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Team Philippines adds three gold medals to its growing collection

CENDY ASUSANO, 33, was indestructible on the field as she heaved 13.74 meters to add the women’s javelin F54 gold.

PHNOM PENH — Tanker Gary Bejino and thrower Cendy Asusano claimed their second gold medal even as swimmer Ariel Joseph Alegarbes got on board as the Philippines lumbered yesterday after a golden rampage the day before in the 12th Asean Para Games at the Morodok Techo National Stadium here.

Mr. Bejino delivered another record-breaking performance in capturing the gold in the men’s 200m freestyle S6 in two minutes and 38.55 seconds, way ahead of Thai Channi Wongnonthaphum (2:53.10) and Vietnamese Do Than Hai (2:54.23), who took the silver and bronze, respectively.

Ms. Asusano, 33, for her part, was indestructible on the field as she heaved 13.74 meters to add the women’s javelin F54 gold to her impressive shot put triumph the day before.

Marites Burce snatched the silver with an 11.96m to cap an impressive 1-2 finish by the Filipinas, whose trip here is being bankrolled by the Philippine Sports Commission.

For Mr. Alegarbes, the country’s flag bearer, he finally barged into the gold column after his 50m butterfly S14 win.

There, the Surakarta triple gold winner clocked 26.69 in edging Malaysians Bryan Sze Kai Lau (27.06) and Muhd Imaan Aiman Muhd Redzuan (27.53).

Mr. Bejino, a 27-year-old Tabaco, Albay native, eclipsed the meet mark of 2:45.99 set by Myanmar’s Aung Myint Myat — the eventual silver medalist in this same event — in the 2017 Kuala Lumpur edition.

It came a day after a magnificent, record-shattering triumph in the 400m freestyle.

Also, the pair of feats already surpassed Mr. Bejino’s one-mint performance last year in Surakarta, Indonesia.

And he isn’t done yet as he is scheduled to plunge back into action in the 50m and 100m freestyle, 50m butterfly and the 4x100m medley relay with Ernie Gawilan, Rolando Sabido and Muhaimin Ulag.

Ms. Asusano will be eyeing a third gold and reclaim the crown in discuss throw tomorrow after ending up with a bronze the last time.

Ms. Asusano who now has seven ASEAN Para Games mints including three in 2017 in Kuala Lumpur and two in Surakarta last year.

Mr. Gawilan, who had the 400m freestyle S7 gold the day before, snatched a bronze in the 100m backstroke S7 in 1:21.77 in the event topped by Vietnam’s Nguyen Hoang Nha (1:15.56).

Also adding a bronze was Edwin Villanueva in the 50m breast stroke SB7 where he clocked 44.50. Myanmar’s Htoo Min took the mint in 42.91.

Earlier at the track and field, King James Reyes checked in at 4:24.85 to grab the silver in the 1500m T46 ruled by Malaysia’s Muhamad Ashraf Muhammad in 4:24.22.

It was Ms. Reyes’ second silver after he failed to defend his 5000m crown Sunday night.

In chess at the Royal University, Darry Bernardo, who had two gold in men’s B2B3 individual and team rapid, launched his bid for more glory as he zoomed to the early share of the lead after smashing Vietnam’s Trinh Huu Dat in the three-day standard play. — Joey Villar

Romeo leads PBA On Tour scoring with 20.7-pt average

TERRENCE ROMEO — PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO/PBA

WELL on his way to recovery from a nagging hamstring injury, San Miguel Beer’s (SMB) Terrence Romeo is back to his gun-slinging ways.

Two weeks into the PBA On Tour, the returning Mr. Romeo sits on top of the scoring table with a league-best 20.7-point average in three outings.

Mr. Romeo, who logged only eight games last season, kicked off his comeback with 27 in a 101-106 loss to Phoenix. After easing with 14 in their 87-75 win over NorthPort, the former FEU star erupted for 21 in leading the Beermen to a 90-78 drubbing of Barangay Ginebra Sunday night.

Mr. Romeo, who continues with his therapy while taking primary playmaking roles for SMB in the absence of Chris Ross and Simon Enciso.

Mr. Romeo paces SMB teammate Jericho Cruz (17.3) and Converge’s Jerrick Balanza (17.0) in the race for scoring honors early in the pre-season meet.

Fellow Beerman Rodney Brondial, making the most of his extended minutes with June Mar Fajardo and Vic Manuel still out, lords it in the battle of the boards with 15.7 a game. Phoenix’ Larry Muyang (12) and Magnolia’s James Laput (11.7) rank next in rebounding.

Meralco’s Bong Quinto and Converge’s Alec Stockton show the way in the assist department with identical 6.7 per match while Phoenix’ Jayjay Alejandro and NorthPort’s MJ Ayaay are tops in steals with two per outing.

Phoenix’ Raul Soyud is the sultan of swats with 1.7 block per game followed by fellow Fuel Master Muyang, Laput, and NLEX’ Don Trollano with 1.3 each. — Olmin Leyba

Fil-Japanese Saso finishes joint seventh in Mizuho Americas Open

YUKA SASO — PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

FIL-JAPANESE Yuka Saso ended a string of misfortunes in the LPGA as she placed joint seventh in the Mizuho Americas Open Sunday at the Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey.

Ms. Saso shot a closing two-under 70 to finish at six-under 282 for a share of No. 7 with South Africa’s Ashely Buhai (64) and Ireland’s Leona Maguire (67) and a prize money of $70,463 (P3.96 million).

The strong placing was a major morale-booster for Ms. Saso after she missed the cut in her last four events.

Overall, the 21-year-old parbuster chalked up her third Top 10 placing of 2023 following sixth-place feats in the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions in January and the HSBC Women’s World Championship in March.

Ms. Saso shot nines of 33-37 on a combo of five birdies and three bogeys in the final round. If not for a bogey mishap on No. 17, the Asian Games double gold medalist could have actually finished higher and joined the group that shared fourth at 281.

In the end, the Tokyo Olympics veteran fell three shots off first-time winner Rose Zhang and runner-up Jennifer Kupcho, who carded identical nine-under 279s after 72 holes.

American Ms. Zhang, a former amateur standout on her professional debut, beat compatriot Ms. Kupcho with a par in the second playoff hole to reign supreme and bank $412,500.

South Korea’s Ryu Hae-ran finished third after a 70 for 280 followed by Japan’s Ayaka Furue, South Korea’s Ji Eun-hee and India’s Aditi Ashok, who shared fourth at 281. — Olmin Leyba

Perpetual and Letran gun for quick entry to PBA D-League Final Four

UNIVERSITY OF PERPETUAL HELP SYSTEM — PBA

Games Today
(Paco Arena, Manila)
2 p.m. — University of Perpetual Help System-Dalta vs PSP Gymers
4 p.m. — Wangs Basketball @27 Strikers-Letran vs CEU

HIGHER-seeded squads University of Perpetual Help System Dalta and Wangs Basketball @27 Strikers-Letran want no delay in their bids for a quick entry to the 2023 PBA D-League Aspirants’ Cup Final Four.

Armed with twice-to-beat incentives, the No. 3 Altas and the No. 4 Knights are eager to take care of business right away when they take on PSP Gymers at 2 p.m. and Centro Escolar University (CEU) at 4 p.m., respectively.

A win by Perpetual and Letran would arrange a quick best-of-three Final Four duels with reigning champion EcoOil-La Salle and Marinerong Pilipino-San Beda, which gained automatic semifinal berths.

The Red Lions topped the elimination round followed by the Green Archers, giving the Altas and the Knights win-once incentives in the quarterfinals.

“We’re not looking for that twice-to-beat advantage. We need to get the win on Tuesday,” said coach Myk Saguiguit as Perpetual eyes mastery of PSP after a 93-82 win in the elims.

“It’s a good opportunity for us to bounce back against CEU. We’re ready for the Scorpions,” said coach Rensy Bajar, whose wards on the other hand eye to avenge their 92-85 overtime loss to CEU.

But CEU and PSP are out to give their rivals a run for their own money in a bid to stay alive and force rubber matches.

“We have to embrace the challenge in front of us. It’s not going to be easy but we will be there competing and giving our best against Letran,” said Scorpions coach Jeff Perlas. — John Bryan Ulanday

Vincent helps Miami beat Denver, level finals at 1-1

THE MIAMI Heat benefited from a late finishing kick against the Denver Nuggets on Sunday to send the NBA Finals back to South Beach all square at one victory apiece.

Miami erased an eight-point deficit entering the fourth quarter and overcame a 41-point, 11-rebound performance from Nikola Jokic to record a 111-108 victory in Game 2 in Denver.

Gabe Vincent made eight of 12 shot attempts from the floor — including four of six from 3-point range — as the Heat outscored the Nuggets by a 36-25 margin in the fourth quarter.

Mr. Vincent was asked on NBA TV’s postgame show if his teammates are upset about a perceived lack of respect in the series against Denver. “I speak for my whole team when I say we don’t give a damn. We just want to get four wins,” Mr. Vincent said.

Bam Adebayo collected 21 points and nine rebounds and Jimmy Butler added 21 points and nine assists for Miami, which hosts Game 3 of the best-of-seven series on Wednesday.

“Our guys love to compete. They love to put themselves out there in those moments of truth,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said.

Denver’s Jamal Murray added 18 points and 10 assists, however, he saw his 3-point attempt with 1.9 seconds remaining hit the iron.

Aaron Gordon scored 12 points and Bruce Brown added 11 off the bench for the Nuggets, who fell to 9-1 at home in the playoffs.

“We didn’t want it to happen of course, but it happened, so we have to live with it,” Mr. Jokic said. “We’re going to Miami to play another game.”

While Mr. Jokic is looking ahead, Denver coach Michael Malone took issue with what he’s seen in the first two games of this series.

“Let’s talk about effort. I mean, this is the NBA Finals and we’re talking about effort. That’s a huge concern of mine,” Mr. Malone said. “… This is not the preseason or the regular season. This is the NBA Finals. And that to me is really, really perplexing, disappointing.”

Denver held an 83-75 lead through three quarters before Miami erupted for a 32-12 run over the first eight-plus minutes of the fourth. Duncan Robinson made a pair of treys and two layups and Butler converted a three-point play and 3-pointer to highlight the surge.

“Our defense has to be a helluva lot better,” Mr. Malone said. “That’s two games now where our fourth-quarter defense has been nonexistent.”

Mr. Murray drained two 3-pointers and Mr. Gordon also connected from beyond the arc to cut the Heat’s lead to 109-106 with 1:09 to play. Mr. Adebayo answered by making a pair of free throws and Jokic responded with a short jumper before Mr. Murray misfired on his game-tying attempt.

Kyle Lowry’s 3-pointer trimmed the Nuggets’ lead to 77-75 with 2:08 left in the third quarter before Mr. Jokic scored the final six points of the period.

Mr. Butler drained a floating jumper to stake Miami to a 21-10 lead and Max Strus answered a modest Denver run with his fourth 3-pointer to push his team’s advantage to 24-15 late in the first quarter. The Nuggets responded by scoring 35 of the game’s next 46 points, capped by Mr. Brown’s short jumper with 5:02 remaining in the first half.

Denver led 57-51 at the break. — Reuters

Ibrahimovic hangs up his boots

AC Milan’s Sweden striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic said on Sunday he had decided to end his playing career at the age of 41 after a trophy-laden career at some of Europe’s top clubs.

The extrovert Swede’s Milan contract expires at the end of June and will not be renewed following a season plagued by injuries, prompting him to end a remarkable career.

Mr. Ibrahimovic arrived in Milan for his second spell with the club in early 2020, having won the Scudetto with them in 2011, and helped the club win the title again last season.

“I say goodbye to football but not to you.” he said after being feted by the San Siro crowd after Milan’s 3-1 win over Hellas Verona in their season finale.

The larger-than-life striker started his career at Malmo FF in 1999 and left for Ajax Amsterdam in 2001 before embarking on a journey that has included spells at Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona, Paris St Germain, Manchester United and Milan.

Mr. Ibrahimovic has won countless domestic leagues and cups plus a long list of individual honours but never got his hands on Europe’s elite club competition trophy the Champions League.

Sweden’s all-time top scorer with 62 goals in 121 matches, he quit the national team after Euro 2016 but returned in 2021 for their unsuccessful World Cup qualifying campaign.

“I thank the journalists for your patience, now you’ll have less work to do without me … From tomorrow, I am a free man from this world of football,” Mr. Ibrahimovic told reporters in a press conference after the announcement he was retiring. — Reuters

Djokovic, Alcaraz on track for French Open showdown, Sabalenka snubs press again

PARIS — Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz inched closer to a blockbuster French Open semi-final showdown with imperious wins on Sunday as Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka skipped another press conference due to being asked to comment on the war in Ukraine earlier in the tournament.

Mr. Djokovic, who is chasing a men’s record 23rd Grand Slam to leapfrog Spaniard Rafa Nadal in the injured champion’s absence, blazed past Peruvian mar

A two-time champion in Paris, Mr. Djokovic has now reached the quarters in Paris for a record 17th time, one mear-old Djokovic. “It was the best level of tennis I have played here so I’m very satisfied.”

World number one and top seed Mr. Alcaraz, another tenacious Spaniard who is backed to take the mantle of 14-times champion Mr. Nadal, bulldozed his way to a 6-3 6-2 6-2 win over Italian Lorenzo Musetti.

World number two Ms. Sabalenka, who has been repeatedly urged by Ukrainian players to take a stand against the war, reached the quarter-finals by beating American Sloane Stephens 7-6(5) 6-4.

But she skipped her press conference for a second time having also done so on Friday citing mental health reasons and saying she did not feel safe after being grilled on what Russia calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine.

Belarus has been a key staging area for the invasion.

Up next for Ms. Sabalenka is Elina Svitolina, who sealed a 6-4 7-6(5) victory over Russian ninth seed Daria Kasatkina to stay in contention for a maiden Grand Slam in her first major since the birth of her daughter Skai in October.

RUSSIANS ROLL ON
Earlier, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova dug deep to return to the quarter-finals for the first time since her runner-up finish two years ago before fellow Russian Karen Khachanov also fought his way through on a bright Sunday.

Ms. Pavlyuchenkova, who was defeated in the 2021 final by Czech Barbora Krejcikova, skipped last year’s edition as well as the second half of the season to nurse a knee problem and came into the match after three-setters in her last two encounters.

She was tested again by 28th seed Elise Mertens but rallied from a set and a break down to seal a 3-6 7-6(3) 6-3 victory in a little more than three hours.

Ms. Pavlyuchenkova, who has slipped to world number 333 after being forced to stop playing for five months last year, is the lowest-ranked French Open quarter-finalist in the Open Era.

Khachanov, the 11th seed, also showed plenty of resolve as he battled past Italian Lorenzo Sonego 1-6 6-4 7-6(7) 6-1 to reach the last eight for the second time.

“After the first set and a half, I was thinking, what am I doing here, he was hitting all over the place so I decided all I could do was fight,” said Khachanov, who has reached the semifinals in his last two Grand Slams in New York and Melbourne.

There were dramatic scenes on Court 14 as Miyu Kato and Aldila Sutjiadi were disqualified from their women’s doubles third-round match after Kato struck a ball down the court between points and hit a ball girl to leave her sobbing.

Kato was initially warned by chair umpire Alexandre Juge but Czech Marie Bouzkova and Spain’s Sara Sorribes Tormo, who were leading 7-6(1) 1-3 at the time of the incident, pointed out to him that the ball girl was crying.

“No, no, let me explain to you. She (Kato) didn’t do it on purpose, she (the ball girl) didn’t get injured,” Mr. Juge said.

“She (Kato) didn’t do it on purpose? She’s crying,” Sorribes Tormo said, pointing to the ball girl.

“And she has blood,” Bouzkova added.

After speaking to the girl, the umpire went back up to his chair and announced the end of the match by disqualifying Kato and Sutjiadi to spark boos from the crowd. — Reuters

Benzema leaves Real Madrid after 14 years at club

MADRID — Ballon d’Or winner Karim Benzema will leave Real Madrid as a free agent in the close season after 14 trophy-laden years, the LaLiga club said on Sunday, with the striker set to move to Saudi Arabian side Al Ittihad.

Saudi Arabia’s state-run Al Ekhbariya television station reported that Al Ittihad had reached an agreement with Mr. Benzema on a two-year contract, with club officials in Madrid to hammer out a “record deal” with the striker.

The 35-year-old Frenchman had looked set to stay at the Spanish club for one more year after a 2022-23 season in which he struggled with injuries and missed out on France’s World Cup campaign in Qatar due to another injury.

However, an offer estimated by media to be worth more than €100 million ($107.05 million) from Saudi Arabia reportedly made him reconsider his future.

The Frenchman decided to void the one-year extension clause he had in his contract, with Real saying he had “earned the right to decide his future”.

“Real Madrid and our captain Karim Benzema have agreed to bring his brilliant and unforgettable time as a player at our club to a close,” the club said in a statement.

“Karim Benzema’s career at Real Madrid has been a shining example of conduct and professionalism, and he has represented the values of our club.”

Mr. Benzema could follow his former Real team mate Cristiano Ronaldo to the Gulf country after the Portugal forward signed a 2-1/2 year contract estimated to be worth more than €200 million with Al Nassr in December.

REAL’S SPEARHEAD
Having joined Real in 2009 from Olympique Lyonnais, Mr. Benzema became the spearhead of the club’s attack and their main goal-scoring threat after Mr. Ronaldo left for Juventus in 2018.

Mr. Benzema scored more than 350 goals for Real to sit second on the club’s all-time scoring list behind Mr. Ronaldo.

He had his best season in the 2021-22 campaign when he scored 44 times in all competitions to lead the side to a record-extending 14th European title as well as the LaLiga crown.

In the Champions League, Real made remarkable comebacks from losing positions in the last 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals against Paris St Germain, Chelsea and Manchester City respectively — with Mr. Benzema scoring in each of the second legs.

His pivotal role earned him the Ballon d’Or crown, making him the first French player to win the trophy since Zinedine Zidane in 1998 and the fifth Frenchman overall.

He finishes his career in the Spanish capital with a record 25 trophies with the club, including five European Cups, four LaLiga titles and three Copas del Rey.

Mr. Benzema’s exit comes a day after Real announced Eden Hazard was also leaving the club after agreeing toterminate his contract a year early.

Real also confirmed the exits of attacking midfielder Marco Asensio and striker Mariano Diaz, leaving holes in the attack for club president Florentino Perez to plug in the close season. — Reuters

[B-SIDE Podcast] How PHL banks can boost digital adoption

Follow us on Spotify BusinessWorld B-Side

Banks are now actively working to make their operations digital. They want to reduce the reliance on physical cash and move towards a cash-lite economy. This means finding ways to automate their processes and make them available online. 

By doing so, they hope to provide customers with convenient and secure digital banking experiences.

In this B-Side episode, Kissflow’s chief executive officer, Suresh Sambandam, discusses with BusinessWorld reporter Aaron Michael C. Sy how banks can accelerate digital adoption. 

Takeaways:

  • As in India, a cashless society in the Philippines could succeed and benefit the country if the government and regulators invest in platforms like the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). “If you can build something like a nationwide infrastructure similar to UPI in India, cashless is not at all a problem. It’s going to be really powerful,” Mr. Suresh said.
  • Automating processes in the middle office is the key to ramping up digital banking. Banks need to digitally transform their processes to make employee operations more efficient, Mr. Suresh said. “Digital banking has not really happened effectively in the middle office applications. The front office applications and the back-office applications are more or less there.”
  • To address the underserved sector in rural areas, regulators could start by introducing cashless payments to get them into digital banking. “When they embark on that, automatically the MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprises) and the agricultural farmers, all of these people can go into the banking system. And that automatically enables digital commerce, digital payments, and takes us one step closer to the cashless banking initiative.”
  • Citizen development paradigm provides a platform for non-IT personnel to translate their field of expertise into working applications without the need for programming knowledge. Banks should be educated in expanding their programming knowledge outside of the IT department, Mr. Suresh said. The citizen development paradigm can also be applied to other industries aside from banking such as retail, merchandise, and even the public sector.

  • “There is a paradigm shift that is required in terms of thinking. Conventionally, the digital automation process is always handled by IT. But for a lot of simpler workflows and applications, you no longer need to depend on IT,” Mr. Suresh noted. “There is a new concept called citizen development paradigm that banks have adopted.”

  • “The place where the cashless society and the digital transformation and digital banking is lacking is in the middle,” he added. “So what the central bank needs to do is to provide the best practices and guidance for all the banks in the Philippines to be able adopt digital transformation in the middle office. If that can be done, the whole cashless society transformation will be very smooth.”

Recorded remotely on May 22, 2023.

Police arrest 23 people in Hong Kong on Tiananmen crackdown anniversary

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Klaus Hausmann from Pixabay

HONG KONG/TAIPEI – Hong Kong police said they detained 23 people on Sunday for “breaching public peace”, including a 53-year-old woman for “obstructing police officers” as authorities ramped up security for the 34th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Restrictions in Hong Kong have stifled what were once the largest vigils marking the anniversary of the bloody crackdown by Chinese troops on pro-democracy demonstrators, leaving cities like Taipei, London, New York and Berlin to keep the memory of June 4 alive.

Near Victoria Park, the previous site of yearly vigils, hundreds of police conducted stop and search operations, and deployed armored vehicles and police vans.

Reuters witnesses saw more than a dozen people taken away, including activist Alexandra Wong, 67, who carried a bouquet of flowers, a man who held a copy of “35th of May”, a play on the Tiananmen crackdown, and an elderly man standing alone on a street corner with a candle.

“The regime wants you to forget, but you can’t forget… It (China) wants to whitewash all history,” said Chris To, 51, who visited the park in a black t-shirt and was searched by police.

“We need to use our bodies and word of mouth to tell others what happened.”

Police on Monday said officers took away 11 men and 12 women aged between 20 and 74 who were suspected of “breaching the public peace at the scene”.

Hong Kong activists say such police action is part of a broader campaign by China to crush dissent in the city that was promised continued freedoms for 50 years under a “one country, two systems” model when Britain handed it back in 1997.

Security is significantly tighter across Hong Kong this year, with up to 6,000 police deployed, including riot and anti-terrorism officers, according to local media.

Senior officials have warned people to abide by the law, but have refused to clarify if such commemoration activities are illegal under a national security law China imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 after sometimes violent mass pro-democracy protests.

In a statement, police said some had been arrested for seditious intent and for “breaching public peace”.

In Beijing, Tiananmen Square was thronged with tourists taking pictures under the watchful eyes of police and other personnel but with no obvious sign of stepped-up security.

A group of relatives called the Tiananmen Mothers said the anguish never ended.

“Though 34 years have passed, for us, family members of those killed, the pain of losing our loved ones in that one night has tormented us to this day,” the group said in a statement released by the New York-based watchdog Human Rights in China.

‘CLEAR CONCLUSION’

Despite the warnings in Hong Kong, some individuals, including book shop owners, have been quietly marking June 4.

Jailed Hong Kong activist Chow Hang-tung, one of the leaders of a group called The Alliance, which used to organise the June 4 vigils, said on Facebook that she would hold a 34-hour hunger strike.

In mainland China, any mention of the Tiananmen Square crackdown – where troops opened fire on pro-democracy protesters, killing hundreds if not thousands, according to rights groups – is taboo and the subject is heavily censored.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning, when asked about the government’s response to events around the world to mark the anniversary, said in Beijing on Friday that the government had already come to a “clear conclusion about the political turmoil in the late 1980s”.

In democratically governed Taiwan, the last remaining part of the Chinese-speaking world where the anniversary can be marked freely, hundreds attended a memorial at Taipei’s Liberty Square where a “Pillar of Shame” statue was displayed.

Peggy Kwan, 57, an interpreter at the event, expressed sadness at the stifling of commemorations in Hong Kong.

“Hong Kong is moving backward,” she said.

China claims Taiwan as its own and has not renounced the use of force to ensure eventual unification. Taiwan Vice President William Lai, the ruling Democratic Progressive Party’s presidential candidate in an election next January, wrote on his Facebook page that the memory of what happened in Beijing in 1989 must be preserved.

“The event commemorating June 4 has continued to be held in Taipei, which shows that democracy and authoritarianism are the biggest differences between Taiwan and China,” he said.

In Sydney, one of over 30 places in North America, Europe and Asia hosting commemoration events, dozens of demonstrators rallied at the Town Hall, chanting “free Hong Kong”, while holding up yellow umbrellas, the symbol of pro-democracy protests since 2014, and placards. – Reuters

Hollywood directors reach labor pact, writers remain on strike

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Peter Thomas from Pixabay

Hollywood’s major studios reached a tentative labor agreement with the union representing film and television directors, likely averting a work stoppage that would have piled pressure on media companies to settle with striking writers.

The Directors Guild of America (DGA) will ask its 19,000 members to approve the three-year contract, which was announced late on Saturday after three weeks of talks.

The agreement includes gains in wages and residuals plus guardrails around the use of artificial intelligence, according to the DGA and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), which represents Netflix, Walt Disney Co. and other major studios.

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) has been on strike since May 2, shutting down several TV and film productions, and has no new talks scheduled with the studios.

During the last WGA strike in 2007 and 2008, a studio deal with the DGA prompted writers to head back to the bargaining table. On Friday, WGA negotiator Chris Keyser argued that strategy would not work this time.

“Any deal that puts this town back to work runs straight through the WGA, and there is no way around that,” Keyser said in a video posted on YouTube.

The DGA’s board will consider whether to approve the deal on Tuesday before it goes to members for ratification. No date has been set for the ratification vote.

If approved, the deal could offer a blueprint for the striking writers and upcoming talks between studios and SAG-AFTRA, the union representing Hollywood actors.

WGA representatives did not respond to requests for comment on Sunday, but some writers voiced reaction on social media.

“Spartacus” creator Steven DeKnight called the DGA deal “disappointing, but not surprising.”

Writer Bill Wolkoff said he had mixed emotions. “Happy for gains DGA members made, frustrated we were stonewalled on all our asks. My resolve is only stronger,” he wrote.

In the DGA’s agreement, directors secured wage increases starting at 5% the first year, an increase in residuals from streaming, and a guarantee that “generative AI cannot replace the duties performed by members.”

AI has emerged as a major concern of writers and actors, who see their jobs as especially vulnerable to the new technology.

Both the WGA and SAG-AFTRA are seeking protections from AI in their negotiations as well as increases in compensation that they say has lagged as companies have benefited from the rise of streaming television.

SAG-AFTRA has asked members to give its negotiators the power to call a strike if needed, and results of that vote are expected to be announced on Monday. Contract talks between the actors and studios begin on Wednesday. The current labor agreement expires on June 30.

The WGA work stoppage has disrupted production of late-night shows and shut down high-profile projects such as Netflix’s “Stranger Things” and a “Game of Thrones” spinoff. – Reuters

Hearings begin in Torres Strait Islands’s climate suit versus Australia

SYDNEY – Australian federal court officials on Monday began hearings on a lawsuit filed by a group of Torres Strait Islanders alleging the Australian government had failed to protect them from climate change, which threatens to destroy their homes.

The case, the first climate class action brought by Australia’s First Nations people, was filed in 2021 on behalf of the remote islands of Boigu and Saibai in the Torres Strait off Australia’s north coast.

The initial hearings will happen in the islands until June 19, with the court expected to hear from the islanders about the threats from rising sea to their culture, life and homes.

“From Saibai’s point of view, they say by 2029 most of the low-lying islands in the Torres Strait will go underwater, that is very true because Saibai and Boigu will be the very first islands to disappear,” Paul Kabai, one of the two plaintiffs, told Reuters.

The Torres Strait Islands face the threat of floods and salt ruining their soil as global warming leads to more storms and rising sea levels.

Plaintiffs are seeking court orders that require the federal government – which currently aims to reach net zero emissions by 2050 – to take more steps to hit that target earlier.

The case is being supported by a non-profit advocacy group, Grata Fund, and the Urgenda Foundation, and is being run by class action firm Phi Finney McDonald. – Reuters

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