In Singapore, foreign currency worth record US$19.2 billion deposited in April, due to Covid-19, HK protests and trade war

With the coronavirus pandemic causing financial markets to tank and a prolonged period of uncertainty ahead, investors have been flocking to keep their cash in Singapore, with bank deposits in foreign currencies reaching an all-time high of S$26.9 billion (US$19.2 billion) in April. In fact, such deposits have been steadily increasing since July, last year, data from the Monetary Authority of Singapore shows. Analysts said the ongoing political crisis in Hong Kong, which started as a series of…

Philippines’ war on drugs included ‘systematic extrajudicial killings with near impunity’ for police, UN report says

Tens of thousands of people in the Philippines may have been killed in the war on drugs since mid-2016, with “near impunity” for police and incitement to violence by top officials, the United Nations said on Thursday.The drugs crackdown, launched by President Rodrigo Duterte after winning election on a platform of crushing crime, has been marked by police orders and high-level rhetoric that may have been interpreted as “permission to kill”, it said.Duterte’s war on drugs is ‘large-scale…

Singapore’s Ho Ching sparks social media stir with US vs Hong Kong protests post

A cartoon shared on Facebook by the wife of Singapore’s prime minister, which contrasts President Donald Trump’s reaction to the ongoing protests against racism and police violence in the US with his comments on anti-government demonstrations in Hong Kong, has become a talking point in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.Ho Ching, the wife of Lee Hsien Loong and who heads state investment firm Temasek, on Monday reposted a cartoon by Singaporean political cartoonist Heng Kim Song, which was…

Coronavirus: first Rohingya refugee dies in Bangladesh camps described as ‘ticking time bomb’

An elderly Rohingya refugee has become the first person to die from coronavirus in the world’s largest refugee settlement in Bangladesh, where there are fears the disease could spread fast due to overcrowding.The 71-year-old man died on May 31 while undergoing treatment at an isolation centre at the camps where over 1 million Rohingya live, said Bimal Chakma, a senior official of the government’s Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commission.“Today we got the confirmation that he tested positive…

Coronavirus: South Korea grapples with new infection clusters a month after easing social distancing rules

South Korea is braced for a fresh wave of infections centred on the capital Seoul almost a month after coronavirus restrictions were eased, as health officials grapple with newly emerging clusters before some 1.8 million students are set to return to school on Wednesday. The country, which had reported 11,541 cases as of Tuesday, endured one of the worst early outbreaks of the Covid-19 disease outside China, but appeared to have brought it under control thanks to an extensive “trace, test and…

Singapore couple divorced after wife became obsessed with cats, husband left after one peed on him

A Singaporean woman’s sudden obsession with cats, which attracted complaints from neighbours and ended up driving her husband out of their home, has become grounds for divorce at a family court. In his decision issued on May 21, District Judge Sheik Mustafa Abu Hassan found that the couple’s 45-year marriage had broken down due to unreasonable behaviour and separation. The wife had contested her husband’s divorce application as she did not want their matrimonial home – a two-storey terrace…

Singaporean food photographer helps restaurants survive coronavirus lockdown by snapping fish soup and curry puffs

When the coronavirus pandemic forced Singapore into partial lockdown in April, Jeryl Tan watched his lifestyle photography business go downhill, his invoices declining 70 per cent. Instead, he has been offering free photography and styling services to help struggling eateries survive by tapping into the growing online market.“Photography in Singapore is expensive and … most businesses would have spent most of their initial capital and costs on rental, manpower and food,” the 28-year-old says. …

Coronavirus highlights Manila’s overcrowding as Philippine government offers to pay residents to leave

The coronavirus pandemic is giving Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte a reason to reduce overcrowding in Manila, which in recent decades has swollen into one of the most heavily populated areas on Earth.Duterte is offering cash and goods to induce city dwellers to move out of the greater capital region in an ambitious programme called “Back to the Province”, one of the most aggressive attempts in decades to lure Filipinos to the countryside.With the pandemic exposing how swift population…

Chinese, Malaysians detained in Philippines raid on online gambling ring

Philippine police have arrested 90 Chinese for running an online gambling hub without permits and for violating quarantine restrictions, officials said on Sunday.Police made the mass arrests on Friday after spotting some of the suspects converging closely without face masks outside a rented flat in violation of quarantine restrictions, in Cavite province south of Manila. The suspects ran into the flat, where police discovered the gambling operation, officials said.Philippines cracks down on…

Singapore NGOs call for rethink of migrant workers’ salaries, health care and recruitment fees

Twelve years ago, when Dhaka-born Aarul completed his secondary school education and was about to join the Bangladesh Army, a family friend introduced him to a recruitment agent in Singapore.The agent promised the 18-year-old an administrative job in the city state, and a S$850 (US$602) monthly salary that was 10 times what he would earn as a soldier.Coronavirus fuels record-breaking philanthropy drive in SingaporeBut there was a catch. Aarul would have to shell out S$8,000 for his flights, an…