Integrated digital repository system ‘Terengganu Lawnet’ launched

KUALA TERENGGANU, July 19 (Bernama) — The state government today launched Terengganu Lawnet, an integrated digital repository system for legal documents that can be accessed more easily by any party in need.

State Trade, Industry, Regional Development and Administrative Wellbeing Committee chairman Datuk Tengku Hassan Tengku Omar said Terengganu Lawnet was developed in collaboration with the Terengganu Strategic & Integrity Institute (TSIS) and a group of researchers from Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin (UniSZA).

He said the collection of all legal documents in one integrated digital system would also make it easier for potential investors to obtain information on laws in Terengganu.

“Terengganu Lawnet can be used as a comprehensive one-stop reference to help administrators, government agencies, foreign and local investors as well as those wishing to obtain accurate and up-to-date information on Terengganu state legislation.

“Along with the development of the industrial revolution (IR 4.0), updated certified online information is very much needed. In addition, there are various laws and regulations that apply in Terengganu that are different from other states,” he said in a press conference here today.

Terengganu State Secretary Datuk Tengku Farok Hussin Tengku Abdul Jalil and Terengganu State Assembly Speaker Datuk Yahaya Ali were also present at the press conferece.

Commenting further, he said Terengganu Lawnet will be expanded in the form of an app that can be downloaded onto smartphones in the near future to be more easily accessible to anyone at any time.

“I will introduce Terengganu Lawnet to 200 investors in a seminar organised by the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) in Kuala Lumpur on Aug 25 to attract their interest to look at the investment potential in Terengganu.

“The state government will also continue to improve such innovations and initiatives so that we remain relevant in line with rapidly changing times and environment for the good of all parties that benefit the people,” he said.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Baling floods: Istana Negara Disaster Relief Team carries out clean-up work at school

KUALA LUMPUR, July 19 (Bernama) — The Istana Negara Disaster Relief Team today carried out clean-up work at the Sekolah Menengah Agama (Arab) Yayasan Al Kahriah in Kupang, Baling, Kedah which was affected by the recent floods.

Istana Negara, in a statement posted on its official Facebook page, said the clean-up work involved a total of 73 volunteers comprising Istana Negara officers and staff, Telekom Malaysia Reaching Out Volunteers (TMRovers) and assisted by staff from the Fire and Rescue Department, Special Malaysia Disaster Assistance and Rescue Team (SMART) as well as Baling Police headquarters.

“The aid mission today was led by His Majesty’s naval aide-de-camp First Admiral Datuk Sharum Shaim and also participated by Yang di-Pertuan Agong’s police aide-de-camp SAC Datuk Azry Akmar Ayob,” it said.

The statement said that Sharum also presented donations from Yayasan Al-Sultan Abdullah (YASA) in the form of school uniforms, stationery and school shoes to 396 students.

The TMRovers team presented donations in the form of electrical appliances to the flood victims and water spraying machines to schools affected by floods.

“His Majesty is very concerned about the plight of the flood victims and sympathised with them for the hardship they went through and expressed the hope that the assistance and donations provided by the team can help to reduce their burden,” it said.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Site of Fire Dept’s Kuching Air Base identified

KUCHING, July 19 (Bernama) — The site for the new Malaysian Fire and Rescue Department’s Kuching Air Base here has been identified.

Deputy Housing and Local Government Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ismail Abd Muttalib said the air base in Kuching would replace the existing air base in Miri.

He added that the department is also in the process of opening another air base in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah.

“For the base in Kota Kinabalu, we are currently in the process of identifying the site and in discussions with the Sabah government.

“Currently, the department has three Air Bases in Miri, Penang and Subang,” he said after attending the Fire Science Certificate Accreditation Parade here today.

A total of 108 trainees successfully completed their training today.

Meanwhile, Ismail said the government was also open to proposals to add more air bases, especially in areas far from existing bases.

We will also consider having an air base in other zones such as in the East Coast (Peninsula) area, which does not yet have one.

“Aside from air bases, we are also committed to improving and adding equipment for the department,” he added.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

10-year-old Japanese Golfer Closing in on 12th Sponsor

Miroku Suto of Japan looks like a professional golfer with logos of 11 sponsors splashed across her polo shirt, cap, bag and even her belt. Her parents say the deals are worth in the mid-six figures annually, with some contracts for 10 years. A 12th sponsorship is waiting when she returns to her home three hours outside of Tokyo.

The sponsors are so important that Suto’s mother and caddie, former figure skater Miyuki Suto, had her daughter change into a sponsor’s belt before she sat for a video interview and carefully arranged her hat in her hands so the logos could be seen.

Miroku Suto has extreme confidence, saying through an interpreter she wants to become “a legend.”

She has a ways to go. She’s only 10.

Although Suto won consecutive titles in the 6-and-under age group at the Junior World Golf Championships in 2017-18 on a par-3 course, she hasn’t done as well as she’s moved up in age.

She struggled this year in the 9-10 age group and tied for 17th, 18 shots behind the winner on a par-74, 4,201-yard layout at Sycuan Resort Willow Glen Course. It’s the third straight time she has left San Diego without a title (the 2020 tournament was canceled because of the pandemic).

While other girls and boys in the 9-10 age group goofed around on the putting green waiting for the awards ceremony, Suto did interviews on the fringe of a nearby green, including one with a Tokyo TV crew that had followed her around for three days on a suburban course. She did show some playfulness when she briefly laid on her back and did the equivalent of a snow angel on the shaded grass.

Otherwise, it’s all business. She and her mother were dressed alike, including wearing coral-colored seersucker shorts.

Suto is well-known in Japan, a golf-crazed country that has produced two major champions in recent year — Hinako Shibuno in the 2019 Women’s British Open and Hideki Matsuyama at the 2021 Masters. It is not uncommon for TV ratings in Japan to be higher for women than men.

Even at her age, Suto’s golfing exploits are routinely featured on TV, but not so much in the rest in the world — at least not yet.

She is not the first child star. Michelle Wie was 10 when she shot 64 on her home course in Honolulu and became the youngest player to qualify for the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links. At age 13, she won that tournament and remains the USGA’s youngest champion. She nearly won an LPGA major at 16 and eventually won a U.S. Women’s Open in 2014.

That same year, 11-year-old Lucy Li became the youngest player to qualify for the U.S. Women’s Open. The sixth-grader missed the cut at Pinehurst No. 2. Earlier this month, now a pro, Li won her second Epson Tour event and is all but assured an LPGA card for next year.

For sponsorships, Suto came along at the right time.

Li ran into trouble with the USGA three years ago when she appeared in an Apple ad. The rules back then prohibited amateur golfers from using their names or likeness for personal gain in promotions or advertisements for products. The USGA gave her a one-time warning.

But the USGA and R&A — Japan falls under the jurisdiction of the latter — have modernized rules. Starting this year, the rules for amateur status eliminated all advertising, expense-related and sponsorship restrictions. The rule change was aimed at elite amateurs who might need funding to reach their potential.

The kid still has a long way to go to fulfill that.

Golf’s most famous prodigy was a young Californian named Tiger Woods. He won his age division in the Junior World, a tournament that has attracted the best from around the world since 1968, six times in eight years.

Sponsorship money wasn’t available for Woods, who appeared on the “Mike Douglas Show” when he was 2. During his World Golf Hall of Fame induction speech in March, Woods spoke passionately about his parents taking out a second mortgage on their home to pay for his development through national junior programs.

Lorena Ochoa of Mexico, another Hall of Famer, won five consecutive Junior Worlds

in her age division.

Suto has won other international junior titles, such as the US Kids Championship last year, along with titles in Malaysia and Europe.

Acknowledging through giggles that it is “very difficult” to win these tournaments, she said her putting wasn’t good at the Junior World. She also broke her driver during a practice round and a new one was rush-ordered and brought over by the Tokyo TV crew.

Suto, who is home-schooled, said she would like to match Woods’ six Junior World titles. She has plenty of time, given the top end is the 15-18 age group.

Does Suto feel any pressure?

“No pressure,” she said.

And there is no lack of attention or sponsorship as she chases her goals.

Source: Voice of America

Japan, South Korea Foreign Ministers Agree to Improve Ties

The foreign ministers of South Korea and Japan reaffirmed Monday the importance of bilateral ties and the three-way relationship with the United States as they renewed efforts to mend relations amid the war in Ukraine and other global tensions.

Park Jin, South Korea’s top diplomat, and his Japanese counterpart Yoshimasa Hayashi agreed to work together on the nuclear threat from North Korea and on the need to resolve a dispute over Japan’s colonial-era forced mobilization of

Korean laborers, according to the two foreign ministries.

The countries’ ties have been strained mostly over historical issues, including forced labor leading up to and during World War II.

At the heart of the dispute are South Korean court rulings in 2018, which ordered two Japanese companies, Nippon Steel and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, to compensate forced Korean laborers. The Japanese companies have refused to comply with the rulings, and the former laborers and their supporters responded by pushing for the forced sale of corporate assets of Nippon Steel and Mitsubishi.

The ministers shared a view that the disputes over the forced laborers must be resolved at an early date, the South Korean Foreign Ministry statement said. It quoted Park as saying South Korea would seek a resolution of the dispute before the sales of the two Japanese companies are made in South Korea.

According to the Japanese statement, Hayashi told Park that both sides need to build a constructive relationship based on the normalization of relations in 1965.

Tokyo has long maintained that all compensation issues had been settled by then.

Since taking office in March, South Korea’s new conservative government led by President Yoon Suk Yeol has been pushing to improve ties with Japan and bolster a trilateral security cooperation with Washington and Tokyo to better deal with North Korean nuclear threats.

At the start of the talks in Tokyo, Park and Hayashi bumped elbows and posed for cameras at the official guest house as they conversed softly in English. Both have attended schools in the U.S., and Park has also studied in Japan.

The visit, the first by a South Korean foreign minister since November 2019, comes after the assassination of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, considered an influential figure in shaping Japan’s foreign policy.

Park expressed his condolences on Abe’s death. Park is scheduled to stay in Japan through Wednesday, and may meet Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

Park and Hayashi had also met ahead of the South Korea presidential inauguration in Seoul in May, as well as in Bali, Indonesia, for the Group of 20 meeting earlier this month.

The South Korean Foreign Ministry in July launched consultations with lawyers and activists representing the Korean forced laborers and other experts to collect opinions on how to resolve the dispute.

Besides painful history, the two nations also share a long-running territorial dispute over islands that are controlled by Seoul but also claimed by Japan. Tokyo calls them Takeshima and South Korea calls them Dokdo.

President Joe Biden’s administration has tried to bring the two Asian democracies to work closer together on security and regional issues amid the war in Ukraine and tensions including threats from North Korea and saber-rattling from China.

North Korea this year stepped up missile and artillery tests in what is seen as an attempt to pressure Washington and Seoul to relax international sanctions against Pyongyang.

Park also expressed support for Tokyo’s efforts to bring back Japanese abducted by North Korea decades ago, the Japanese Foreign Ministry said.

About 20 years ago, North Korea reversed years of denial and acknowledged it had kidnapped Japanese citizens and returned some to Japan. But Japan believes more are still in North Korea.

Source: Voice of America

Bidong Summit: RHB, UMT committed to raising awareness about ocean conservation

KUALA TERENGGANU, July 17 (Bernama) — RHB Islamic Bank Bhd and its strategic partner, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (UMT), remain committed to raising awareness for marine life conservation and the importance of oceans via the Bidong Summit, which was held from July 14 to 16.

Its managing director Datuk Adissadikin Ali said that it was part of the RHB Ocean Harmony initiative and set the direction of RHB and UMT’s cooperation in ocean and marine life conservation activities.

He said the joint venture that had been established over the past two years was based on value-based intermediation (VBI) and Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) 14 and 17.

“SDG 14 is all about life below water, so we took SDG 14 as one of the cores to bring the message of sustainability forward and SDG 17 (partnership for the goals) because we cannot do it alone, so we have to work with those who are members,” he told Bernama after completing the underwater clean-up activities around the waters of Pulau Bidong, which were part of the summit.

He said that he was happy that the Bidong Summit, which was postponed for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, had been successfully implemented.

“We undertook this initiative not only to get knowledge from our strategic partner, UMT, but we actually came out to the field…into the sea and dived. My team and I from RHB got a first-hand experience of the beauty (of marine life and oceans) and simultaneously witnessed the destruction (that was taking place) due to human activities. The oceans must be valued and cared for,” he added.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency

Regatta Lepa to be made Sabah’s annual tourism event

SEMPORNA, July 17 (Bernama) — The Regatta Lepa or the traditional water and boat festival celebration of the local community here will be continued as an annual event to attract tourists, especially from abroad.

Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Jafry Ariffin said the celebration, which had been suspended for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, was part of the state’s tourism calendar and would be more lively after this, including inviting participants from abroad.

He said the two-day Regatta Lepa which ended today, is also able to play an important role in improving the economy of the local community involved in organising the celebration.

“The Regatta Lepa is a programme that is eagerly awaited by local and foreign tourists, this in turn provides benefits and a positive impact to the economic and social development of the local community,” he told reporters here today.

Earlier, he witnessed the sea sports event, the beautiful lepa (indigenous boats of the Sama-Bajau people) parade of the 27th Regatta Lepa here which was also witnessed by the Yang Dipertua Negeri of Sabah Tun Juhar Mahiruddin and his wife Toh Puan Norlidah RM Jasni.

Meanwhile, Jafry said his ministry is also in the process of creating a cultural village as a new attraction for the tourism sector in Sabah and an application for the initiative has been forwarded to the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture (MOTAC).

“The village location will be determined later. Sabah, which has cultural diversity, needs to be nurtured and inherited for the next generation, ” he said.

Source: BERNAMA News Agency