Some non-Muslims support PAS Bill, Hadi tells critics

Some non-Muslims support PAS Bill, Hadi tells critics


Some non-Muslims support PAS Bill, Hadi tells critics

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:37 PM PDT

PAS president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang said that his party is willing to meet with anyone including non-Muslims to explain the technicalities behind the Bill that he had submitted in the last Dewan Rakyat session. — Picture by Saw Siow FengPAS president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang said that his party is willing to meet with anyone including non-Muslims to explain the technicalities behind the Bill that he had submitted in the last Dewan Rakyat session. — Picture by Saw Siow FengKUALA LUMPUR, Aug 21 — PAS president Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang has claimed that there are non-Muslims who have stated their support for his party's Shariah law proposal, amid criticism over his private member's Bill.

He also hit out at detractors who have said that his Bill was "too general", saying that it is not specific as it sought amendments to the Shariah Courts (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act 1965 or Act 355 which is part of the Constitution and not a specific law itself.

"I have been informed that there are non-Muslims that support (the Bill). Some have met me and there are non-Muslims who support.

"This is the right of Muslims because under the Constitution. The Shariah courts can only punish Muslims and not non-Muslims," Malay-language newspaper Sinar Harian quoted Hadi as saying.

"It is a Constitution. A Constitution must be general. People don't understand what is Constitution and what is law.

"They need to understand that this (Bill) is a Constitution. Where has there been a detailed Constitution, a Constitution has to be general," the PAS chief added.  

Hadi said that his party is willing to meet with anyone including non-Muslims to explain the technicalities behind the Bill that he had submitted in the last Dewan Rakyat session.

Hadi's Bill seeking amendments to the Shariah Courts (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act 1965 or Act 355 made a surprise appearance in the Dewan Rakyat last May after Umno minister Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said tabled a motion to expedite it.

The motion was approved by Dewan Rakyat Speaker Tan Sri Pandikar Amin Mulia but Hadi later requested for the Bill to be deferred for debate at the October parliamentary meeting.

Since then, non-Muslim politicians from both Pakatan Harapan and Barisan Nasional (BN) have lashed out at both PAS and Umno, with some even accusing the ruling party of colluding with PAS to push for the implementation of hudud.

Both PAS and Umno have insisted, however, that Hadi's Bill was not a hudud Bill but simply a Bill seeking amendments that would upgrade the Shariah courts' powers to hand out harsher sentences.

Canadian man’s bomb did not fully detonate before police shot him, says report

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:36 PM PDT

A combination photo shows Royal Canadian Mounted Police images of a taxi where there was a detonation with suspect Aaron Driver inside in Strathroy, Ontario August 10, 2016. — Reuters picA combination photo shows Royal Canadian Mounted Police images of a taxi where there was a detonation with suspect Aaron Driver inside in Strathroy, Ontario August 10, 2016. — Reuters picTORONTO, Aug 21 — A homemade bomb set off last week by a Canadian man who was apparently inspired by Islamic State, failed to fully detonate, a senior police official told the National Post newspaper yesterday.

While there was a blast in the back seat of a taxi in Strathroy, Ontario, as police closed in, it came from the detonators, and explosive material did not go off, Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) deputy commissioner Mike Cabana said.

The RCMP could not immediately be reached for comment on the newspaper report.

Aaron Driver, 24, was shot dead by police on Aug 10 and the taxi company in the small town said the driver sustained only minor injuries in the blast.

Cabana did not go into further detail on the bomb. He said forensic investigation was still underway. The target of what police have said was an attack plotted by Driver was unclear.

Driver, who also used the alias Harun Abdurahman, was arrested last year for openly supporting Islamic State on social media, but was never charged with a crime. Islamic State militants control parts of Iraq and Syria and they have supporters and sympathisers around the world who have carried out attacks on civilians in several countries.

In February, Driver was placed on a peace bond, a court order that restricted his movements. It required he stay away from social media and computers and not have contact with Islamic State or similar groups.

The RCMP has said officers sought out Driver on Aug. 10 after a tip from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation that morning, which included a "martyrdom video."

Cabana said police identified Driver from the video in part through his choice of balaclava.

The incident called into question Canada's capabilities to combat extremism and increased calls for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to abandon his plan to scale back a 2015 law that gave increased powers to police and intelligence agents. — Reuters

Conte salutes spirited Chelsea

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:26 PM PDT

Chelsea’s Diego Costa celebrates scoring their second goal against Watford, August 21, 2016. ― Action Images via Reuters/Tony O’Brien Livepic Chelsea's Diego Costa celebrates scoring their second goal against Watford, August 21, 2016. ― Action Images via Reuters/Tony O'Brien Livepic WATFORD, Aug 21 ― Chelsea manager Antonio Conte praised the commitment and focus of his players after their 2-1 victory over Watford at Vicarage Road.

Late goals by Michy Batshuayi, his first for the club, and Diego Costa gave Chelsea three points that seemed unlikely when Etienne Capoue put Watford ahead early in the second half yesterday.

Chelsea were second-best for the first 70 minutes, but Conte sent on Batshuayi and then Cesc Fabregas and the former scored while the latter had a hand in both goals.

It was the second successive match in which Costa has scored a late winner after his decider against West Ham United last Monday and Conte took heart from his team's battling comeback.

"In these two games we have seen the right spirit, the right commitment," Conte said.

"After a bad season like last year's, it's not easy to start in a good way and win games, and it won't be easy, so we must know that we have to continue.

"It's important to change the situation compared to last season and we are trying to do that with all our strength.

"Yes, the subs had a good impact but I think it's normal when you push for 70 minutes, the opposition pays for the effort it has put in, and when the new players come on, there is an impact."

Conte agreed that his intense fitness regime, which has included double sessions in pre-season, has paid off in Chelsea's ability to perform strongly late in games.

"I believe that work pays and always pays," he said.

"It's important. We are working very hard and we will continue to. And wins like this are very important to improve confidence and trust in the work."

Commitment

Conte's decision not to start Fabregas in either of this season's Premier League matches has been seen as a sign that the Spain midfielder may not be part of his long-term plans, but Conte praised the former Arsenal and Barcelona star.

"We all know Cesc is a great technical player with a good pass and good assists and I made this substitution because I wanted more quality," Conte said.

"Cesc is working very hard to show me that he deserves to play and I want to see this - all the players showing me that they deserve to start the game and if I see this commitment I'm a very happy manager.

"That all the players think of the team, not himself, is important. And that is happening in Chelsea."

Costa was in the bad books of the opposing fans as usual, this time for a challenge on Capoue that ended the Watford man's afternoon.

But Conte defended the volatile Spain forward, saying: "He scored two goals but I'd have preferred him to score them earlier.

"Diego is working hard like the other players but he can improve a lot. He's an important player for us and he had to stay concentrating in the game."

Watford manager Walter Mazzarri, an old adversary of Conte's from Italy's Serie A, chose to look on the bright side after a frustrating result.

"We played better than at Southampton last week," he said. "Then we played only 20 minutes as I wanted us to play, today we played good football for 70 minutes. We can hold our heads high.

"But in Italy we'd say that we complicated our own lives. Both goals were our errors.

"The value of the Chelsea players you can see for yourself but I would have preferred to concede two goals through their great qualities than our own mistakes." ― AFP

Firefighters make steady progress against California blaze

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:25 PM PDT

A burning tree is seen at the so-called Blue Cut Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest in San Bernardino County, California August 18, 2016. — Reuters picA burning tree is seen at the so-called Blue Cut Fire in the San Bernardino National Forest in San Bernardino County, California August 18, 2016. — Reuters picLOS ANGELES, Aug 21 — Firefighters had a Southern California wildfire mostly surrounded yesterday, allowing thousands of evacuated residents to return to their houses as another fire further north moved perilously close to the historic Hearst Castle, officials said.

The Blue Cut fire, named after a narrow gorge where it ignited about 120 km northeast of Los Angeles on Tuesday in an area called the Cajon Pass, has burned more than 15,000 hectares and destroyed 105 homes and 213 outbuildings, said fire information officer Mike Lopez.

At its height, the blaze forced authorities to order more than 80,000 residents to evacuate their homes. They also ordered the temporary closure of a segment of Interstate 15, which connects Las Vegas to the Los Angeles area, where it traverses the Cajon Pass.

But with the fire 68 per cent contained, many residents were allowed to return home, Lopez said.

Overnight, firefighters built strong containment lines near Wrightwood, which allowed residents of that ski resort town to repopulate the area yesterday, he said.

Residents of 7,000 other homes in the Cajon Pass area were still potentially in the path of the fire, which is burning in heavy brush, and they remained under evacuation orders, Lopez said.

"We feel confident we can keep continuing this aggressive attack," he said in a telephone interview.

Nearly 2,700 firefighters and crew were battling the wildfire, their efforts amplified by more than two dozen water-dropping airplanes and helicopters, according to tracking website InciWeb.gov.

Less than 483 km to the northwest, a week-old blaze called the Chimney Fire threatened the historic Hearst Castle in San Simeon, the former mansion of the late newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst. But no evacuations had been ordered at the site, according to a California state government fire information website.

Officials suspended tours of Hearst Castle due to poor air quality, according to a message on Twitter from the California Department of Parks and Recreation.

The Chimney Fire had burned 6,880 hectares and firefighters have built containment lines around a third of it, officials said.

Nearly 30 major blazes have burned some 1,373 square kms in eight Western states this week, as prolonged drought and unusually hot weather have intensified wildfire season, the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, said. — Reuters

Solitary by nature, India’s new central bank head steps into spotlight

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:24 PM PDT

Urjit Patel offers the promise of continuity with most of the policies of the man he will replace, Raghuram Rajan, who was feted by investors for halving inflation and for pulling the country out of its worst currency crisis in over two decades. — Reuters picUrjit Patel offers the promise of continuity with most of the policies of the man he will replace, Raghuram Rajan, who was feted by investors for halving inflation and for pulling the country out of its worst currency crisis in over two decades. — Reuters picMUMBAI, Aug 21 — India's incoming central bank governor, Urjit Patel, is widely regarded as having the professional and academic credentials he needs to make a success of his new job.

Less well known is whether a man who seems to feel most at ease in his own company commands the communication skills to answer to multiple constituencies and keep a 17,000-strong team on side.

Patel, deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India since 2013, demonstrated intellectual heft in overseeing landmark changes to the 81-year old institution, including switching to inflation-targeting and establishing a monetary policy panel to set interest rates.

Now promoted, Patel offers the promise of continuity with most of the policies of the man he will replace, Raghuram Rajan, who was feted by investors for halving inflation and for pulling the country out of its worst currency crisis in over two decades.

Within the RBI, however, Patel is widely viewed as a solitary and at times temperamental figure.

He avoids large meetings and gatherings with colleagues and, in contrast to other deputy governors who had busier public schedules, gives few speeches or media interviews.

"His biggest challenge is his communication skill," said an official who works closely with Patel. "He prefers to interact with only those whom he is comfortable with, which is a very small group."

That raises questions about how Patel will approach the public aspects of a role that is set to be transformed under changes he largely helped spearhead.

He will have to seek consensus with five other members of the RBI's new monetary policy committee.

He must also work closely with heads of state-owned banks as the sector battles to clean up US$120 billion of soured loans — a relationship that greatly frustrated Rajan as lenders went only half way towards matching 150 basis points of RBI rate cuts.

Respected by investors

Already known to have a good rapport with government officials, Patel may find his low public profile helps him develop even better ties.

Rajan, by contrast, faced a backlash from hard-right elements in Prime Minister Narendra Modi Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for sometimes peppering his public statements with social critiques.

"(Patel) is extremely sensitive and pragmatic about not upsetting the government," said another senior RBI official who works with him.

"The fact that he was reappointed as a deputy governor ... and now promoted ... shows the strong support he enjoys from the government," the first official said.

Patel is also likely to share his predecessor's good reputation among investors.

Both men worked for the International Monetary Fund and studied abroad, in Patel's case at the London School of Economics and Oxford University before heading across the Atlantic to Yale for his economics doctorate.

Patel has also spent time in the private sector with stints at the Boston Consulting Group and Indian energy conglomerate Reliance Industries and, at the RBI, was seen as the candidate most in tune with Rajan's policy agenda.

Having beaten off the challenge of, among others, IMF Executive Director Subir Gokarn to get the top job, analysts believe Patel will not kow-tow to the government either.

His reputation suggests he will uphold the independence of the central bank while pushing Modi and his ministers towards fiscal prudence — all welcome traits for investors used to a steady hand at the RBI tiller.

"The new governor needs to reinforce the faith that the external world and Indian markets have in the ... central bank," said Mihir Vora, Chief Investment Officer of Max life insurance. — Reuters

Stalemate keeps Leicester and Arsenal grounded

Posted: 20 Aug 2016 06:19 PM PDT

Leicester City's Ahmed Musa reacts after a penalty is not awarded in their match against Arsenal at King Power Stadium, August 20, 2016. ― Action Images via Reuters/John Sibley LivepicLeicester City's Ahmed Musa reacts after a penalty is not awarded in their match against Arsenal at King Power Stadium, August 20, 2016. ― Action Images via Reuters/John Sibley LivepicLEICESTER, Aug 21 ― Premier League champions Leicester City and last season's runners-up Arsenal remain without a win this season after a slow-burning 0-0 draw at the King Power Stadium yesterday.

Beaten 2-1 at promoted Hull City last weekend, Leicester avoided the ignominy of becoming the first English champions to lose their first two games since Aston Villa in 1981.

But Claudio Ranieri's side were frustrated by two unsuccessful penalty shouts ― one in each half ― and also lost full debutant Nampalys Mendy to an apparent ankle injury.

Arsenal looked far more robust than the team beaten 4-3 by Liverpool a week ago and were able to welcome back Laurent Koscielny, Mesut Ozil and Olivier Giroud from their post-Euro 2016 breaks.

But with the season only two games old, both Arsene Wenger's men and Leicester are already five points off the pace set by Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Hull.

Ranieri had given starts to Demarai Gray and new signings Luis Hernandez and Ahmed Musa at Hull, but he reverted to last season's formula for the visit of Arsenal, three months on from his side's title coronation.

Robert Huth returned from suspension in place of Hernandez, along with Marc Albrighton and Shinji Okazaki, and Mendy stepped into the midfield hole created by N'Golo Kante's move to Chelsea.

With Arsenal dominating possession on a blustery East Midlands afternoon, it also allowed Leicester to adopt the counter-attacking formula that saw them storm the table in the first half of last season.

Arsenal were reduced to potshots, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, in for the injured Alex Iwobi, curling wide and Santi Cazorla, who replaced the hamstrung Aaron Ramsey, shooting straight at Kasper Schmeichel.

The first moment of contention in the Arsenal box occurred late in the half, after Petr Cech had saved at the feet of Jamie Vardy.

Musa penalty appeal

Danny Drinkwater, following up, tumbled over Koscielny's outstretched leg, but referee Mark Clattenburg played on and despite the home fans' boos, television replays vindicated his call.

Leicester suffered a setback early in the second half when Mendy had to go off after seeming to injure his right ankle, with Andy King taking his place.

But the hosts began to show greater enterprise in attack, Riyad Mahrez drawing an untidy foul from Francis Coquelin and then whipping a shot narrowly over the bar from the free-kick that followed.

With the game becoming scrappy, Ranieri introduced Leonardo Ulloa to the mix and with 20 minutes to play Vardy spurned a gilt-edged chance to break the deadlock.

Albrighton caught Granit Xhaka dawdling and sent the ball skidding into Vardy's path, but with Koscielny sliding in to close him down, the England man skewed his shot wide.

Wenger sent on Jack Wilshere, Ozil and Giroud from the bench and the visitors began to make inroads.

Theo Walcott threatened twice, forcing a save from Schmeichel and a fine, stretching block from Wes Morgan, while Alexis Sanchez teed up Ozil for an effort that drew Schmeichel racing from his line to block.

But Leicester saw a strong penalty appeal turned away late on when Hector Bellerin appeared to trip substitute Musa in a tangle of legs just inside the box, only for Clattenburg to shake his head once more.

There was time for one last scare in the Arsenal box as Mahrez left Koscielny on the deck before taking aim, but Cech parried to extend his side's unbeaten run against Leicester to 22 games. ― AFP

Asian stocks poised for biggest weekly decline in a month

Asian stocks poised for biggest weekly decline in a month


Asian stocks poised for biggest weekly decline in a month

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 09:26 PM PDT

A man walks past a panel displaying figures of China stock indexes and Hang Seng Index at the financial Central district in Hong Kong, September 2, 2015. — Reuters picA man walks past a panel displaying figures of China stock indexes and Hang Seng Index at the financial Central district in Hong Kong, September 2, 2015. — Reuters picHONG KONG, Aug 19 — Asian stocks fell, erasing earlier gains and sending the regional gauge toward its biggest weekly drop in a month, as consumer and health-care shares declined.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 0.2 per cent to 139.06 as of 11:53am in Hong Kong, reversing gains of as much as 0.4 per cent.

The gauge is heading for 0.7 per cent decline this week, the biggest weekly loss since July 8. Japan's Topix index rose 0.3 per cent as the yen halted a five-day rally, trading at 100.33 against the dollar.

The Hang Seng Index slipped 0.3 per cent, retreating from a nine-month high, as casino shares slumped.

"The market lacks momentum," Margaret Yang, an analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore, said by phone.

"The market has been driven by liquidity arising from loose monetary policies by central banks around the world, rather than improving economic fundamentals.

"Besides the rally in oil, there's nothing that could push share prices higher."

Oil entered a bull market, gaining for a seventh straight day, on speculation major oil producers may act to curb output. OPEC is on course to agree to an output-freeze because its biggest members are pumping flat-out, said Chakib Khelil, the group's former president.

US crude supplies fell the most in five weeks through August 12, while fuel stockpiles slid a third week, Energy Information Administration data show.

Asian stocks have rallied 23 per cent from a February low through yesterday, with the regional benchmark index touching a one-year high last week, as lackluster data from the world's biggest economies fueled speculation central banks will continue to support them with stimulus and loose monetary policy.

The Fed minutes released Wednesday showed officials saw little risk of a sharp uptick in inflation, helping drive the odds of a rate increase this year back below 50 per cent.

Japanese shares are down 2.1 per cent for the week as the yen reached the strongest level since November 2013. Authorities are closely watching for speculative moves in the exchange rate because it's been volatile, Vice Finance Minister Masatsugu Asakawa said yesterday.

"The BOJ is really in a tough spot," James Woods, a strategist at Rivkin Securities in Sydney, said by phone.

"They're fighting an uphill battle against the market given the strengthening yen. That's creating a lot of headwinds for Japanese exporters."

China's Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.5 per cent. Taiwan's Taiex index fell 0.6 per cent. South Korea's Kospi index lost 0.1 per cent.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index gained 0.2 per cent. New Zealand's S&P/NZX 50 Index added 0.1 per cent, heading for an all-time high.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index were little changed. The US equity benchmark index gained 0.2 per cent yesterday. — Bloomberg

Gold drops as Fed’s Williams says he’s for increasing rates soon

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 09:17 PM PDT

Gold bars and Swiss Franc banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken at the GSA in Vienna November 13, 2014. — Reuters picGold bars and Swiss Franc banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken at the GSA in Vienna November 13, 2014. — Reuters picSINGAPORE, Aug 19 — Gold dropped, snapping a four-day winning run, as the dollar rebounded and a Federal Reserve policy maker said the US economy is strong enough to warrant an increase in interest rates soon, warning that waiting too long risks high inflation or asset bubbles.

Bullion for immediate delivery fell as much as 0.5 per cent to US$1,345.80 (RM5,368.12) an ounce and traded at US$1,347.71 at 11:29am in Singapore, according to Bloomberg generic pricing, as a gauge of the greenback climbed 0.4 per cent. 

The metal remains 0.9 per cent higher this week.

While the Fed's hesitation in raising rates this year has helped boost gold 27 per cent, recent comments have left open the possibility of a move before year-end.

Fed Bank of San Francisco president John Williams said yesterday it makes sense to get back to a pace of gradual increases, preferably sooner rather than later. Investors will look for further clues as Chair Janet Yellen speaks Aug. 26 at an annual gathering in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

"With the market looking forward to Jackson Hole, we wouldn't be surprised to see the metal to remain range-bound," said Jordan Eliseo, Sydney-based chief economist at trader Australian Bullion Co. 

Whilst gold has no lack of supportive factors, a rally in risk assets, greater chances of another hike from the Fed, a drop in net longs in four of the last five weeks, and minor outflows from gold-backed funds have limited the upside, according to Eliseo.

The net-long position in gold futures and options fell 4.3 per cent to 255,773 contracts in the week ended Aug. 9, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released three days later.

Exchange-traded fund holdings fell for a second day as of Thursday, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

While the probability of a hike ticked up earlier this week after New York Fed president William Dudley flagged the possibility of tightening as soon as next month, minutes of the central bank's last meeting released Wednesday struck a more dovish tone, pushing odds back below 50 per cent.

Societe Generale SA isn't expecting any increases in US borrowing costs this year.

"The delay in the Fed rate hike profile has been a significant factor in our positive outlook for gold in the near term, as much of the weakness throughout 2014 and 2015 has been a function of policy normalization and a stronger dollar," said Mark Keenan, head of commodities research for Asia at SocGen. Prices may rise to US$1,400, he said.

In China, bullion of 99.99 per cent purity fell 0.2 per cent to 288.40 yuan a gram on the Shanghai Gold Exchange. 

On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, gold for December delivery lost 0.1 per cent to 288.95 yuan a gram, while silver dropped 0.5 per cent to 4,360 yuan a kilogram.

Silver declined 0.6 per cent, platinum retreated 0.8 per cent and palladium fell 0.7 per cent. — Bloomberg

Singapore wants to be Asia’s Sweden in push for cashless payment

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 09:13 PM PDT

A view of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) building in the downtown financial district in Singapore. MAS will require Singapore banks to hold liquid reserves to tide over financial crises. — AFP picA view of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) building in the downtown financial district in Singapore. MAS will require Singapore banks to hold liquid reserves to tide over financial crises. — AFP picSINGAPORE, Aug 19 — Singapore plans to reduce the role of cash and checks in its economy by encouraging banks to switch to digital payments, according to the head of the country's central bank.

"For consumers, the use of cash for daily payments is high," Ravi Menon, managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore, said at a financial technology conference today.

"For businesses, the use of checks is relatively high too."

Menon said cash in circulation in Singapore is the equivalent of 8.8 per cent of gross domestic product, compared to just over 2 per cent in Sweden.

An average of 12.7 checks were written per person in Singapore in 2014, compared with practically none in Sweden, he added.

This costs Singapore about S$2 billion (RM5.949 billion) per year, mostly for storage and processing, which Menon described as a "non-trivial" amount.

Singapore is aiming to be a hub for the financial technology industry in Asia, in an attempt to bolster its economy, create jobs and cement its position as a regional banking center.

Menon said the MAS is asking the country's banks to pass on to their customers the full cost of paper-intensive services, such as the processing of checks, to encourage them to switch to digital payments.

The MAS also wants to see a majority of those transactions made using cellphones, or national ID or other secure numbers, rather than bank account numbers, over the next year, Menon said.

Singapore, along with Finland, the US, Sweden and the UK, are the economies that are most ready to use digital payments, based on the high use of mobile phones and banking services, according to a Citigroup Inc report published in June.

Apple Inc introduced its mobile payment service Apple Pay in Singapore in April. 

Samsung Electronics Co followed with its own service two months later. — Bloomberg

无奖牌不丢脸!玛丽娜:多少人能征奥运?

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 09:09 PM PDT

潘德莉拉(左)和诺塔比达在决赛后,对着青体部长凯里的镜头微笑,笑容仍是斗志满满。-图取自凯里推特-潘德莉拉(左)和诺塔比达在决赛后,对着青体部长凯里的镜头微笑,笑容仍是斗志满满。-图取自凯里推特-(吉隆坡18日讯)大马跳水女将潘德莉拉和诺塔比达在里约奥运10米台单人决赛无缘摘牌,但全民正能量为两位运动员打气,前首相敦马哈迪女儿玛丽娜说,潘德莉拉和诺塔比达能征战奥运会已是非凡成就,没摸牌并非让人感到丢脸之事。

她今日转载小潘和诺塔比达止步跳水的奥运新闻时说,"这不是丢脸的事,(跳水)是竞争力非常强的领域,潘德莉拉和诺塔比达,你俩已做得很好了。我们有多少人能可像这两人一样成为奥林匹克选手?我们仍感到光荣。"

潘德莉拉和诺塔比达,在里约奥运会跳水女子10米台单人决赛分别获得第11名和第9名。

潘德莉拉在决赛时表现欠缺稳定,以330.45分,在12人排在第11位,反之17岁的小将诺塔比达让现场评审惊艳,以338.00分获得第9名,完成自己的奥运前秀。

潘德莉拉在上周和队友张俊虹,摘下女子双人10米跳水银牌,是大马在本届奥运首面奖牌

小潘和诺塔比达两人也获得不少网友的祝福。而人在巴西的青体部长凯里也发推文说,"向两位女孩敬礼!我们的奥运决赛选手。你让我们感到光荣,每一天。"

小潘本人则在赛后于其脸书专页留言向广大民众致谢,充满正能量,"谢谢所有没休息而看我跳水的朋友。我对这次里约奥运会的所有赛事都非常感恩。我一定会以更强的姿态回来,永不放弃。"

大马羽球男女混双陈炳顺和吴柳萤也在里约奥运创造历史闯入决赛,虽然不敌印尼队而得银牌,但遭两家马来报章以刻薄标题揶揄,《每日新闻》指称"只获银牌",而《kosmo!》则写两人辜负了全民,引起全民挞伐,最后凯里也开腔吁各造别再闹,并分享柳萤在伤后复出征战奥运的励志故事。

Malaysia deserves better — Abdul Hasib

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 09:08 PM PDT

AUGUST 19 — Malaysia is in dire states. The economy is in a rut. Homes are unaffordable. Car prices are through the roof and to top it off, Malaysians don't get along with one another.

Each distinct group has its own issues. Malaysians are so focused on the micro-aspect that the bigger picture is often time neglected.

Going into 60 years of independence, and our education system is still one big joke. You have one group who refuses to embrace English and you would have another group supposedly defending an identity.

Moving forward, you have Malaysians who are unable to even string simple sentences of Malay despite it being the national language.

Things are fast becoming unhealthy. Each group is waging its wars but there is no uniformity between the groups due to the different wars and skirmishes.

Malaysia is left unattended. There exist common enemies but its citizens are too preoccupied with nonsense to smell and spot the truth.

This Malaysia that we are living in today is only borrowed from the eventual owners that will be our children. We are giving them one big mess and is it this legacy that we want to leave behind?

The wedge between the people is worrying. The people should come together. This, however, is easier said than done.

It is easier said than done simply because you have one group who feels they are being discriminated while another group feels slighted that there are monopolies by a certain group on the economy.

But is this all true?

Education is the way forward but the education system is in shambles. The main objective for education should be unity. It should be unity first and foremost instead of the usual rates like literacy and mathematics.

What good is a Malaysian who can read and count but is racist and to top it off, is racist to fellow Malaysians?

People keep saying that Malaysia in the past was a totally different place. I wouldn't know a thing being that I was born in 1987 but if what is said was true, why did those that lived during the good times produced offspring nothing like them?

A friend who still plays music says that the scene is different but outside the scene it is status quo as usual. Different individuals from different groups have no problems as their war is music.

They are more preoccupied on bending techniques, stomp box pedals and what amps has the best gains instead of the usual rhetoric.

Malaysia. It's a nice place with nice people. The food is abundant and fabulous. I am not a huge fan of the weather though but that's bearable. We need a common enemy. The enemy is there but why are we fighting each other?

Malaysia is made up of many different people. This is our strength and we should play to it. But this isn't the case.

Happy 60th birthday Malaysia. You deserve better.

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail Online.

USOC apologises for behaviour of swimmers who claimed they were robbed (VIDEO)

Posted: 18 Aug 2016 08:58 PM PDT

RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug 19 — The United States Olympic Committee apologised yesterday to the people of Brazil for the behaviour of four American swimmers who were found to have lied about a gunpoint robbery, prompting enormous criticism of the Games host city.

America's official Olympic body acknowledged that one of its athletes had committed an act of vandalism in a gas station restroom and the swimmers had handed over money to security staff after they'd demanded payment for the damage in the early hours of Sunday.

"The behaviour of these athletes is not acceptable, nor does it represent the values of Team USA," USOC chief executive Scott Blackmun said in a statement released yesterday night.

US Olympic swimmers Jack Conger and Gunnar Bentz check in at the international airport to board a flight back to the US after spending the day being interrogated by police in Rio de Janeiro, August 18, 2016. — Reuters picUS Olympic swimmers Jack Conger and Gunnar Bentz check in at the international airport to board a flight back to the US after spending the day being interrogated by police in Rio de Janeiro, August 18, 2016. — Reuters pic

The USOC's final account differed wildly from an interview given by gold medallist Ryan Lochte, 32, on NBC, in which he said he and swimmers Jack Conger, 21, Gunnar Bentz, 20, and Jimmy Feigen, 26, had been robbed by men posing as police and that he'd had a gun put to his head.

Bentz and Conger flew out of Brazil Yesterday night after visiting a police station earlier in the day to revise their statements.

The USOC also said yesterday that Feigen, the only one of the swimmers left in Brazil, had also revised his statement to Brazilian authorities.

"Feigen provided a revised statement this evening with the hope of securing the release of his passport as soon as possible," the USOC said.

"On behalf of the United States Olympic Committee, we apologise to our hosts in Rio and the people of Brazil for this distracting ordeal in the midst of what should rightly be a celebration of excellence," it said. — AFP

For the children, ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’

For the children, ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’


For the children, ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’

Posted: 17 Aug 2016 06:38 PM PDT

Duration: 02:09, Published 18 Aug 2016

Clever, kindhearted Kubo (voiced by Art Parkinson of Game of Thrones) ekes out a humble living, telling stories to the people of his seaside town including Hosato (George Takei), Hashi (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa) and Kameyo (Academy Award nominee Brenda Vaccaro). But his relatively quiet existence is shattered when he accidentally summons a spirit from his past which storms down from the heavens to enforce an age-old vendetta.

Audi develops shock absorber system that recovers energy to save fuel

Posted: 17 Aug 2016 06:35 PM PDT

Audi is working on a prototype called eROT, which uses electromechanical rotary dampers to replace traditional hydraulic dampers. — Reuters picAudi is working on a prototype called eROT, which uses electromechanical rotary dampers to replace traditional hydraulic dampers. — Reuters picFRANKFURT, Aug 18 — German carmaker Audi has unveiled innovative new shock absorption technology that can save fuel by recovering energy absorbed via the suspension from shocks encountered along the road.

Audi is working on a prototype called eROT, which uses electromechanical rotary dampers to replace traditional hydraulic dampers. The aim is to use every possible source of kinetic energy in the car — induced when the vehicle drives over bumps and potholes in the road — and transform it into electricity to power the car and save fuel.

Audi's engineers have developed a lever arm which absorbs the motion of the wheel carrier system. This force is then transmitted to an electric motor, which converts it into electricity. The manufacturer promises output of 100 to 150 watts on average, based on initial testing in Germany. However, output is greatly affected by the type of road and quality of its surface. This can range from three watts for a smooth, freshly surfaced freeway to more than 600 watts for a relatively rough secondary road. In real-life driving conditions, Audi expects this technology to save drivers up to 3g of CO2 per kilometre (4.8g/mile).

The Audi eROT suspension system could save drivers up to 3g of CO2 per kilometre. — Handout via AFPThe Audi eROT suspension system could save drivers up to 3g of CO2 per kilometre. — Handout via AFPThe eROT system is based entirely on a 48-volt electrical system. Electric motors arranged horizontally on the rear axle replace upright telescopic shock absorbers. This arrangement also helps make more space for luggage in the trunk.

What's more, this active suspension adapts ideally to irregular road surfaces for a comfortable ride.

Audi hopes to install this system or its derivatives in future consumer vehicles. From 2017, Audi's 48-volt system will be used in a new hybrid model from the brand, promising potential fuel savings of up to 0.7l/100 km. — AFP-Relaxnews

New trailer released for Shia LaBeouf’s ‘American Honey’ (VIDEO)

Posted: 17 Aug 2016 06:32 PM PDT

LOS ANGELES, AUg 18 — Studio A24 has unveiled a new trailer for Shia LaBeouf's new movie American Honey, ahead of its release next month. 

The clip for the upcoming road-trip movie is backed by Bruce Springsteen's cover of Suicide's Dream Baby Dream, and tells the story of 18-year-old runaway (played by newcomer Sasha Lane) who joins a group of teenagers (Riley Keough, Shia LaBeouf) travelling across America selling magazine subscriptions.

The film, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May, marks the first US movie by British director Andrea Arnold and is also set to play at the Toronto Film Festival, before its theatre debut on September 30.

In addition to the 1979 song Dream Baby Dream, the soundtrack to American Honey will also feature Steve Earle's Copperhead Road, Mazzy Star's Fade Into You and Lady Antebellum's American Honey (via Rolling Stone). — AFP-Relaxnews 

'American Honey' has published its first trailer ahead of its release later this year. — AFP pic'American Honey' has published its first trailer ahead of its release later this year. — AFP pic

‘Guardians Of The Galaxy’ writes to pen first live-action Pokemon film

Posted: 17 Aug 2016 06:31 PM PDT

Production on the first live-action Pokemon film is expected to begin in 2017. — AFP picProduction on the first live-action Pokemon film is expected to begin in 2017. — AFP picLOS ANGELES, Aug 18 — Guardians Of The Galaxy writers Nicole Perlman and Alex Hirsch have signed on to pen the script for the first live-action Pokemon film, with production on the film expected to begin in 2017.

As previously reported, Legendary Entertainment has acquired the rights to the feature, which will centre on the character "Detective Pikachu", a character who isn't as agile as other Pokemon characters, relying on his intelligence to solve cases.

The deal, which will see Legendary partner with the Pokémon Company, comes just weeks after the launch of the "Pokemon Go" app game which has become a worldwide hit.

Since the release of Pokemon Go, shares in Nintendo have risen by 25 per cent, while Pokemon has sold 21.5 billion cards since it was launched in 1996. Games based on Pokemon have sold 280 million copies, according to NME. — AFP-Relaxnews

‘Battlefield 1,’ ‘Sea of Thieves,’ PlayStation VR, ‘Destiny’ to be among Gamescom’s bigger names

‘Battlefield 1,’ ‘Sea of Thieves,’ PlayStation VR, ‘Destiny’ to be among Gamescom’s bigger names


‘Battlefield 1,’ ‘Sea of Thieves,’ PlayStation VR, ‘Destiny’ to be among Gamescom’s bigger names

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:40 PM PDT

'Battlefield 1,' 'Sea of Thieves,' PlayStation VR, 'Destiny' to be among Gamescom's bigger names

Gamescom 2016 will provide a chance to push the PlayStation VR (pictured) before its October 13 launch. — AFP picGamescom 2016 will provide a chance to push the PlayStation VR (pictured) before its October 13 launch. — AFP picPARIS, Aug 17 — Nintendo's holding back for a new console announcement, PlayStation's expected to make Paris Games Week its main European platform, and Microsoft's opting for a Fan Fest, but there's still plenty to look out for at Gamescom 2016, August 18-21.

Battlefield 1, named after the World War I period in which it's set, will be livestreaming on Twitch in order to demonstrate its chaotic, building-crumbling multiplayer appeal. A public pre-release beta phase starts August 31 ahead of an October 21 launch.

Techland, the publisher company behind zombie survival hits Dead Island and Dying Light, is expected to announce at least one big new game.

October's card game Gwent, a spin-off from acclaimed 2015 action adventure The Witcher 3, enters the same space as Hearthstone and The Elder Scrolls: Legends and will be present and playable.

Team action title Overwatch has proven to be one of 2016's defining multiplayer experiences, and it is showing off its gradually expanding roster of 20-plus characters through animated short films; a fifth, for robot enforcer Bastion, is to drop during Gamescom.

Having focused on March 2017's Zelda: Breath of the Wind, Nintendo looks to be expanding its showfloor vision to include Pokémon Sun & Moon, Yo-Kai Watch 2, Dragon Quest VII and Mario Party: Star Rush, as speculation continues about next year's NX console release.

Microsoft is bringing Gears of War 4, Halo Wars 2, ReCore and Sea of Thieves to GamesCom as part of its Xbox FanFest, with multiplayer pirate jaunt Sea of Thieves to benefit from several days of livestreaming via Twitch.

Sci-fi action franchise Destiny has its 2016 expansion Rise of Iron due September 20 and fans should expect a closer look during Gamescom week, while Destiny: The Collection includes the original 2014 game and all four major updates released since.

The expansion should be on display in PlayStation's section of the show floor, where Titanfall 2, Gran Turismo Sport, and a clutch of titles for PlayStation VR will also be in evidence, as well as Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare, Horizon Zero Dawn, Mafia III and others.

For Ubisoft, the knights, samurais, and Vikings of ahistorical multiplayer action game For Honour will be available to try out, as will extreme sports game Steep and its own VR offerings Star Trek Bridge Crew and Eagle Flight, while December's Assassin's Creed film will also be promoted. — AFP-Relaxnews

Trump visits Milwaukee to address unrest over police shooting

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:36 PM PDT

Republican US presidential nominee Donald Trump visits the Milwaukee County War Memorial Centre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin August 16, 2016. — Reuters picRepublican US presidential nominee Donald Trump visits the Milwaukee County War Memorial Centre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin August 16, 2016. — Reuters picMILWAUKEE, Aug 17 — US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump visited Milwaukee yesterday, days after the city was hit by unrest over the fatal police shooting of a black man, and said that initial evidence pointed to the shooting being justified.

Trump, who has been vocal in support of law enforcement during a spate of protests around the country over high-profile police shootings, told Fox News that he plans to address the unrest during a town hall meeting yesterday in the Wisconsin city.

"It's law and order. We have to obey the laws or we don't have a country," said Trump. "We have a case where good people are out there trying to get people to sort of calm down and they're not calming down and we have our police who are doing a phenomenal job."

Unrest broke out in the city on Saturday night after the death earlier in the day of Sylville Smith, 23. Authorities said Smith was stopped for acting suspiciously and then fled, and was shot by police because he was carrying an illegal handgun and refused orders to drop it.

"But the gun was pointed at his (a police officer's) head supposedly ready to be fired. Who can have a problem with that? That's what the narrative is," Trump told Fox News. "Maybe it's not true. If it is true, people shouldn't be rioting."

Trump held a roundtable discussion yesterday afternoon with Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke and Inspector Edward Bailey — but news media representatives were escorted out and not permitted to hear the discussions. Trump took a brief tour of the county's war memorial and posed for pictures with veterans.

Clarke, who is black and who spoke last month at the Republican National Convention, has been blunt in his assessment of the unrest, writing in an opinion piece for The Hill, "it was a collapse of the social order where tribal behavior leads to reacting to circumstances instead of waiting for facts to emerge."

Demonstrations on Saturday night turned violent, when cars and businesses were set ablaze and gunfire ripped through the area of protests. The city was calmer on Monday night after a curfew was put in place for teenagers, and community leaders called for peace.

Police violence against African-Americans has set off intermittent, sometimes violent protests in the past two years, igniting a national debate over race and policing in the United States and giving rise to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Trump frequently talks about the need to restore safety and order in the wake of such unrest. He will hold an event with veterans and law enforcement, appear at the town hall meeting sponsored by Fox News, and then hold a rally in the Milwaukee suburb of West Bend on Tuesday night.

His presence in Milwaukee could prompt more demonstrations. Opponents of the New York real estate mogul frequently demonstrate inside and outside his campaign events. A rally in Chicago earlier this year was canceled after demonstrations grew violent.

A Fox News representative would not elaborate on security for the event.

Meanwhile, officials from the Office of Director of National Intelligence are expected to give Trump a wide-ranging briefing on national security issues this week, an adviser to Trump and a source familiar with the matter said yesterday.

Presidential candidates are entitled to receive a briefing of classified information after they formally secure the nomination, which Trump did last month. Trump's Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, is also entitled to receive a briefing if she requests one.

Democrats have been strongly critical of Trump's positions on foreign policy and national security, as well as of some of his freewheeling remarks. President Barack Obama has called Trump "unfit" for the presidency and earlier this month warned the Republican candidate that briefing information must be kept secret. — Reuters

KL shares open lower in early trade

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:32 PM PDT

An investor monitors share market prices at a brokerage firm in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. — Reuters picAn investor monitors share market prices at a brokerage firm in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. — Reuters picKUALA LUMPUR, Aug 17 ― Shares on Bursa Malaysia were lower in early trade today following the weaker overnight performance on Wall Street which was uncertain of the US Federal Reserve policy outlook.

At 9.10am, the benchmark FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) was 5.16 points lower at 1,694.73 against yesterday's close of 1,699.89 points. It opened 4.32 points easier at 1,695.57 at 9am.

Losers outpaced gainers 130 to 121 while 217 counters were unchanged, 1,212 untraded and 19 others were suspended.

Turnover stood at 201.89 million shares worth RM57.11 million.                

A dealer said the weaker US equity market dampened buying interest in the local market.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.5 per cent to 18,552.02, the S&P 500 equity index eased 0.6 per cent to 2,178.15 while the Nasdaq Composite retreated 0.5 per cent to 5,227.11.

The FBM Emas Index gave up 27.02 points to 11,903.59, the FBMT 100 Index lost 28.35 points for 11,593.99 and the FBM Emas Shariah Index decreased 29.1 points to 12,563.46.

The FBM 70 lost 8.12 points to 13,669.04 but the FBM Ace was 18.63 points higher at 5,604.85.

Sector-wise, the Finance Index declined 32.77 to 14,544.52 and the Plantation Index gained 8.71 points to 7,746.16 while the Industrial Index erased 18.41 points to 3,199.06.

Among heavyweights, TNB and IHH were flat at RM14.80 and RM6.68, respectively, Maybank lost two sen to RM8.03 and Public Bank was six sen lower at RM19.74.

Of actives, Iris and Censof both added one sen to 22 sen, respectively, while TH Heavy Engineering and Vivocom were flat at 19.5 sen and 28.5 sen, respectively. ― Bernama

Google releases Duo app for Android and iOS, rivalling Apple’s FaceTime (VIDEO)

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:28 PM PDT

Google releases Duo app for Android and iOS, rivalling Apple's FaceTime (VIDEO)

Google Duo is billed as a simple video-calling app that brings two callers face-to-face. — Handout via AFPGoogle Duo is billed as a simple video-calling app that brings two callers face-to-face. — Handout via AFPSAN FRANCISCO, Aug 17 — Unveiled at the Google I/O conference in May 2016, the Duo video-calling app is now available for Android and iOS, offering iPhone users an alternative to FaceTime.

Google Duo is billed as a simple video-calling app that brings two callers face-to-face, using the front-facing cameras of their smartphones or tablets, over a cellular or Wi-Fi network.

Unlike Apple's FaceTime, Google Duo is available to users of several operating systems — namely Android and iOS for the time being. Presented as the fastest and most easy-to-use Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) tool, Duo is lined up as a direct rival to FaceTime (for iOS) and even Skype (available for Android and iOS) for making video calls.

Although relatively limited in functionality, the app does come with a new and amusing feature called "Knock Knock," which shows the person calling live onscreen before you even answer the call.

Google Duo was released yesterday in the US and will roll out to other regions imminently.

Duo will soon be followed by Allo, an intelligent instant messaging app expected to land with Android Nougat (7.0) this autumn. Google Duo and Allo are due to replace Hangouts, which, in the future, should be more geared towards business users. — AFP-Relaxnews

Three more towns in France to join burkini ban

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:28 PM PDT

A Tunisian woman wearing a 'burkini' walks in the water with a child on August 16, 2016 at Ghar El Melh beach near Bizerte, north-east of Tunis. — AFP picA Tunisian woman wearing a 'burkini' walks in the water with a child on August 16, 2016 at Ghar El Melh beach near Bizerte, north-east of Tunis. — AFP picNARBONNE, Aug 17 — Three more resorts in France were poised yesterday to join a widening ban on the burkini, the full-body Islamic swimming garment that has sparked concern about religious extremism.

In the southwest, the mayor of the resort town of Leucate, Michel Py, was to sign a municipal decree later yesterday that would ban the burkini on public beaches, the town hall said.

The decree, running until August 31, will bar access to public beaches to "any person who is not properly dressed, respectful of moral behaviour and secularism, hygiene and bathing safety."

"The wearing of bathing clothes which are associated with these principles is also forbidden," according to the decree, seen by AFP.

Leucate is located on the Mediterranean coast, 35 km from Perpignan.

In the northern French department of Pas-de-Calais, the mayor of the Channel town of Oye-Plage said Tuesday he would also move to ban the burkini after seeing a woman wearing "a complete cape and gloves, covering her face and her eyes" as she headed to the beach on Sunday.

In the nearby upmarket resort of Le Touquet, local mayor and MP Daniel Fasquelle said he would also implement a burkini ban in the coming days "to fight against religious proselytising."

String of jihadist attacks

"There are no burkinis in Le Touquet at the moment, but I don't want the town hall to be caught offguard if we are affected by this phenomenon," Fasquelle told AFP.

France has been hit by a string of jihadist attacks over the last 19 months that have left the country on edge and fretting over home-grown religious extremism.

Partly as a result, the burkini has become embroiled in a fierce debate about perceived religious symbols and their place in a strongly secular country.

On July 14 Nice was the target of an attack claimed by the Islamic State group when a Tunisian ploughed a truck into crowds celebrating Bastille Day, killing 85.

And on July 26, a priest was killed in his church in northwestern France by two attackers who had proclaimed their allegiance to IS.

The following day, the Cote d'Azur city of Cannes banned the burkini and the nearby resort of Villeneuve-Loubet followed suit in early August.

Beach brawl over burkinis

The Corsican town of Sisco on Sunday became the third on the list after a brawl in a cove between locals and families and of North African origin left five people injured.

A witness said the violence happened after tourists took pictures of women swimming in burkinis on the Mediterranean island. Investigators are still probing whether this was the case.

The first ban on the burkini has been attributed to Mandelieu-la-Napoule, close to Cannes, where it was discreetly barred in July 2013.

The text of the municipal decree has been used, typically word for word, in bans elsewhere.

Cannes mayor David Lisnard said he had signed off on the burkini ban out of "respect for good customs and secularism," a founding principle of the French republic.

But Villeneuve-Loubet mayor Lionnel Luca had a different argument, saying swimming "fully dressed... (was) unacceptable for hygienic reasons."

The bans are opposed by some, who contend they are a populist ploy, violate human rights and likely to inflame tensions.

The Collective Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF) mounted an unsuccessful legal challenge to the ban in Cannes.

It is now taking its case to the Council of State, the highest judicial authority in France for administrative matters. — AFP

Asian stocks climb as yen steadies amid US fed rate comments

Posted: 16 Aug 2016 06:27 PM PDT

Investors weighed the policy response from the Bank of Japan as the yen surpassed 100 per dollar for the second time this year. — Reuters picInvestors weighed the policy response from the Bank of Japan as the yen surpassed 100 per dollar for the second time this year. — Reuters picSINGAPORE, Aug 17 — Asian stocks rose as the yen steadied after breaking through 100 against the dollar and investors weighed the prospects for higher rates this year.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.1 per cent to 139.69 as of 9:10am in Tokyo. Japan's Topix index climbed 0.3 per cent as the yen retreated against the dollar after briefly touching 99.54 yesterday. New York Fed President William Dudley said the central bank could potentially raise interest rates as soon as next month, warning investors that they are underestimating the likelihood of increases in borrowing costs.

"Considering how much the yen has strengthened, Japanese shares are showing resilience," said Chihiro Ohta, a senior strategist with SMBC Nikko Securities Inc "However, there aren't any reasons to actively buy Japanese stocks right now."

Asian equities have climbed 23 per cent from their February low through yesterday as lackluster data from the world's biggest economies fuelled speculation central banks will continue to support them with stimulus and loose monetary policy. While the odds the Fed will raise rates in December climbed to 51 per cent yesterday, from 45 per cent the previous day, traders are betting there's only a 22 per cent chance of tightening next month, data compiled by Bloomberg showed.

Yen strength

Investors also weighed the policy response from the Bank of Japan as the yen surpassed 100 per dollar for the second time this year. Strategists at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd and Morgan Stanley see the yen extending this year's 20 per cent gain versus the dollar, further confounding policy makers who are seeking to spur growth and inflation in the world's third-largest economy.

As the currency surged yesterday, Japanese Vice Finance Minister Masatsugu Asakawa said he's watching with concern to see if there are speculative moves in the foreign-exchange market.

The "Japanese economy is extremely weak," Perpetual's Sherwood said. "Helicopter money could be in play as Japanese policy makers run out of ammunition."

South Korea's Kospi index was little changed. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index fell 0.2 per cent. New Zealand's S&P/NZX 50 Index climbed 0.6 per cent. Markets in China and Hong Kong have yet to start trading.

China retreat

Futures on the FTSE China A50 Index added 0.3 per cent in most recent trading, while those on the Hang Seng Index rose 0.1 per cent. The Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.5 per cent yesterday, after advancing above its 200-day moving average for the first time in a year as volume rebounded. While the gauge has climbed 17 per cent from its January low, it's still down 40 per cent from last year's peak.

China's regulators took another step toward opening their financial markets yesterday, unveiling a second channel for foreign investors to buy the country's stocks while also lifting restrictions on asset flows. The trading link between Hong Kong and Shenzhen is expected to start in about four months.

The long-delayed second link, which had been expected for more than a year, is part of China's efforts to internationalize its capital markets and increase its global influence to something more in line with the heft of the nation's economy. Barriers to foreigners wanting to trade the US$6.5 trillion of mainland equities were one of the reasons that MSCI Inc decided not to include the shares in its global benchmark indexes in June. Authorities in Beijing have also kept tight control over how much money leaves the country.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index rose 0.1 per cent. The US equity benchmark index slipped 0.6 per cent yesterday. — Bloomberg