Demand for meat, traditional medicine, high
Transcription
Demand for meat, traditional medicine, high
SPECIAL REPORT POLITICS Keeping children off the Internet Bizarre episode in Sabah FASHION Vintage kimono Febr u ary 22-March 7, 2013 SNAKE HUNT Demand for meat, traditional medicine, high-end fashion US$3 / Bt100 ISSN 19052650 9 771905 265009 05331 05331 At work I don’t have a choice of where I sit But with Star Alliance Upgrade Awards Across 20 of our member airlines worldwide Now I do. I’ve earned it. Tak u m a Sato I n ternat ional raci ng d ri ver and Star A l l ian ce Gol d Statu s staral l ian ce.com ASIA NEWS NETWORK 21 newspapers in 18 countries—covering Asia for 13 years W e K n o w A s i a B e t t e r F ebrua r y 22-M a r c h 7, 2 01 3 • V o l 8 No 4 SPECIAL REPORT Sonny Tu mbelaka /AFP Keep Off Those Trolls 10 Children’s activities online leave them vulnerable to sexual predators, cyberbullying and pornography VIEW 6 SOCIETY 20 ENTERTAINMENT 32 Strategic Approach South Korea needs a long-term scheme to counter the North’s nuclear threat Snake Hunt Consumers are caught up in a frenzy of owning all things snake--with dire consequences Feels Like You’ve Seen It Before? The trend is reversing from small to big screen, as some of Korea’s beloved hit films are brought to television TECHNOLOGY 12 F E AT U R E S TRAVEL 36 The World Of Modern Living Within the next decade, people will be able to control some of life’s most routine decisions and tasks right in the palm of one’s hand LIFESTYLE 24 Eat, Save, Don’t Waste China has a growing appetite to cut back on food wastage No-frills, No Standards? Travellers put up with delays and disruptions, understanding that these are sometimes beyond the control of an airline, especially a low-cost one POLITICS 16 Fashion 30 TRAVEL 42 Fighting Rich Terrorists Terrorist cells thrive in Indonesia with members and sympathisers as new sources of funding Colourful & Bold Fashionistas get a blast from the past with vintage kimono Flurries In The Park The Sapporo Snow Festival is a wonderful sight to behold, but make sure you are wrapped warmly from top to toe COVE R IMAG E | WAN G Z H AO/A F P PHOTO Copyright © 2006 of Asia News Network. All rights reserved. AsiaNews (ISSN 1905-2650) is a weekly magazine. Printed by WPS (Thailand) Co, Ltd Subsidiary of Nation Multimedia Group Plc. WRITE, FAX, EMAIL Please include sender’s name and address to: [email protected] | Asia News Network Nation Multimedia Group Plc 1854 Bangna-Trad Road (Km 4.5), Bangna, Bangkok 10260 Thailand.Tel: (662)338 3333 Fax: (662)338 3964 Subscription inquries: Nation Multimedia Group Plc 1854 Bangna-Trad Road (Km 4.5), Bangna, Bangkok 10260 Thailand.Tel: (662)338 3333 Call Center: (662)338 3000 press 1 Fax: (662)338 3964 The View The Korea Herald Strategic Approach South Korea needs a long-term scheme to counter the North’s nuclear threat ❖❖ Seoul 6• AFP/ Yonhap A diversity of views and suggestions have been put forward by South Korean officials, politicians and academics on how to respond to escalating nuclear threat from North Korea following its third atomic detonation earlier this month. This diversified discourse now needs to converge into an effective, sophisticated and comprehensive strategy to solve the prolonged nuclear tension and ensure peace and security on the Korean Peninsula. Such a strategic scheme should be based on national consensus and pursued beyond changes of government. This may sound somewhat detached from the complicated reality, but is the direction South Koreans should take to free themselves of the increasing dangers from North Korea’s nuclear arsenal. Pyongyang’s latest atomic bomb test with more explosive power, which followed a successful long-range rocket launch in December, leaves no room for internal discord over how to respond to its nuclear capabilities and intentions. It should be reminded that the lack of long-term consistent strategies, coupled with partisan considerations in handling inter-Korean relations, has seen the nuclear situation deteriorate over the two decades since Pyongyang left the NonProliferation Treaty in 1993. It is encouraging that the liberal main opposition party departed from its reluctance to criticise North Korea’s provocative acts and joined in condemning its third nuclear test, which followed previous atomic detonations in 2006 and 2009. The incoming government under President-elect Park Geun-hye will be mainly tasked with building national consensus around a creative South Korean soldiers march on a road during a military drill in Paju near the demilitarised zone dividing the two Koreas on Feb 13, 2013. The country said it would accelerate the development of longer-range ballistic missiles that could cover the whole of North Korea in response to a third nuclear test by Pyongyang. and strategic approach that hopefully leads to a fundamental solution to the nuclear standoff. It is likely that Park’s inauguration on February 25 will be followed by further provocations from Pyongyang, as it has vowed to launch more long-range missiles, reportedly n o t i f y i n g B e ij i n g o f a p l a n f o r additional nuclear tests. In immediate terms, Seoul needs to enhance deterrence capabilities against North Korea by expediting the deployment of more advanced antimissile and preemptive strike systems, and strengthening security cooperation with the US. In a longterm bid to get Pyongyang to give up its nuclear arsenal, it should pursue a delicate diplomatic approach that could induce the US, China and other neighbouring powers to take the course in its best possible interests. Park’s administration is urged to show strategic wisdom particularly in getting China to put enough pressure and sanctions on Pyongyang to change its attitudes. It seems the Chinese increasingly perceive North Korea as more of a security liability than a security asset. But Beijing’s thinking will certainly not change overnight. Seoul may use strengthening cooperation in missile defence with the US as one form of leverage to push China to be more active in pressuring the North. Such an attempt would require extremely adroit diplomatic skill to strike a balance between the two giant powers. Growing calls for South Korea’s nuclear armament need to be contained to prevent them from blurring the discussion of effective and realistic responses to North Korea’s nuclear threat. It can be argued that the asymmetric threat posed by Pyongyang’s nuclear arms has reached the point of compelling Seoul to consider all strategic options. It may also be hoped that such discussions would serve at least as a warning to North Korea and China to pay more heed to South Korea’s voice. But under conditions that make it realistically impossible for Seoul to pursue its own nuclear weapons programme, explicitly abiding by its denuclearisation policy may be more effective in achieving its strategic goal and making the peninsula safer and more secure over the longer term. February 22-March 7, 2013 By Kavi Chongkittavorn The Nation Ending Insurgency Can Malaysia be a peacemaker in south Thailand? ❖❖ Bangkok I AFP f everything goes well— augment Malaysian and it is a big if—by the Prime Minister Najib end of this month in Razak’s leadership credKuala Lumpur, Malaysia ibility. could broker a framework Thailand has been peace plan between the Thai urging Malaysia to government and southern amend the border secuThai-Malay insurgents to rity cooperation to rebegin a peace dialogue. But flect the newly perceived it is not a done deal. Rather, threats along the Thaiit is a work in progress Malaysian border. In showing for the first time the past, both countries that Thailand and Malaysia fought communist inare working closely together Members of the bomb squad inspect the site of bomb blast, surgents as common detonated by suspected separatist militants at the clock tower to bring a long lasting solu- intersection in Pattani town on Feb 17, 2013. A shadowy insurgency enemies—something tion to the restive deep south calling for greater autonomy has plagued Thailand’s far south near older generations of after years of unfulfilled the border with Malaysia, claiming more than 5,300 lives, both Malaysians continue to promises. This continued Buddhists and Muslims, since 2004. appreciate. effort coincides with the ofHowever, with the ficial four-day visit of Yangdi disappearance of comPertuan Agong XIV and the representatives of Pattani United munist threats, both Raja Permaisuri Agong to Thailand Liberation Organisation who reside sides have yet to come to terms with as guests of Their Majesties the King in Malaysia, along with low level their different threat perceptions. At and Queen. members of the Barisan Revolusi the General Border Committee in P r i m e M i n i s t e r Y i n g l u c k Nasional across the border, but they November last year, Thailand wantShinawatra’s government, with her failed to strike a deal. When the ed to add terrorism, transnational b r o t h e r T h a k s i n b e h i n d i t , i s news broke, Thaksin and his associ- crime, and drug and arms smuggling currently working together with the ates denied vehemently that the to intelligence exchanges as new Malaysian government through the meeting took place, despite picto- security areas for cooperation. MaSpecial Branch Police to identify the rial proof. Subsequently, bomb at- laysia was reluctant. The Thai offiinsurgents who would be part of the tacks in Yala and Songkhla followed, cials have been hoping—but rather framework. As a facilitator, Malaysia committed by younger elements in vain—that there are specific w i l l h a v e a l i m i t e d r o l e i n t h e opposing the meeting. confidence-building measures that beginning. Thailand has made clear Nearly a year has elapsed. Sud- Malaysia could do right away on its to its neighbour that it owns the denly, Thaksin and his security team own to show goodwill. process and would move at a pace saw a window to strike a peace deal Within the next few weeks, Thaithat is comfortable to all. What with the insurgents with Malaysia’s land and Malaysia can together prompted the government to move full cooperation. make history if they can overcome forward essentially has to do with After all, Malaysia played a com- their differences and find new comthe worsening situation in the three mendable role in assisting the his- mon grounds for cooperation, which provinces in recent months. A series toric peace agreement last October could eventually lead to an enduring of continued violent killings oF between the Philippine government peace in the south and in adjacent innocent civilians and the failed and the Muslim rebels in Mindanao. areas. attack on a Thai naval camp recently If Malaysia can do the same in forgSo far, a convergence of factors in Narathiwat added urgency for the ing a peace deal in southern Thai- including domestic dynamics has government to seek dialogue with land, it would enhance the country’s played out positively in the south. the various insurgent groups. prestige and position. Most impor- But for the future, nobody knows Last March, Thaksin met with tantly, it would also immediately whether peace is at hand. February 22-March 7, 2013 •7 economy Philippine Daily Inquirer Prices are seen for different kinds of rice at a market in Manila. Inflation rates in the Philippines rose to 3.0 per cent in January, slightly higher than the 2.9 per cent the previous month following a rise in prices of goods and services. Despite a much-touted performance, the Philippines is rated as the laggard in the region ❖❖ Manila T he Benigno Aquino III administration has received much praise from foreign and local institutions for the “spectacular” performance of the Philippine economy in 2012. The International Monetary Fund, World Bank, Asian Development Bank and private think-tanks have all been bullish on the Philippines. Thus, many were surprised by the recent release by Malaysian creditwatcher RAM Rating Services of its inaugural sovereign ratings for five leading Southeast Asian countries. In brief, it showed the Philippines as the laggard among the region’s major economies. In an 80-page report titled “Leading Asean Sovereigns”, RAM gave the Philippines a rating of “BBB” on its long-term borrowings, meaning that it had only “moderate capacity to meet its obligations”. The Philippines was also given a short-term rating of P2, also the 8• Jay D ir ecto/AFP Pragmatic Rating lowest in this category, meaning that it had “adequate capacity to meet its short-term financial obligations”. Malaysia and Singapore got the highest ratings of “AAA” and P1, respectively, meaning “superior capacity” to pay long-term debt and “strong capacity” to settle shortterm obligations. Indonesia and Thailand got “AA” and P1, the former indicating “strong capacity” to meet long-term obligations. RAM was incorporated in 1990 and listed among its shareholders Fitch Ratings, McGraw-Hill Asian Holdings (Singapore), and the Malaysian subsidiaries of Bank of America, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Deutsche Bank, Citibank, HSBC, JP Morgan Chase and Standard Chartered. Weaknesses In explaining the ratings for the Philippines, RAM noted the country’s strengths in terms of sustained current-account surpluses, rising foreign currency reserves and improving economic conditions. But it said these pluses were being watered February 22-March 7, 2013 down by a “heavy government debt burden, mostly in foreign currencies; a small revenue base and hefty interest expenses [that] strain the fiscal profile, and a weak institutional framework”. “Our assessment of the Philippines’ fiscal profile reveals persistent deficits due to the government’s weak revenue-generating capacity; tax revenues are its main source of income. As a percentage of GDP, government revenue averaged 15.3 per cent from 1990 to 2011 and is the lowest among its peers in the region,” it said. RAM observed that Philippine budget deficits had largely been narrowing because of better tax administration and collections. “There is also noticeable improvement in its debt ratio, from more than 70 per cent of gross domestic product a decade ago to 50.8 per cent as of end-2011,” it said. But it added that “the government’s debt load is still hefty and its sizeable foreign-currency-denominated borrowings amplify foreign exchange risk”. “While the Philippines’ recent February 22-March 7, 2013 economic performance is noteworthy, we are also mindful that much more needs to be done to reposition its misaligned identity—from a remittance-dependent economy to one powered by investments and stronger industries,” RAM said. And while it noted that the Aquino administration was laying the foundation by focusing on upgrading infrastructure and enhancing human-capital development, “the Philippines’ ability to attract FDI still pales in comparison to its regional peers at this juncture”. Problems persist Achieving inclusive growth is also being made difficult by the Philippines’ burgeoning population, the world’s 12th highest at more than 95 million. RAM noted the mass poverty that continued to affect about a quarter of the population, as well as the national unemployment rate that stood at 6.9 per cent in the second quarter of 2012, and underemployment remaining widespread at 19.3 per cent. The “educated unemployed” as a percentage of the total unemployed labour force exceeded 40 per cent, highlighting the problem of labour mismatch that has forced Filipinos to work overseas. RAM’s assessment is the most pragmatic compared with those of Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings. Many in the Aquino administration and in the private sector will cast doubt on RAM’s assessment and point out that the three biggest credit watchdogs are in fact bullish on the Philippines. But it may be well to recall that about four years ago, Moody’s and S&P were criticised for their role in the global credit crisis that saw the fall of the venerable investment house Lehman Brothers in September 2008, leading the world to a sharp economic decline that persists today. Then, the likes of Bank of America, Citi and Merrill Lynch had sterling credit ratings, yet all reeled from the effects of the subprime crisis. Those glowing ratings appear to have been flawed. •9 SPECIAL REPORT By Prodita Sabrini The Jakarta Post Children’s activities online leave them vulnerable to sexual predators, cyber-bullying and pornography ❖❖ Jakarta N ew technologies are forever a blessing and a curse, as in the case of inevitable exposure of the young to unknown abusers in cyberspace. Just how can we prevent children from falling victim to sexual predators? According to Ecpat International, cyberspace is home to more than 1 million images of tens of thousands of children being subjected to sexual abuse and exploitation. A 2010 report from the International Watch Foundation states that 17 per cent of the world’s child sex abuse Web addresses are based in Asia. From a recent two-month survey conducted by Ecpat, the foundation discovered 137 cases of commercial sexual exploitation that used social media or mobile messenger services in Jakarta, Bandung and Batam. The director of Ecpat Indonesia, Irwanto, said that the pervasiveness of the Internet in children’s lives made children vulnerable to sexual predators lurking online. (Ecpat is an organisation dedicated to “End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes”.) “This can happen to anyone,” he said. The mother of a 14-year-old girl from Depok who fell prey to an online sexual predator and was nearly trafficked to Batam said she hoped the government would 10 • Sonny Tu mbelaka /AFP Keep Off Those Trolls Children look up Facebook at an Internet shop in Indonesia. Without protection, children fall prey to sexual predators online. take firmer action against sexual predators who exploited the Internet to search for their victims. She endured sleepless nights when her daughter, identified as SAS, did not return home in late September after saying that she was going to visit a sick friend before heading to church choir practice. SAS was allegedly kidnapped and taken to Bogor, drugged and repeatedly raped by Catur Sugiarto, 24, a man who befriended her on Facebook. Child activists believe a child sex trafficking ring was involved as SAS said that her kidnapper told her she was to be shipped to Batam, an island that is a notorious sex trafficking destination. SAS was found on September 26 at the Depok bus terminal after her alleged captor left her there. SAS’ lawyer, Dwi Handi Pardede, said her kidnappers probably became scared because of the media coverage of the missing girl and returned her to Depok. SAS also said that she saw at least four other girls between the ages of 14 and 17 in the house where she was held captive. Social stigma SAS’ abduction brought the issue of online-based sexual violence against children to the fore. But it also showed a sinister side of some members of the public against victims of sexual violence. SAS was denounced and humiliated in front of other students February 22-March 7, 2013 Bay I smoyo/AFP Indonesian teens use their phones for access to the Internet, where lurkers search for victims. by her former school principal on her first day back at school after the ordeal. Education and Culture Minister Mohammad Nuh made a controversial statement about underage victims of rape, implying that a lot of girls consented to sex and then claimed rape. The minister made this comment despite the fact that consent is irrelevant in sexual relations between an adult and a minor. Under the Penal Code and the Child Protection Law, any kind of sexual relationship between an adult and a minor is a crime. SAS’ mother said her daughter was trying to rebuild her life and that she had changed schools. She worried though about other girls as her daughter’s kidnapper remained at large. “The police haven’t caught the perpetrator. The government has to act more firmly. Other victims are at risk,” she said. Indeed, SAS’s story is hardly the only incidence of sexual violence. The National Commission for Child Protection (Komnas PA) this year received 129 reports of missing children. The commission believes that 27 of them went missing after meeting their abductors through Facebook. With the many risks that come with social media, parents should monitor their children’s online activity, a child activist says. Irwanto, the director of Ecpat Indonesia, said February 22-March 7, 2013 parents should be aware of the dangers posed by social media and take active steps to protect their children. Irwanto said that one way was to install monitoring software on their computers to monitor their children’s social media accounts. Apps for parents Software developers and security firms have released applications for parental monitoring. Among the paid products and services available are ZoneAlarm SocialGuard, TrueCare and SocialShield. MinorMonitor also provides free monitoring software. These applications allow parents to monitor their children’s online activity, including alerting parents to the existence of their chidren’s acquaintances with a low number of mutual friends and identifying online friends that might be too old. Children’s activities online leave them vulnerable to sexual predators, cyber-bullying, pornography and sharing too much personal information online. Irwanto said parents should also try to have an open discussion about sex education. “Many teenagers do not know who to talk to about sex,” he said. He said that children were at risk of looking for answers among their peers, which could lead to risky sexual behaviour and sexual exploitation. • 11 TECHNOLOGY By Julie Jackson The Korea Herald Welcome to the world of self-driven cars, 3-D avatars ❖❖ Seoul T he monstrous leaps that technology has taken and continues to take today have an immeasurable impact on daily life. These advancements in technology and telecommunications are what open up the doors to a future of endless possibilities, inventions and seamless productivity. Like a scene straight out of a sci-fi movie, the SK Telecom Ubiquitous Museum (T.um) is a visual splendor showcasing the many yet-tobe mass marketed technologies of tomorrow. Within the next decade, people will be able to control some of life’s most routine decisions and tasks right in the palm of one’s hand. T.um is a truly unique museum that allows visitors 12 • to utilise and interact with some of the world’s state-of-the-art technologies. U.Home Living rooms of the future will be controlled with a wave of an arm, whether it is checking the weather or email, reading the news, or even making a phone call. The U.Home section of T.um is an interactive display of the capabilities of the new generation of smart homes. Everything one would come to hope for in an entertainment and practical information system is simply projected onto the walls of one’s home and equipped with motion control using the latest in infrared technology. “It takes a lot of time and money to change the wallpaper in your house these days, but in the future, with this technology, it can be done February 22-March 7, 2013 Photos by Ki m Myu ng-su b/ The Korea H erald simply,” said Choi Boo-g yung, manager of T.um, as she waved her hand and made a picture of a city skyline appear on the wall, including a nighttime fireworks display. Even the tables of the future will be equipped with the latest in computer and communications technology. Envision a giant iPad as a coffee table that can play music and video, and store, send and even print photos. And if this isn’t enough, with a simple flick of one’s finger, the videos and photos on the table can be pushed to display on the wall. U.Driving U.Driving allows visitors to take a virtual spin in an actual car that is meant to simulate what driving will be like in the years to come with a vehicle that drives itself. February 22-March 7, 2013 “You won’t need to drive yourself because automatic driving systems will be available in the future,” said Choi. The door locks and interior temperature are all controlled by one’s smartphone, and as soon as the driver gets in, the car scans and measures one’s body condition, from heart rate and blood pressure to body temperature. Similar to a video arcade game, the U.Driving simulation has a large video screen of a futuristic Seoul where gas stations are obsolete and replaced by electric recharging stations. One can even purchase and sell electric energy from cars driving next to it simply by sending an electronic request to another car. Equipped with voice automation, the car narrates to the driver all the personalised features that are available while riding. On a small • 13 TECHNOLOGY screen located in the car, optimal destination routes and nearby restaurant recommendations appear along with shopping options. There are even movie downloads available that can be played on a screen projection that appears on the windshield of the car to be enjoyed while the car navigates the roads on its own. U.Shopping/U.Fashion In the future, there will be no wasting time tr y ing on different outfits while shopping. Rather you can dress up your personal avatar with ready-to-purchase outfits. “When you go to the mall these days you have to go into fitting rooms, but here you can just use our fitting screens,” Choi said. By stepping into a very modern looking clear tube, visitors can have their bodies and faces scanned to produce a life size 3-D avatar of themselves in less than a minute. “We use millimetre-waves that go through our outfits and reflect thousands of water points on our skin to measure our body index,” she said. Once an avatar has been created, one’s body measurements are immediately stored and clothing stores and recommended outfits are sent directly to one’s smartphone along with all purchasing information. Shoppers can then view these outfits on their avatar and swiftly change views and outfits with the touch of a button. What may seem like a world of surreal imagination may in fact become a reality sooner that one may think. Because these technological developments and capabilities are already possible and in existence, it is only a matter of marketing and time before these options become readily available. “I think people will be able to see all the future concepts within five to 10 years,” said Choi. ∞∞SK Telecom Ubiquitous Museum +82 (02) 6100-0601 Location: SK T-Tower, 11 Euljiro2-ga, Jung-gu, Seoul Hours: Open Monday through Friday from 9am to 6pm. (Closed last Friday of every month) Admission: Free. Reservations are required and must be made at least one day in advance. For more information, visit tum.sktelecom.com 14 • February 22-March 7, 2013 Building Asia together Holcim is building the very foundations of modern life. As a leading supplier of building materials in Asia we are strongly committed to the region. Global expertise and know-how, local market excellence and can-do attitude provide the strongest foundation for future growth. As with the Mass Rapid Transit network that forms the backbone of Singapore‘s public transport system. That‘s what it takes to build with confidence in the most dynamic region in the world. We do this with respect for both the environment and the local communities where we operate. www.holcim.com Strength. Performance. Passion. POLITICS The Jakarta Post Indonesia’s presidential security forces show off their skills during an anti-terrorist drill in Bali. Fighting Rich Terrorists Terrorist cells thrive in Indonesia with members and sympathisers as new sources of funding 16 • February 22-March 7, 2013 ❖❖ Jakarta S o nny Tum b e lak a /AF P T February 22-March 7, 2013 he Indonesian National Police’s crackdown on al-Qaedalinked Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) as the party responsible for a series of deadly bomb attacks targeting foreign interests within the last decade has in fact not marked an end to acts of terrorism in the country. Terrorist cells have continued to seek and receive funding to carry out recruitment, training and eventually carnage, albeit on a lower scale. The country’s law enforcers had long been aware of the key issue of terrorism funding, but it took them one year to finally win the House of Representatives’ approval of a bill on terrorism financing. The bill, unanimously passed on February 12, authorises government institutions, including the Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (PPATK), to track down and cut the sources of funding for terrorist activities, both domestically and overseas. It will complement the draconian antiterrorism law passed in 2006 and the anti-money laundering legislation endorsed in 2003. When the bill comes into effect, PPATK will be responsible for freezing bank accounts and confiscating assets related to terrorism and terrorist organisations in cooperation with law enforcement agencies and financial service providers. The bill will also allow Indonesian authorities to ask foreign governments to block bank accounts of individuals or corporations included on the list of world terrorist groups and vice versa as part of the international cooperation in the fight against terrorism. ∞∞Funding sources According to the police, the terrorism network in the country has shifted to members and sympathisers as sources of funding. The terrorists turn out to justify funding raised through criminal acts as apparent in an August 2010 bank robbery in Medan, North Sumatra, which left a police officer dead, and the money changer robbery in Bali in March of last year. Bali bomber Imam Samudra, who was eventually executed, admitted to raising funds for the first attack on the tourist island in October 2002 by, among others, robbing a jewellery shop. It has been uncovered that terrorists collect money through Internet hacking as evident in the arrest of IT experts Rizki and Cahya, who worked under Santoso, a terror suspect who now tops the police most-wanted list for his activities in Poso, Central Sulawesi. The police said Rizki and Cahya hacked a foreign exchange trading website and collected nearly US$700,000 used to launch a bomb attack on a Surakarta Protestant church last year and paramilitary training in Central Sulawesi. A former terrorist who has served his jail sentence once said terrorist cells also collected funds through charity foundations or organisations, whose members operated door-to-door, in bus terminals and train stations, without knowing the money would go to terrorists. ∞∞Drugs connection With foreign funding no longer to be expected, terrorists will seek every avenue to secure their access to funding. Learning from the global terror network al-Qaeda, it will come as no surprise if in the future the Indonesian police find a link between terrorism and drug trafficking. The US security authorities discovered evidence of al-Qaeda’s alleged involvement in large-scale drug sales to finance its and its associates’ activities worldwide. They said ever since the Taliban took over Afghanistan, heroin production soared each year. The Taliban produced 400 out of 500 metric tons of heroin in 1999 alone. The media and several intelligence agencies also reported that bin Laden once exchanged $500 million worth of heroin for four suitcases with nuclear devices from the Chechens. The passage of a bill that will cut the lines of terrorist financing marks a progress in the country’s fight against terrorism. Sooner or later terrorists will arm themselves with high-tech unless the law enforcers succeed in blocking their access to funding. But all the efforts and initiatives to combat terrorists should not distract us from the root of terrorism: radicalism. • 17 POLITICS Philippine Daily Inquirer Bizarre Episode In Sabah ❖❖ Manila A lmos t a week since a large group of men and women identified with the Sultanate of Sulu made a mysterious mass landing in Lahad Datu town, in Sabah, much remains to be sorted out. But the excursion’s impact on the peace process with the Philippines’ Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) is becoming clearer by the day. The number of people involved remains undetermined. Many news reports have pegged the total at “100 armed Filipinos”, with other stories bringing the number up to 200. The man in charge of the expedition, Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram, said about 1,000 of his followers left Tawi-Tawi for Sabah on February 11. A report in The Star asserts that “the number of armed men has increased from 30 from Saturday to about 300”. There remains some doubt whether the men were indeed armed. Malaysian authorities said they were and responded accordingly; The 18 • Star report said they were “armed with M16 rifles, M14 grenade launchers and Colt 45 pistols”; Agbimuddin, the expedition leader, told the Inquirer that his followers had “M-14, M-16, M203, Baby Armalite, basta assorted ang dala namin [we brought assorted weapons].” But two Malacañang spokespersons, both quoting Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, said the men were not armed. (That women joined the expedition is an assertion of Agbimuddin’s. “We won’t go hungry here because the women who are with us are cooking for us,” he told the Inquirer in Filipino.) But what were they doing in Sabah in the first place? According to both Agbimuddin and his older brother, Sultan Jamalul Kiram, the expedition was meant to press their claim to Sabah. “I sent my brother in [sic] Sabah in the name of peace and in exercise of our historic, ancestral and sovereign right over Sabah,” an ailing Jamalul told the Inquirer. Agbimuddin said the resolution of the age-old claim to Sabah was an “integral and essential aspect” of any MO H D RASFAN/ AFP PH OTO The Philippines’ policy on the Sabah claim is not to relinquish but wait for the right time to push for it Malaysian armed policemen return from a sea patrol in Tanjung Labian near Lahad Datu, on the Malaysian island of Borneo on Feb 16, 2013. The Philippines called for a peaceful resolution to a tense stand-off in a remote area on the island, where hundreds of Filipinos with arms have landed. peace agreement. But, he said, “they are not interested, this government and the previous governments, so we decided to act on our own.” News reports out of Malaysia, however, suggest that Malaysian authorities either see Jamalul as part of the solution (“A Sulu Sultan has been called in to resolve a standoff”—the very state of affairs he had caused with his order to Agbimuddin) or that the members of the landing party wanted merely to be acknowledged “as citizens of the Sultanate of Sulu”. No wonder news reports from around the world have characterised the episode as bizarre. February 22-March 7, 2013 Because Sulu is part of the Philippines, the claim to Sabah is a national prerogative. Last year, President Benigno Aquino III described the Philippine claim as “dormant at this point in time”, a pragmatic policy in keeping with a long list of presidential precedents. The policy, as we understand it, is never to relinquish our claim, but also to wait for the right time to push it. Does the Lahad Datu excursion present the right opportunity to promote our claim? Some legal experts and political opportunists think so. We are not so sure. It has been suggested that mere physical presence of descendants of February 22-March 7, 2013 the Sultan of Sulu in Sabah would bolster the claim; this is rash and unrealistic, and would only prejudice Philippine standing in any international court. The immediate danger the excursion presents, however, is to the peace negotiations between the government and the MILF. Read the statements of both the Sultanate leaders and the official responses of Nur Misuari’s faction of the Moro National Liberation Front, and it is hard to escape the conclusion that the Sabah adventure was designed precisely to throw a spanner in the works. The Sultanate leaders felt aggrieved, a spokesperson said, that “the framework agreement [with the MILF] was finished without even the shadow of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo”. This is an interesting rationalisation, considering that Misuari, their fellow Tausug, negotiated the 1996 peace agreement with the national government that failed to promote the Sabah claim too. The peace negotiations are far from a done deal, but the two parties have never been this close to a peace agreement—the very compact that will put the Philippine claim to parts of Sabah on firmer footing. The illadvised excursion to Lahad Datu should not be a cause for distraction. • 19 Society By Natalie Heng The Star Bay I smoyo/AFP Snakes with unique colours and skin patterns, such as those of the corn snake, are popular among pet owners. But this hobby is said to be driving an illegal trade in wild-caught snakes. Snake Hunt W ❖❖ Kuala Lumpur Consumers are caught up in a frenzy of owning all things snake—with dire consequences 20 • ith the Year of the Snake, some animal lovers are seeking out snakes as pets, just like how rabbits were popular in 2011, the Year of the Rabbit. But without being churned through the Chinese New Year branding machinery, snakes are already in demand for their meat, in traditional medicine, and in highend fashion. In January 2012, over 47,350 pieces of cobra bile and 1,680 cobra eggs were seized at Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. In November, a report estimated that half a million python skins are exported from Southeast Asia annually, in a trade worth US$1 billion. “There is a higher demand for snakes right now, probably more than there has ever been,” says Chris Shepherd, deputy director of wildlife February 22-March 7, 2013 snakes is fast gearing up to become another crisis. Scientists admit that few studies have attempted, or been able to determine, the scale of the illegal trade in snakes, and the effects of illegal harvest. What we do know is that there are hundreds of species of reptiles and amphibians harvested from the wild every year for trade. Phi lippe Lopez/AFP ∞∞Captive breds As Hong Kong prepares to usher in the Year of the Snake, an increasing number of the reptiles are slithering their way into local households, with sales of the uncuddly pet rocketing. trade monitoring network Traffic Southeast Asia. “The global reptile trade right now, for pets, is huge, and the trade in skins is really huge.” According to an article published in the journal Conservation Biology last October, the wild harvesting of amphibians and reptiles is driven chiefly by consumer demand, largely from developed nations but increasingly, from Asian countries. At the losing end of the bargain are Southeast Asian countries, the source of these wildlife. We’ve already encountered the “Asian Turtle Crisis” which saw drastic declines in tortoises and freshwater turtles in the region. Now, it l o o k s l i ke t h e t ra d e i n A s i a n February 22-March 7, 2013 From the few studies that have been done, it looks like there is good reason for consumers to be cautious. The green tree python (Morelia viridis) is a popular snake in the global pet trade. It is one of Indonesia’s top exports, and stocks are declared as captive breds. In 2011, however, scientists Jessica Lyons and Daniel Natusch from the University of New South Wales found that at least 80 per cent of Indonesia’s green tree python exports were poached from the wild. This f ind highlights two important points: the potential for widespread fraud in the reptile export market and the difficulties pet owners face in differentiating between wild-caught and captivebred stock. There are many responsible snake owners who genuinely care for their pets and think that their hobby is harmless to populations in the wild. After all, snakes like the green tree python are not classified as a “threatened” species. Unfortunately, simply looking at an animal’s global conservation status does not reflect the damaging impact that harvesting might have on local wild populations. For example, the green tree python is listed as of “least concern” on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List but the assessment is based on global distributions. In Indonesia’s Papua province and Maluku Islands, the researchers say traders have reported a decline in snake numbers, which indicates over-harvesting on a local scale. ∞∞Illegal trade Last year, both scientists conducted another survey in the same area but discovered that efforts to find out the long-term impacts of the pet trade on local populations were hampered by poor understanding of the biology and trade of the snake species, and the fact that they inhabit remote provinces. They found a great need for increased monitoring and enforcement to curb illegal trading activities. Aside from improving our knowledge of the species being traded, there is also a need to educate consumers. Pet owners need to be aware of the effects their demand for exotic wildlife can have on species and their habitats, as well as the illegal means used to supply animals for the trade, such as wild-caught animals being passed off as captive breds. According to the Wildlife and National Parks Department (Perhilitan), nine species of snakes are traded locally—the reticulated python, Burmese python, blood python, Borneo short-tailed python, ball python (or royal python), Oriental rat snake, king cobra, monocled cobra and equatorial spitting cobra. Perhilitan said 406 live snakes, 297,956 pieces of skin, 12,508kg of meat, and 82 snake-based products were exported from Malaysia in 2011. Eight Malaysian snake species listed were in CITES (multilateral treaty on anti-wildlife trade) Appendix II and so, subjected to controlled trade. The local trade in snakes will soon be affected by an amendment to the Pet Shop Regulations 2012 under the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010. Perhilitan says not all local species will be allowed for trade under the regulation, citing this as a way to control the possession of harmful and dangerous snakes. C u r re n t ly, t h e Ac t l i s t s 1 69 species as “protected” (permit is required for any trade) and 14 as “totally protected” (no trade allowed). • 21 Society By Pam Pastor Philippine Daily Inquirer Love In Time Of Social Networking It’s a new era for dating, where your relationship status can change with a click of a button ❖❖ Manila K itty, a preschool teacher, thought she had found the love of her life when she met Bong. “We dated regularly for a few months. He said we were exclusive so I changed my Facebook status to ‘In a relationship.’ His status stayed `Single’ and he refused to change it. We broke up. If he wasn’t going to be truthful about our relationship on Facebook, how can he be truthful about it in real life?” Kitty said. Welcome to love and courtship in the time of social networking. It’s a new era for dating, where chocolates and roses have been replaced by “likes” and Instagram pictures, and your relationship status can change with a click of a button. “That relationship status feature of Facebook is evil,” said Carmela, a writer. “I’ve seen angry friends change theirs to ‘It’s complicated’ 22 • every time they fight with their boyfriends. Then friends flood their pages with questions: ‘Why?’ ‘What happened?’ ‘What did he do?’ ‘It’s so messy.” Princess Dasky, a PR manager, agreed. “I’ve decided that I will never change my dating status in Facebook or anywhere online, except maybe if I’m changing it to ‘engaged’ or ‘married’”. Dating tool Social networking sites have become a necessary tool for this generation of daters, offering a venue for low-risk and convenient courtship. Backg round checks are now easier too. Char, an account supervisor in a marketing communication company, said, “By adding him on Facebook, you see your common friends and you can text or call them right away.” “It’s not stalking, it’s research,” said Bunny, an admin assistant. Bernard, a copywriter, said, “Job companies you apply for do it— why not on someone you potentially will spend the rest of your life with?” Denise, a housewife, met her husband online. Before they were married, he lived in the United States and she lived in the Philippines. So they used Facebook to stay connected. “We would post pictures so the other could see what we were up to,” she said. The two now live together in the United States. It was also through Facebook that Melanie, a PR executive, reconnected with her childhood sweetheart after 10 years of not seeing each other. They used to exchange handwritten letters when they were in high school. Now, they are back together and use Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to keep in touch, especially since they both travel a lot for work. “Communication has been easier, checking up on each other can be February 22-March 7, 2013 Robyn Be ck/AF P Is Facebook helping or hurting you? Social media sites put unwanted strain on relationships. done in an instant,” she said. Viber, other apps For people in long-distance relationships, sites like Facebook and Twitter and apps likes Viber, Whatsapp, Skype are heaven-sent. Princess Dasky said: “I’m in a long-distance relationship now. Six to eight years ago, this might not have worked for me. But social networking sites are a great way to continue to get to know each other. It’s a great way to introduce him to my family and friends too.” Neil, a senior art director, said social networking sites were a big help when he was living in Toronto and his girlfriend was in Vancouver. “Social media is an excellent venue to know whether your partner is having a bad day at work, the food she is craving, and how she feels in general, depending on how much she shares on her page.” The two are now married. “I eventually moved to Vancouver and lived happily ever after,” Neil said. Make or break But not all stories end happily. Joseph, a human resources business partner, said, “Facebook can make or break relationships so use it responsibly.” TriggerFinger, a photographer, felt the same way. “Social networking sites can both be a February 22-March 7, 2013 blessing and a bane. They can amplify issues from the past that should not be remembered.” Jellybean, a case manager, said: “If one of you is a jealous person, these sites can make a relationship difficult. My husband and I don’t really use them to declare love for each other or have online fights. We think that some aspects of our relationship should stay private.” Isabel, an ER nurse, said the convenience of social networks could be dangerous. “You have a constant access to their daily lives and their interactions, whether you like it or not. In the thick of being in love, your insatiable urge to know about your partner will use this. You want to know what they’re doing, who they’re interacting with, what they’re thinking about. “This can cause friction in relationships. Couples, my past relationships included, have had so many fights that were brought on by very petty things on the Internet,” Isabel said. Other couples have decided to deal with this by staying away from each other’s social networks. Isabel said: “The guy I’m dating is in a band. A lot of girls try to flirt with him on Facebook and he will always be tempted to flirt with them. We fought about it once. I’ve decided to unsubscribe from him. It’s the best decision I made online.” Alta, a plus-sized model, said she and her boyfriend were no longer friends on Facebook. “Now we have less arguments. We just use iMessage and Viber.” Cerise, a marketing consultant, believed that social networking sites also made it easier for partners to cheat. “Because these sites make hooking up easier, cheating is easier too.” But the very same sites make catching infidelity easier too. Resisting urge Moving on can become more difficult, too, because Facebook and Twitter make it easy to see what people’s ex-boyfriends and girlfriends are up to. “I think the amount of times you spend checking your ex’s profile can tell you how far you’ve moved on,” said Janis Ian, an editor. Some save themselves from the trouble by resisting the urge. Random Perignon, a graduate student, said, “I don’t stalk exes because I don’t want to commit emotional suicide.” B, president of a tourism company, said: “I have blocked ex-boyfriends from finding me on any social media offering a ‘block’ option. Who wants that kind of drama?” Finding balance The key is balance—finding a way to use social networks to keep love alive both online and offline. Jonha, a community manager, says, “Tagging someone you love on a Facebook status isn’t as powerful or as sweet as actually spending time with them in person.” Neil said, “I’m the type of guy who would send flowers to her office in the same way I would randomly tweet about how much I love her just so people could tease her the whole day.” Ruth, a writer, said: “I still get flowers and chocolates on important dates. I get to brag about it on Facebook minutes after receiving it. That, to me, is awesome.” • 23 LIFESTYLE By Cecily Liu, Caroline Berg and He Na China Daily Eat, Save, Don’t Waste China has a growing appetite for cutting back on food wastage 24 • February 22-March 7, 2013 ❖❖ Beijing E very few weeks, Lu Jinhua’s family meets for dinner at a restaurant close to her home in Beijing’s Chaoyang d i s t r i c t . B ut t h e h a p py mealtime almost always ends with an unhappy scene: Her children will insist that Lu leaves the table before she can embarrass them by asking to take the leftover food home in takeaway bags. But on Sunday, the 63-year-old Beijing resident was delighted to discover that the restaurant had implemented a number of changes. A poster on the table clearly stated, “Save food, don’t waste it”. Instead of persuading customers to order a wide range of expensive dishes, the waitress suggested a small order that could be supplemented l ater if February 22-March 7, 2013 people were still hungry. At the end of the dinner, Lu’s daughter even volunteered to ask the waitress for doggy boxes. “This is the happiest dinner I had in that restaurant so far, and I am so glad to see these changes. I used to live in a rural area and I’m well aware of the hardships farmers endure,” Lu said. A campaign against food wastage is sweeping China, a country where 128 million people live below the poverty line. Every year, food valued at 200 b i l l i o n y u a n ( US $ 3 2 b i l l i o n) i s thrown away in China. The volume is equivalent to the amount consumed by more than 200 million people during a 12-month period. A proposal published in January, opposing waste, is part of a drive by China’s new leaders to fight extravagance and advocate thrift. Following suit, many provinces have launched their own, moredetailed versions. Central China’s Henan province has ordered that business meals for cadres should feature no more than four dishes, and alcohol is prohibited. Meanwhile, the southwestern province of Guizhou has set a time limit of 45 minutes on meals paid for by the public purse. The public has also adopted the idea, resulting in a surge in antiwaste rhetoric. For example, the Beijing Catering Trade Association, Beijing Cuisine Association and Beijing Western Food Association launched a joint anti-waste initiative in late January, which garnered a rapid response from many catering enterprises. Smaller portions At Quanjude Group, one of China’s biggest restaurant chains, cards written in red print remind customers to order sparingly, while also pointing out that they are encouraged to take leftovers home to eat later. To discourage customers from ordering more than they can eat, the group has started to use smaller serving plates for portions. The new plates are roughly half the size than before and hold half the amount of food. Prices have also been altered to suit. The campaign has also attracted large numbers of young people. In January, a proposal initiated on the micro blog service Weibo calling on Beijing residents to eat everything on their plate attracted the participation of 2.74 million people within the first two weeks. Liu Qinglong , a professor at Tsinghua University’s School of Public Policy and Management, was happy to see the change in attitude toward food wastage, but he said he’s waiting to see how things pan out over the long term. He expressed concern that the new move may be short-lived and will fade away in the face of traditional cultural pressures. “Ostentation and preserving face have been part of Chinese culture for thousands of years,” he said, pointing out that people don’t like to be seen taking food home from restaurants for fear that neighbours and friends may think them stingy or poverty-stricken. He sug gested the government should introduce a media and social supervision mechanism to combat these perceptions, while also advocating the establishment of a special office to oversee payments made with public funds. “Without effective and detailed implementation, the phenomenon will not last long,” said Liu. Although research by China Agricultural University in 2008 estimated that 50 million metric tons of food—one-tenth of China’s total grain output—is wasted every year, the problem is equally, if not more, acute in industrialised countries and the phenomenon can be observed in almost every developed nation. Roughly one-third of the food produced in the world for human consumption every year—approximately 1.3 billion metric tons—is wasted, according to a study commissioned by the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation. • 25 LIFESTYLE By Fiona Ho The Star Carefully choosing what to eat and the amount of exercise we do will determine whether we’ll be having a ball, or looking like one, later in life. AFP Going Grey A practical guide on the art of ageing ❖❖ Kuala Lumpur A geing is a process that affects not just your physicality; it also affects your brain, as well as your attitude and belief systems. The only way to address that is by changing your lifestyle habits and belief systems. You’ve probably heard this some 5,000 times before, yet the undisputed truth remains that good eating habits and regular exercise are factors that can help determine whether you’ll be having a ball or looking like one in your golden years. Like eating and sleeping, growing older is an inevitable fact of life. In bygone days, old age was regarded as a measure of wisdom and survival worthy of respect. These days, far from being a celebrated journey, ageing is often treated as a dreaded phenomenon that spawns wrinkles and diseases in its wake. 26 • Whatever your view on ageing, the undisputed truth remains that not even the richest, most powerful, or most beautiful of us are exempt from the ravages of time. Changing habits That said, it is a common misconception that ageing is a chronologically-driven event that happens automatically when people reach 50, says Rico Ricketts, a Canadianbased consultant and coach on wellness and ageing. “People start to lose their dignity. They assume they will become diseased and automatically discarded by the rest of society with age,” Ricketts, 70, says. While the thought of growing older doesn’t always paint a rosy picture, the road towards your golden years doesn’t have to be a bumpy one. Adequate nutrition and regular physical activity are important factors that can help ease the ageing process, says Ricketts. But you already knew that, having heard about it some 5,000 times before. That doesn’t stop you from tucking into your regular fix of burgers and fries. Yet, it is these simple choices that we make on a daily basis, including what we eat and how much we eat, that can help determine whether we’ll be having a ball, or looking like one, later in life. Many Malaysians take their health for granted. “I can see that Malaysians love to makan-makan (eat),” Ricketts points out with a laugh. Indeed, with food and incessant eating being part of our national culture, Malaysians are well-known for stuffing our faces with obscene amounts of food at any given time of the day. Given these habits, it is no wonder that Malaysia is now the fattest country in Southeast Asia. Current findings by the Health Ministry reveal that two in every five adults are either overweight or obese. February 22-March 7, 2013 Ong S o o n Hin/ the sta r Dr Rajbans: The common misconception is that you have to join a gym to exercise. Actually, you can do all of this from home. Citing statistics from the National Health and Morbidity Surveys, Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai says that 15.1 per cent of Malaysians aged 18 and above were suffering from obesity as of 2011. “This is an increase from the 14 per cent figure of the same demographic in 2006,” he points out. Being over weight or obese increases one’s risk of developing heart diseases, type 2 diabetes and cancer. The presence of such diseases can have a debilitating effect on one’s quality of life, says Ricketts. atrician and president of the Malaysian Wellness Society. Understanding the ageing process is more important than ever as people are now living longer. The average lifespan of Malaysian men and women today are 74.2 years and 79.1 years respectively, compared to 7 2.6 years and 7 7.5 years respectively in 2010. However, instead of taking the right measures to ensure a healthy ageing process, many people are busy shopping for solutions to fight ageing, Ricketts notes. Longer life The number of cosmetic surgeries performed in the United St ates increased by 155 per cent last year. Sales of anti-ageing products are also estimated to hit a total of US$274.5 billion in 2013. Cosmetic products and procedures that claim to have the ability to curtail or reverse ageing are equally popular with Malaysians. However, many of these products are minimally effective at best, and are often costly and impermanent. Worse, you could end up looking like Cher. “Most of these anti-ageing products address ageing from the outside, using things like lotions and p o t i o n s , a n d b o t ox a n d pl a s t i c surgery. “ B ut a c t u a l l y, g ra c e f u l a g e i ng occurs from the inside out. That’s how biology operates,” says Ricketts. “Ageing is a process that affects not just your physicality; it also affects your brain, as well as your attitude and belief systems. T he only way to address that is by changing your lifestyle habits and A 2009 report by the Health Ministry estimated that about one in every four deaths in government hospitals were attributed to either heart diseases or strokes. Despite the apparent health risks that can develop from making poor lifestyle choices, a staggering 75 per cent of Malaysians do not exercise at all, the ministry reported. “A healthy lifestyle can have a significant impact on your biology,” Ricketts notes. “By making the right lifestyle choices, you don’t have to lose your mind, lose your faculties, or lose your limbs and digits, and suffer in old age.” The robust coach recently spoke on the subject of healthy ageing at a public forum held at a medical centre in Selangor. The talk, which addressed the popular myths of ageing, was part of a community ser vice project organised by the Canadian-based non-profit organisation, Friends to Mankind. Ricketts was joined by Dr Rajbans Singh, a consultant geriFebruary 22-March 7, 2013 Ageing with grace Ricketts: Graceful ageing occurs from the inside out. That’s how biology operates. belief systems.” Unfortunately, health problems like obesity are not exclusive to the ageing population. “I have seen young boys with breasts,” Ricketts shares with a chuckle. The good news is, even if you have been on a fastfood and soda diet all your life, it is never too late to start making healthy changes to your lifestyle. The best thing that you can do for your heart is getting rid of your love handles. For those unacquainted with physical activity, Rajbans advises: start small. “Start by doing simple things like going to bed 10 minutes earlier and waking up 10 minutes earlier to do some simple exercises. “You can start by doing exercises like push-ups and squats, and progress from there,” he shares. Rajbans adds: “ The common misconception is that you have to join a gym to exercise. Actually, you can do all of this from home.” Some important aspects to note when considering your new fitness routine are: cardiovascular activities such as aerobics to promote optimum heart health; weight-bearing exercises to help improve muscular and core strength; and exercises that help promote flexibility such as yoga and Pilates. “Flexibility becomes an issue for most of us as we get older,” says Rajbans. He concludes: “The simplest thing that you can do is just to e at ‘simple’ foods that have not been processed, genetically modified or doused with chemicals. Eat something that your grandma can recognise.” • 27 LIFESTYLE By Cheche V. Moral Philippine Daily Inquirer Need cash? Designer bags are the new currency ❖❖ Manila D esigner purses have transcended their arm-candy s t a t us a nd h ave b e c o m e currency for wealthy women and salary-earners alike. Bags these days are traded and exchanged over and over to fulfil not just fleeting desires, but to get one through a financial bind, in much the same way jewellery used to. In a way, bags have become the new jewellery. “Women from all walks of life are now in on this,” says Hazel Aguilar, a young mother of two who resells designer purses on the side. “We’re no longer talking of just ‘bag addicts’. Everyone wants to own one. And because of that, it has created a business for those who want to unload their collection to make room for new ones.” Aguilar, who started collecting luxury purses in college, began reselling bags six years ago “when only a few women were doing so”. She only wanted to dispose of styles she was no longer using. She found the upkeep of too many purses difficult. “They’re leather and they’re hard to maintain,” she explains. If unused and not aired regularly, leather becomes brittle and deteriorates. “And unlike jewellery, they don’t appreciate in value.” Trisha Cruz Cuason, co-owner of 28 • AFP Confessions Of Bagaholics Vintage Restore, a bag restoration shop, agrees. Cuason also sells vintage jewellery and luxury purses. ∞∞Monogram “You sell bags at a loss,” Cuason says. “I advise clients to resell only when the bags they bring to us are beyond repair, say, a Louis Vuitton Vernis, which is very difficult to fix. The reselling price is usually very cheap.” Cuason typically gets higher-end designer purses, like Chanels, on consignment, from rich clients. Aguilar started with mostly L o u i s Vu i t t o n s , t h e u b i q u i t o u s Monogramme styles that “everybody knows.” “If you’re a newbie, that’s what you want, something easily recognisable,” she notes. After all, that’s what most women are after, she says. “They want it known that they own something designer.” Her clients then graduate to Pradas and Balenciagas. These days, Aguilar sells mostly handbags from Celine, Marni, Alexander Wang, brands only the in-the-knows are familiar with. Aguilar’s clients have different budgets, including those who want to pay only in installments. Preowned purses, depending on their state and condition, can go as low as 40-per-cent off the price at a boutique, she says. Sometimes, if you get lucky, a woman might unload her wares for spare change when she needs “fast cash”. “Women have varied reasons for b uy i n g p r e - o w n e d , ” s h e s a y s . “These are those who are not too eager to have it absolutely right now. They would rather wait. Of course, there are also those who just don’t want to pay full price.” Carla Torres (not her real name) is one such buyer. A top human resources executive for a big company, she likes to buy pre-owned bags for the cheap. “I think that’s the motivation: the brand and the feeling that you got it cheaper,” she says. One time, she purchased a used Prada purse for only 4,000 pesos (US$98); restoration cost her more at 5,000 pesos ($123). But for her, it was a steal nonetheless. While Torres doesn’t sell her bags, she likes to hunt for good bargains. She belongs to a close network of women who pass their purses around. ∞∞Paradox It’s paradoxical, in fact, these women’s desire to own a so-called status symbol: They want something that people can easily recognise yet they don’t want what everybody else is carrying. Hence the desire to upgrade. “You know what, it has become a venue for bonding for my friends and me,” says Torres. “A lot of them go to the stores to check the retail February 22-March 7, 2013 Most first-time luxury bag buyers want an easily recognisable brand, like a Louis Vuitton. Some women would starve to own a ‘status symbol’ like this Louis Vuitton. Newbie collectors go for logos, like this hobo style by Gucci. prices. Some are always online. We compare.” Aguilar’s cousin-in-law in the province, for instance, had told her about a woman who comes in to their office to sell “entr y-level” purses—Tor y Burch, Kate Spade, Coach—on an installment basis. Her in-law works in a bank. Politicians as well as office workers count among Roe Quiambao Dillera’s clients. She sells purses via her Facebook page called The Duchess of Luxury. Dillera’s “backyard industry”, as she calls it, has proved so lucrative that she had left her corporate job, the same job that brought her on quarterly trips to Japan and introduced her to the world of “preloved” bags, parlance for things secondhand or pre-owned. “I think these became popular when ordinary women started seeing actresses like Ruffa Gutierrez and Gretchen Barretto c arr y ing them,” Dillera says. “Before people only knew Louis Vuitton and Gucci. Now everybody wants a Celine. When I post a Celine online, it’s gone in half a day.” ∞∞Meticulous Mothers now also buy luxur y purses as gifts for their teen daughters, says Dillera. “They put down ‘reservation’ money,” she adds. Dill e ra s e l l s b o t h b ra n d - n e w a n d February 22-March 7, 2013 When buyers have had their fill of logos, they graduate to brands like Prada. Photos provide d to Inquire r A Celine luggage, one of the most in-demand styles of late, according to online bag resellers. secondhand from suppliers abroad. Filipino women, she says, are quite meticulous, demanding that their purses come in their original boxes, dust bags and authenticity cards— often with the intent of reselling at a later time. Dillera admits she doesn’t pay taxes for her business. “I don’t have a [physical] store, and even my customers don’t demand for a receipt. I also have resellers under me. They don’t want to be charged the 12 per cent [VAT].” Most online vendors don’t pay taxes, she claims. “On Multiply, there are a lot who sell items that are even more expensive.” She has been in business for 2 1/2 years. These women are bemused at the lengths other women would go to own a luxury handbag. ∞∞Scrimp and starve “I know women who travel but scrimp on food so they have money for shopping,” says Aguilar. In her circle, Torres tells of women who practically starve, subsisting on crackers, just to save up for a purse. These are no different from reported tales of women from other Asian cities who live on ramen noodles for weeks to save up for that purse. “I have a friend who only had water and bread for a month so she Kate Spade considered an ‘entry-level’ brand by resellers. could buy two bags, a YSL and a Givenchy,” says Torres. “She would go out with friends for coffee and she wouldn’t order food. She’s a mom with other responsibilities.” In Japan, says Dillera, she heard tales of young women who would have three boyfriends, ask each boyfriend to buy her the same style of bag, keep one, and sell the other two for cash. A lot of women end up lying to their husbands, claiming the purses they bring home are either on loan or “donated” by a friend. Some husbands act panicked when they see Dillera. “But I tell them, you buy gadgets, and in months those gadgets’ value drop quicker than these bags.” Torres likes to suspend her judgement. To each her own, she says. “ T hose are choices we make. Some think of it as an investment, better than shoes or furniture. Bags don’t get worn and scuffed like shoes, so they’re easier to sell. And you can carry bags [to show off ] unlike furniture, that’s what some say.” Ultimately, it’s an addiction, Torres admits, one that needs to be fed and sustained. “You raise the bar,” says Torres. “It’s no longer just about wanting to own a red or a green bag. Once it’s gets posted on Facebook, trust me, it’s gone in 10 minutes.” • 29 By Midori Yamamura The Yomiuri Shimbun Colourful & Bold Fashionistas get a blast from the past with vintage kimono ❖❖ Tokyo V intage kimono have a unique character that’s missing from modern fashion. Fresh, bold patterns and vivid colours catch the eyes of fashionistas who are looking to try something a little out of the ordinary. Vintage kimono, known in Japan as antique kimono, were made during the Taisho (1912-1926) and early Showa (1926-1989) eras. At the time, the trend was to wear vivid, flamboyant kimono that often featured designs of plants, f lowers, birds and polka dots. When modern-looking “fruit parlour” dessert shops began opening on every street corner, kimono patterns became even more diverse with designs such as apples and grapes on plates. Today, there are a number of vintage kimono specialty shops that rent or sell traditional Japanese clothes for less than 20,000 yen. In 2003, kimono stylist Rafu Ono opened one such shop, called Ponia-pon, in the Nezu district in Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo. “Antique kimono developed when Western clothing became the preferred fashion of choice over Japanese clothing,” Ono said. “I imagine antique kimono were made as a statement against that trend.” Ono, a lecturer and stylist for magazine photo shoots and exhibitions, offered a few tips on choosing the right kimono. 30 • February 22-March 7, 2013 “For starters, look at as many kimono as possible until you start noticing your favourite patterns,” she said. One tip is to consider seasonal items when choosing a kimono. For example, plum blossoms and camellia are good motifs for the winter season. However, the real challenge is finding an appropriate obi to match the bold patterns of vintage kimono. “Don’t put too much on following colour coordination rules for Western clothing or modern kimono. You’ll find that you’re often advised to pair solids with patterned cloth,” Ono said. Instead, she suggests trying an obi with the same type of seasonal flower or pairing a kimono with a running water motif with a fish-patterned obi. “Make a ‘story’ when coordinating kimono and obi. That’s one idea,” she said. For novice kimono wearers, Ono recommends a set of vintage obi and simply patterned kimono, with motifs such as tsumugi (pongee). If you’re lucky, you might find such kimono hiding at the bottom of a drawer at home. “A wide selection of obi will give a new look to the kimono in your wardrobe,” she said. For hair, a simple style is best when wearing antique kimono. “Instead of an elaborate, formal hairstyle, an easy, simple updo will suffice,” she said. Hair accessories are another option. For example, for February 22-March 7, 2013 a chic kimono, find an elegant hair accessory to go along with it. For footwear, Ono recommends matching like with like. “A pair of dark tabi socks should go with zori sandals with darkly coloured straps to bring unity to your outfit,” she said. For patterned tabi, Ono recommends small, noncoloured prints that can be worn with any type of kimono. However, there are a few things to look out for when purchasing vintage kimono. Women back then were of a smaller build, meaning kimono sleeves tend to be shorter. In kimono terminology, the length from the back of the neck to the wrist is referred to as yuki. When Ono measures the yuki of her customers, she has them spread out their arms before lowering them by about 10 degrees. A 160-centimetre-tall woman, for example, needs a yuki of about 63 centimetres. “Try them on and get the advice of a clerk before purchasing,” she said. It’s also important to check the condition of the fabric and look for frays, ravels and spots. Ironing the kimono with steam can help get rid of any smells. “You can express your style with antique kimono just as easily as with Western clothing. Take a look at how clerks wear their kimono and then find your own way to wear them elegantly,” Ono said. • 31 ENTERTAINMENT By Jean Oh The Korea Herald Level 7 Civil Servant (working title), the drama remake of the film 7th Grade Civil Servant (right), nabbed top viewer ratings when its second episode aired. The series, starring Choi Gang-hee (left) and Joo Won, has been riding high since. The trend is reversing from small to big screen, as some of Korea’s beloved hit films are brought to television ❖❖ Seoul I f there was a notable TV drama trend this year, it would be the remake. The start of 2013 has already seen three adaptations of original works hit the small screen, including SBS’ comic book-based Queen of Ambition. That is just the beginning. A slew of remakes are in the pipeline, ranging from revivals of old television series to comic book-based dramas to sequels and spinoffs of previous shows. Joining this year’s mix are a few f lick-turned-TV deals, something that, until now, has been more of a small screen rarity. While viewers have had their fill of comic book-based dramas, and, when the Internet became another conduit for the genre with webtoon-inspired series, audiences have not been given the chance to surfeit themselves on the movie-to-drama genre. This year marks a change in that trend, with two drama remakes of movies in the lineup. Add to that another unintentionally like-minded 32 • H ari mao Pictu res Feels Like You’ve Seen It Before? remake, a work based on a Japanese TV series previously remade into a Korean movie, for a total of three. Of even more interest is the fact that these are not just any movies. Two of them were huge hits. What films are we talking about? The movies in question are the spy caper 7th Grade Civil Servant, Jun Ji-hyun’s iconic My Sassy Girl and Moon Geun-young’s sobfest Love Me Not. 7th Grade Civil Servant drew in over 4 million viewers when it was released in 2009. The comedic take on the classic secret agent genre and the chemistry between the leads Kim Ha-neul and Kang Ji-hwan proved a winning silver screen combination. My Sassy Girl was a massive success in 2001, so much so that American and Chinese film versions of the flick were subsequently released. On the other hand, Love Me Not failed to make a major splash in the box office, which may have viewers wondering whether a drama version will fare better. Nevertheless, all three films boast a certain degree (some more than others) of recognition among local audiences. February 22-March 7, 2013 Apple Tre e Pict ure s Why, then, would a promovie attracted 4.87 milduction company take the lion v ie wers and was risk of drawing from higheven remade for the US profile material? Well, it and Chinese markets. turns out that k ind of RaemongRaein planpopularity can rub off in a n i n g t e a m h e a d Yu n good way. Hee-kyoung agrees that Take 7th Grade Civil Servthere “is pressure beant, for instance. Apple cause the film was so Tree Pictures, the company popular. However, beco-producing the movie’s cause it was so well redrama version, felt adaptceived, we decided that ing a box office hit into a the content of the origiTV series was well worth n a l p oss e ss e d e n o ug h 7th Grade Civil Servant, starring Kim Ha-neul (left) and Kang the risk. v i e w e r a p p e a l ” , Yu n Ji-hwan, drew over 4 million viewers when released in 2009. Apple Tree Pictures CEO wrote via email. Yoon Shin-ae broke down A 16-episode drama the reasoning behind revisiting a successful original. version of My Sassy Girl is slated to air in the second “ The reason why people do remakes is probably half of 2013. because the works are tried-and-tested and because one According to Yun, the plot of movie has proven can get a sneak peek at how the tone of a remake will difficult to translate into a miniseries format. play out,” Yoon said over the phone. “We are going to try to maintain the charms of the “There are pros and cons to remakes, but because original characters while taking the story in a new the original works are so well known, that is a major and different direction,” Yun said. plus for us. If we just take that familiar code and twist On why 2013 seems to be the year for remakes, Yun it a little, twist it well, then there are always good said, “When you tune into a work that is based on results,” Yoon added. an original, it feels familiar and friendly, but it also Yoon said one of the reasons why Apple Tree Pictures gives rise to expectations as to how it will be new was willing to take a leap of faith with 7th Grade Civil and different. Watching a proven hit revamped in a Servant was because the original film’s scriptwriter Chun new style is, I believe, very attractive to viewers.” Seung-il would be on board. What happens when you take an original that did “We thought that not just anyone could write char- not perform well when it was remade into a movie acters like that,” Yoon explained. for Korean audiences? In Yoon’s opinion, a good remake begins with the That is the enigma of one of the most anticipated original. dramas of the year. Yoon explained that 7th Grade Civil Servant was not just Technically, SBS’ Baramibunda is based on the Japayour standard spy fodder. It was unique in that it took nese TV series Forget Love that aired on TBS in 2002. a lighthearted and comedic approach to an age-old Nevertheless, the upcoming series will likely be genre. compared to the Korean film version, which failed to Once a work with a strong foundation that sets it become a box office success when released in 2006. apart from the crowd was selected, the second challenge Despite the less-than-desirable track record of its was to avoid regurgitating the original and boring view- film predecessor, the buzz surrounding the series has ers. A well-thought out twist was needed. been at fever pitch, partly because it is actor Zo InWith 7th Grade Civil Servant, the drama version would sung’s first drama since he completed military service focus on how the two leads became secret agents, a and also because his co-star is Full House actress Song subject that was not addressed in the movie. Hye-kyo. The approach worked. When the drama, Level 7 The fact that high-profile scriptwriter Noh HeeCivil Servant (working title), aired its second episode on kyung is penning the upcoming series is also heightJanuary 24, the series, which features actress Choi ening the anticipation for the drama which started Gang-hee and actor Joo Won, nabbed top viewer rat- airing last week. ings. Level 7 Civil Servant has been riding high ever since. Noh is famed for putting out compelling works like Naturally, this is the scenario that any producer KBS’ Worlds Within. Yet, despite her widely acknowlwould hope for. edged scriptwriting prowess, viewer ratings of the last For production company RaemongRaein, which is two feature-length dramas she scripted were less than planning the drama version of the movie My Sassy Girl, stellar. matching the success of the original might prove a tall With the airing of Baramibunda, it will be interesting order. to note if the star power and talent of Song, Zo and When Jun Ji-hyun charmed audiences with her Noh will be enough to overshadow the previous, less quirky antics in the rom-com over a decade ago, the successful Korean remake of the Japanese original. February 22-March 7, 2013 • 33 LIFE By Prateebha Tuladhar The Kathmandu Post The Women In in Blue The Chorepatan Police Station in the city of Pokhara in western Nepal is a model station in the country’s context, manned as it is by a force of all-women officers ❖❖ Pokhara “S ir will be here in a few minutes,” subi n s p e c t o r P a r va t i Nepali tells you when you ask for the head of the Chorepatan Police Station in the city of Pokhara in Nepal’s west, who is currently out on patrol duty. You wait in the office, looking over the certificates of appreciation and the awards. On the table stands the national flag alongside the Nepal Police flag, and in the centre, a wooden plaque that reads ‘Inspector Sushila Pradhan’. And after a short wait, ‘Sir’ walks in. “It would’ve been all right if they called me ‘Ma’am’, but in the force, women have always been 34 • addressed as ‘Sir’, which I guess is m e a n t t o i n d i c a t e t h a t we ’ r e equals,” smiles Inspector Pradhan, who stands a couple of inches above five feet in her blue Nepal Police uniform, topped with maroon cap. Seven years ago, when Pradhan had expressed interest in becoming a police off icer, her brother, Inspector Nabin Pradhan, had told her it was going to be an uphill task. But lured by what she calls a ‘clean service’ in the force, she’d gone ahead with her decision. T h e 2 7- y e a r - o l d h a d b e e n working at the police headquarters in Kathmandu until eight months ago, when she was posted to the C h o re pa t a n Po l i ce St a t i o n i n Pokhara—a model station run by women officers. A few blocks away from the entrance to the city’s famous Devi’s Fall, the station is located along the highway, on the border of the Kaski and Syangja districts. The concept of an all-women police station was pioneered some three years ago by the deputy inspector general of Nepal Police, Upendra Kanta Aryal, a concept that many had rubbished at first. But once the headquarters gave the green signal, the idea gained support, and the Chorepatan Police station was established. “I thought if there was a police station that was run by women, it would give the message that female officers can independently tackle all kinds of crime. I thought it would be a great way to empower women in the force,” says Aryal. February 22-March 7, 2013 Prate e bha Tula dha r A typical day for the 25 women at the station begins with some cleaning up, followed by physical training. “It’s a barrack, but it still feels like home because we’re all women here, like a family,” says Pradhan. The station is also equipped with a day care centre that not only looks after the staff ’s children but also those who have been rescued. Sometimes, orphans are taken in too. “A model station of this nature needs to have the kind of physical infrastructure that supports women, and the centre is an example of this,” says Aryal. There are over 60,000 police personnel in Nepal, out of which 3,457 are women. In August 2012, the government said it was preparing to create 1,035 more vacancies for women in the force to deploy them on cases of violence against women. “When it comes to issues like gendered violence, female personnel can deal with these better. Women understand women’s pain,” says Pradhan. She adds that policewomen are given trainings periodically on counselling victims and perpetrators of domestic violence. The number of women officers has been increasing since the Nepali government introduced the 20 perFebruary 22-March 7, 2013 cent reservation for females in the force. Even so, most continue to serve in lower positions, while many operate in the technical and engineering departments, or in nursing. Only two women—Parvati Thapa Magar and Bimala Sharma—have made it to the position of deputy inspector general. “More women join the force now, and the status of women in the service has definitely improved,” says Nepali. “The government has also raised the bar in terms of academic qualification for recruitment, so there are a lot more educated applicants coming in now.” But it isn’t enough, Sushila argues Pradhan. Pradhan “If the government really wants to encourage women, it should offer them more opportunities. In-charge positions are still only given to men. Women need to be granted command at mixed-gendered stations; setting up allwomen stations is not enough,” she says. One of the biggest problems faced by the women at the Chorepatan station has to do with cases that necessitate dealing with men who are physically stronger. Then there have been times when they have had to drag men in and out of toilets, which has put them in an uncomfortable position. “The headquarters decided to post some male constables here last month to help out with these kinds of situations,” says Nepali. The station deals with a number of accidents, cases of theft, domestic violence, gang fights and drug abuse, and the staff is constantly pulled in various directions. “Last month, we had to pursue some men involved in a gang fight using khukuris and talwaars (traditional weapons) close to midnight,” describes Pradhan. “We drove for an hour, then walked a couple of hours uphill, before chasing the men. The locals actually hid them that night and we managed to arrest them only a couple of days later.” But there are greater challenges for the women officers than the physical. Although these women are in a profession where they rub shoulders with men, they are simply not seen as equals. Pradhan recalls a case where a boy had drowned in a swimming pool and the force was trying to remove the body for autopsy. “The boy’s mother lay herself down in front of our vehicle and refused to let us take him,” she explains. “She said I was just a woman and I had no right to exercise my power as a member of the police.” Some have had it even worse. “A man actually stopped his car in front of the station once and asked one of my colleagues on duty to go with him, calling her a ‘whore’. It’s a term that gets flung at us by people often,” says Nepali. They eventually arrested the man and charged him under the Public Offence Act, after which he was detained for two months. Being located in a village where literacy levels are low makes their task more challenging, the women officers believe. “We work as hard as our male counterparts, but the fact that we’re women means we have to work even harder to convince people of our credibility,” says Shanta Chettri, a traff ic policewoman stationed at Chorepatan for the last two years. “We can’t have them thinking we’re weak.” • 35 TRAVEL By Karamjit Kaur The Straits Times Travellers put up with delays and disruptions, understanding that these are sometimes beyond the control of an airline, especially a low-cost one AFP No-frills, No Standards? ❖❖ Singapore O ver the last decade, there have been repeated calls from frustrated travellers for regulation in the low-cost carrier business. Scooting off on a holiday was no fun for thousands of travellers stranded at Changi and other airports in recent weeks. On January 19, frustrated travellers booked on Scoot kicked up such a fuss that police had to step in. A faulty emergency slide had meant that seats near the exit of the Singapore Airlines-owned long-haul budget carrier had to be left vacant. It took seven hours before 23 volunteers stepped forward to give up their seats. Two weeks later, a problem with a fuel tank led to a group of more than 400 Singapore- Qingdao-Shenyang travellers waiting for 15 hours for their flight to take off. With just four planes and a tight schedule, each delay had a knock-on effect. It took days for Scoot to recover fully. By then, as many as 20 arrivals and departures were late. Asked to comment on the disruptions, Scoot reiterated that travellers on budget carriers pay low fares so they should not expect meals and accommodation when flights are disrupted. The terms and conditions which customers must acknowledge they have read and accepted before making their purchase are clear, the airline said. Inconvenienced passengers really should have bought insurance, it added. 36 • In the end, it was Changi Airport Group—the airport, not the airline—that gave out blankets and meal vouchers to passengers stranded overnight in some cases. The only compensation Scoot offered was a S$50 travel voucher to offset against the next new Scoot booking. The lengthy disruptions reignited debate on whether there should be a set of rules to ensure that airlines meet minimum operational and service standards, with penalties imposed if they don’t. Over the last decade, there have been repeated calls from frustrated travellers for regulation in the low-cost carrier business. Travellers put up with delays and disruptions, understanding that these are sometimes beyond the control of an airline, especially a low-cost one. But what if services promised are not delivered? Shouldn’t there be a framework for consumers to be compensated? Another common complaint is that budget carriers take ages to process refunds and reply to e-mails. One can argue that expecting quick responses and refunds are “extras” in customer service for tightly run, margin-obsessed carriers. But some basic level of customer service must surely be maintained. Like being informed of likely delays, and getting regular updates so they are not left hanging around at the airport not knowing what to expect next. For long delays, food and drinks are essentials. Airlines should also deploy staff to manage upset travellers instead of leaving it to airport staff or ground handlers to deal with the mess. February 22-March 7, 2013 Yet the authorities here have shied away from wielding the stick to mandate basic standards of customer service. The official view is that in an intensely competitive industry like the airline business, market forces should suffice to motivate airlines to serve their customers well. It is self-correcting. If service sucks, customers will vote with their feet and switch to another airline. According to this school of thought, regulating airlines and imposing minimum service standards could drive fares up, and not be good for consumers. Better protection elsewhere In mature markets like Europe, Australia and New Zealand where consumer laws are strict, travellers are better protected. Within the European Union, for example, a traveller is entitled to compensation which includes cash of up to 600 euros (US$807) when flights are disrupted. Airlines must also provide accommodation when there are overnight delays. In Asia, regulation is more scarce but things are changing. In the Philippines, a law has just been passed to hold airlines accountable for operational and service lapses. Indonesian authorities are also contemplating a similar approach. Passengers’ wish list In a competitive industry where profit margins are February 22-March 7, 2013 thin, it is not in Singapore’s interest to go the EU way. There, any disruption—whether it is the airline’s fault or an act of God—is treated the same. Excessive regulation with heavy penalties could end up backfiring if it drives carriers away and reduces Singapore’s competitiveness as a premier air hub. Doling out cash for delays is not recommended either, unless it is to refund passengers who cancel their flights. Deciding how much to give, whether more if it is the airline’s fault or less if not, can also be a complicated and messy affair. But there should, at the very least, be clear guidelines on what travellers can expect when there are service disruptions. Beyond a certain delay period, meal and drink vouchers must be provided. If the delay is overnight, the least carriers must do is offer blankets to those stranded. Where possible, senior citizens and families with young children should be provided with hotel rooms. Staff must also be on the ground to manage disgruntled travellers and provide regular updates. Instead of leaving it to the airlines, common guidelines should also be set on the maximum delay tolerable before a traveller can demand a refund. And there should be guidelines on how long he should have to wait before getting his money back. Regulation need not be limited to just managing flight disruptions. It can go one step further to include regular tracking of airline performance. What proportion of flights depart and land on time? What is the airline’s response time to consumer calls and feedback? For the stick to work, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore, which regulates the industry, and Changi Airport Group must work together. If the worry is that over-regulation and hefty fines may affect the competitiveness of Singapore carriers, a good middle way to help consumers and punish errant carriers is to make public information on service lapses and operational hiccups easily available. This will keep airlines on their toes and empower consumers to make the right choices. Yes, regulation may drive costs up for budget airlines. But as consumers have shown, they are willing to pay a bit more for basic service—be it a confirmed seat or extra baggage allowance. There is little doubt they will do the same to fly an airline that they know will take good care of them when turbulence hits. • 37 TRAVEL By Chusri Ngamprasert The Nation Massive snow sculptures depicting Chibi Maruko Chan always woo the crowds. Flurries In The Park The Sapporo Snow Festival is a wonderful sight to behold, but make sure you are wrapped warmly from top to toe ❖❖ Sapporo Ch usri Nga mpras e rt/ The Nati o n S The winning sculpture from Thailand: ‘The artist from the wild’ 38 • nowflakes shaped like diamonds land gently on my face as I step outside from the warmth of my hotel into the cold Sapporo day. Their icy touch makes me shiver and I quickly pop back inside to grab another couple of kairo, those wonderful disposal warmer packs so much part of chilly Japanese life, and slip them inside my boots. I figure that at least my feet won’t freeze as I take in the sight of snow statues and ice sculptures in the Sapporo Snow Festival. Sapporo’s festival got off to rather a humble start. It was held for the first time in 1950 in the town’s Odori February 22-March 7, 2013 School kids wait for a chance to quiz visitors about their impressions of the festival. The best way to fight the cold weather is to feast on hot food. Park and featured only six snow statues made by local high school students. In 1955, the Japan Self Defence Force joined in and built the first massive snow sculptures, for which the Snow Festival has now become famous. Today the event has grown into an annual snow and ice extravaganza and attracts more than two million visitors from Japan and around the world. Around 6,500 five-ton truckloads of snow are transported from locations in and around Sapporo for these beautiful sculptures. This year, the gleaming white snow has come from Takino and Satozuka cemetery parks, Sapporo Satoland, Moerenuma Park and Ishikari Bay New Port. The main festival site is still Odori Park, which stretches from east to west through the centre of downtown Sapporo. Around 131 snow sculptures line the entire 1.5-kilometre length of the park and tourists are crowding around the main attractions, the gigantic sculptures depicting Japanese historical landmarks and famous characters in Japan. This year, the Japanese historical landmarks are Ise Shrinein, a Shinto shrine complex in the city of Ise in Mie Prefecture, the Hoheikan, a historical building in Nakajima Park in Sapporo and Kabuki-za in Ginza, the principal Tokyo theatre for the traditional Kabuki dramas. I immediately recognise Wat Benchamabophit, Bangkok Marble Temple, recreated to mark the 50th anniversary of the Thai royal family’s first visit to Japan in May of 1963. Another international landmark is the National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in Taipei. Understandably, the all-time favourite with visitors is the snow sculpture contest site in International Square. Here, contestants brave the cold and sculpture the snow into sophisticated and meaningful statues and sculptures from morning until night. Out and about First time visitors to Japan may raise their eyebrows or even laugh out loud when they see Japanese of all ages lining up to take photographs of their favourite February 22-March 7, 2013 cartoon character snow sculptures, among them Ultraman, Pichachu, Totoro, Peroro, Anpanman and Chibi Maruko Chan. But blending in with the crowd is a great way of learning more about these famous cartoon characters, both foreign and Japanese, and gives you get an idea of who is who around the park. The best way to fight the cold weather, apart from wearing the same kind of clothes that you would don for a polar crossing, is to feast on hot foods and drinks. Sapporo is famous for tasty miso ramen, soup curry, scallops, potatoes and fresh seafood and I don’t hesitate to stop at a couple of the dozens of food booths offering Hokkaido’s delicacies. Before long, the wind rises and the snow starts to falls even more heavily. My face is now entirely numb yet to my amazement, the park is becoming increasingly more crowded. The powdery snow is covering ground just like icing on a cake and the branches of the leafless trees are bending with the weight of the snow. Some children are trying to catch the f luffy snowf lakes in their mouths while waiting for their turns at the Donbei-kun Slide. Laughter fills the air and smiles are everywhere. The weeklong snow festival, now in its 64th year, may be arctic but it sends out warmth to every corner of Sapporo. If you go The Snow Festival 2013 has now ended but skiing, snowboarding and other outdoor activities involving the white stuff continue until early April. Always wear good solid boot or snowshoes because the snow covered ground is slippery. Otherwise buy “suberi dome” (shoe grips) from convenience store. Simply slip them on the outer part of your shoes so you can walk more comfortably on the slippery snow. If you have no idea how to use them, ask the shopkeeper. Prepare small packs of tissue paper since you will almost certainly may a runny nose because of the cold weather. • 39 TRAVEL By Mary Baines The Jakarta Post The steaming Child of Krakatau shows her moodier side. On one side of the island is lush, verdant plant and animal life. On the other, a dead and eerie wasteland of new lava and dead trees. Escape to Krakatau Have a splendid getaway at the base of an isolated, steam-spitting, active island volcano ❖❖ Krakatau L ike castaways, hours away from any form of civilisation in the abyss of the Sunda Strait, there we were —camped at the base of an isolated, steam-spitting, active island volcano. Only hours before, we had been navigating our way through a heaving mass of some 16 million people in Jakarta. Now, there were just six of us, alone on Anak Krakatau (Child of Krakatau), covered in sticky, black sand, barbequing fresh fish on an open fire, unable to contact the outside world. Towering over us was the Child of Krakatau (also known as Krakatoa), the emerging son of the volcano that shook the world in 1883. Although three islands remained after the colossal eruption—Rakata, Sertung and Panjang, it wasn’t until 1930 that Anak rose from beneath the sea. The young, volatile volcano now stands some 1,200 feet above sea level, reportedly growing about 6.8 metres every year. Often on high alert, the bolshy teenager has a tendency to spurt hot gases, rocks, lava and ash. “Don’t worry,” our guide Epoy said with a twinkle in his eye. “Anak is only at the first alert level today.” So without hesitation, we made the uninhabited island volcano our 40 • home for the weekend—camping on one of the nearby islands with volcanic activity seen only from a distance didn’t seem nearly as exciting. Getting there To get to Krakatau, we had taken a three-hour pot-holed and trafficj a m m e d d r iv e f r o m Ja k a r t a t o Carita Beach, West Java. From there, we were taken on a speedboat, “very safe, with radio”. An hourand-a-half l ater the remains of Krakatau emerged on the horizon. My s e l f a n d t w o o t h e r s we r e joined by Epoy, our captain Warta, and boat mechanic Yani, who have all lived near Carita Beach their whole lives. The six of us set up base by Krakatau’s black-sand beach, dotted with fresh pumice, and began to explore the island. At sea level, the island is thick with a lush, pre-historic looking forest growing in the fertile volc anic soil. While Krakatau was completely sterilised by the 1883 explosion and Anak only emerged in 1930, it is now home to more than 500 species of plant and animal life. There are butterf lies, birds, land molluscs, insects, spiders, bats and monitor lizards—one of which came to greet us at our campsite. The mini ecosystem is a goldmine to biologists studying how life can recover from utter annihilation. But as we started to climb the volcano, the landscape soon The beach at Rakata, one of the three islands remaining after the colossal eruption of 1883, offers splendid views, and is the best for snorkelling of the four islands that make up Krakatau. February 22-March 7, 2013 Ma ry Ba ine s/ The Ja ka rta P o st At the first level of Anak Krakatau, Epoy shows the new red-rock lava created only three months earlier. Only minutes after, a fierce and heavy rainstorm moved in and we had to make our way down the volcano. Boat captain Warta cooks fresh Travelli caught that afternoon on a handmade barbecue at the camp on Anak Krakatau. descended into what looked like a nuclear wasteland—dead trees, hot ash and piles of red and white rocks, eerily uninhabited by animals. Clouds of thick smoke escaped ominously from cracks in rocks and the smell of sulphur dominated the air. Some parts were covered in white ash, making the volcano look almost like a snow-capped mountain. Epoy told us that he had been there, watching from Rakata, when the rock lava had been created only three months earlier. It seems appropriate that locals once saw Krakatau as being like “a big spirit, like a giant dragon or February 22-March 7, 2013 kingdom of genies which from the nose and mouth comes the fire”. But we’re told that while some still like to believe in this spiritual connection, it is a tradition becoming less and less believed by local youths. Explore away As we reached the first level of Anak Krakatau, a heavy rainstorm and high, hot winds swept in from what was before a clear-sky day. The ground hissed as hard rain hit the molten rocks, and we were drenched in less than a minute. “Not good, not safe,” Epoy said, leading us hastily back toward our campsite. From up there, at the centre of what was once Krakatau, now on the rise again and so violently at times, I understood the aura of terror the volc ano e xuded. I saw Krakatau’s moodiness firsthand and realised the potential for disaster it held. The 1883 eruption caused fragments of land to collapse into the sea creating a 40-metre-high tsunami with a blast heard over 4,000 kilometres away. It had an explosive force 13,000 times the power of the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima, changing worldwide weather for several years and killing more than 36,000 people. And the young Krakatau, already showing signs of boiling over, could well follow in its parent’s footsteps one day to cause havoc around the world. But Epoy assured us the next big one was still 100 years off. In an attempt to avoid feeling too philosophical while on holiday, we decided to see the calmer side of Krakatau and dabble in a bit of snorkelling. We were not disappointed. We saw clownfish, starfish, sea horses, flying fish, angelfish and sea slugs camouflaged in bright gold, orange and green coral. Thousands of newborn Travelli circled us like we were prey and the many friendly coral fish were not afraid to introduce themselves, happily eating food out of our hands. As night fell, we spent the evening drinking Bintang and sitting around a fire as Epoy, Warta and Yani prepared dinner. The trio sat with lights strapped to their heads as they barbequed fish they had caught earlier that afternoon, fresh prawns, rice and water spinach. We enjoyed dinner while admiring the eerie, orange glow emanating from the volcano’s peak with the outlines of Java and Sumatra in the distance. Although we slept squished together on thin pieces of foam, my sleep on Krakatau was the best I have had in Indonesia—with no loud street vendors or notorious Jakarta traffic noise to disturb me. For us, that was the beauty of the place—it was the antithesis of the bustling Jakarta we had left behind, perfect for a weekend getaway. • 41 TRAVEL By Phoowadon Duangmee The Nation The Wild Himalayan Cherry in full bloom. Love Under The Cherry Blossoms Chiang Mai is the hot place to be in the winter, as the cherry trees burst into bloom ❖❖ Chiang Mai O ften referred to as the “Rose of the North”, Chiang Mai is indeed famous for its beautiful roses, which burst into blossom as the cool season arrives around November and continue to offer their fragrant blooms until around February. Less advertised but equally as beautiful are the many other flowers the former Lanna capital is proud to share with its visitors. Brave the ribbon of high and often vertiginous roads to the mountains where the hilltribes live on small strawberry, flower and coffee farms and enjoy the pure beauty of the cherry blossom. At this time of year, Chiang Mai’s hilly roads are a breathtaking pageantry of loveliness, as the Wild Himalayan Cherry is bursting in bloom. You’ll have to head up there now though if you want to witness the splendour— l i ke a f l a s h i n t h e p a n , t h e blooms last only brief ly after they peak. 42 • The Wild Himalayan Cherry was introduced more than 10 ye ars to T hail and’s north. Spreading out from Doi Phu Kha in Nan to Doi Suthep and Doi Inthanon ranges in Chiang Mai province, the cherry trees were planted on high terrain to improve the land that had been badly damaged following deforestation. Ten years later, and Thais are benefiting from their beauty. Over the last three years, the cherr y trees have draw n crowds of flower-lovers, romantic weekenders and small-time photographers to Chiang Mai to admire their puffy pink blooms. Getting there is simple. Take a budget flight to Chiang Mai over the weekend, and drive from the airport into the high ranges. The first stop is Khun Wang Royal Agricultural Research Centre about 90 k ilometres from downtown Chiang Mai. Tucked away be yond the high range of Doi Inthanon, the research centre studies cold-climate and high-altitude crops including Arabica coffee, macadamia nuts, peaches and f lowers before February 22-March 7, 2013 Phoowadon Duangmee/ The Natio n There are other flowers along the way so snap away. The cherry trees are a must-see when in Chiang Mai. passing on the knowledge to the hilltribe farmers. Here, where coffee plants and peach trees spread out as far as the eye can see, cherry trees line both sides of the path, snaking their way through the research centre. The leaf less trees explode in pink-and-white blossoms, reminding even hardened souls of their first romantic moment. Their aged, bent and gnarly trunks and branches make a dramatic contrast with the young, fragile blossoms, one ∞∞Tips The cherry blossom season peaks from now until mid February before fading out in early March. For the best dose of tranquil beauty and cherry blossom, rent a car at Chiang Mai airport and drive into the mountains. The Royal Agricultural Research Centre can accommodate the visitors in decent cottages, but you have to wait for a long time for a reservation. Pitching a tent is the best alternative. February 22-March 7, 2013 that can only be appreciated by walking beneath the floral canopy. Yes, walking. Some tourists disgrace themselves by driving cars through the canopy and only see the scenery beyond the windshield. Give flowerlovers a break. This is nature, not a drive-in burger. You don’t have to write a Haiku on Japanese’s haute art of cherry blossom gazing but, at least, have the courtesy to give a tranquil place some respect. Hill-tribe village Another place in full bloom is Khun Chang Khian, a hill-tribe village on Doi Suthep. Within an hour’s drive from downtown Chiang Mai, you’ll be strolling beneath the feathery canopy of pink and white cherry blossoms. Khun Wang Royal Agricultural Research Centre and Khun Chang Khian village are about 100 kilometres apart. Be sure to detour, as you drive between the two, through other royal agricultural research centres and hilltribe villages and admire the terraces of strawberry and colourful flowers. The scenery is spectacular and it’s well worth lingering. • 43 TRAVEL By Ko Chuk-wun Asia News Network The Remains Of The Day Thailand boasts of 2,800 kilometres of coastline offering different sunset views ❖❖ Bangkok/Phuket/Koh Samui A s one of the world’s most visited countr y, Thailand has long been known for its Buddhist a r t a n d a rc h i t e c t ure , beaches with cr ystal blue water, elephant trekking through tropical jungles and streams, floating markets, ladyboy cabaret shows, relaxing Thai massage and even tom yum kung, the spicy and sour seafood soup with an exotic flavour of lemongrass. So forget about the meet-cute in t r ave l r o m a n t i c - c o m e d i e s . T h e “Land of Yellow Robes” offers more than enough for you to eat, pray, roam and revel. To maximise the fun with a tight schedule, devote daytime to exploring and nighttime to revelry. What results is a refreshing moment for the body and soul. With more than 2,800 kilometres of coastline shared between Anda44 • man Sea and the Gulf of Thailand, the littoral country also embraces mountain resorts in the north, thus hosting sunset views with different characteristics, be it in metropolitan Bangkok, the “Pearl of Andaman” P h u ke t o r c o c o n ut i s l a n d Ko h Samui. Little Luxury of serenity Chao Phraya River runs through Bangkok, and a river excursion— entrancing you with views on both sides—is a must. A view of the river where one can see the city’s most famous landmark, the Temple of Dawn, seems a perfect location for watching the sunset. However, it is not easy to find an unhindered view with tourist boats, the noise from tuktuks and streetfood stalls threatening to spoil the tranquility. The Deck bar at the Arun Residence, which is just five minutes away from the Temple of the Reclining Buddha, is perhaps the best place where you can avoid the aforementioned and enjoy a little luxury of serenity. Come to the bar around 5:30pm to secure a riverside table, spend a hundred-odd baht on a drink and bathe yourself in soul-soothing smooth jazz before the sun sinks. The breeze, the hustle and bustle of Chao Phraya River and even the curious faces popping out to catch a glimpse all become elements to the sunset glow. The sun is still like a huge fireball in the west while in just a few minutes, it dips like a f laming pink ball finally melting from the horizon. T he clouds catch the last red-orange rays of the setting sun. T he temple’s image becomes blurred as night fal ls, but the remains of the day offer a reason for you to linger awhile. The bar is lighted by candles and the illuminated temple on the other side stands magnificently against February 22-March 7, 2013 the grey sky as the glow slowly fades out. If you’re not exactly a budget -conscious traveller, have a nice dinner downstairs before you leave the residence. On your way to the pier, savour the spectacular night view of the Temple of the Reclining Buddha from outside. Less is more If you prefer to delay the sunset pleasure through a little hill trekking, Phromthep Cape, the southern-most point of Phuket, is the ideal location. Enjoy your sunbathing on Phuket Island’s west coast by day, or visit the famed SinoPortuguese style architecture in Phuket Town. You can also take a day trip to Phi Phi Islands. Enjoy snorkeling at the coral reefs of Maya Bay or feed assorted fishes before kicking off your little adventure on Phi Phi Islands, and you would come back before 5pm, just in time for the sunset in Phuket. Riding a scooter all the way to the southern tip of the island is a delightful experience. Climbing staircases to the viewFebruary 22-March 7, 2013 Buddha’s delight point at Phromthep Cape is not at all tiring and holidaymakers can stop here and enjoy some leisure time. For those who want a more “private” spot to admire the sunset, follow the trail down to the cape’s promontory. This is a bumpy jungle trail covered with rocks and weeds. Prepare for a sweaty journey, but it will turn out to be rewarding. Sunset at Phromthep Cape is nothing like the one in the capital’s Chao Phraya. From the cape’s promontory, you may spot a loaded ship p a s s i n g b y o r i f y o u’ r e l u c k y enough, a lonely fisherman. There is no music nor mocktail at Phromthep Cape. All that remains is your exhausted body and soul waiting to be revived. Like the oasis at Phromthep Cape, sunset in Koh Samui is just as enjoyable but with some religious flavour. Although another sunset viewpoint is marked on the tourist map, the Big Buddha in the northeast of the island is a much better spot. Like T he Deck bar near Chao Phraya, the cafés located next to the entrance of the island’s landmark entertain customers with smooth jazz, but the music is mixed with bells calling for prayer from the Big Buddha. The white sand beach lined with coconut trees not faraway is also a feast for the eyes. After the golden sun sinks at last behind the hill on the other side of the bay, spend some time visiting a nearby local market, where a variety of tropical fruits stay incredibly fresh and cheap. Sunset at the Big Buddha will certainly refresh your body and soul before you set out for one of the wildest parties on Earth, the full-moon party on the beach of Koh Phangan, which is just 30 minutes from Koh Samui if you take the speed boat. • 45 DATEBOOK SEOU L Michael Lau AR+OY Exhibition Michael Lau’s art toy collections are on view in Seoul. Toys as playthings have long been a bygone perception. They have become objects to admire for adults who treat them as valuable collectibles on the same level as artwork, including more than 100,000 fans of Lau’s art toy collections worldwide. The Hong Kong-based artist’s famous toy collections have arrived in Seoul for the first time amid much anticipation from local fans. When: Until April 14 Where: Sejong Centre Exhibition Hall, Seoul OSAKA Japan Fine Arts Exhibition BANG KO K Art Of A Princess Stepping inside the Queen’s Gallery where her solo show “L’art de Marsi” is currently on display in Bangkok, visitors see intricate paintings of surrealistic fantasy. Her Serene Highness Thai Princess Marsi Sukhumbhand lived in Annot in the south of France for 40 years. The gallery displays the chronological development of Princess Marsi’s artwork through four main themes: rocks and flowers, real and fantastic animals, architecture, and ornaments. They date back to her early works in the 1960s. The Japan Fine Arts Exhibition showcases works by the country’s finest modern artists at the Osaka Municipal Museum of Art. Visitors can view paintings, sculpture and calligraphy from both established professionals and talented newcomers. When: February to March Info: www.nitten.or.jp/index. html H O N G KO N G Hong Kong Salsa Festival Whether you’re a natural or have two left feet, salsa gets everyone up and moving. The Hong Kong Salsa Festival celebrates the Latino-inspired rhythms and footwork with a programme of workshops, shows, parties and the Asian Salsa Open Competition. When: Until February 26 Where: Queen’s Gallery, Rajadamnoen Klang Rd, Bangkok RAJAST HA N Desert Festival The golden city of Jaisalmer in Rajasthan comes alive each year for the Desert Festival. The event kicks off with an incredible parade of camels and locals dressed in fine Rajasthani mirrored clothes, with accompanying musicians. When: February 18 to 24 Info: www.hksalsafestival.com Acrobatic troupes, puppeteers, fakirs and jugglers pass through the massive red sandstone fort before performing in the desert surrounding the town. Camel races and polo matches on camels (a legacy of the Raj) take place at the Dedansar Polo Ground. When: February 23 to 25 Where: Rajasthan, India 46 • February 22-March 7, 2013 AD 195x130 17.9.2012:Layout 1 17.9.2012 14:25 Uhr Seite HGRS_AsiaNewsAdvtv2_080807.qxp:Layout 1 8/31/07 9:29 1AM Page 1 “If we want sustainable architecture to be popular, we have to make it look good.” Building Asia together. Kenneth Yeang, global Holcim Awards finalist W hether you’re building or investing in factories, homes, bridges, schoolhouses or shopping malls we’re the perfect partner to make your project happen. As the No. 1 supplier of building materials in Asia we can deliver the right solutions when and where it counts. Holcim in Asia-Pacific: Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam www.holcim.com Out of 6051 submissions in the 3rd International Holcim Awards competition, two from Asia Pacific made it to global final. Left: Mahanama Ralapanawa, CEO Holcim Malaysia, handing over the finalist certificate 2012 to Kenneth Yeang for the design of a retail and commercial building in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Right: Isavaret Tamonut and Singh Intrachooto with the finalist certificate 2012 for their project “Urban Farm Urban Barn” in Bangkok, Thailand. Read more about all winning projects and their design teams at: www.holcimawards.org/apac Strength. Performance. Passion.