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    Dozens of protesters, 12 police dead in Kazakhstan protests

    MOSCOW (AP) – Security forces killed dozens of protesters and 12 police died during extraordinarily violent demonstrations in Kazakhstan that saw government buildings stormed and set ablaze, authorities said yesterday.

    One police officer was found beheaded in escalating unrest that poses a growing challenge to authoritarian rule in the Central Asian nation.

    Despite the severe response by authorities, protesters took the streets again in the country’s largest city, Almaty, a day after breaking into the presidential residence and the mayor’s office there.

    Police were out in force again, including in the capital of Nur-Sultan, which was reportedly quiet, and Russian troops were on their way.

    Russia’s Sputnik news service reported that shots were fired as police surrounded one group of about 200 protesters in the city. So far, 2,000 people have been arrested, the Interior Ministry said.

    In the unrest on Wednesday, “dozens of attackers were liquidated”, police spokeswoman Saltanat Azirbek told state news channel Khabar-24, using a term common to describe the killing of people thought to be extremists by law enforcement.

    Riot police walk to block demonstrators gathering during a protest in Almaty, Kazakhstan. PHOTO: AP

    Twelve police officers were killed in the unrest and 353 injured, according to city officials cited by the channel.

    Tens of thousands of people, some reportedly carrying clubs and shields, have taken to the streets in recent days in the worst protests the country has seen since gaining independence from the Soviet Union three decades ago. Although the demonstrations began over a near-doubling of prices for a type of vehicle fuel, their size and rapid spread suggest they reflect wider discontent in the country that has been under the rule of the same party since independence.

    The government yesterday announced a 180-day price cap on vehicle fuel and a moratorium on raising utility rates – an attempt to address the economic issues that catalysed the protests, though it was unclear what, if any, effect the moves would have.

    The president has vacillated between attempts at mollifying the protesters, including accepting the resignation of his government, and promising harsh measures to quell the unrest, which he blamed on “terrorist bands”.

    Worries that a broader crackdown could be on the horizon grew after he called on a Russia-led military alliance for help. Severe interruptions to internet service also raised concern and made it difficult – sometimes impossible – for news of what was happening inside Kazakhstan to get out. In other apparent attempts to seal the country off, the airports in Almaty and one other city have also been shut.

    The military alliance, the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), said early yesterday that it would send peacekeeper troops to Kazakhstan at Tokayev’s request.

    The operation is the first military action by the CSTO – an indication that Kazakhstan’s neighbours, particularly Russia, are concerned that the unrest could spread.

    Russia and Kazakhstan share close relations and a 7600-kilometre border, much of it along open steppes. Russia’s manned space-launch facility, the Baikonur Cosmodrome, is in Kazakhstan.

    The size and duties of the peacekeeping force have not been specified. Russia has already begun sending forces, according to the CSTO, which also includes Kazakhstan, Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

    But Kyrgyzstan’s presidential spokesman, Erbol Sutanbaev, said his country’s contingent must be approved by Parliament and said that the troops would not take actions involving demonstrators.

    It was not immediately clear if any of the Russian forces had arrived in Kazakhstan.

    Tokayev has imposed a two-week state of emergency for the whole country, including an overnight curfew and a ban on religious services.

    Of the five Central Asian republics that gained independence following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Kazakhstan is by far the largest and the wealthiest, spanning a territory the size of Western Europe and sitting atop colossal reserves of oil, natural gas, uranium and
    precious metals.

    Japan’s service sector activity growth eases in Dec

    TOKYO (CNA) – Japan’s services sector activity expanded at a slower pace in December as growth in new and outstanding business softened and expectations for the 12 months ahead eased to a four-month low.

    The world’s third-largest economy is expected to rebound in the final quarter of last year after COVID-19 cases fell, as it seeks to catch up with other advanced nations in its recovery from the pandemic’s hit.

    The final au Jibun Bank Japan Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dropped to a seasonally adjusted 52.1 from the prior month’s 53.0, which was the highest reading since August 2019.

    The figure compared to a 51.1 flash reading.

    “Japanese service sector businesses signalled a sustained expansion in business conditions at the end of 2021,” said economist Usamah Bhatti at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey.

    People dining in a restaurant in the Shibuya area of Tokyo, Japan. PHOTO: CNA

    “The easing of COVID-19 restrictions allowed customer-facing businesses to operate more freely throughout the final quarter of the year.”

    Firms, however, reported raw material and labour shortages, with employment levels dipping to a 15-month low, while business optimism for the year ahead improved at its weakest pace since September.

    The private sector as a whole saw cost burdens increase at the year-end amid sustained material shortages and supply chain delays, said Bhatti.

    “Concerns that disruption would extend into the new year were elevated,” he added.

    The composite PMI, which is calculated using both manufacturing and services, dropped to 52.5 from November’s final of 53.3.

    Ensuring diligent preparations

    Fadley Faisal

    Minister of Education Dato Seri Setia Awang Haji Hamzah bin Haji Sulaiman made a working visit to the Sufri Bolkiah Secondary School, which is temporarily housed at the Muda Hashim Secondary School building.

    The Sufri Bolkiah Secondary School building is being used as the COVID-19 Holding Area in Tutong, said the Ministry of Education (MoE).

    The minister and his delegation toured the facilities in anticipation of the second stage of school re-openings during the Endemic Phase.

    The delegation also scrutinised the current situation of the first stage of school reopening and visited students in their Year 10 and 11 classes while giving the students moral support in preparation for their Brunei-Cambridge GCE ‘O’ Level and IGCSE exams.

    The minister toured the school’s multi-purpose hall where antigen rapid tests are carried out, teachers’ rooms, class rooms, laboratories, prayer rooms, canteen and ablution areas.

    According to the MoE, the Minister had been making working visits to government educational institutions since last December to ensure standard operating procedures for physical learning are in place.

    The ministry also said visits were made to institutions under the MoE during the first and second days of the start of the 2022 academic year by separate delegations led by the minister, deputy minister, permanent secretary and deputy permanent secretary (core education).

    Minister of Education Dato Seri Setia Awang Haji Hamzah bin Haji Sulaiman made a working visit to the Sufri Bolkiah Secondary School, which is temporarily housed at the Muda Hashim Secondary School building. PHOTO: MOE

    NASA nails trickiest job on newly launched space telescope

    Marcia Dunn

    CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDA (AP) – NASA aced the most complicated, critical job on its newly launched space telescope on Tuesday: unrolling and stretching a sunshade the size of a tennis court.

    Ground controllers cheered and bumped fists once the fifth and final layer of the sunshield was tightly secured. It took just one and a half days to tighten the ultra-thin layers using motor-driven cables, half the expected time.

    The seven-tonne James Webb Space Telescope is so big that the sunshield and the primary gold-plated mirror had to be folded for launch. The sunshield is especially unwieldly – it spans 21 metres by 14 metres to keep all the infrared, heat-sensing science instruments in constant subzero shadow.

    The mirrors are next up for release this weekend.

    The USD10 billion telescope is more than halfway toward its destination 1.6 million kilometres away, following its Christmas Day send-off. It is the biggest and most powerful observatory ever launched – 100 times more powerful than the Hubble Space Telescope – enabling it to peer back to almost the beginning of time. Considered Hubble’s successor, Webb will attempt to hunt down light from the universe’s first stars and galaxies, created 13.7 billion years ago.

    “This is a really big moment,” project manager Bill Ochs told the control team in Baltimore. “We’ve still got a lot of work to do, but getting the sunshield out and deployed is really, really big.”

    Engineers spent years redoing and tweaking the shade. At one point, dozens of fasteners fell off during a vibration test. That made Tuesday’s success all the sweeter, since nothing like this had ever been attempted before in space.

    “First time and we nailed it,” engineer Alphonso Stewart told reporters.

    This combination of images from a computer animation made available by NASA in December 2021 depicts the unfolding of the components of the James Webb Space Telescope. PHOTO: AP

    Toshiba shareholder calls for extraordinary meeting to vote on break-up plan

    TOKYO (CNA) – Toshiba Corp’s second-largest investor called yesterday for an extraordinary shareholder meeting for a vote to force the Japanese company to get two-thirds support before continuing with a controversial plan to split in three.

    The proposal by Singapore-based hedge fund 3D Investment Partners marks the latest in a long and acrimonious battle between the once-mighty Japanese conglomerate and a number of its foreign shareholders, many of them activist funds.

    In a statement, 3D highlighted concerns about the cost of Toshiba going ahead with its split before getting a mandate from shareholders. It also called for Toshiba to continue with its
    strategic review.

    “There is no rationale for pursuing at great expense the separation plan without knowing whether a sufficient number of Toshiba shareholders will ultimately provide consent,” the fund, which owns more than seven per cent of Toshiba, said.

    With its proposal, 3D is effectively trying to force the conglomerate to bring forward by more than a year a legally mandated vote requiring backing from two-thirds of shareholders.

    Officially, the vote is not slated to be held until the annual shareholders meeting in 2023.

    The Toshiba Corp headquarters in Tokyo. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

    RBC’s Central Kitchen receives international recognition

    Izah Azahari

    The Asia Pacific Division (APD) of the Foodservice Consultants Society International (FCSI) recently awarded the development project of Royal Brunei Culinary’s (RBC) Central Kitchen as one of the winners of its inaugural Project Excellence initiative.

    RBC’s Central Kitchen is one of the largest central production facilities in the country.

    Hospitality Total Services (HTS) Australia, a professional member of FCSI provided design master planning for the project.

    The work involved moving from four separate production facilities comprising in-flight catering, healthcare, restaurant and bakery into one modern commissary kitchen.

    The objective of RBC’s project was to maximise its production efficiencies through supply chain optimisation. Equipment was selected towards efficient production and ease of operation.

    RBC Senior Manager and Project Manager of the Central Kitchen development project Alvin Voon said, “It is a great honour for RBC’s Central Kitchen to receive this recognition, made even more special as it was awarded by experts in the international food service industry.

    This is a credit to the hard work put in by all the stakeholders involved in ensuring this project was a success”.

    As the Sultanate’s largest central production facility, the project helped RBC improve its production yield on a significant scale.

    The award winning Central Kitchen. PHOTO: RBC

    ‘Monster Hunter Rise’ tops Japan’s Switch charts

    Danial Norjidi

    Nintendo recently revealed the top 30 best-selling Switch games on the Japanese eShop for 2021, with titles from a wide variety of genres making the list.

    Emerging as the top best-selling game from the eShop for Japan was Monster Hunter Rise, the most recent entry in Capcom’s critically acclaimed action role-playing game series.

    First released on March 26 last year, Monster Hunter Rise is set in the ninja-inspired land of Kamura Village and sees players “explore lush ecosystems and battle fearsome monsters to become the ultimate hunter”. The game allows players to hunt solo or with friends to earn rewards that they can use to craft a wide variety of weapons and armour.

    Taking the second spot on the list was online multiplayer social deduction game, Among Us.

    Developed by Innersloth, the highly popular Among Us sees four to 15 players join together as they attempt to prepare their spaceship for departure. However, one or more random players among the crew are impostors aiming to eliminate everyone else.

    ‘Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury’ Switch game. PHOTO: NINTENDO
    ‘Monster Hunter Rise’. PHOTO: CAPCORN

    Meanwhile, Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Pokémon Shining Pearl placed third and fifth on the list. Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl are remakes from 2021 that provide a re-imagining of the adventure first embarked upon in the original Pokémon Diamond and Pokémon Pearl released 15 years prior.

    As the protagonist, the player adventures across the Sinnoh region, catching wild Pokémon and making new friends as they strive to complete their Pokedex, an electronic device that catalogues and provides information on the various species of Pokémon.

    Fourth spot went to Momotaro Dentetsu: Showa, Heisei, Reiwa mo Teiban!, the latest entry in a long-running series of board-game style video games. The game from Konami sees players become the president of a railroad company and acquire properties across Japan with the goal of having the highest total assets in the country.

    Human Fall Flat was the sixth game on the list. Developed by No Brakes Games, Human Fall Flat is described as “a hilarious, light-hearted physics platformer set in a world of floating dreamscapes. Each dream level provides a new environment to navigate, from mansions, castles and Aztec adventures to snowy mountains, eerie nightscapes and industrial locations”.

    The seventh game on the list was Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury, an enhanced port of the title that originally released on the Wii U in 2013, which also brings with it additional content. As described by Nintendo, “In Super Mario 3D World, choose from Mario, Luigi, Peach, and Toad and set off to save the Sprixie Kingdom.” Meanwhile, Bowser’s Fury is a new adventure in which Mario arrives on Lake Lapcat to find that Bowser has become gargantuan, has lost all control and is on a rampage.

    Nintendo’s mascot also appears in the eighth game on the list, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, the 2017 enhanced Switch version of Mario Kart 8, which initially launched on the Wii U in 2014.

    Featuring all previously released downloadable and additional content, the game sees players engage in kart racing, controlling various characters from Nintendo franchises and making use of an array of items they can collect and use to gain an advantage against opponents.

    Minecraft took the ninth spot on the best-sellers list. In the ever popular Minecraft, players “explore randomly generated worlds and build amazing things from the simplest of homes to the grandest of castles”. They have the option of playing in creative mode with unlimited resources or delving into survival mode, where they have to mine and gather resources as well as craft weapons and armour to survive and fend off dangerous mobs.

    Rounding up the top 10 was fighting game Super Smash Bros Ultimate. This fifth instalment of the Super Smash Bros series sees players do battle by taking control one of a multitude of characters from a roster ranging from Nintendo mascots to characters from third-party franchises.

    The next 10 titles on the list are: Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics, a collection of board games, card games and sports games in 11th place; Mario Party Superstars, featuring a collection of classic Mario Party gameboards and minigames in 12th; life simulation game Animal Crossing: New Horizons in 13th; open world adventure game The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild in 14th; cooperative cooking simulation title Overcooked! 2 in 15th; photography game New Pokemon Snap in 16th; mutiplayer action shooter Splatoon 2 in 17th; role-playing game Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin in 18th; Together! Nyanko Great War in 19th; and Fitness Boxing 2: Rhythm & Exercise in 20th.

    The final 10 titles listed in the top 30 are: farming and life simulation game Story of Seasons: Pioneers of Olive Town in 21st place; action adventure game The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword HD in 22nd; role-playing games Dragon Quest X1 S: Echoes of An Elusive Age and Dragon Quest III in 23rd and 24th; Pokémon Sword in 25th; game creation title Game Builder Garage in 26th; Super Mario Party in 27th; side-scrolling action-adventure game Metroid Dread in 28th; indie role-playing game Undertale in 29th; and role-playing game Miitopia in 30th.

    N Korea claims second successful missile test

    SEOUL (AP) – North Korea claimed yesterday to have conducted the second successful test flight of a hypersonic missile, days after leader Kim Jong-Un vowed to bolster his military forces despite pandemic-related difficulties.

    Wednesday’s launch, the North’s first known weapons test in about two months, indicates the country will press ahead with plans to modernise its nuclear and missile arsenals rather than return to disarmament talks anytime soon.

    The official Korean Central News Agency said the Central Committee of the ruling Workers’ Party expressed “great satisfaction” at the results of the missile test, which was observed by leading weapons officials. Hypersonic weapons, which fly at speeds in excess of Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound, could pose crucial challenges to missile defence systems because of their speed and manoeuvrability.

    It’s unclear whether and how soon.

    North Korea could manufacture such a high-tech missile, but it was among a wish-list of sophisticated military assets that Kim disclosed early last year, along with a multi-warhead missile, spy satellites, solid-fueled long-range missiles and underwater-launched nuclear missiles.

    The North’s latest launch was first detected by its neighbours.

    The United States (US) military called it a ballistic missile launch that “highlights the destabilising impact of (North Korea’s) illicit weapons program”, while South Korea and Japan expressed concerns or regrets over the launch.

    China, for its part, called for dialogue and said that “all parties concerned should keep in mind the big picture (and) be cautious with their words and actions”.

    A test launch of a hypersonic missile in North Korea. PHOTO: AP

    Fed sees rate hikes ‘sooner’ as inflation spikes

    WASHINGTON (AFP) – Federal Reserve officials last month were concerned about the Omicron impact, but believed the United States (US) economy had recovered enough from the pandemic downturn that interest rate hikes could come sooner than expected, according to minutes of the December meeting released on Wednesday.

    The document provides a behind-the-scenes look at the deliberations of the Fed’s policy committee, which convened as the US central bank faced increasing pressure to act against the wave of inflation that sent consumer prices surging to multi-decade highs.

    The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) accelerated the withdrawal of the pandemic stimulus measures and released forecasts showing central bankers expect to hike interest rates – their most potent weapon against price increases – as many as three times in 2022.

    One of the two criteria for raising the benchmark lending rate off zero is how close the economy is to maximum employment, and many officials believe it is nearing that point or already there.

    That means “it may become warranted to increase the federal funds rate sooner or at a faster pace than participants had earlier anticipated”, the minutes said.

    With the faster pullback, the Fed’s stimulus bond-buying program now is set to end in March, setting the stage for rate hikes after that, though the minutes acknowledge they could move even quicker, if necessary given rising prices.

    Muted crowds for Tamu Tutong’s return

    Lyna Mohamad

    Tamu Tutong’s return was met with a muted response in comparison to its usual crowds before it was temporarily closed during the second wave of COVID-19 infections in the country.

    The weekly open-air market, held every Thursday, usually welcomes visitors from Brunei-Muara, Belait and the Temburong districts.

    A frequent visitor of the Tamu Tutong, who had never missed her visit every Thursday while the market was in session, was surprised they had no problem finding parking space.

    “It was not a usual sight, with only a small crowd coming to the tamu,” she said, adding that reasons for the quiet response might be the lack of awareness for the market’s re-opening or that public confidence to visit markets wasn’t quite there yet. The same goes with vendors who have not resumed business activities, she said.

    Another visitor, who drove all the way from Kuala Belait early morning was disappointed when her favourite vendors weren’t there and went back empty handed.

    She also had issue with the handling of exits and entries into the market. Since the way in was also the way out, it got congested and the queues were fairly long. “It is probably bearable for the younger visitors, but it is definitely a hassle for senior citizens,” she said.

    “Some visitors just left after visiting one block as they do not want to go through the hassle.”

    Stall operators were similarly disappointed as sales were below average, compared to before the temporary closure. Some came as early as 4am so they can park close their allocated stall locations. Tamu Tutong re-opened yesterday, following guidelines and standard operating procedures (SOPs) issued by the Ministry of Health.

    Both market operators and visitors were required to scan the a QR code with their BruHealth app and check their temperature before entry.

    Face masks must be worn at all times and visitors were reminded to practice social distancing.

    Visitors to the Tamu Tutong when it re-opened yesterday after a hiatus brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. PHOTOS: LYNA MOHAMAD

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