions of an exercise.

The entire routine, with about 20 seconds between one machine and the next, required about 15 to 20 minutes, depending on how many repetitions of each exercise someone managed, once a week.

A 15-MINUTE WEEKLY ROUTINE FOR MORE STRENGTH

This small time commitment resulted in substantial strength gains, Steele found, especially in the beginning. During the first year of lifting, most people’s strength grew by about 30 to 50 per cent, based on the weights they could manage during each workout.

After that, almost everyone’s gains levelled off, with most adding perhaps an additional 10 or 20 per cent, overall, to their muscular strength in subsequent years.

Wondering if this plateau might be avoided if people switched up and varied their weight workouts, Steele next checked an online database about competitive powerlifters, who presumably altered their training often. They, too, showed ample strength gains in the beginning and then a stark levelling off after a year or so.

These findings indicate there are limits to how strong we can become.

“Adaptation is likely finite,” said an associate professor of exercise science at the University of Mississippi Jeremy Loenneke, who studies muscles and strength and was not involved with this study. “Individuals can improve, but the amount they can improve will get smaller and smaller.”

At the same time, we probably can reach our full strength by working out just once a week, if we are consistent, the study suggests.

“I do think the single-set-to-failure training protocol – doing as many reps as possible with that load – would be adequate to induce changes in strength for the majority of the population,” Loenneke said.

We may, however, lose some potential benefits by aiming for the least possible lifting. The study did not look, for instance, at muscle mass, so we do not know if this routine would help us build or maintain bulk.

It’s also possible that some people (okay, some people like me) would become bored by the same precise workout performed every week for years.

“Maintaining motivation is important,” Loenneke said. “There might not be a physiologic reason why switching up a training programme would help break a plateau, but perhaps there is a psychological one.”

Still, for those of us entering the new year with a firm resolve to get stronger, these six exercises, once a week, represent a scientifically valid place to start.

“It’s not the only route” to greater strength, Steele said. “But most people are going to get to where they should be” by following this simple, minimalist routine.

Davis scores 21 points in return as Lakers defeat Spurs

LOS ANGELES (AP) – LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers are starting to get key pieces of their line-up back as he makes his push toward becoming the NBA’s all-time leading scorer.

Anthony Davis scored 21 points in his return from a right foot injury and Rui Hachimura added 12 in his Lakers debut as they bounced back from a rough loss to beat the San Antonio Spurs 113-104 yesterday.

Davis and Hachimura both came off the bench with 4:22 remaining in the first quarter.

“We were all figuring out ways we could mix and match. We just wanted to get guys in there,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “With AD coming back and Rui being new, we had to work through some kinks. When we got settled into the game, guys had different runs.”

Davis, who missed 20 games due to a stress injury suffered during the first half of a December 16 game at Denver, came in with 4:22 remaining in the first quarter.

He was seven of 15 from the field and also had 12 rebounds in 26 minutes for his 19th double-double in 26 games played this season.

“He makes the game look so easy and takes the pressure off us,” Ham said of Davis. “He was really being aggressive. I thought he was phenomenal.”

Davis was a little tentative his first couple minutes back on the floor.

He missed his first two shots from the floor and had one point in the first quarter, but hit four of his next five and scored nine in the second quarter.

The Lakers trailed 85-81 early in the fourth quarter before they took control with a 22-6 run over a span of nearly six minutes.

Los Angeles’ largest lead would be 14 late in the quarter as it swept the four-game season series.