Tag: Vietnam

  • From Bike Messenger To SEA Games: Singaporean Luqmanul Hakim’s Unlikely Journey

    From Bike Messenger To SEA Games: Singaporean Luqmanul Hakim’s Unlikely Journey

    The disappointment of finishing out of the medals clearly showed on debutant Luqmanul Hakim as he looked downcast following the end of the men’s team time trial race at the SEA Games on Tuesday (Aug 22). For Team Singapore’s men’s road cycling team, it was always going to be a Herculean task against favourites Malaysia on their home ground. The quartet of Gabriel Tan, Teoh Yi Peng, Junaidi Hashim and Luqmanul eventually posted a credible timing of 1:06:45.326 to finish in sixth place as Malaysia won gold in the 9-team event. Thailand took silver, while Vietnam bagged bronze. It was a tough learning experience for 19-year-old Luqmanul who has had an interesting journey to becoming a SEA Games athlete.

    HUMBLE BEGINNINGS
    Just two years ago, Luqmanul could not have imagined representing his country, as he worked as a dispatch cyclist delivering parcels in Singapore’s Central Business District on his “fixie” bicycle. “Yes, it’s true,” said the full-time National Serviceman, when asked about his previous job. “In Singapore, there isn’t any organic structure to race competitively so at the start we had to fund ourselves by finding our own money to go for races.”

    Building up his abilities in Malaysia helped his journey to the SEA Games, according to the young racer. “Thankfully a development team sponsored me – the Pro Development Project – where I trained with the Terengganu juniors like Khalid Nasrudin and the rest, and it really built up my abilities. At the start (of my career) it was hard, but you cannot let your guard down. Training-wise, you must always be committed and you must remember why you started.”

    DREAM FULFILLED
    Racing in the SEA Games was a dream come true for the 19-year old. “It was an awesome once-in-a-lifetime experience and I basically had nothing to lose,” said Luqmanul, on the positives he gained in the team time trial event on Tuesday. “I enjoyed myself out there and my heart rate was quite high, as it was my first time. Even going up the team time trial platform was exciting.” Dejected at the outcome of the team time trial for Singapore, the teen is already aiming finish strongly in the mass start start road race on Thursday. “I’m already looking forward to do my very best in the road race with my team-mates in two days,” he said. “Today didn’t go as planned but we tried our best. We showed our capability, but there’s still one more race to go.”

     

    Source: CNA

  • Meet Vietnam’s Gay Power Couple: US Ambassador And His Husband

    Meet Vietnam’s Gay Power Couple: US Ambassador And His Husband

    HANOI — Since their December arrival in Vietnam, US Ambassador Ted Osius and his husband have become the most prominent gay couple in the South-east Asian country.

    Mr Osius and Mr Clayton Bond landed with their toddler son shortly before the government abolished its ban on same-sex marriage. Now the couple, who recently adopted an infant girl, find themselves ambassadors of the nascent LGBT rights movement spreading across the country.

    “A lot of young people have reached out to me on Facebook, to say: ‘We are happy to see somebody who is gay and is happy in his personal life but also has had professional success’,” Mr Osius said in an interview. “I don’t think of it as advocating as much as supporting Vietnamese civil society in doing what it is already doing.”

    The Communist government’s revised marriage law, while not officially recognising same-sex marriage, and its tolerance of pride events has made Vietnam a leader in gay rights in South-east Asia, potentially opening up opportunities to attract the tourist “pink dollar” and business executives seeking a more tolerant environment.

    Yet young gay Vietnamese say they can be ostracised in a patriarchal society in which heterosexual marriage and parenthood are seen as the path to happiness. The legal changes also sit oddly in a country that more broadly curbs political dissent, Mr Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in an e-mail.

    Mr Osius, 53, and Mr Bond frequently appear together at official government gatherings and media events. Mr Osius — who is on his first posting as ambassador and has also worked in Indonesia and India — always introduces his husband and often talks about their children, who are 19 months and five months.

    “This is a core interest of ours with regard to human rights,” said Mr Bond, 39. “People see us as an openly gay couple with kids serving our country. I hope people find that inspiring.”

    ‘ROLE MODELS’

    While a small number of celebrities have held same-sex weddings, Mr Osius and Mr Bond are the most prominent gay couple in Vietnam, said Mr Tung Tran, director of ICS, a Ho Chi Minh City-based group that advocates for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights. They are also embraced by the larger population, reflecting the closer relationship being forged by Hanoi and Washington.

    “They are the full package,” Mr Tran said by phone. “They are married. They have a family. They are successful. They are our role models.” This year 25 Viet Pride events will take place across the country, up from 17 in 2014, said Mr Tran.

    Mr Osius, a career diplomat, co-founded GLIFAA, a US association for LGBT employees and families in foreign affairs agencies, in 1992. There are now six openly gay US ambassadors, including Mr Osius, Ambassador to Australia John Berry and Ambassador to Denmark Rufus Gifford, said Ms Regina Jun, president of the group.

    Mr Osius’ posting to Vietnam comes amid improved relations between Vietnam and the US, former enemies that have shared economic goals and strategic concerns about an increasingly assertive China in the region. Vietnam’s civil society is relatively robust, Mr Osius said, even as its human rights record in other areas remains a hindrance to even warmer ties.

    ‘MEDICAL METHODS’

    Vietnam held about 125 political prisoners at the end of 2014, fewer than in previous years, in part because of a drop in convictions, according to the US State Department.

    “Vietnam is trying to figure out what kind of country it wants to be and it doesn’t want to be China,” Mr Osius said. “There is more openness. There is more inclusiveness in government.”

    On gay rights the country has some way to go. Same-sex relationships can be viewed as bringing bad luck to a family, said Mr Luong The Huy, legal officer at the Hanoi-based Institute for Studies of Society, Economy and Environment.

    “Families are usually the last people LGBTs come out to,” he said by phone. “The reactions can be harsh. Some are involuntarily treated by medical methods or get locked up in the house.”

    ‘MORE RESTRICTIVE’

    In other parts of South-east Asia including Thailand, the push for gay rights has stalled. Countries such as Brunei and Malaysia can punish those who engage in gay behaviour under Sharia law, Mr Robertson said.

    In Singapore, sex between men is illegal although rarely prosecuted. The city-state banned a song and video by Taiwanese singer Jolin Tsai’s about same-sex relationships, the Straits Times reported on May 26.

    “In many ways the region is getting more restrictive,” Dr Jamie Gillen, a researcher of cultural geography at the National University of Singapore, said by phone. “Vietnam is something of an outlier. Vietnam has a live-and-let-live mentality.”

    On the evening of July 31, Mr Osius and Mr Bond attended the kick-off of Hanoi’s Viet Pride weekend, which featured a bicycle rally through the heart of the city. He addressed about a hundred Vietnamese in a hall where rainbow banners covered a wall. Speaking in Vietnamese, Mr Osius urged the gathering of young people to simply be who they are.

    “This stuff hits right at home,” he said after the speech, tears welling. “Yeah, it hits right at home.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 8 Indonesians Confess To Hijacking Malaysian-Registered Tanker Orkim Harmony

    8 Indonesians Confess To Hijacking Malaysian-Registered Tanker Orkim Harmony

    PETALING JAYA (THE STAR/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) – The eight suspects in the hijacking of Malaysian oil tanker MT Okim Harmony have confessed to the crime.

    Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency deputy director-general (operations) Maritime Vice-Admiral Ahmad Puzi Ab Kahar confirmed that the suspects, who are all Indonesian nationals, had made the confession to the Vietnamese authorities.

    Datuk Ahmad Puzi added that they were closely monitoring the situation, but declined to comment further.

    The eight were arrested in Vietnamese waters near Tho Chu Island after they reportedly fled the MT Orkim Harmony in a rescue boat at 8.30pm on Thursday.

    Before that, they had directed the Navy to move its ships about five nautical miles (9km) from the MT Orkim Harmony, threatening to harm the crew.

    The vanishing act was only found out at about 1am on Friday when the captain of the seized oil tanker contacted the KD Terengganu.

    The ship’s captain did not inform the navy immediately of their escape as the pirates threatened to harm his family if he did so.

    The tanker – owned by Magna Meridian Sdn Bhd and carrying 6,000 tonnes of petrol worth RM21 million (S$7.5 million) belonging to Petronas – had been reported missing since June 11 while on its way from Malacca to Kuantan Port, Pahang.

    The vessel that was reported to be adrift in Cambodian waters then suddenly changed course to the east towards Natuna Island, Indonesia.

    It had also been repainted and renamed ‘Kim Harmon’ by the pirates.

    The oil tanker with 21 crew members arrived at Kuantan Port on Saturday morning.

    One of its crew members, an Indonesian cook, was flown by helicopter to Universiti Sains Malaysia Hospital on Friday for treatment after he was shot in the thigh.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Two Men Charged With Selling Fake Tickets To SEA Games Football Match Between Thailand And Vietnam

    Two Men Charged With Selling Fake Tickets To SEA Games Football Match Between Thailand And Vietnam

    Two men, aged 29 and 31, have been arrested for allegedly selling fake tickets to the 28th Southeast Asian (SEA) Games football match between Thailand and Vietnam, said Police on Tuesday.

    The match is scheduled to take place at Bishan Stadium on Wednesday, June 10.

    Police investigations are ongoing. If convicted, the duo can be jailed up to 10 years and fined.

    Tickets with the serial numbers listed below may have been duplicated and those holding on to these tickets may be denied entry into the stadium, police said.

    The public is advised to purchase official Games tickets from the 28th SEA Games website at tickets.seagames2015.com, the official ticketing hotline at +65 3158 8080, at any SingPost Outlets island-wide, and at the Box Office at Singapore Indoor Stadium.

    The Police have urged the public to be mindful of purchasing tickets through unauthorised vendors and report this to the organising committee via the official ticketing hotline.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Vietnam Abolishes Ban On Same-Sex Marriage

    Vietnam Abolishes Ban On Same-Sex Marriage

    HANOI — With Vietnam taking the lead in gay rights in South-east Asia by abolishing a ban on same-sex marriages, medical doctor Thuan Nguyen is planning a wedding ceremony with his boyfriend of two years.

    “I am ready to have a wedding,” he said. “Many, many young people in love are optimistic about the acceptance of gay weddings.”

    The revised law, while not officially recognising same-sex marriage, places the communist country at the forefront of acceptance of gay people among countries in Asia.

    The National Assembly’s move is expected to attract more lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender travellers and boost Vietnam’s US$9 billion (S$12 billion) tourism industry.

    The new marriage law, which took effect on New Year’s Day, abolished regulations that prohibit marriage between people of the same sex. Same-sex marriages can now take place, though the government does not recognise them or provide legal protection in cases of disputes. It abolished fines that were imposed on homosexual weddings in 2013.

    No other South-east Asian country has taken as big a step towards accepting same-sex marriage, said Mr Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com