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Project reaches out to provide food aid for Muslim converts

Lyna Mohamad

The Fathul Barakah 3.0 project continues to help underprivileged Muslim converts (Muallaf) in the Sultanate by providing food necessities in the run-up to the holy month of Ramadhan.

Funds collected from the public are used to make purchases, under the joint project by the Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA) through the Muallaf Development Division (Tarbiyah Muallaf), Islamic Da’wah Centre (PDI) and the converts associations nationwide.

The contributions were distributed to recipients in the Brunei-Muara District on March 22-23, a follow up to earlier distributions carried out through drive-throughs across all four districts.

PDI Director Haji Abdul Rajid bin Haji Mohd Salleh led the delegation yesterday, which included Tarbiyah Muallaf Head Dr Hajah Rohanita binti Haji Yaakub and a representative of the Nurul Islam Association committee.

The delegation first made its way to Kampong Bengkurong homes of Nur Amirah binti Haji Haswan and Muhammad Saiful Rizal bin Abdullah Nagang, before stopping by the Kampong Masin home of Siti Nurhalizah binti Abdullah.

ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show contributions being handed over to recipients. PHOTOS: LYNA MOHAMAD

Items were distributed to Siti Nooraishah binti Mohd Wan Adam in Kampong Sinarubai, and Kampong Bebuloh residents Hanafi bin Rozisham, Sandurin bin Abdullah, Hajah Fatimah binti Manang and Ahmad Ayyudi bin Abdullah.

The day also saw the director handing over to converts the Ramadhan Practices poster and waqaf mushaf contributed by Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali (UNISSA).

The Ramadhan Practices poster is an initiative by Tarbiyah Muallaf in collaboration with the PDI Research and Publication Section to guide converts in carrying out religious practices, aside from performing their fasting obligation.

The Fathul Barakah Project 3.0 serves as a platform for the public to contribute basic necessities to asnaf converts in helping them prepare for Ramadhan and fasting.

The project also aims to strengthen ties between converts and PDI members.

Britain pledging to respond to war, cost-of-living crisis

LONDON (AP) – Britain’s Treasury Chief is pledging to respond to Russia’s war in Ukraine and a cost-of-living crisis hitting working families when he delivered his spring budget statement yesterday.

Rishi Sunak didn’t offer details on specific policy proposals but said Britain would continue its “unwavering” support for Ukraine and seek to strengthen the domestic economy to counter the threat posed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“So when I talk about security, yes, I mean responding to the war in Ukraine,” Sunak said in remarks released ahead of the statement. “But I also mean the security of a faster-growing economy. The security of more resilient public finances. And security for working families as we help with the cost of living.”

Sunak has come under increasing pressure to announce further measures to help consumers facing what one economist has called “the biggest year-on-year fall in household incomes in a generation”. Utility bills are set to rise by more than 50 per cent in April, on top of a planned income tax increase and an acceleration of consumer prices for everything from fuel to food at the fastest pace in decades.

Some politicians also are calling for increased defense spending amid rising tensions between NATO and Russia due to the conflict.

Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak leaves 11 Downing Street for the House of Commons where he delivered the Spring Statement to the house in London. PHOTO: AP

The spring statement Sunak will deliver to the House of Commons is a midyear update on public finances. It often includes policy announcements that respond to new challenges facing the government.

The economic and security picture look much bleaker now than when Sunak released his budget in October.

Economists now estimate inflation will peak at close to nine per cent this year as the war in Ukraine boosts food and energy prices. That’s double the 4.4 per cent forecast government advisers made in October.

Accelerating inflation is also likely to curtail economic growth and squeeze government finances.

Some economists now suggest gross domestic product will grow less than one per cent next year, compared with the 2.1 per cent forecast by the Office of Budget Responsibility when Sunak released his fall budget.

Politicians and consumer advocates have suggested that the government could help ease the cost-of-living crisis by delaying a planned 1.25 per cent income tax increase set to take effect next month.

Other suggestions include cutting taxes on gasoline and diesel fuel, raising benefits for low-income households and doing more to help people pay utility bills that are set to rise by 54 per cent next month because of the soaring costs of natural gas.

Kicking the chemical habit

MOUGON, FRANCE (AFP) – In a field in western France, the small purple and white flowers quivering among tender shoots of wheat are a clue that this is not conventional single-crop farmland.

In fact, the whole area is part of scientific work to help farmers cut down on their use of pesticides, herbicides and chemical fertilisers.

“I felt that these products were dangerous,” said farmer David Bonneau as he hunched over the little wildflowers – veronica and hickweed. And “the general public is asking for reductions”.

One of his experimental plots is treated the standard way, with chemical weedkiller; another he weeds mechanically with a harrow whose teeth tear up the wild plants; while a third will not be treated at all.

He is part of a project involving 400 farms and around 40 villages in the Deux-Sevres region of western France, where scientists are experimenting with different techniques to cut pollution.

Researchers from the French research agency CNRS support volunteer farmers to reduce the use of pesticides – probable sources of cancer and fatal to birds – as well as water-polluting chemical fertilisers, the prices of which are exploding.

Farmer David Bonneau prepares an insecticide before spraying it in a field in Mougon, France. PHOTOS: AFP
The stiches delimiting pesticide-treated plots from untreated ones in an experimental field in Mougon

While Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has raised the spectre of food shortages, policymakers in Europe should not waver in their commitment to green agriculture, experts said.

And protecting Nature, a central task of biodiversity negotiations currently taking place in Geneva, is also a matter of safeguarding the water we drink, the food we eat and the air we breathe.

“It’s important from a political point of view to show long-term engagement,” head of farming systems research at ETH University of Zurich Robert Finger said.

And greener could even mean more profitable.

“In many parts of the world, we are at a point where fertiliser use is very inefficient in terms of additional yield,” he said, referring to Europe and parts of Asia.

Excessive use of fertilisers or pesticides can affect small and large crops.

Meanwhile, researcher at the World Vegetable Centre Pepijn Schreinemachers said farmers in countries such as Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia were misusing pesticides with potentially harmful consequences.

“It is important to realise that it is farmers themselves most affected by the misuse of agrochemicals,” he said. This could be using too much of a chemical, unsafe techniques or the use of the wrong products.

“Every farmer can share details about pesticide-poisoning incidents they have experienced, ranging from skin rashes to vomiting and unconsciousness. Still, most farmers strongly believe that pesticides are necessary for farm production.”

So how can farmers be persuaded to change?

Robert Finger believes farming needs to have a middle way, between full organic farming and chemical-heavy conventional agriculture.

“The most important point is that the farmers have an option to do something different,” he said.

Clear long-term public policies should help support the development of new technologies, as well as investment in pesticide-free production and techniques like growing legumes among crops to reduce the need for fertilisers.

The costs of pesticides and fertilisers should properly reflect the damage they can do, he said.

And in regions where “highly toxic” products are not being used safely, Schreinemachers said they should be banned outright, or heavily taxed to discourage use, while encouraging alternatives like biopesticides.

To help farmers overcome worries about making a switch, CNRS researchers are considering a mutual fund which would compensate them in the event of losses linked to the reduction of synthetic fertilisers and pesticides, a model that already exists in Italy.

David Bonneau has seen savings so far on the costs of buying weedkiller and equipment.

When he made his first attempts at ditching the chemicals, he used his neighbour’s machinery. Since then, a more efficient device has been purchased by the agricultural cooperative.

But the proof will come at harvest time, when researchers will measure the wheat yields of each of the plots to find out the impact of the herbicide reduction.

In Deux-Sevres, “we have demonstrated that conventional farmers can reduce nitrogen and pesticides by a third without loss of yield, while increasing their income because they lower their costs”, CNRS Research Director Vincent Bretagnolle said.

But changing behaviour long-term is another challenge.

“Even the farmers who participated in the experiment and saw the results with their own eyes did not noticeably change their practices,” Bretagnolle said.

BuzzFeed cutting jobs, top editors leaving news division

AP – BuzzFeed is shrinking and shifting the focus of its Pulitzer prize-winning news division as the digital media company, best known for its lighthearted lists and quizzes, strives to increase its profitability.

The New York-based company is offering voluntary buyouts in its high-profile, 100-person newsroom and some top editors are leaving.

They include, Editor in Chief of BuzzFeed News Mark Schoofs, and Deputy Editor in Chief Tom Namako, who announced a move to NBC News Digital on Tuesday. Ariel Kaminer, the Executive Editor for Investigations, is also leaving.

BuzzFeed News is unprofitable but has won awards, including its first Pulitzer last year, and its staff has been regularly poached by traditional news organisations.

BuzzFeed spokesman Matt Mittenthal said about 35 people were eligible for the buyouts, but the company doesn’t expect all of them to take one. Buyouts will be offered to news staffers on the investigations, inequality, politics and science teams, as BuzzFeed focusses more on big breaking news and lighter content.

Beyond the newsroom buyouts, the company also said it is cutting 1.7 per cent of its staff. In a January filing with securities regulators, Buzzfeed said it had 1,524 US and international employees, so the cuts would amount to roughly 25 people.

The entrance to BuzzFeed in New York. PHOTO: AP

Crunch time for Portugal and Italy in play-offs

PARIS (AFP) – The World Cup hopes of the last two European champions are on a knife edge with Portugal and Italy on a collision course in decisive qualifying play-offs over the next week.

A potential clash in Porto between the Euro 2016 winners, captained by Cristiano Ronaldo, and an Italy team who succeeded them as continental champions last year is a mouth-watering prospect.

However, both must first come through semi-finals early tomorrow (3.45am Brunei time) that are far from foregone conclusions, with Portugal hosting Turkey and Italy facing North Macedonia.

Failure to reach this year’s World Cup would be a catastrophe for the Azzurri, who had gone to every finals since 1958 until missing out in 2018 when they lost a play-off to Sweden.

It would be all the more remarkable given that they bounced back from that under Roberto Mancini to win Euro 2020 while on a world record 37-game unbeaten run.

Yet four draws in their last five World Cup qualifiers last autumn saw them finish second in their group to Switzerland, and now they must come through these two one-off ties to secure a place in the April 1 draw in Doha. “Our goal is to win the World Cup, and to win the World Cup we have to win these two matches. There’s nothing else to say,” Mancini said on Monday.

Portugal’s national football team captain Cristiano Ronaldo takes part in a training session at the Cidade do Futebol training camp in Oeiras, outside Lisbon. PHOTO: AFP

Italy host North Macedonia in Palermo, and they will know not to take the Balkan nation of two million people lightly.

After all, they beat Germany away in qualifying last year before appearing at their first major tournament at Euro 2020, and they also held Italy to a damaging draw in Turin in qualifying for the last World Cup.

“We are not going to Italy as tourists, but to outplay (them) and to win,” said coach Bobi Milevski, who is aiming to take North Macedonia – born in 1991 out of the break-up of Yugoslavia – to their first World Cup.

Portugal skipper Ronaldo will be 41 come 2026, so Qatar surely represents his last chance to win the World Cup. Missing out altogether is unthinkable for the all-time top scorer in international football with 115 goals.

“We know the road will not be easy and we have full respect for our opponents, who share the same objective as us. But together we will fight to take Portugal where we belong,” Ronaldo posted on Instagram this week.

Portugal, who are ranked eighth in the world, two places behind Italy, must beat Turkey in Porto to reach the play-off final, in which they would have home advantage.

However, their two first-choice centre-backs have been ruled out – Manchester City’s Ruben Dias succumbed to injury before 39-year-old veteran Pepe tested positive for coronavirus.

Three World Cup berths from Europe remain up for grabs, with 10 teams led by holders France having already qualified.

The play-offs were meant to feature 12 teams, split into three separate paths, but they have been impacted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, with both of those countries initially due to take part.

Hosts of the 2018 World Cup, Russia were excluded after being suspended by FIFA and UEFA until further notice.

That meant Poland getting a walkover to a final against either 2018 quarter-finalists Sweden or the Czech Republic, who meet in Solna.

Ukraine were due to face Scotland in Glasgow, but that match has been postponed until June.

Therefor, whoever wins tonight’s clash between Wales and Austria in Cardiff will also have to wait until June for their play-off final.

No more quarantine for air travellers arriving in Indonesia

JAKARTA (THE STRAITS TIMES/ANN) – International air travellers arriving in Indonesia no longer have to serve quarantine, as Covid-19 cases trend downwards around the vast archipelago.

“The government decided to take several measures to ease restrictions. International travellers arriving in all airports across Indonesia no longer need to serve quarantine,” President Joko Widodo said in a speech yesterday.

Travellers will still need to do a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test upon arrival in Indonesia, Widodo added, without saying if pre-departure test would continue to be
a requirement.

Previously, travellers from overseas who were fully vaccinated or had a booster shot must serve a one-day quarantine, while those who were partially vaccinated served seven days of quarantine.

Yesterday’s announcement came after a successful two-week trial of quarantine-free travel for visitors arriving on the main tourist islands of Bali, Batam and Bintan.

Currently, international arrivals by air are only allowed at the Soekarno-Hatta main international airport outside Jakarta and six other airports: Juanda in East Java; Ngurah Rai in Bali, Hang Nadim in Batam; Raja Haji Fisabilillah in Tanjung Pinang; Sam Ratulangi in Manado and Zainuddin Abdul Madjid in Central Lombok.

Travellers will still need to do a polymerase chain reaction test upon arrival in Indonesia. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Other than the seven airports, overseas travellers may arrive in Indonesia by sea only via Bali, Batam, Tanjung Pinang, Nunukan in North Kalimantan, and by land via Entikong in West Kalimantan and Motaain in Nusa Tenggara Timur.

Other entry points have temporarily been closed because of the pandemic.

Widodo did not say yesterday if the lifting of quarantine also applied to land and sea travellers.

In his speech, he also said Indonesians who have had their booster shot can go on their annual Hari Raya home trips this year.

Despite a ban on such trips in the past two years, millions of people had travelled across the vast archipelago during the festive period, causing a surge in Covid-19 cases.

Breaking-of-fast gatherings and Hari Raya open house gatherings are banned for civil servants and high-ranking officials this year, Widodo added. Last year, the ban was for everyone.

Indonesia’s Covid-19 infection and death numbers have been on a decline in recent weeks. It has reported 5.98 million cases so far, with 6,376 new infections yesterday, down from 7,464 the day before.

The authorities said yesterday there were 159 deaths in the past 24 hours – down from 170 on Tuesday – bringing the total death tally to 154,221.

At the peak of the Omicron wave in the third week of February, daily new cases were reported to be above 30,000 and daily deaths above 300.

Indonesia has been praised for accelerating its vaccine roll-out despite the vast geographical challenge.

It has fully vaccinated 75 per cent of its eligible population. Some 94 per cent of the people had received the first shot as at March 22, placing Indonesia among the world’s top five countries with the highest number of vaccinations.

The lucky star of a cultural revolution

Daniel Lim

Very rarely does a series or form of media revolutionise and shape a culture, not only in its place of origin but also across the world.

Kagami Yoshimizu’s Lucky Star could be argued to be one of them, having provided a platform for the otaku culture before it became a worldwide phenomenon.

Many terms such as Tsundere, to the myriad of hotspots and sites that otakus around the world adore, such as Akihabara, can trace its roots back to the series, first published in the early 2000s.

While many factors went into the success of the otaku – a Japanese word that refers to people with a passion for a certain interest, particularly towards anime and manga – Lucky Star was a pinnacle platform in the global spread of the culture.

It had an impact on the anime scene, with its influence is still felt to this day.

Lucky Star is a slice-of-life story of stereotypical everyday at school, following Konata Izumi, who constantly skips her schoolwork to watch anime, play video games and read manga.

Lucky Star’s main and side characters. PHOTO: KYOTO ANIMATION

She is accompanied by her three friends – Kagami Hirragi, whose character traits form the basis of foundation of being a Tsundere, (which refers to a person who has a cold expression on the outside but is friendly on the inside), airhead little sister Tsukasa Hiiragi, and the mature but also slightly clumsy Miyuki Takara – each providing a unique perspective of those on the outside of the otaku culture. Each character is relatable, whether one is an otaku, only slightly familiar with the culture or not at all.

Lucky Star set itself apart from other school life anime at the time by not being afraid to make homage and references to popular culture, including other manga, anime and even tokusatsu, otherwise known as Power Rangers of Japan. Lucky Star in its heyday was the ultimate fan-service anime.

Part of the charm of Lucky Star is spotting these references. For those outside the loop it was also a moment to ponder on the weirdness that just occurred in the episode.

There are references to older hits such such as Initial D with an impromptu racing scene and more overt fourth wall-breaking homages to other anime like The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya (also a school life series) where the protagonists of both anime series were played by the same voice actress.

Alongside showcasing the otaku culture of the day, Lucky Star also explores various cultural hotspots – places such as Akihabara and its storefronts supporting the otaku culture were placed front and centre, cementing them as must-visit locations for otakus.

Lucky Star began as a manga before being adapted into an anime by Kyoto Animation, which received a positive response, staying true to the original material with all its over-exaggerated references recreated by the studio.

The work that went into the adaptation was also a turning point for the studio, as alongside the previous success of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya, Lucky Star catapulted Kyoto Animation as ‘a studio to watch’. It later released other hits such as the light music-based K-On! to Free!.

While the manga itself is close to 20 years old at this point, Lucky Star still stands as one of the important animes to watch, not just to its significance in the growth of anime and otaku culture, but also because it offers a glimpse back in time to the early days of before to the worldwide explosion of popularity of all things otaku.

Students help with food distribution

Azlan Othman

Fifty Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali (UNISSA) students stepped forward to assist youth volunteers with food ration distribution at the Bandar Seri Begawan Youth Centre last week.

The initiative – carried out by UNISSA through the Community Services Division, Co-Curriculum Unit, Knowledge and Language Upgrading Centre – provides students with valuable experiences, while at the same time allowing to cultivate positive values and strengthen relations.

The initiative will continue to be held weekly to embed in students a caring nature.

ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show UNISSA students assisting at the Youth Centre in the capital. PHOTOS: AZLAN OTHMAN

Plastic pollution cuts power in DR Congo

BUKAVU, DR CONGO (AFP) – Among rolling hills around the southern tip of majestic Lake Kivu, huge layers of plastic waste ride the water and block the turbines of the largest hydroelectric plant in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Ruzizi dam is polluted by thousands of bottles, cans and other objects thrown into the lake, which stretches 90 kilometres along the border between DR Congo and Rwanda.

“Since the lake flows towards the Ruzizi River, the waste thrown into it comes here little by little,” production manager at the dam’s power station Lievin Chizungu told AFP.

The mountainous terrain and rainy climate around lakeside Bukavu, capital of South Kivu province, do not help.

“The rainwater carries the waste into the lake and then into the river,” engineer for the national electricity company (SNEL) in south Kivu Jovy Mulemangabo told AFP.

Chizungu said piles of waste can “reach a depth of 14 metres”. Divers clean the river bed to keep debris from clogging the turbines. If waste gets trapped, towns in the area are deprived of power.

Other employees clean the surface, using barges.

“I have been doing this job for 13 years,” Byunanine Mubalama told AFP. “Every day there is garbage I have to clean up.”

Ruzizi 1 hydroelectric plant workers take an inspection tour of the Ruzizi River in Bukavu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. PHOTO: AFP

But it is not enough. One of the four units in the plant was damaged by debris at the end of January, and it is still down.

“The impact is huge. We have a deficit of 6.3 megawatts out of 30 total MW that we must produce not only for South Kivu, but also for neighbouring North Kivu province and for Burundi,” Chizungu said.

Garbage also caused an alternator to fail at the Ruzizi 2 power plant about 25 kilometres south of Bukavu. With the damage at both plants, they are 20 MW short, Chizungu said.

This has provoked “many power outages in Bukavu and Uvira”.

Nicole Menemene, 29, collects plastic waste on the lake’s shores to make baskets, flowerpots, stools and nightstands.

She runs a private company called Plastycor that transforms trash into “beautiful and useful” objects.

“We do the work by hand,” Menemene said.

The company has 10 employees, but her goal is to “industrialise” their work. With her project and other local efforts, Menemene hopes to see a “90 per cent reduction of Lake Kivu’s pollution”.

Education is a crucial first step in reducing the lake’s plastic pileup, Chizungu said.

“First, we have to teach people that they cannot dump waste in the lake,” he said, adding that authorities should crack down on people tossing garbage in the waters.

But for some local residents, it is not so simple.

“Our houses are crammed together on small plots. There is no way to manage garbage,” Mathilde Binja said. “I have no choice but to throw it into Kawa river, which dumps into the lake.”

The city does offer garbage collection and disposal services for USD3 to USD5 per month, director of Bukavu Household Waste Management Program (PGDM) Malgache Malyanga told AFP.

“Many inhabitants prefer to throw their garbage out on the road at night or in the lake,” Malyanga said.

This could be either from ignorance or lack of funds to pay for waste removal services, he added.

To combat the plague of plastic waste filling the world’s lakes, oceans and lands, the United Nations (UN) launched negotiations in March in Kenya for a global treaty against plastic pollution.

E Africa’s hunger crisis needs global action: Oxfam

KAMPALA, UGANDA (AP) – Widespread hunger across East Africa could become “a catastrophe” without an injection of funds to the region’s most vulnerable communities, the international aid group Oxfam warned on Tuesday.

An estimated 13 million people are facing severe hunger in the Horn of Africa as a result of persistent drought conditions, according to the United Nations (UN).

Only three per cent of the needed USD6 billion has been raised for food assistance amid “competing priorities,” as the world’s attention has focussed on the humanitarian crisis in the war in Ukraine, Oxfam International Executive Director Gabriela Bucher said in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.

“The brutal truth is that at the moment East Africa is not on the global agenda,” said Bucher.

The world risks “ignoring one of the greatest crises,” she said. “2022 cannot be the year in which hundreds of thousands die from an unavoidable hunger crisis in East Africa because we couldn’t get this into the agenda.”

Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya face the driest conditions recorded since 1981, the UN World Food Program reported in February. More forecasts of below-average rainfall threaten to worsen conditions in the coming months, the agency warned.

Herders supply water from a borehole to give to their camels near Kuruti, in Garissa County, Kenya. Aid agency Oxfam International warned that widespread hunger across East Africa could become ‘a catastrophe’ without an injection of funds to the region’s most vulnerable communities. PHOTO: AP

Malnutrition rates are high in the region and drought conditions are affecting pastoral and farming communities.

While it “feels like a world on fire,” donors “don’t have to choose. The human rights and humanitarian needs of all people must be met,” said Bucher. “Our world is more than capable of doing so.”

Somalia is particularly vulnerable because it faces sporadic violence and there is concern the situation could deteriorate. Hundreds of thousands of Somalis have already fled their homes in search of help.

About 250,000 people in Somalia died from hunger in 2011, when the UN declared a famine in some parts of the country. Half of them were children.

Bucher called for “a life-saving” cash injection to support local responders to cope with the impact of drought conditions.

“A life in Somalia is equal to the life of anyone else in the world,” she said.