Wednesday, December 4, 2024
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Cuba slaps new tax on food sales as economic woes hit hard

HAVANA (AFP) – Cuba on Saturday announced a new 10-per-cent tax on retail food sales, as the country endures economic woes marked by rampant inflation.

The levy taking effect today will target self-employed people and small- and medium-sized companies in the retail food sector, said the decree published in the official government gazette. These sales were only allowed starting in August of last year as part of reforms in the communist run island.

Cuban economist Pedro Monreal wrote on Twitter that the new tax will probably have two effects: higher food prices and more inequality among the Cuban people.

Monreal said it will hurt “lower income households that spend a relatively higher percentage of their resources on food”.

Monetary reforms applied last year caused prices of goods and services to shoot up in Cuba, mainly those of food. Inflation last year came in at 70 per cent.

People have to wait in long lines for scarce supplies of food and medicine.

Cuba imports 80 per cent of the food it consumes.

Its purchases have declined drastically due to a shortage of hard currency and because of international transport problems stemming from the COVID pandemic.

A man with a banana cart in Havana, Cuba. PHOTO: AFP

Royalty joins Brunei’s U-16 football team

Brunei Darussalam under-16, under-19 and under-23 football teams have begun preparations ahead of upcoming major competitions sanctioned by the Asean Football Federation (AFF) for the respective age groups this year.

Yang Teramat Mulia Pengiran Muda ‘Abdul Muntaqim ibni Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Muda Mahkota Pengiran Muda Haji Al-Muhtadee Billah has been selected in the national under-16 team.

Also making the squad are Yang Amat Mulia Pengiran Anak ‘Abdul Haseeb bin Pengiran Maharaja Setia Laila Diraja Sahibul Irshad Pengiran Anak Haji Abdul Rahim and Pengiran Anak ‘Abdul Muta’ali Haziq Hamidullah bin Pengiran Anak Haji Abdul ‘Ali Yil-Kabier.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

380 new COVID-19 cases detected

Some 374 local and six imported cases were recorded in the Sultanate yesterday, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 17,784, a Ministry of Health statement said.

The number of recoveries totals 16,155 after 49 cases recovered. The country currently has 1,527 active cases. The bed occupancy rate at isolation centres nationwide is at 22.6 per cent.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

Mukim Lamunin gets new penghulu

Residents from Mukim Lamunin cast their votes via a drive-through to elect the penghulu of Mukim Lamunin at the Balai Raya Kampong Lamunin in Tutong District yesterday.

The sole candidate for Penghulu Mukim Lamunin was 55-year-old Mohd Jaafar bin Haji Tinggal who was a member of the Consultative Council of Kampong Lamunin.

Of the 285 votes, 280 residents voted for Mohd Jaafar, four voted against while one vote was disqualified.           

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

Joe Rogan apologises for racial slur after video surfaces

NEW YORK (AP) – Spotify’s popular United States (US) podcaster Joe Rogan apologised Saturday after a video compilation surfaced that showed him using a racial slur in clips of episodes over a 12-year span.

The mea culpa came after Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter India.Arie posted the compilation on Instagram and announced that she was removing her music from Spotify’s streaming service because of it.

Spotify is facing growing discontent from artists over Rogan’s podcast, which it reportedly paid more than USD100 million to license. Last month, musician Neil Young removed his music over concerns that Rogan was magnifying vaccine scepticism.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

UK papers herald future ‘Queen Camilla’

London (AFP) – Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II has announced that she wants daughter-in-law Camilla to hold the role of queen consort once her son Charles ascends to the throne, in a major statement timed to mark her unprecedented seventieth jubilee.

The move cemented a remarkable journey to public acceptance for Camilla, after being vilified for her role in the break-up of Charles’ marriage to Princess Diana – and shows that the Queen is planning for the future after
her death.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

Philippines’ election campaign season to kick off

MANILA (AFP) – Philippine election candidates will hit the hustings tomorrow, the official start of campaigning, with the son and namesake of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos leading the presidential race as he seeks the ultimate revival of the family brand.

Political scions, celebrities and ex-convicts are among the contenders vying for more than 18,000 posts in the May 9 polls, with most interest on the contest to succeed authoritarian firebrand Rodrigo Duterte, whose six-year presidency has been marked by foul-mouthed tirades and a deadly drug war.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

Morocco in shock after tragic death of ‘little Rayan’

IGHRANE, MAROC (AFP) – Morocco was in shock yesterday after emergency crews found a five-year-old boy dead at the bottom of a well in a tragic end to a painstaking five-day rescue operation that gripped the nation and the world.

The ordeal of “little Rayan” since he fell down the well last Tuesday afternoon gained global attention and sparked an outpouring of sympathy online, with the Arabic hashtag #SaveRayan trending.

Throughout the operation to extricate him from the bottom of the 32-metre well shaft, authorities had cautioned that they did not know whether he was alive.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin

Mass swarm of dead fish in Atlantic prompts European inquiry

PARIS (AP) – France and the European Union (EU) are investigating why a massive swarm of dead fish was released by a huge trawler in the Atlantic Ocean off France, after an environmental group released dramatic video and photos of the incident.

The images by the group Sea Shepherd show a blanket of dead blue whiting fish floating on the surface of the Bay of Biscay, off the coast of southwest France. The group estimates it held some 100,000 dead fish.

More details on Monday’s Borneo Bulletin