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Ja Morant leads Grizzlies to rare road win over Celtics

JA MORANT had 32 points, nine rebounds and nine assists to help the visiting Memphis Grizzlies defeat the Boston Celtics 127-121 on Saturday night and earn their first win in Boston since 2013.

The victory ended Boston’s six-game winning streak against Memphis. The Grizzlies had lost 16 of their last 17 games against the Celtics, including the last 10 in Boston.

Boston led 103-99, but a 10-0 run handed Memphis a six-point lead with 7:19 to play. The Grizzlies maintained the lead after that.

Jaren Jackson, Jr. added 27 points, nine rebounds and three steals for the Grizzlies, who went 15 of 33 on 3-point attempts. Jackson scored 14 points in the fourth quarter.

Jayson Tatum had 17 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists for the Celtics, who shot 18 of 60 from long range. Boston received 23 points from Jrue Holiday and 22 from both Payton Pritchard and Jaylen Brown.

Boston’s Sam Hauser left the game in the first half with right adductor tightness and did not return.

Marcus Smart, who spent his first nine NBA seasons with the Celtics before he was traded to Memphis in a three-team deal that brought Kristaps Porzingis to Boston, was 1 of 11 from the field and scored three points.

The loss ended Boston’s three-game winning streak and its seven-game home winning streak.

A 10-0 run gave Memphis an early 18-8 lead, and the Grizzlies led 31-27 going into the second quarter.

Memphis took a 12-point lead following a Morant basket with 29.8 seconds remaining in the first half and led 66-54 at halftime. The Celtics shot 36% from the field in the first two quarters and made only 9 of 31 from long range.

Pritchard’s 3-pointer capped a 13-3 run that sliced the Memphis lead to 88-86 with 1:37 left in the third quarter, but Boston trailed 94-89 entering the fourth. — Reuters

Real Madrid closes in on leader Barcelona with 3-0 Girona win

GIRONA, Spain — Real Madrid narrowed the gap on LaLiga leaders Barcelona to two points with a commanding 3-0 win at Girona Saturday thanks to goals from Jude Bellingham, Arda Guler and Kylian Mbappe

Second-placed Real have 36 points with a game in hand on Barca, who drew 2-2 at Real Betis.

Girona suffered a sixth loss in 16 league matches and remain eighth on 22 points, two points off the European spots.

Bellingham opened the scoring in the 36th minute by capitalizing on a loose ball and firing home from the center of the box before setting up Guler with a fine through ball to double the lead 10 minutes after the break.

The England midfielder, who scored for a fifth consecutive LaLiga match, was having an outstanding game but was forced off after taking a knock shortly before Mbappe made it 3-0 with a shot from a tight angle in the 62nd to wrap up the win.

Real boss Ancelotti told reporters Bellingham was all right but they also lost full-back Ferland Mendy to a muscular problem ahead of their Champions League clash at Atalanta on Tuesday.

“(Bellingham) is fine, he is available. We’ve had the muscle injury to Mendy but the rest of it is just knocks, nothing more,” the Italian manager said.

Girona have struggled without key players through injury and now face difficult matches at home to Liverpool in the Champions League on Tuesday and away to Mallorca next Saturday in LaLiga.

“The team has suffered a lot of injuries. It’s costing us more. We still have months to keep growing,” Girona defender Miguel Gutierrez told Movistar.

“We have to keep going. We have two very important games. In the Champions League against Liverpool, we’re playing to get through. In LaLiga against Mallorca.”

Girona are 30th in the Champions League table, three points behind Real who are 24th and occupy the final qualifying spot for the playoffs. — Reuters

Manchester City drops points at Palace; error-strewn Man United loses to Forest

MANCHESTER CITY’S struggles continued in a 2-2 Premier League draw at Crystal Palace on Saturday, while Manchester United lost 3-2 in their first defeat by Nottingham Forest at Old Trafford in 30 years to prolong their rocky start under Ruben Amorim.

Brentford extended its unbeaten home run with a 4-2 win over Newcastle United, while Aston Villa beat Southampton 1-0.

Liverpool, which leads the standings, was set to kick off the weekend action at Everton but the last ever Merseyside league derby at Goodison Park was postponed due to storm Darragh.

Erling Haaland and Rico Lewis scored for City, who won in midweek but have lost four of their last six league games and twice trailed at a wet and windy Selhurst Park.

They remain fourth on 27 points, a point behind Chelsea and Arsenal and eight off Liverpool but having played a game more.

“We took a point. We fought incredible and came back twice,” City manager Pep Guardiola told the BBC. “It’s a season to suffer. We’ll see what happens in the last months.

“We tried. We cannot talk about the title race when we lose four games in a row and draw. We have to do more games to be consistent. It’s difficult in the situation we have. I’m really pleased for the players — they fought and did everything.”

Daniel Munoz and Maxence Lacroix scored for Palace. City defender Lewis got their second equaliser in the 68th minute but was shown a red card in the 84th after a second booking.

Manchester United’s defensive weaknesses were exploited again as it fell to Forest, who are two points behind City in fifth, while the scale of the task facing Amorim was apparent as his side languishes in 13th place after a disjointed display.

“Tough game in a tough moment, but we have to continue the job,” the new United manager said.

The hosts went behind within two minutes as Forest defender Nikola Milenkovic headed home a corner, before United levelled when Rasmus Hojlund pounced to slot home a rebound.

Amorim’s side started the second half equally badly and again conceded within two minutes when Morgan Gibbs-White’s shot somehow took goalkeeper Andre Onana by surprise.

Onana was at fault again when Chris Wood sent a looping header over him and defender Lisandro Martinez. Bruno Fernandes pulled one back but United’s fans were left frustrated again.

Brentford held on to beat Newcastle at the Gtech Community Stadium after the visitors twice came from a goal down in the first half before Nathan Collins and Kevin Schade struck to wrap up the points.

Brentford climbed to seventh place in increasingly windy conditions while the Magpies are 12th.

Bryan Mbeumo and Yoane Wissa also scored for Brentford, while Newcastle’s goals came from Alexander Isak and Harvey Barnes.

“One of the best results you can have in that weather, both sides were struggling, the wind was carnage,” Collins said.

A first-half strike by Aston Villa’s Colombia forward

Jhon Duran was enough to secure the points in their home win over bottom side Southampton.

“We have to thank our fans because it was difficult in the weather today,” said Villa manager Unai Emery.

Duran had netted in the 24th minute, chasing down a long ball and capitalizing on some sloppy defending before charging into the box and powering a finish past goalkeeper Joe Lumley.

Villa moved up to sixth, while Southampton remains rooted to the basement, eight points from the safety zone. Reuters

The benching of Draymond Green

Draymond Green was just heading into his third year with the Warriors when he got the call to be a permanent member of their First Five. To argue that it signified a leap of faith would be an understatement. As a 35th overall pick in the 2012 draft, he didn’t seem to have the physique or the skills required of a rotation player. He was an undersized power forward at 6’6”, and he lacked the traditional offensive prowess the blue and yellow demanded of regulars in the National Basketball Association. Still, he found himself with the golden opportunity following a coaching change.

Green’s ascent to stardom was, perhaps, fated. For one thing, the Warriors appeared to be only too ready to move on from David Lee; the erstwhile All-Star then had an albatross of a contract that belied one-dimensional predilections and a troubling history of injury. For another, newly installed bench tactician Steve Kerr represented a fresh set of eyes that provided bias-free impressions of his unique set of skills, and on how it could complement backcourt scorers Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson under a pace-and-space system. And the rest, as the cliche goes, is history.

These days, the Warriors have their dynasty in the rear-view mirror. Thompson is gone, and the other vital cogs are much older. And while it’s still too early in the 2024-25 season to count them out, it’s fair to argue against their capacity to stand toe to toe with the league elite given their uneven roster. For a while there, it looked as if Kerr would be able to leverage loose substitution patterns into wins. It was never going to be sustainable, of course; there’s a reason fewer cogs get to see action in the playoffs.

The other day, Kerr made a decision hitherto deemed all but impossible in the Curry era: He sent Green to the bench in favor of projected future big Jonathan Kuminga. For longtime fans, it translated to the Warriors coming full circle; all things considered, the latter’s promotion was as necessary as Lee’s demotion 10 years ago. And while they still ended up losing to the Timberwolves, the change figures to stick for a while in the face of a glaring lack of scoring options.

Creditably, Green has taken the turn of events in stride. Not normally predisposed to accepting any change in the status quo, he has accepted it with uncharacteristic peace. “I am a product of my vet being willing to take a backseat for me,” he noted. “So you got to give back what came to you. That’s what this is about.” To be sure, the Warriors are walking a tightrope. In large measure, his stellar court vision is precisely what makes the offense hum, and why Curry has thrived all this time. Then again, Kerr has no choice. They’re reeling, and they can’t keep doing the same things over and over again while expecting a different result.

Have the Warriors latched on to a formula for success? It’s anybody’s guess. At the very least, they have Green’s cooperation — as critical an ingredient as any.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Syrian rebels topple Assad who flees to Russia in Mideast shakeup

People gather at Saadallah al-Jabiri Square as they celebrate in Aleppo, Syria, Dec. 8 after Syria’s army command notified officers that President Bashar al-Assad’s 24-year authoritarian rule has ended. This comes after a rapid rebel offensive that took the world by surprise. — REUTERS

DAMASCUS (UPDATE) – Syrian rebels seized the capital Damascus unopposed on Sunday after a lightning advance that sent President Bashar al-Assad fleeing to Russia after a 13-year civil war and six decades of his family’s autocratic rule.

In one of the biggest turning points for the Middle East in generations, the fall of Assad’s government wiped out a bastion from which Iran and Russia exercised influence across the Arab world. Moscow gave asylum to Assad and his family, Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s ambassador to international organizations in Vienna, said on his Telegram channel.

His sudden overthrow, at the hands of a revolt partly backed by Turkey and with roots in jihadist Sunni Islam, limits Iran’s ability to spread weapons to its allies and could cost Russia its Mediterranean naval base. It could allow millions of refugees scattered for more than a decade in camps across Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan to finally return home.

For Syrians, it brought a sudden unexpected end to a war in deep freeze for years, with hundreds of thousands dead, cities pounded to dust and an economy hollowed by global sanctions.

“How many people were displaced across the world? How many people lived in tents? How many drowned in the seas?” the top rebel commander, Abu Mohammed al-Golani, told a huge crowd at the medieval Umayyad Mosque in central Damascus, referring to refugees who died trying to reach Europe.

“A new history, my brothers, is being written in the entire region after this great victory,” he said, adding that with hard work Syria would be “a beacon for the Islamic nation.”

The Assad police state – known since his father seized power in the 1960s as one of the harshest in the Middle East with hundreds of thousands of political prisoners – melted away overnight.

Bewildered and elated inmates poured out of jails after rebels blasted open their cells. Reunited families wept in joy. Newly freed prisoners were filmed at dawn running through the Damascus streets holding up the fingers of both hands to show how many years they had been in prison.

“We toppled the regime!” a voice shouted as one prisoner yelled and skipped with delight.

The White Helmets rescue organization said it had dispatched five emergency teams to the notorious Sedhaya prison to search for hidden underground cells believed to hold detainees.

DEFACED ASSAD IMAGES
As the sun set in Damascus without Assad for the first time, roads leading into the city were mostly empty, apart from motorcycles carrying armed men and rebel vehicles caked with mud as camouflage.

Some men could be seen looting a shopping centre on the road between the capital and the Lebanese border. The myriad checkpoints lining the road to Damascus were empty. Posters of Assad were torn at his eyes. A burning Syrian military truck was parked diagonally on the road out of the city.

A thick column of black smoke billowed from the Mazzeh neighborhood, where Israeli strikes earlier had targeted Syrian state security branches, according to two security sources.

Intermittent gunfire rang out in apparent celebration.

Shops and restaurants closed early in line with a curfew imposed by the rebels. Just before it came into effect, people could be seen briskly walking home with stacks of bread.

Earlier, the rebels said they had entered the capital with no sign of army deployments. Thousands of people in cars and on foot congregated at a main square in Damascus waving and chanting “Freedom.”

People were seen walking inside the Al-Rawda Presidential Palace, with some leaving carrying furniture. A motorcycle was parked on the intricately-laid parquet floor of a gilded hall.

The Syrian rebel coalition said it was working to complete the transfer of power to a transitional governing body with executive powers.

“The great Syrian revolution has moved from the stage of struggle to overthrow the Assad regime to the struggle to build a Syria together that befits the sacrifices of its people,” it added in a statement.

Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali, prime minister under Assad, called for free elections and said he had been in contact with Golani to discuss the transitional period.

Golani, whose group was once Syria’s branch of al Qaeda but has softened its image to reassure members of minority sects and foreign countries, said there was no room for turning back.

ARAB WORLD STUNNED
The pace of events stunned Arab capitals and raised concerns about more instability on top of the Gaza war.

U.S. President Joe Biden, in a televised address, cheered Assad’s fall but acknowledged that it was also a moment of risk and uncertainty.

“As we all turn to the question of what comes next, the United States will work with our partners and the stakeholders in Syria to help them seize an opportunity to manage the risk,” Biden said.

The U.S. Central Command said its forces conducted dozens of airstrikes targeting known Islamic State camps and operatives in central Syria on Sunday.

Later in the day Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said he spoke with Turkish Minister of National Defense Yasar Guler, emphasizing that the United States is watching closely.

Jubilant supporters of the revolt crowded Syrian embassies around the world, lowering red, white and black Assad-era flags and replacing them with the green, white and black flag flown by his opponents.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Assad’s fall was thanks to blows Israel had dealt to Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah, once the lynchpin of Assad’s security forces.

“The barbaric state has fallen,” French President Emmanuel Macron said.

When the celebrations fade, Syria’s new leaders face the daunting task of trying to deliver stability to a diverse country that will need billions of dollars in aid.

During the civil war, which erupted in 2011 as an uprising against Assad, his forces and their Russian allies bombed cities to rubble. The refugee crisis across the Middle East was one of the biggest of modern times and caused a political reckoning in Europe when a million people arrived in 2015.

In recent years Turkey had backed some rebels in a small redoubt in the northwest and along its border. The United States, which still has 900 soldiers on the ground, backed a Kurdish-led alliance that fought Islamic State jihadists from 2014-2017.

The biggest strategic losers were Russia and Iran, which intervened in the war’s early years to rescue Assad, helping him recapture most territory and all major cities. The front lines were frozen four years ago under a deal Russia and Iran reached with Turkey.

But Moscow’s focus on its war in Ukraine and the blows to Iran’s allies following the war in Gaza – particularly the decimation of Hezbollah by Israel over the past two months – left Assad with scant support. — Reuters

France says ‘merci’ as Notre-Dame cathedral rises from ruins of fire

GENERAL VIEW of the Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral, five-and-a-half years after a fire ravaged the Gothic masterpiece, during a light show as part of ceremonies to mark its reopening after restoration in Paris, France, Dec. 7, 2024. — REUTERS

PARIS — The word “Merci” was projected on to the front of Paris’ Notre-Dame cathedral as it reopened on Saturday, in thanks for its salvation after a devastating fire that brought the 860-year-old building close to collapse five years ago.

The cathedral’s bells rang out and the Archbishop of Paris, Laurent Ulrich, struck the doors of Notre-Dame three times with his crozier before symbolically reopening the building, as the ceremony started. First responders who helped preserve the Gothic masterpiece and some of those who subsequently restored it received a standing ovation.

“I stand before you to express the gratitude of the French nation, our gratitude to all those who saved, helped and rebuilt the cathedral,” President Emmanuel Macron said, adding that with the swift renovation, France had “achieved the impossible.”

“Tonight we can together share joy and pride. Long live Notre-Dame de Paris, long live the Republic and long live France.”

Minutes earlier, the cathedral’s bells rang out and Mr. Macron welcomed guests including US President-elect Donald J. Trump.

Notre-Dame has been meticulously restored, with a new spire and rib vaulting, its flying buttresses and carved stone gargoyles returned to their past glory and white stone and gold decorations shining brightly once again.

Five years ago, on the evening of April 15, 2019, dismayed Parisians rushed to the scene and TV viewers worldwide watched horrified as the fire raged through the cathedral, the spire fell and the roof collapsed.

Getting Mr. Trump to attend the opening ceremony, and organizing a meeting between him and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Elysée Palace before the Notre-Dame ceremony, was a coup for Mr. Macron as he faces a political crisis at home, after parliament ousted his prime minister.

Mr. Trump shook hands with Britain’s Prince William and heads of state and government as he made his way to the front of the cathedral. He sat next to Mr. Macron and Mr. Macron’s wife Brigitte in the front row. Jill Biden, the wife of US President Joseph R.  Biden, sat on the other side of Brigitte Macron.

Earlier on Saturday, guests stood and applauded as Mr. Zelensky walked into the cathedral.

Tesla billionaire Elon Musk, a close adviser in Mr. Trump’s transition team, also attended, as did France’s richest man, Bernard Arnault, as well as Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and former French Presidents Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy. 

France’s Marseillaise national anthem rang out as the ceremony drew to a close. Mr. Macron will host Mr. Trump and heads of state and government at a dinner in the presidential Elysée Palace after the ceremony.

THOUSANDS WORKED ON RESTORATION
Thousands of experts — from carpenters and stonemasons to stained glass window artists — worked round the clock for five years, using age-old methods to restore, repair or replace everything that was destroyed or damaged.

“Notre-Dame is more than a Parisian or French monument. It’s also a universal monument,” said historian Damien Berne.

“It’s a landmark, an emblem, a point of reference that reassures in a globalized world where everything evolves permanently,” said Mr. Berne, a member of the scientific council for the restoration.

The cathedral’s first stone was laid in 1163 and construction continued for much of the next century, with major restoration and additions made in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Victor Hugo helped make the cathedral a symbol of Paris and France when he used it as a setting for his 1831 novel “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.” Quasimodo, the main character, has been portrayed in Hollywood movies, an animated Disney adaptation and in musicals.

Some Parisians were particularly thrilled by the reopening.

“What does Notre-Dame mean to me? This. Look, it’s here,” said careworker Pascal Tordeux, displaying a tattoo on his arm representing the cathedral. “It means everything.”

“I saw the construction every day from my window, the spire being brought down, being brought back. I saw it burn, I saw it rise again. I followed it day by day,” said Tordeux, who lives across the river from Notre-Dame.

Would-be visitors can now book a free ticket online, on the Cathedral’s website. But on Saturday, the first day bookings could be made for the coming days, all tickets were gone, a message on the site said.

Group visits will be allowed next year — from Feb. 1, 2025 for religious groups or from June 9, 2025 for tourists with guides. The Catholic Church expects the cathedral to welcome 15 million visitors each year.

So much money poured in for the renovation from all over the world — more than 840 million euros ($880 million), according to Mr. Macron’s office — there are still funds left over for further investment in the building.

In a message read aloud during the ceremony, Pope Francis said it was a day of “joy, celebration and praise.”

Weighing in a heated debate on whether visitors should pay to visit the cathedral — which some French politicians have pushed for, to help restore other churches — the pope, who was not at the ceremony himself, said in his message that he trusted all would continue to be welcomed for free. — Reuters

South Korea ex-defense minister arrested over President Yoon’s martial law

SOUTH KOREAN President Yoon Suk Yeol delivers a speech to declare martial law in Seoul, South Korea, Dec. 3, 2024. — THE PRESIDENTIAL OFFICE/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

SEOUL — South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol’s former defense minister was arrested on Sunday over his alleged role in Mr. Yoon’s declaration of martial law last week, prosecutors said.

Mr. Yoon survived an impeachment vote in the opposition-led parliament late on Saturday, prompted by Tuesday’s short-lived attempt to impose martial law, but the leader of his own party said the president would effectively be excluded from his duties before eventually stepping down.

The leader of Mr. Yoon’s People Power Party, Han Dong-hoon, in a joint press conference with the prime minister, said on Sunday that Mr. Yoon will not be involved in foreign and other state affairs before his early resignation.

Ex-Defence Minister Kim Yong-hyun, who stepped down on Wednesday after Mr. Yoon rescinded martial law, was seen as a central figure in the debacle. He had proposed martial law to the president, according to a senior military official and the impeachment filings.

The prosecution’s special investigative team arrested Mr. Kim on Sunday and seized his mobile phone, it said in a brief statement to reporters. Before the arrest, investigators questioned Mr. Kim, who voluntarily appeared at the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office around 1:30 a.m. on Sunday (1630 GMT on Saturday), Yonhap news agency reported.

Three minority opposition parties filed a complaint with the prosecution against Mr. Yoon, Mr. Kim and martial law commander Park An-su, accusing them of insurrection. If convicted, the crime of leading an insurrection is punishable by death or life imprisonment, with or without prison labour.

Opposition lawmakers allege Mr. Yoon mobilized military forces to block a vote by lawmakers seeking to nullify what they said was an unconstitutional martial law decree.

The national police raided Mr. Kim’s office on Sunday as part of an investigation into claims of treason against Mr. Yoon and top ministers, Yonhap said.

Hours before Saturday’s impeachment vote, Mr. Yoon addressed the nation in a televised speech to apologize for his martial law decree, saying he would put his fate in the hands of his party. Mr. Han said the comments were effectively a promise to leave office early, adding that the ruling party would consult with the prime minister to manage state affairs.

Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said on Sunday the cabinet would do its best to “maintain trust with our allies,” referring to the United States and Japan.

Mr. Yoon shocked the nation on Tuesday night when he gave the military sweeping emergency powers to root out what he called “anti-state forces” and obstructionist political opponents. He rescinded the order six hours later, after parliament defied military and police cordons to vote unanimously against the decree.

Mr. Yoon’s martial law declaration plunged South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy and a key US military ally, into its greatest political crisis in decades, threatening to shatter the country’s reputation as a democratic success story. — Reuters

US alleges China hacked calls of ‘very senior’ political figures, official says

MANAMA, Bahrain — The US believes that an alleged sweeping Chinese cyber espionage campaign known as Salt Typhoon targeted and recorded telephone calls of “very senior” American political figures, a White House official said on Saturday.

The comments by Anne Neuberger, the US deputy national security advisor for cyber and emerging technology, to reporters at the Manama Dialogue regional security conference in Bahrain’s capital revealed new details of the campaign.

While a large number of Americans’ metadata likely has been stolen, US officials understand that “the purpose of the operation was more focused,” Ms. Neuberger said.

“We believe… the actual number of calls that they took, recorded and took, was really more focused on very senior political individuals,” she continued.

She did not elaborate, including revealing the identities of those who were targeted.

Chinese officials previously have described the allegations as disinformation and said that Beijing “firmly opposes and combats cyber attacks and cyber theft in all forms.”

“We’re still investigating the scope and scale” of the hacking campaign, Ms. Neuberger said.

The New York Times in October reported that members of US President-elect Donald J. Trump’s family and Biden administration officials were among those targeted by China-linked hackers who broke into telecommunications companies.

A senior US official this week said dozens of companies worldwide have been struck by the hackers, including at least eight telecommunications and telecom infrastructure firms in the US. — Reuters

Taiwan reports near doubling of Chinese warships nearby

A NAVY miniature is seen in front of displayed Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration taken April 11, 2023. — REUTERS

TAIPEI — Taiwan’s defense ministry said on Sunday that China had nearly doubled the number of its warships operating around the island in the previous 24 hours, ahead of what security sources expect will be a new round of war games.

China, which views democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, has been angered by visits by President Lai Ching-te to Hawaii and the US territory of Guam as part of a Pacific tour. Mr.  Lai returned from the week-long trip on Friday night.

Beijing has held two rounds of war games around Taiwan this year.

In its daily morning report on Chinese military activities, Taiwan’s defense ministry said there were 14 Chinese warships operating nearby, up from the eight it reported the previous day.

The ministry said it had detected four Chinese balloons flying over the Taiwan Strait, one of which had brushed the top of the island.

Weather will likely be a factor in China’s decision on any war games, security sources say. Weather in the strait has been poor this weekend.

China’s defense ministry did not answer calls to its news office seeking comment outside of office hours on Sunday.

But in a strongly worded commentary on its WeChat account on Sunday, China’s Ministry of State Security said Mr. Lai’s efforts to “use arms to seek independence” and cosy up to the United States were doomed to fail.

Taiwan’s government is putting on a “false display of power” while the US government is “acting in cahoots with gangsters and jackals” in supporting Taiwan, it said.

“No country, organization or individual should underestimate the strong determination, firm will and powerful capacity of the Chinese government and people to safeguard national sovereignty and territorial integrity,” it said.

No one should presume they can “step out of line on the Taiwan issue without having to pay a price”, the ministry added.

Mr. Lai and his government reject Beijing’s sovereignty claims. — Reuters

Jollibee Group brands bag 11 awards at 2024 Marketing Excellence Awards

Mang Inasal wins a total of six awards, including gold for #MangInasalAt20: The 20th Anniversary Digital and PR Campaign (Excellence in Anniversary Marketing), silver for Mang Inasal Creators' Circle (Excellence in Influencer/KOLs Marketing) and National Halo-halo Blowout (Excellence in Customer Engagement), and bronze for the MAS Juicy Campaign (Excellence in Integrated Marketing).

With two gold, five silver, and four bronze trophies, Jollibee Group and its brands emerged as one of the big winners at the 4th edition of the Marketing Excellence Awards (MEA) in the Philippines.

The Jollibee Group brands, including Mang Inasal, Chowking and Greenwich, have captivated the judges with various innovative marketing campaigns and took home 11 trophies during the recent Marketing Excellence Awards Gala Night.

“We’re thrilled to have received 11 Marketing Excellence Awards this year! This speaks to our brands’ hard work and dedication, great collaboration across teams, and customer-centric focus. Congratulations to all the teams and individuals behind the campaigns. We hope this continues to fuel our passion and commitment to deliver creativity and value in everything we do,” said Jollibee Group Philippines CEO Joseph Tanbuntiong.

A big win

Chowking’s Halo-halo Land campaign wins silver in the Excellence in Experiential Marketing category at the 4th Marketing Excellence Awards. The team also receives silver in the Excellence in Event Marketing category for their Tikman ang Kulay ng Pasko campaign and bronze in the Excellence in Viral Marketing category for their Tikman ang Bagong Sarap campaign.

The Marketing Excellence Awards is organized by Marketing Interactive, which aims to celebrate and recognize the outstanding marketing campaigns in the Philippines. With an extensive array of 42 diverse categories, three winners emerged each and took home the gold, silver, and bronze trophies. The recipients of the Gold awards serve as the benchmark for marketing excellence, honoring innovative and impactful campaigns that have set the Gold standard.

The winners were chosen by an independent judging panel comprised of high-caliber, industry experts from reputable brands, who specifically looked for exceptional problem, solution, delivery and performance in every submitted entry.

Mang Inasal’s #MangInasalAt20: The 20th Anniversary Digital and PR Campaign won the gold award for Excellence in Anniversary Marketing whereas Jollibee Group’s Corporate Communications and Jollibee Group Foundation’s Farmer Entrepreneurship Program Media Farm Tour have also won the gold award for Excellence in Communications/Public Relations.

Mang Inasal Creators’ Circle and National Halo-halo Blowout bagged the silver award for Excellence in Influencer/KOLs Marketing and Excellence in Customer Engagement, respectively. Chowking’s Tikman ang Kulay ng Pasko and Halo-halo Land also took home silver trophies for Excellence in Event Marketing and Excellence in Experiential Marketing categories, respectively.

Greenwich’s Marketing Head Ali De Torres came home victorious after being hailed as the silver awardee in the Marketing Leader of the Year category

 

Mang Inasal’s Marketing Head Allan C. Tan took home the bronze awardee in the Marketing Leader of the Year category

The brands also took home the bronze award for the following categories: Excellence in Integrated Marketing (Mang Inasal’s MAS Juicy Campaign) and Excellence in Viral Marketing (Chowking’s Tikman ang Bagong Sarap campaign).

In the Marketing Leader of the Year category, Mang Inasal marketing head Allan Tan and Greenwich marketing head Alizon de Torres were awarded bronze and silver, respectively.

Finally, Mang Inasal’s marketing team won the bronze award in the Marketing Team of the Year category.

Aside from the above wins, several of Chowking’s campaigns have also been finalist under several categories: Excellence in Brand Awareness and Excellence in Brand Strategy for the Buksan ang Siopao Sarap campaign; Excellence in Gaming and Excellence in Influencer/KOLs Marketing for the GG#ChaoFanalo campaign; and Excellence in Social Media Marketing for their New & Improved: Bagong Social ng Chowking initiative.

Jollibee Group Corporate Communications and Jollibee Group Foundation’s 2023 Farmer Entrepreneurship Program Media Farm Tour won gold in the Excellence in Communications/Public Relations category.

Meanwhile, Mang Inasal’s other campaigns have also become finalists in several other categories, including Excellence in Advertising for Project Corlys, Excellence in Content Marketing for the #ILoveMangInasal Content Marketing campaign, Excellence in Launch Marketing for the Hei Hei campaign, and Excellence in Viral Marketing for Dwight Howard’s Love for Mang Inasal.

“These awards are the result of our team’s hard work to create campaigns that truly connect with our customers. I believe this recognition will inspire us to keep raising the bar for excellence, creativity, and strategic vision in our company and brand teams,” said Jollibee Group global chief marketing officer David Beal.

 


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Vietnam’s soaring US trade surplus stokes new fears of Trump tariffs

A VIETNAM DONG note is seen in this illustration photo May 31, 2017. — REUTERS

HANOI – Vietnam is vulnerable to becoming the new Trump administration’s next target for tariffs as data shows its trade surplus with the United States ballooning, industry executives and analysts said.

The Communist-run country, home to large industrial operations of U.S. multinationals such as Apple, Google, Nike and Intel, has the fourth highest commercial surplus with the United States, topped only by China, the European Union and Mexico.

U.S. trade data released on Thursday showed the country’s deficit with Vietnam reached $102 billion in the first ten months of this year, nearly a 20% increase over the same period in 2023.

“For Trump the main metric is the trade deficit, and the Vietnam number is bad,” said Deborah Elms, head of trade policy at the Asia-based Hinrich Foundation.

“Vietnam is an ideal candidate for early action because it cannot easily retaliate,” she said.

President-elect Donald Trump, who takes office in January, threatened tariffs of up to 20% on all U.S. imports during his election campaign.

His son Eric, a top adviser, has cited Vietnam among countries that “ripped off” the U.S., according to a video shown last week at a business conference in Hanoi organised by American chambers of commerce.

At the event several businessmen and trade association representatives expressed concern about possible tariffs on Vietnam.

“The new tariffs are one of the biggest concerns for the Korean industry in Vietnam,” Hong Sun, head of South Korea’s chamber of commerce in Vietnam, told the conference. South Korea’s Samsung Electronics is a major exporter of smartphones and electronic devices to the U.S. from Vietnam
Vietnam’s foreign affairs ministry did not reply to a request for comment on potential tariffs, but Vietnamese officials have repeatedly urged Washington to maintain seamless trade.

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In another sign Vietnam could face tariffs, Trump picked Peter Navarro to be his senior counselor for trade and manufacturing.

Navarro has said tariffs on Vietnam would be highly effective in cutting the U.S. trade deficit, writing in the Project 2025 proposals seen by many policymakers in Washington as a blueprint for the new Trump administration.

“Navarro has been a well-known expert under the Trump administration for increasing the size of the American manufacturing sector, imposing high tariffs, and repatriating global supply chains,” said Nguyen Hung, a specialist in supply chains at RMIT University Vietnam.

Vietnam benefited from trade barriers Trump imposed on Beijing in his first term, which spurred manufacturers to shift production out of China.

With nearly one-third of Vietnam’s exports now going to the U.S., the country would need to improve the traceability of goods and components to dispel concerns of being used merely as an assembling site for products made in China, Hung said.

The country could partly offset its large trade surplus by boosting its imports from the U.S., including possibly liquefied natural gas (LNG), drugs and airplanes, officials have said.

However, it is unclear whether Vietnamese authorities support these offsetting measures and how significant they could be.
“I don’t think Vietnam is in a position to buy quickly and enough” to materially reduce its surplus, said Elms of the Hinrich Foundation. — Reuters

Ahead of expected war games, Taiwan urges China to ‘unclench its fists’

CHESS PIECES are seen in front of displayed China and Taiwan’s flags in this illustration taken Jan. 25, 2022. — REUTERS

TAIPEI – Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te urged China on Friday to “unclench its fists” and not take any unilateral actions, saying ahead of expected Chinese war games around the island that Beijing would not win any respect for military drills.

China, which claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own territory, is expected to launch another round of exercises in response to Lai’s trip to the Pacific, which has included stopovers in Hawaii and the U.S. territory of Guam, according to security sources.

Speaking to reporters in the Pacific Islands nation of Palau on the final day of his tour, Lai said he hoped China, which has condemned his visits to the United States, would return to the rules-based international order.

“It’s better to open your hands than to clench your fists. Only by doing so can China win respect from the international community,” Lai said in comments carried live on Taiwanese television.

“No matter how many military drills China stages and how many ships and aircraft they dispatch to intimidate regional countries, China will not win the respect from any country,” he added, urging Beijing to stop “unsettling and regrettable” unilateral actions.

Asked about possible Chinese drills, Lai said Taiwan’s engagement with the world “should not be used by authoritarian countries as an excuse for provocation”.

Taiwan’s government has a full grasp of the security situation in the region and has made the “best preparations” to ensure the security of the Taiwan Strait separating the island from China, he said.

Beijing detests Lai, branding him a “separatist”, and has rejected multiple offers of talks by him.

A spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry, asked on Friday about the potential for war games, said the Taiwan issue was the “core of China’s core interests”.

“It is the first red line that cannot be crossed in Sino-U.S. relations, and China’s determination to defend its national sovereignty and territorial integrity is unwavering,” Lin Jian told a routine news conference in Beijing.

Lai rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only Taiwan’s people can decide their future and that Taiwan has a right to engage with the rest of the world.

Lai reiterated that while Taiwan wants engagement with China, he cannot have any illusions about peace and that Taiwan must continue to strengthen its defenses.

Peace is priceless and there are no winners in a war, he added, repeating comments he made in Hawaii after visiting a memorial to the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

China has staged two rounds of war games around Taiwan so far this year, one in May shortly after Lai’s inauguration and another in October following his national day speech.

In Guam on Thursday, Lai spoke with U.S. congressional leaders, including House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, ahead of Donald Trump returning to the White House on Jan. 20.

Trump unnerved Taiwan during the U.S. presidential campaign, saying the island “should pay us for defense” and that Taiwan had taken virtually all of the U.S. semiconductor industry’s business.

Lai said Taiwan enjoys strong bipartisan support in the United States and that he was optimistic that he can deepen ties with the incoming U.S. administration.

“Taiwan is confident that we can continue to deepen cooperation with the new U.S. government and resist the expansion of authoritarianism.” — Reuters