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    PSG calls off trip to Qatar, Saudi Arabia because of COVID

    PARIS (AP) – Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) called off its upcoming trip to Qatar and Saudi Arabia yesterday because of coronavirus concerns.

    The French league leader was scheduled to fly to Qatar for a three-day training camp starting on Sunday and then play a friendly match in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, on January 19.

    “In view of the health situation in France, Paris Saint-Germain has decided to postpone the Qatar Winter Tour 2022 to protect the health of its staff and players,” PSG said. The club is owned by the Qatari state.

    PSG’s squad has been hit by COVID-19 cases this month, with Angel Di Maria and Julian Draxler the latest players to contract the virus, which forced them to miss Sunday’s league game at Lyon.

    Lionel Messi contracted the virus while he was in Argentina during the mid-season winter break. He has since tested negative.

    GERMANY

    The German football league’s governing body said that most of the players and staff in the top two tiers have had a booster vaccination.

    League board member Ansgar Schwenken said that “of the more than 90 per cent of all of the players, coaches and support persons who have been vaccinated, more than 70 per cent have already received a booster vaccination”.

    The statement comes as squads are starting to recover from a wave of coronavirus infections among players returning from vacation during the winter break. The absences disrupted most of last week’s games.

    Goalkeeper and captain Manuel Neuer was one of six Bayern Munich players who returned to training after isolation yesterday, along with Alphonso Davies and Leroy Sané.

    Paris Saint-Germain’s French forward Kylian Mbappe in a training session with teammates. PHOTO: AFP

    Indonesia launches COVID booster campaign to stem Omicron spread

    JAKARTA (AFP) – Indonesia opened its coronavirus booster campaign to the public yesterday as the country records rising infections driven by the Omicron variant.

    The free shots will be given to the elderly and at-risk residents as a priority, but will be available to everyone who received their second dose six months prior, President Joko Widodo said on Tuesday after announcing the decision.

    The boosters will be administered as half doses due to supply shortages, said Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin.

    Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country with more than 270 million people, has struggled to procure enough vaccines for its residents since the onset of the pandemic.

    Elderly Indonesians lined up at vaccinations centres in Jakarta yesterday for their boosters in hope of better protection against the highly contagious Omicron variant.

    “I must get this shot because I have a lot of activities,” said 84-year-old Hardini in Jakarta after receiving her third shot.

    “I am still playing tennis, running. If I don’t have immunity then I could infect people or I could become sick.”

    A woman receives a booster shot of COVID-19 vaccine at South Tangerang Regional General Hospital, Indonesia. PHOTO: AP

    Indonesia is administering half doses for all of its approved vaccines, of which there is no precedent elsewhere in the world, COVID-19 taskforce spokesperson Siti Nadia Tarmizi told AFP.

    Indonesia uses Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca and China’s Sinovac for Covid-19 inoculations.

    Some countries, including the United States, are injecting half a dose of Moderna as a booster.

    The decision to use half doses was based on a study conducted by the University of Indonesia and the Padjadjaran University in collaboration with the Health Ministry, Tarmizi said.

    The country has been severely impacted by the pandemic since July last year, with hospitals running out of beds and oxygen to treat infected patients.

    It had reported more than 4.2 million confirmed COVID-19 cases, and more than 144,000 deaths as of yesterday. Around 40 per cent of the Indonesian population is double-jabbed.

    The low vaccination rate is leaving the country vulnerable to new outbreaks, especially of the more transmissible Omicron variant that is driving record case numbers in Europe.

    Thai joint business group sees limited economic impact from Omicron

    (CNA) – Thailand’s leading business group yesterday said it saw only a limited impact on the country’s economy from the latest coronavirus outbreak driven by the highly transmissible Omicron variant.

    “We expect the impact from the Omicron variant to be felt in the first quarter of 2022 then economic recovery will continue in the second quarter,” said Chairman of the Joint Standing Committee on Commerce, Industry and Banking Sanan Angubolkul.

    It maintained its outlook for gross domestic product (GDP) expansion this year of three per cent to 4.5 per cent and export growth of three per cent to five per cent.

    Inflation was seen rising at 1.2 per-cent to two per cent this year, but short-term policies to support rising food prices were needed, Sanan told a news conference.

    The group expects five to six million foreign tourists this year, it said in a statement. That compares to nearly 40 million in 2019. The central bank on Tuesday said the Thai economy will take a 0.3 per cent hit from the latest outbreak.

    It last week forecast the economy to expand by 3.4 per cent in 2022.

    The Bank of Thailand logo outside its building. PHOTO: CNA

    Envoy’s visit sheds light on M’sian business community

    James Kon

    Malaysian High Commissioner to Brunei Darussalam Dato’ Raja Reza bin Raja Zaib Shah visited Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia at the Lambak Kanan Industrial site to gain a better understanding of the Malaysian business community in the Sultanate.

    Malar Setia Group of Companies Managing Director Haji Abdul Rahman bin Haji Metassim, Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia Managing Director CL Lim and Malar Setia Sales Director Eric Lim received Dato’ Raja Reza bin Raja Zaib Shah upon arrival.

    Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia, set up in 1987, was formerly known as Heng Ngee Trading Company. The company’s core strategy is to deliver high quality imported frozen food, groceries and reliable services to clients.

    In a presentation, Eric Lim said, “Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia has a total outlet coverage of 860 in Brunei Darussalam, including wholesalers, hotels, supermarkets, pharmacy, catering services, fast food outlets, restaurants and provision shops.”

    The company has delivery vehicle strength of nine freezer trucks, six light trucks, six vans and five rental trucks.

    The day later saw Dato’ Raja Reza bin Raja Zaib Shah touring the Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia office and warehouse.

    Malaysian High Commissioner to Brunei Darussalam Dato’ Raja Reza bin Raja Zaib Shah tours the Syarikat Perniagaan Malar Setia warehouse. PHOTO: JAMES KON

    16 burnt to death in mini-bus crash

    JOHANNESBURG (AFP) – Sixteen people were burnt to death on Tuesday when a minibus taxi and an SUV collided on a highway in South Africa’s northeastern Limpopo province, a local official said.

    The SUV driver lost control after a tyre burst and collided head-on with a 22-seater Mercedes-Benz bus, provincial transport ministry spokesman Mike Maringa told AFP yesterday.

    “The bus burst into flames and 16 occupants trapped inside were burnt alive,” he said.

    The SUV driver was killed on impact, he said. Eight other people survived with injuries. Privately-owned minibus taxis are widely used by the commuting public in South Africa.

    Despite having one of the most developed highway networks on the continent, South Africa has one of the world’s worst records for road safety – a phenomenon usually blamed on poor driving.

    Nearly 1,500 people were killed on the roads during the year-end holidays, according to government.

    Burrowing badger unearths Roman-era treasure in Spain

    MADRID (AFP) – A treasure trove of some 200 Roman-era coins was discovered in northwestern Spain thanks to the apparent efforts of a hungry badger hunting for food, archaeologists have said.

    Described as “an exceptional find”, the coins were discovered in April 2021 in La Cuesta cave in Bercio in the Asturias region, with details outlined in the Journal of Prehistory and Archaeology published last month by Madrid’s Autonomous University.

    The coins were likely dug up by a badger searching for food during the vast snowstorm which paralysed Spain in January 2021.

    At that time, many creatures struggled to find berries, worms or insects to eat, with this luckless mammal only unearthing a handful of inedible metal discs that were later spotted by a local.

    “On the floor of the cave… in the sand likely dug up by badger at the entrance to its sett, we found the coins with more inside,” the archaeologists wrote after finding 209 coins dating back to between the 3rd and the 5th Century AD.

    Most of these late Roman era coins “originate from the north and eastern Mediterranean” from Antioch, Constantinople, Thessaloniki which later passed through Rome and Arles and Lyon in southern France, although at least one coin came from London, they wrote.

    “The quantity of coins recovered, as well as the undoubted archaeological interest of the transition to the early medieval period, make the hoard discovered at Bercio an exceptional find,” they wrote.

    The researchers said the coins had likely been moved there in the “context of political instability” linked in particular to the invasion of the Suebians, a Germanic people, who pushed into the northwestern part of the Iberian peninsula in the 5th Century.

    Pereiro rescues Cagliari in 2-1 win over Bologna in Serie A

    CAGLIARI, ITALY (AP) – Substitute Gastón Pereiro set up one goal and scored a stoppage-time winner as relegation-threatened Cagliari again came from behind to beat Bologna 2-1 in Serie A on Tuesday.

    Leonardo Pavoletti had cancelled out Riccardo Orsolini’s second-half opener for Bologna. Both sides also hit the woodwork.

    It was the second match in succession that Cagliari had come from a goal down to win 2-1, having done the same at Sampdoria last week. Cagliari moved to within a point of safety, although it has played a match more than 17th placed Venezia. Bologna remained 12th.

    Both sides had different aims and it was an energetic match from the start in Sardinia.
    The home side almost took the lead in the 14th minute but Raoul Bellanova’s angled effort came off the base of the right post.

    Bologna took the lead early in the second half when Orsolini curled a free kick into the top near corner. But Cagliari levelled in the 71st. A throw-in was only half cleared and Pereiro crossed it back in for Pavoletti to volley in the equaliser.

    Bologna almost immediately restored its lead but home goalkeeper Alessio Cragno did well to push Orsolini’s effort off the left post and out.

    Instead it was Cagliari that scored the winner in stoppage time when Pereiro ran onto a through-ball from João Pedro and fired into the bottom near corner.

    Bologna’s Marko Arnautovic and Cagliari’s Giorgio Altare battle for the ball. PHOTO: AP

    Philippines logs 32,246 new COVID-19 cases

    MANILA (XINHUA) – The Philippines reported 32,246 new COVID-19 infections yesterday, the second-highest single-day tally since the pandemic began in January 2020, pushing the number of confirmed cases in the Southeast Asian country to 3,058,634.

    The Department of Health (DOH) said the number of active cases or patients still battling the disease soared to 208,164 as the positivity rate rose to 45.7 per cent.

    The DOH also reported 144 coronavirus-related deaths, raising the country’s death toll to 52,654, with 11 laboratories failing to submit data. The deaths include those who died in previous months.

    Health Secretary Francisco Duque said the COVID-19 surge was still ongoing, adding it was still “premature” to say that the COVID-19 infections had slowed down after recording slightly lower new cases on Tuesday.

    “Tuesday’s caseload is not an indication that the peak is over. We might still be in the acceleration phase of our surge. I cannot say for now whether it is the beginning of a downtrend,” he told an online forum yesterday.

    Residents wait for their turn at a COVID-19 vaccination centre in Quezon City, the Philippines. PHOTO: AP

    Infections are beginning to spread outside Metro Manila, he added.

    Duque said the lower case count reported on Tuesday was due to the failure of testing laboratories to submit data on weekends. Many health care workers, including nurses and medical technologists, contracted the virus affecting the operation.

    The Philippines’ COVID-19 infections surged to record levels beginning Saturday before peaking on Monday, with 33,169 cases.

    Officials blamed the spike on high mobility, poor compliance with safety health protocols during the holiday season, and the fast-spreading Omicron and Delta variants.

    Meanwhile, the Philippines’ Department of Transportation has banned unvaccinated people in Metro Manila from using public transport while the capital region is under alert level 3 (on a scale of 5) or higher.

    Transportation Secretary Arthur Tugade said the new policy was in line with President Rodrigo Duterte’s order to restrict the movement of unvaccinated people in Metro Manila, the region with the most active and new cases.

    Tugade said only those with medical conditions that prevent their complete COVID-19 vaccination and those travelling to buy food and other essentials were exempted from the “no vaccination, no ride” policy. The Philippines, which has around a population of 110 million, has tested more than 24 million people since the outbreak.

    Exercise can reduce junk food cravings and prevent stress eating

    Cassandra J Lowe

    LONDON, CANADA (CNA) – Every January, millions of individuals make New Year’s resolutions to lose weight or eat healthier, if not both.

    To achieve this goal, many individuals will begin strenuous exercise programmes that incorporate too much exercise too soon, leading to fitness burnout or injury. Overtraining can actually prevent you from losing weight.

    The truth is that you simply cannot exercise away a poor diet and expect to lose weight (if that is your goal).

    Humans are very good at conserving energy and will account for any calories burned through exercise by consuming more calories later in the day or by being less physically active throughout the rest of the day.

    That being said, you can – and should – use exercise to help you lose weight and maintain your weight loss. But not to offset calories consumed.

    If you are looking to lose weight, the only way to do it is by controlling your calorie intake. The best and most effective way of doing that is limiting the consumption of ultra-processed foods – typical “junk foods” and fast-food meals.

    Even if you are not trying to lose weight, reducing ultra-processed food consumption is good for mental and physical health.

    Regular exercise makes it easier to do this by improving the brain and cognitive processes that help us regulate junk food consumption, and by reducing stress.

    And the best part is, as little as 20 minutes of brisk walking is all you need to get the beneficial effects.

    WHY WE OVER-CONSUME JUNK FOODS

    We know that we shouldn’t overeat candy, cookies, cake and chips, or drink sugary sodas. Diets that are high in these ultra-processed foods cause us to gain weight. But they are just so hard to resist.

    Ultra-processed junk foods have been designed to be as tasty and rewarding as possible.

    When we are exposed to advertisements, or actual food items (for example, chocolate bars in the check-out lane at grocery stores), brain activity in regions associated with reward processing increases.

    This reward-related brain activity results in increased food cravings and the drive to eat, even when we are not hungry.

    A brain region known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) helps us limit the consumption of ultra-processed foods by both decreasing activity in these reward regions to reduce food cravings and by initiating the cognitive processes needed to exert conscious control over food choices.

    When using functional brain imaging to examine brain responses, neuroscientists have shown that increased activity in the dlPFC helps us control food cravings and select healthier food items by decreasing activity in the reward regions of the brain.

    Conversely, when activity in the dlPFC is decreased, we have a harder time resisting the temptation of appealing junk foods and will consume more snack foods.

    EXERCISE CAN HELP REGULATE FOOD CONSUMPTION

    Exercise boosts brain plasticity, which is the brain’s ability to adapt its functions based on new input. Boosting brain plasticity makes it easier to change our habits and lifestyle.

    More and more evidence has shown that regular physical activity can increase prefrontal brain function and improve cognition.

    These exercise-induced increases in prefrontal brain function and cognition makes it easier to regulate or limit our consumption of junk foods. And we can see the effects with as little as 20 minutes of moderate intensity exercise.

    I have shown that people consume less ultra-processed food such as chips or milk chocolate after 20 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise (in our study, this was a brisk walk at 5.6-6.1 kilometres per hour on a treadmill with a slight incline).

    Research has also shown that both a single session of high-intensity interval training and a 12-week high-intensity aerobic exercise programme can reduce preferences or appetite for high-calorie junk foods.

    Similar effects are seen when people engage in moderate aerobic exercise or strength training. The key takeaway here is that regular exercise can reduce how much people want junk foods and improve their ability to resist the temptation of these appealing foods by improving brain function and cognition.

    This makes it easier to limit the consumption of these foods to achieve healthier eating and weight loss goals.

    EXERCISE ALSO HELPS US REDUCE STRESS

    When people are stressed, the body releases a hormone called cortisol, which activates what is known as the fight-or-flight response.

    When cortisol levels are high, the brain thinks it needs more fuel, resulting in increased cravings for sugary or salty ultra-processed foods.

    Participation in regular exercise or a single bout of exercise reduces perceived stress levels and cortisol levels. Exercise also helps reduce unhealthy drink and food consumption when people are stressed.

    Stress can also impact how the brain functions. Research has shown that stress can result in decreased activity in the prefrontal cortex and increased activity in reward regions of the brain when looking at pictures of food. This makes it harder to resist the temptation of appealing junk foods.

    By offsetting the impact of stress on prefrontal brain function, exercise makes it easier to maintain your goals of healthier eating or reducing junk food consumption.

    Twenty minutes of brisk walking can help the prefrontal cortex recover from temporary changes in activity, like the ones seen when people are stressed.

    Next time you are feeling stressed, try going for a brisk 20-minute walk. It could prevent you from stress-eating.

    WHAT EXERCISE IS BEST?

    Researchers often get asked what is the best exercise and how much exercise to do.
    At the end of the day, the best exercise is one you enjoy and can sustain over time.

    High-intensity interval training (HIIT), aerobic exercise, meditation and mindfulness, yoga and strength training are all effective in helping improve diet by targetting prefrontal brain function and reducing stress.

    If you are beginning a new exercise routine this new year, ease into it, be kind to yourself, listen to your body and remember that a little goes a long way.

    Singapore to be ‘more selective’ of data centre investments: minister

    SINGAPORE (CNA) – Singapore continues to welcome data centre investments but it intends to be “more selective” of such projects moving forward, said Singaporean Trade and Industry Minister Gan Kim Yong on Tuesday.

    “In particular, we seek to anchor data centres that are best in class in terms of resource efficiency, which can contribute towards Singapore’s economic and strategic objectives,” he said in a written reply to a Parliamentary question from Member of Parliament Louis Chua (WP-Sengkang). Singapore will also put in place measures to raise the efficiency of existing data centres over time, he added.

    As of last year, the country has more than 70 operational data centres with a total IT capacity of about 1,000 megawatts. Data centres form the backbone of a booming digital economy around the world, but they are also huge energy hogs. Everything from the servers, storage equipment and cooling infrastructures have a large appetite for electricity and water.

    Singapore has been mulling a more sustainable approach for the growth of data centres.
    It embarked on a review of the industry in 2019 and imposed a “temporary pause” on the building of new data centres.

    The minister said the review was necessary due to data centres being intensive users of resources.

    “We had to find a way to manage the growth of data centres in a sustainable manner consistent with our climate change commitments,” he said.

    He noted that this review was recently completed and authorities will engage the industry soon to share details and gather feedback.

    Singapore has more than 70 operational data centres with a total IT capacity of about 1,000 megawatts as of last year. PHOTO: CNA

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