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464 new COVID-19 cases in Singapore

SINGAPORE (CNA) – Singapore reported 464 new COVID-19 cases as of noon yesterday, including 285 imported infections.

There were no fatalities, with the country’s death toll remaining at 829, according to the latest infection statistics on the Ministry of Health’s (MOH) website.

Yesterday’s case count was up from the 429 reported on Sunday.

Among the new cases reported yesterday, 179 were locally transmitted, comprising 177 in the community and two in migrant worker’s dormitories.

One hundred and eighty-seven new Omicron infections were confirmed yesterday, comprising 183 imported cases and four local cases.

The daily COVID-19 cases and new confirmed Omicron cases are presented as two separate sets of data on MOH’s website.

The weekly infection growth rate yesterday was 0.95, up from Sunday’s 0.92. This refers to the ratio of community cases for the past week over the week before.

This is the 10th consecutive day the weekly infection growth rate has increased.

The rate has remained below one since November 13, indicating that the number of new weekly COVID-19 cases is falling.

As of yesterday, Singapore has recorded 280,754 COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic.

How to help your child know when to ‘tattle’

Kelly Hoover Greenway

THE WASHINGTON POST – Recently, my six and 10-year-old sons were playing basketball in our driveway.

While this should have been time for me to enjoy a peaceful, quiet house, my younger child soon came barreling through the front door with an urgent question.

“Mom, is it true? Do snitches really get stitches?!”

It ends up, his brother learned this refrain not from another kid, but from a counsellor at his summer camp, and of course passed it along to his brother.

My older son explained, when I pressed him, that the counsellor encouraged campers to work things out among themselves instead of reporting all their skirmishes to an adult.

This left me feeling rather torn.

I agree that children must learn how to handle peer conflict in mature ways. However, this idea that reporting information to an adult automatically equates to “snitching” or being a “tattletale” dismisses the important role trusted grown-ups can play in helping kids and teens navigate complicated situations.

No, we don’t want our children running to us every time they feel slighted or want to get a peer (or sibling) in trouble.

But when we infer that speaking up will jeopardise their relationships with their friends, we risk losing a vital line of communication between parent and child- one that becomes even more important as they grow older.

It’s a tricky issue to navigate for both kids and their caregivers, due in no small part to our tendency to send mixed messages with regard to this topic. When our children are young we teach them the rules: no hitting, no biting, treat others the way you want to be treated.

But as soon as they report that someone else isn’t playing by those rules we said, “No one likesa tattletale.”

This does not elicit trust from our little ones.

“It’s important for parents and caregivers to understand that children want support, but (once they start school) they are now part of the bigger world, so they don’t want to break those social contracts either,” said Los Angeles-based parenting coach and early childhood consultant Joshua Castillo. If we want our kids to feel safe giving us information, it’s crucial we establish early on what our help will look like when they do.

“Help doesn’t mean the adult is going to save you. Your role is to help the kid think it through and understand their options (for problem-solving),” Castillo said.

She called this “deconstructing the context” and urges parents to resist pitting one child against another by asking things like, “Who made you feel bad?”

Instead, she suggests going back to the initial point of connection (what they were doing at the time) and then figure out where the disconnect (not the “wrong”) occurred.

“If your kids get accustomed to you saying, ‘I can see that situation got tricky. Let’s play it back. How did it all start?’ they will give you more details to work with.”

In doing this, she explained children won’t feel scared to confide in you because you’ve coached them early on to see you as a reliable source.

As our children grow so do their bonds with friends, which can make the stakes higher for revealing information to the grown-ups in their life. Pinkie promises, being sworn to secrecy, and the threat of “stitches” all lead to an internal conflict: to tell or not to tell?

Judging by the statistics, when it comes to peer conflict such as bullying, most of our children are choosing not to talk. Executive Director for American Society for the Positive Care of Children (SPCC) Genevieve Rivera reported that only a tiny percentage of children who are being bullied tell their caregivers. Somewhat surprisingly though, young people cite fear of parental repercussions, not necessarily those of their friends, as one of the main reasons they don’t want to share their struggles.

Rivera noted that children (yes, even the ones who are being bullied) worry they’ll have their phone taken away or be told they can’t play with a particular person anymore.

Because of this, she said caregivers must “be the calm in the chaos” if their children tell them about bullying or other upsetting behaviors taking place.

Castillo agreed, noting that the challenging situations our kids find themselves in may repeat – with the same or different characters – and we should be honest about that without letting our emotions take over or making anyone else a villain.

“Even if your kid had a really hard experience I’d say, ‘So this might come up again, let’s talk it through’.“

Of course, bullying isn’t the only issue young people feel nervous reporting to grown-ups.
Castillo cited a time when her daughter’s friend came out to her daughter, but told her not to tell anyone. She explained to her daughter, “Your friend told you that because it’s their way of saying, ‘I don’t want other people to know because this is so delicate,’ and she doesn’t know if you have a parent who is going to run and tell everyone.”

She stated parents can secure for their children how they will show up for this kind of information by letting them know, “I’m a parent who is going to talk it through with you, and we’ll wonder, we’ll ask questions together, and maybe I’ll give you some strategies to help support your friend, but that’s it. I’m not the kind of grown-up who is going to talk.”

Deviating from this, she cautions, may result in your child “not signing a higher-level contract with you”.

Kids know when there’s a parent revealing information that has been deemed private among their peers. I saw this firsthand when I asked my son about an issue at school he didn’t think I knew about. “When there’s a leak,” Castillo warned, “everyone becomes petrified of sharing.

And your kid is going to FBI background check you to make sure you aren’t the one responsible.”

One strategy Castillo recommended for maintaining open lines of communication while also respecting your child’s need for privacy is to create an “idea jar” where everyone in the family writes down tricky situations they’d like to discuss.

No one gives specific names or whether a situation is real or hypothetical, but it gives the family a chance to sit down together, discuss, and play out a number of different scenarios in which support might be needed.

It’s entirely possible to imagine a relationship with our kids where this topic isn’t binary: either they talk to us or they solve issues on their own.

If we can remember our role is to support, not solve, and we show up as reliable, trustworthy sources, then perhaps a new scenario can emerge – one where snitches no longer need to get stitches.

Race heats up in quest for Formula 1’s new owner

BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND (CNA) – The Formula One duel between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen was resolved in sensational – and controversial – style on the final lap of the last race of 2021.

The Dutch driver snatched victory and the world title from his British rival at the end of what was widely considered one of the best seasons in the sport’s history.

It seems clear from the close finish that Formula One is in rude health on the track. It is also attracting large viewing figures – which could in turn attract fresh financial interest in owning the sport.

Currently at the wheel is the US media giant Liberty Media, which also has interests in baseball, broadcasting, film production and sport management.

It bought Formula One for USD4.6 billion in 2017 from the previous owners, CVC Capital Partners.

But just two years later, in 2019, there were rumours that Liberty was already considering selling up.

The rumours, denied by Liberty, came amid concerns about falling fan numbers and the challenge of increasing the appeal of Formula One to a younger audience.

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain in the lead at the start of the Formula One Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on December 12, 2021. PHOTO: AP

NEW-FOUND INTEREST

After a recent decline in TV audience figures (they dropped from 1.9 billion to 1.5 billion from 2019 to 2020), Formula One’s profile has been significantly enhanced.

During the 2021 season, the global TV audience for the first nine races increased by 36 per cent compared to 2019.

And in 2020 there was a 99 per cent increase in social media engagements recorded across Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube – the largest increase for any professional sport, and a clear indication that younger fans were showing interest. This marked increase in popularity – especially in the US – is likely to be at least in part down to the success of the Netflix documentary series Drive to Survive, which has become one of the streaming giant’s most-watched shows.

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings also counts himself a fan of Formula One, suggesting that if Liberty were considering selling, he would be willing to make an offer.

He explained in an interview in September, “A few years back, the Formula 1 rights were sold. At that time we were not among the bidders, but today we would definitely consider that now.”

There may be other jostling for position too, not least the bidders who lost out to Liberty five years ago.

That bid was submitted by Qatar (through the Qatari Sports Investment fund, a part of the country’s sovereign wealth fund) in partnership with the American billionaire Stephen Ross, who owns the Miami Dolphins American football team.

POLE POSITION?

Far from losing their appetite for Formula One after they lost out to Liberty, both parties are now firmly embedded in the sport. Qatar staged its first race in November 2021, and has signed up for nine more (with a break in 2022 while it hosts the Fifa World Cup).

Next season will also see the first Miami Grand Prix in May, which will be held at the Miami International Autodrome. The Floridian track weaves around the Hard Rock Stadium’s real estate, which just happens to be the home of the Miami Dolphins. So could Qatar, Ross or Netflix be tempted to pounce? Certainly the numbers look enticing too.

Earlier this year Liberty’s shares were reported to be up 113 per cent since they acquired the sport, and revenue was up at USD180 million for the first quarter of 2021, from just USD39 million in 2020.

Confidence in the financial value of the sport is high with McLaren Racing’s CEO Zak Brown recently pointing out, “Liberty are sports investors in amongst investing in lots of businesses … they could really uncork the potential value of the sport.”

Back in 2020, Bernie Ecclestone, former chief executive of CVC’s Formula One Group, had cautioned that a business that gives the impression that it is doing well might be creating the right climate for a profitable sale. He said, “I would do the same if I wanted to sell.”

Whether they do intend to sell after one of Formula One’s most exciting seasons in recent years remains to be seen. Interest is up, viewing figures are up, and the start of the 2022 season is already an enticing prospect.

From Ice Prince to Frog Princess

BEIJING (AFP) – The biggest names in winter sports will descend on the Chinese capital for the Beijing Winter Olympics from February 4-20.

With today marking one month until the opening ceremony, AFP Sport highlights five stars who could light up the Winter Games.

The 27-year-old ‘Ice Prince’, who is aiming to complete a hat-trick of figure-skating gold medals, had his Olympic preparations hampered by an ankle injury but appeared fit again as he dazzled at his season’s debut at Japan’s national championships last month.

Hanyu is followed everywhere by screaming fans who shower the ice after his routines with Winnie the Pooh toys.

Although the Games will have only domestic spectators, Hanyu’s importance to the Games is such that Chinese authorities have promised that the superstar will still receive plenty of support.

Born in California and having represented the United States (US) before switching to China, Gu looks destined to be one of the faces of the Games.

Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu. PHOTO: AP

Just 18, the freeskier is also a model and grade-A student. Known as Gu Ailing in China, her father is American and mother Chinese. She has been enthusiastically embraced in China, with the country’s media affectionately dubbing her ‘Frog Princess’ after she wore a
green helmet.

The American star, who started out aged two skiing down her family’s driveway, is pursuing a third consecutive gold in slalom and had been in sparkling form in the build-up to Beijing.

The 26-year-old – who won the overall women’s World Cup title for three straight years to 2019 – late last month said that she had tested positive for Covid-19 but despite that setback is still expected to make it to the Chinese capital.

Born in the US to Korean parents, Kim lit up the Pyeongchang Games in 2018 when aged just 17.

The snowboarder swept to halfpipe gold in South Korea, roared on by the host nation’s spectators who adopted her as their own and chanted her name.

She now admits that she struggled with the fame and attention that arrived at such a young age, telling The New York Times in December, “I just felt like everyone is out to get me or something.” The trailblazing American snowboarder is yet to seal qualification for the Games, but assuming he does, it will almost certainly be his last Olympics and he will want to go out in style.

Now a relative veteran at 35, White has won three Olympic halfpipe golds and been an icon in men’s snowboarding for two decades since bursting onto the scene as a freckly teenager.

He has also won a record 15 golds at the X Games, two of them in skateboarding.

… and one who won’t be there

The Tongan set pulses racing when he peeled off and oiled up for the opening ceremony of the Rio 2016 Olympics, appeared shirtless again as temperatures plunged in Pyeongchang two years later, and pulled off the same stunt at Tokyo six months ago. But after competing in freestyle cross country skiing at the 2018 Winter Games – coming 114th but avoiding the wooden spoon – he is not expected to take part in Beijing.

Doa Kesyukuran commemmorates TAP’s 29th anniversary

Tabung Amanah Pekerja (TAP) held a virtual Doa Kesyukuran ceremony in conjunction with its 29th anniversary yesterday.

Minister of Culture, Youth and Sports Major General (Rtd) Dato Paduka Seri Haji Aminuddin Ihsan bin Pehin Orang Kaya Saiful Mulok Dato Seri Paduka Haji Abidin as the Chairman of the TAP Board attended.

The event commenced with the recitation of Surah Yaasiin and Tahlil followed by Doa Kesyukuran led by Haji Muhammad Akhimullah bin Haji Abu Bakar. The event concluded with the Doa seeking protection from the COVID-19 pandemic.

TAP board members, members of TAP’s Investment Panel, Audit Committee, Human Resource Policy Committee and Risk Management Committee as well as officers and staff of TAP were also present.

Minister of Culture, Youth and Sports Major General (Rtd) Dato Paduka Seri Haji Aminuddin Ihsan bin Pehin Orang Kaya Saiful Mulok Dato Seri Paduka Haji Abidin as the Chairman of the TAP Board at the doa kesyukuran. PHOTO: TAP

Bird’s Nest, Ice Ribbon and bullet trains

BEIJING (AFP) – The Beijing Winter Olympics will be spread over three zones and merge new venues with existing ones from the 2008 Games, including the ‘Bird’s Nest’ stadium.
With one month to go, AFP Sport looks at where the Olympics will take place.

The 80,000-seater ‘Bird’s Nest’ National Stadium – whose cross-hatched steel girders produce a nest-like appearance – will stage the opening and closing ceremonies.

Other sites from the 2008 Games have also been spruced up. The ‘Water Cube’ aquatics centre has been restyled as an ‘Ice Cube’ for curling.

The Wukesong Sports Centre and fan-shaped National Indoor Stadium – which held the basketball and gymnastics events in 2008 – have been renovated to host ice hockey.

The only new addition to Beijing’s existing Olympic Park is a 12,000-capacity speed skating oval nicknamed the ‘Ice Ribbon’.

New venues have been built in other parts of the city, such as the striking location for some of the freestyle skiing and snowboarding events. The 60-metre-high ‘Big Air’ jumping platform stands in the shadow of four vast cooling towers at a former steel mill that once employed tens of thousands of workers and is now a trendy restaurant and office complex.

ABOVE & BELOW: Children skating past the ‘Bird’s Nest’ stadium; and skiers at the Genting ski field at Chongli, north of Beijing. PHOTOS: AFP

ABOVE & BELOW: A man holds a banner showing the Beijing Winter Olympics logo; and a worker at the under-construction ski jumping venue for the Beijing Winter Olympic Games

The Beijing Olympics prompted a government-backed winter sports drive that aims to build a USD156-billion industry by 2025.

The Olympic zone of Yanqing – a suburb about 75 kilometres northwest of the city centre – is already home to several ski resorts and swanky hotels.

It’s also the site of China’s first bobsleigh, skeleton and luge tracks at the National Sliding Centre, which can seat 2,000 people and accommodate a further 8,000 standing spectators.

Nearby is a new 8,500-capacity centre for alpine skiing, with vertical drops reaching up to 900 metres.

China has linked the small city of Zhangjiakou – about 180 kilometres northwest of Beijing – to the other two Olympic hubs via what state media claims is the first rail line allowing driverless trains to reach speeds of up to 350 kilometres per hour.

The popular resort area has also added an unconventional ski-jumping venue designed to resemble a traditional ruyi sceptre symbolising power and good fortune.

Organisers have temporarily taken charge of an existing resort to hold some of the freestyle skiing and snowboarding competitions.

It lies a few kilometres from Zhangjiakou hub’s Olympic Village, a cluster of chalet-style apartments ringed by mountains.

There are three newly constructed villages – one in each of the three hubs – to accommodate over 6,000 athletes and officials in total.

They will be converted into public housing or business parks after the Games.

Yemen rebels seize UAE ship, hackers hit Israeli newspaper

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES (AP) – Yemen’s Houthi rebels seized an Emirati-flagged ship in the Red Sea, officials said yesterday, the latest sign of Mideast tensions as hackers targetted a major Israeli newspaper’s website to mark America’s 2020 killing of a top Iranian general.

The seizure of the Rwabee marks the latest assault in the Red Sea, a crucial route for international trade and energy shipments. The Houthis acknowledged the incident off the coast of Hodeida, a long-contested prize of the grinding war in Yemen.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the hacking of the Jerusalem Post. The hackers replaced the Post’s homepage with an image depicting a missile coming down from a fist bearing a ring long associated with Qassem Soleimani, the Iranian general killed by a United States (US) drone strike in Iraq two years ago.

First word of the Rwabee’s seizure came from the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations, which only said an attack targetted an unnamed vessel around midnight.

The coordinates it offered corresponded to the Emirati-flagged landing craft Rwabee, which hadn’t given its location via satellite-tracking data for hours, according to the website MarineTraffic.com.

A statement from the Saudi-led coalition, carried by state media in the kingdom, acknowledged the attack hours later, saying the Houthis had committed an act of “armed piracy” involving the vessel. The coalition asserted the ship carried medical equipment from a dismantled Saudi field hospital in the distant island of Socotra, without offering evidence.

“The Houthi militia must immediately release the ship, otherwise the coalition forces shall take all necessary measures and procedures to deal with this violation, including the use of force,” Brigadier General Turki al-Malki said in a statement.

A Houthi military spokesman, Yahia Sarei, announced that rebel forces had seized what he described as an Emirati “military cargo ship” carrying equipment into Yemen’s territorial waters “without any licence” to engage in “hostile acts” against Yemen’s stability. He said the rebels would offer more details on the seizure later.

Maybank group CEO to step down, leadership search under way

KUALA LUMPUR (AGENCIES) – Maybank Group President and CEO Abdul Farid Alias will step down at the end of his current contract in August, a stock exchange filing showed yesterday.

Malaysia’s largest lender by assets said a search for a successor is under way including assessing internal and external candidates.

Farid has indicated he will not be seeking a renewal of his contract which is set to expire on August 1 and has informed the board that he would like to pursue his own interests following the conclusion of his third term, the bank said. He has held the position since 2013.

Farid, 52, began his career at a subsidiary of Maybank in 1992 and will continue to oversee the bank’s management and operations until a successor assumes the position.

Ceremony marks Kg Sungai Besar Mosque 38th anniversary

Azlan Othman

The Kampong Sungai Besar Mosque held a Doa Kesyukuran to commemorate its 38th anniversary yesterday.

Acting Director of Mosque Affairs from the Department of Mosque Affairs at the Ministry of Religious Affairs Haji Amir Hisham bin Haji Masri and advisor to the mosque committee Haji Mohiddin bin Pengarah Dato Paduka Haji Awang Othman attended.

The ceremony began with the recitation of Surah Yaasiin, Tahlil and recitation of Doa Kesyukuran by mosque imam Muhammad Hazman bin Haji Mohd Hairol Azme.

Mosque committee secretary Haji Awang Zaini bin Haji Awang Damit expressed his gratitude for the role of the committee to improve and enliven the mosque.

He said various activities to attract people to value the mosque have been carried out by the mosque committee while encouraging youth and women worshippers who enliven the mosque.

Kampong Sungai Besar Mosque was built on October 1, 1982 on a two-acre site with a capacity of 280 congregants. Now it can accommodate over 600 following expansion works.

Pehin Orang Kaya Laila Wijaya Dato Seri Setia Haji Awang Abdul Aziz bin Begawan Pehin Udana Khatib Dato Seri Paduka Haji Awang Umar, the then Minister of Education, officially opened the mosque on January 1, 1984.

Acting Director of Mosque Affairs from the Department of Mosque Affairs, Ministry of Religious Affairs Haji Amir Hisham bin Haji Masri at the ceremony. PHOTO: AZLAN OTHMAN

 

Mukhriz calls for overhaul of leadership in Pakatan, says Anwar’s time ‘has passed’

PETALING JAYA (THE STAR) – While not discounting the possibility of working with Pakatan Harapan in the 15th General Election, Datuk Seri Mukhriz Mahathir called for the overhaul of the coalition’s leadership, including its prime-minister candidate.

The Pejuang President said the time has passed for Opposition leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to become the premier, should the coalition win in the next election.

“I think his (Anwar) time has passed. That’s my feeling and a lot of people have been saying that, in fact within Pakatan itself.

“It’s time for a new group of people to take over (the coalition’s leadership),” he said in an interview with business station BFM.

On working with Pakatan for GE15, he said, “We are still open to discussion. But we have certain issues, about the Malay electorates on how they feel about the coalition.”

The former Kedah mentri besar also said Pejuang would contest in 120 seats, targetting rural Malay and semi-urban seats.

He said there was a reason for the party to vie for more than half the parliamentary seats in the country.

“When we were in Bersatu (Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia), we only contested in 52 seats.

“Even if we had won all that time, we won’t be able to have the majority. We had to be in a coalition, as we were in Pakatan, to be able to govern the country.

“In our case this time, we need to show and convince the rakyat that we are serious, and we want to contest as many seats as we can,” he said.

Mukhriz said the party had not ruled out the possibility of working with political parties to be the government of the day.

“We are very close to parties, Warisan and Muda.

“After taking up 120 seats, there are another 102 seats that we won’t be contesting.

“It would be a waste for us if we don’t do something about those seats. We need to form electoral pacts and we have not decided which way to go yet.

“We need to work with others as well. The political scenario has also changed somewhat as people are not just looking at political parties. They also look at the candidates.

“Chances are non-governmental organisations that have been very active in certain constituencies will put forward their own candidates under a certain banner. And I think we can work with them,” he said.

On staying out of the memorandum of understanding that Pakatan signed with Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob in September, Mukhriz said Pejuang needed to be seen as being ‘independent’.

“We need to be free to convey our thoughts in Parliament.

“We felt that if there was any form of reward from the government, it might diminish our ability to be critical of the government when it needs to be criticised,” he said.