Curabitur ultrices commodo magna, ac semper risus molestie vestibulum. Aenean commodo nibh non dui adipiscing rhoncus.

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates | 

A US-Israeli delegation led by White House advisor Jared Kushner arrived Monday in Abu Dhabi, on the first commercial flight from Tel Aviv to mark the normalisation of ties between the Jewish state and the UAE.

In another breakthrough, regional heavyweight Saudi Arabia allowed the historic flight to cross its airspace, halving what would otherwise have been a long trip around the Arabian peninsula.

"This is the first time this has ever happened. I would like to thank the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for making that possible," Kushner, US President Donald Trump's son-in-law, said on arrival in Abu Dhabi.

The word "peace" was written in Arabic, English and Hebrew on the cockpit of the El Al flight that landed in the Emirates capital, where US flags flew alongside the Star of David banner.

The direct flight by Israel's national carrier, numbered LY971 in a nod to the UAE's international dialling code, is due to return on Tuesday with the number 972, matching Israel's dialling code.

"While this is a historic flight, we hope that it will start an even more historic journey in the Middle East and beyond," Kushner, a key architect of Trump's Middle East policy, said before boarding.

"The future does not have to be predetermined by the past. This is a very hopeful time."

Kushner urged the Palestinians, who have condemned the UAE deal as a betrayal of their cause, to come to the negotiating table.

"When they are ready, the whole region is very excited to help lift them up and move them forward. But they can't be stuck in the past, they have to come to the table," he said.

The accord was announced by Trump on August 13, making the UAE the first Gulf country and only the third Arab nation to establish relations with Israel.

Unlike Egypt, which made peace with its former battlefield enemy in 1979, and Jordan, which followed in 1994, the UAE has never fought a war with Israel.

 

- Saudi next? -

 

Gulf Arab nations have had increasingly publicly ties with Israel in recent years, boosted by their shared rivalry with Iran and the advantages of linking their powerful economies.

Saudi Arabia, in keeping with decades of policy by most Arab nations, says it will not normalise relations until Israel has signed a peace deal establishing an independent Palestinian state.

But the overflight was a concrete sign of Saudi cooperation with Israel after years of behind-the-scenes overtures.

The plane however skirted the Gulf states of Qatar and Bahrain, who have declined so far to follow the UAE's move, also met with criticism elsewhere in the Arab world.

"Peace is not an empty word used to normalise crimes and oppression," Saeb Erekat, secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organisation, said Monday.

"Peace is the outcome of justice. Peace is not made by denying Palestine's right to exist."

 

- 'There are no limits' -

 

In a joint statement on Monday, the US, UAE and Israel said the accord represented "a courageous step towards a more stable, integrated and prosperous Middle East" after a decade that has witnessed an escalation of "war, destruction and dislocation".

They said that on Tuesday, officials would begin discussing cooperation in seven areas: investment, finance, health, space exploration, civil aviation, foreign policy, and tourism and culture. 

"The result will be broad cooperation between two of the region’s most innovative and dynamic economies," they said after talks between Kushner and Israeli and Emirati national security advisors Meir Ben-Shabbat and Sheikh Tahnoun bin Zayed.

Ben-Shabbat, who was also on the flight to the UAE, said the delegation's goal was to make a plan to push ahead relations in a broad range of areas. 

"We came here to transform a vision into a reality. There are no limits to cooperation... in education, innovation, health, aviation, agriculture, energy and many other fields," he said.

Since the agreement was unveiled, there have been phone calls between ministers from the two countries, and on Saturday the Emirates in a new milestone repealed a 1972 law boycotting Israel.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has praised "the swift pace of normalisation", said that Ben-Shabbat had invited the Emirati delegation to visit Israel.

"I can tell you we will welcome them with same red carpet they gave us," he said Monday, without specifying if they had accepted.

As part of the normalisation agreement, Israel agreed to suspend its planned annexations in the occupied West Bank, although Netanyahu quickly insisted the plans remained on the table in the long run.

The Israeli leader has also denied reports that the accord hinges on the sale of US F-35 stealth fighter jets to the UAE, saying he opposes a move that could reduce Israel's strategic edge in the region.

Kushner said Monday that the US could maintain that edge "while also advancing our military relationship with the United Arab Emirates" and that the issue would be discussed further in "coming weeks and months".

burs-sls/lc

Every September, the world honors and recognizes the value and contribution of the grandparents not just in the lives of their loved ones but to society as well. This year may be a little different because of the pandemic and quarantine restrictions to hold parties and celebrations, but no need to worry as Resorts World Manila (RWM) prepares special treats and surprises that will definitely show your love and appreciation for your beloved lolos and lolas.

 

Since food deliveries are now a norm as most people, especially the senior citizens, avoid going out, why not maximize it for a simple celebration at home? On September 12 and 13, send your grandparents some love  and surprise them with a sumptuous set from Casa Buenas that is inclusive of a 15-minute live online serenade via the L.O.V.E. Project or Live On-request Virtual Entertainment.

 

Choose from two sets depending on your liking: package 1 serves Grilled Marinated Chicken Salad, Garlic Butter Baked Pasta with Seafood, the signature Sinulog Roast Chicken with Cebu’s best lechon stuffing, and Grilled Spanish Pork Back Ribs served with roasted mixed vegetables, sweet potato fries, and Casa Buenas specialty sauces on the side. Meanwhile, package 2 includes Mixed Green Salad, Baked Tomato and Chorizo Pasta, Sinulog Roast Chicken, and Oven Roasted Salmon Yuzu (Japanese Lemon) Miso, also served with with roasted mixed vegetables, sweet potato fries, and Casa Buenas specialty sauces on the side. Both sets are good for 4 to 6 pax, and available for only Php 4,000 net, inclusive of delivery via RWM’s in-house delivery service, Delishvery. You can also opt to add a bottle of wine to complete the celebrations for an additional fee of P700. As an added heartwarming touch, you may also surprise lolo and lola a 15-minute live and exclusive Zoom performance from a L.O.V.E Project artists absolutely for free.

 

Orders can be made until September 10, 2020 only, while delivery period is from September 11to 13.

 

If you are feeling extra and you want to give gifts for your lolo and lola, Newport Mall got you covered as several retail shops are now open. To ensure guests safety, enhanced sanitation protocols and continuous disinfection are in place. Guests are encouraged to follow the prescribed minimum health standards such as wearing of face masks and face shields, and practicing physical distancing while shopping.  Newport Mall is open daily from 11AM to 7PM.

 

To know more about RWM’s special Grandparents Day package and other promos, visit www.rwmanila.com or follow its official Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram pages at @rwmanila.

 

 

###

 

======

CONTACT

JOY ANDRADE

Public Relations

Landline: +632-908 8000 local 7839

Mobile: +63917 863 0443

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

10/F NECC Bldg., Newport City

Pasay, Metro Manila

Philippines 1309

www.rwmanila.com

The Forever Summer deals just got hotter! Quest Plus Conference Center Clark, together with the Crimson Hotels and Resorts and Quest Hotels in the Philippines, is offering exclusive discounted rates of the Forever Summer packages at the Hotel Sales and Marketing Association International, Inc’s first online sale titled “SOS” September Online Sale.

 

From September 15 to 30, you can book your quick getaway with rates starting at PHP 3,499 per night. This big sale is in support to local tourism and to help ignite the fire of travel in the Philippines once again.

 

Just an hour away from Manila, Clark is the perfect destination for travellers looking to escape the city and enjoy the outdoors. Plan your road trip now by availing the Forever Summer Deluxe Room package with markdown rates exclusive only to SOS. For only Php 3,499 net per night, guests can enjoy a deluxe room accommodation at Quest Plus Clark for two inclusive of breakfast, 10% discount on Mimosa Plus Golf Course green fee, complimentary access to hotel facilities such as the resort style swimming pool, Equinox Fitness Center, and free use of bikes around the estate. And to fully enjoy the beautiful vistas of Clark, avail of the optional picnic at the park package for only Php 1,500. This offer comes with a picnic basket filled with snacks and activities, like kites and board games, perfect for a chill day at Acacia Park located just in front of the hotel. Exclusive rates for Stay and Play at Mimosa Plus Golf and a luxurious Villa stay are also available.

 

Booking is offered through http://bit.ly/sosquestclark or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. for reservations. Vouchers are valid until September 30, 2021. For inquiries call (045) 599 8000. Follow Quest Plus Conference Center, Clark on Facebook or Instagram for other exclusive promos and news.

 

 

ABOUT CHROMA HOSPITALITY

Chroma Hospitality, Inc. is a young, forward-thinking company crafting bold, innovative hospitality brands. Owned by Filinvest Hospitality Corporation, Chroma is the management company behind Crimson Hotel Filinvest City, Manila, Crimson Resort and Spa Mactan, Cebu, Quest Hotel and Conference Center in Cebu City, Quest Plus and Conference Center in Clark, Pampanga, Quest Hotel Tagaytay and Crimson Resort and Spa Boracay. For more information please visit http://chromahospitality.com/.

 

# # #

PRESS CONTACT:

Renzelle Ann Palma

PR and Communications Manager

Tel: (045) 599 8000 loc. 1418

Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Ho Chi Minh CityVietnam A tech-savvy population, a fast-growing economy, and the perks of being first in an emerging market -- Vietnamese entrepreneur Le Thanh saw the potential in booming Ho Chi Minh City for his start-up transforming coffee grounds into masks. 

The 35-year-old chemistry graduate worked for two multinationals before stepping out on his own three years ago to launch ShoeX -- a sustainable footwear company which nimbly pivoted to masks as the coronavirus pandemic struck.

When he entered the workforce, Thanh was drawn to the higher salaries and no-nonsense working culture at foreign companies he assumed were a cut above local firms, tangled up in rules imposed by his country's staid Communist rulers.

"But now I see there are more openings in a place where things are a bit murky," Thanh told AFP from his buzzing Ho Chi Minh City co-working space.

He is not alone in believing Vietnam -- and especially its southern commercial centre -- is poised to become an innovation hub thanks to its young, educated and digitally active population.

Vietnamese e-commerce and e-payment companies have been "flooded" with private equity in the past couple of years, said Eddie Thai, a Ho Chi Minh City-based partner at venture capital firm 500 Startups.

Their rise has been stellar.

Vietnam-based start-ups made up 18 percent -- or $741 million -- of the capital invested in Southeast Asia in 2019, up from four percent in 2018, according to a report by Cento Ventures.

Although Indonesia remains the leader, the amount pumped into Vietnam start-ups pushed ahead of Singapore for the first time in 2019, the venture capital firm said.

The gold rush comes in spite of cumbersome regulations for foreigners, Thai told AFP, making it difficult to invest and repatriate capital.

Last year, popular e-wallet platform VNPay reportedly snagged the largest deal in Southeast Asia, attracting $300 million from Softbank's Vision Fund and Singapore's sovereign wealth fund GIC.

And although Thai said investment had paused due to the coronavirus pandemic, Vietnam is well-placed to bounce back.

Its economy unexpectedly grew in the second quarter and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts a 2.7 percent expansion for the year despite the global downturn.

The country also has a huge pool of software engineers who cost substantially less than their Indian or Chinese peers.

And unlike the tech talent in wealthy start-up hubs such as San Francisco or London, they understand what consumers in the emerging world want, Thai says.

 

 

- Exciting, young environment -

 

Air pollution -- and then the outbreak of COVID-19 -- prompted Thanh to take a gamble on sourcing Vietnamese coffee waste material to turn it into masks. 

His cutting edge design uses woven fibre made from coffee grounds to make a washable outer layer, with a biodegradable filter inside.

"I took a risk and hoped it would succeed," he said, adding that there had been a surge in orders of his masks from Europe, the US and Japan since they launched in April.

A similar strain of environmental innovation courses through many other smaller start-ups in a country among the most vulnerable to climate change. 

They exploit the high tech literacy of the population -- 70 percent of which is under 35, according to the World Bank -- to sell new products to a receptive market.

Bui Thi Minh Ngoc wanted to find a sustainable alternative to standard menstrual products, searching for months to find the right organic cloth for her sanitary pad business GreenLady Vietnam, which she operates largely on Facebook.

"In Vietnam, there are not many specialising in period products and reproductive health," the 26-year-old said as she checked material samples at a tailor in Hanoi.

"But I like to do things which are difficult."

While Vietnam is yet to produce any truly "disruptive technology", said Trung Hoang of local investment platform VinaCapital Ventures, China has shown what is possible.

The Asian giant -- also an autocratic one-party state -- has managed to incubate dynamic tech behemoths like Alibaba and Tencent that have risen to the forefront of the industry.

Back in his Ho Chi Minh City office space, packed with young professionals, Thanh fizzes with enthusiasm for Vietnam's start-up culture.

"I am in this exciting and young environment. It's inspired us all."

tmh-aph/dhc/gle

 

The Tokyo art exhibit opened to enthusiastic visitors, but many of those circulating weren't just there to soak in some culture -- they were casing the joint for a midnight raid.

Hours after the gallery closed for the night, a crowd had gathered ready to pounce on the artworks. The police station was nearby, but officers only intervened for crowd control, because all the pieces at the Stealable Art Exhibition were up for grabs.

The event was intended as "an experiment", to alter the relationship between artists and visitors, organiser Tota Hasegawa told AFP.

It was originally conceived as a low-key event that might attract some covert thievery, but word spread so fast on social media that a crowd of nearly 200 people packed the streets near the gallery hoping for a chance to grab a prize.

Would-be robbers were told they could raid the gallery from midnight, but the crowd was so big that the theft started half an hour earlier, and the exhibition that had been billed as running for up to 10 days was emptied of art in less than 10 minutes.

Yusuke Hasada, 26, was a rare winner, gripping a crumpled 10,000 yen ($93) banknote in a frame, which was part of the "My Money" installation by Gabin Ito. 

He arrived an hour before midnight only to see a crowd had already formed.

Since there was no apparent queue, he manoeuvered himself into a spot right in front of the gallery.

"The moment the staff said they should open early due to the big crowd, people rushed in from behind me. I was in the front, and I almost fell over," he told AFP.

"It was scary." 

 

- Auction resales -

 

Hasada said he plans to hang the work, among those on display supplied by 10 contemporary artists, in his home.

But not everyone stealing the items appeared to have the same idea, with several artworks appearing on online auction sites within hours with price tags as high as 100,000 yen. 

Even after the exhibit was emptied out, would-be thieves continued arriving, forcing a nearby police station to dispatch officers for crowd control.

"You are blocking traffic!" officers shouted.

Yuka Yamauchi, a 35-year-old systems engineer, showed up 15 minutes before midnight but was too late.

"I entered with my husband and it was just packed with so many people... We saw larger artworks taken out by those who came earlier," she said.

"I haven't seen so many people in a long time as we have been refraining from going out due to the coronavirus."

But Yamauchi didn't leave completely empty-handed.

"I've got a clip... It must have been one of those used for the cloth installation. I found it dropped, so I picked it up as a souvenir," she said with a laugh.

 

- 'Well-mannered' thieves -

 

Yamauchi recognised the clip because she was at a preview of the artwork six hours earlier to "case" the venue.

She said she would happily come back for a similar "participatory" art event, where some of the artists showcased work that was purpose-made for those hoping to make off with it.

Naoki "SAND" Yamamoto's work "Midnight Vandalist" was composed of a stack of peelable pages with printed illustrations.

Another work was a large cloth printed with lines to be cut along with scissors.

But would-be thieves were responsible for organising their own getaway vehicles. A notice was posted at the entrance: "We do not assist art thieves with packing or transporting artworks, so you are responsible for everything."

Organiser Hasegawa told AFP he later met with police -- perhaps not used to such large-scale larceny in Japan, with its ultra-low crime rate -- to clear up any misunderstandings about the event and the crowd it attracted.

He said the budding thieves had proved to be "well-mannered."

They might have been there to stage robberies, but when "someone lost a bag with a wallet in it, it was passed onto a staffer and safely returned to the owner."

mis/sah/ric/gle

 

Sisters Mimi and Nikki have battled Thailand's tropical climate, chased off elephants from their vineyards and won over a sceptical public to their award-winning wine. Now they're taking on the "unfair" booze laws critics say benefit the kingdom's billionaire booze monopolies.

Rows of Syrah, Viognier and Chenin Blanc grapes stretch across the 40-acre GranMonte Estate in the foothills of Khao Yai National Park.

The elevated terrain, three hours outside of Bangkok, provides unexpectedly fertile ground for grapes and an escape from city life, complete with a rust-coloured guesthouse that could be pulled straight from a Tuscany tourism advert. 

As they snap selfies in between the vines visitors run into Nikki Lohitnavy, 33, who studied oenology in Australia and now steers the science behind each bottle.

She painstakingly experiments with grape varieties to see how they respond to the climate -- it takes at least six years to see if a decent wine will emerge from the ground.

The plot of land was once a cornfield, but their father Visooth transformed the terrain into trellised vines and as a teenager Nikki joined him in the fields.

Younger sister Mimi was not interested in the viticulture, but today, she heads the label's marketing, calling it her "mission to put Thai wine into the market". 

The kingdom's wine remains an outlier -- grapes grown in warmer temperatures tend to produce tannic wines, something that seasoned drinkers eschew. 

But after more than two decades in business, GranMonte is gaining recognition especially for its progress in tropical viticulture.

"Winemakers around the world want to know what we do here because the climate is changing so they have to adapt to warmer temperatures and higher rainfall in their regions too," Nikki told AFP.

Its proximity to a national park also poses an unusual pest control issue as hungry elephants occasionally trespass through their vineyard, prompting calls from the sisters to rangers for help.

 

 - Que Syrah Sera -

 

Despite the gains, the long term future of the GranMonte wines is clouded by the kingdom's heavily restrictive booze laws.

Thailand has a strange relationship with alcohol. A devoutly Buddhist kingdom, it also has the highest alcohol consumption rate in Southeast Asia, according to the WHO.

A web of rules, including high import taxes on alcohol, hefty fines for breaches and a licensing culture where bars require friends at local police stations, can make drinking a complicated business.

Then there's the 2008 Alcoholic Beverage Control Act, a law forbidding the display of booze logos on their products, as well as any advertising that could "directly or indirectly appeal to people to drink". 

It's aimed at controlling consumption, but in effect clips the wings of small producers who do not possess the same reach to customers as established brands.

"I can't show clearly a bottle of my wine, I can't post on social media what the wine tastes like, or how or why it's good," says Mimi, who worries that their website might fall afoul of the law. 

Critics say it has always been unevenly enforced, allowing booze giants to cement their brand recognition, spraying their logos via non-alcoholic drinks like soda water on giant billboards and public transport. 

The market leader - Thai Beverage - makes the ubiquitous Chang lager. The firm is owned by Sirivadhanabhakdi family, the kingdom's third richest family with $10.5 billion in wealth according to Forbes, and their portfolio includes massive downtown Bangkok real estate projects and hotels. 

Together with Boon Rawd Brewery -- which produces Singha and Leo -- the duopoly are unrivalled in reach and capital. 

Neither responded to multiple requests for comment. 

Thailand's booze laws are uncharacteristically responsive to changes in drinking culture.

Online alcohol sales - which surged during the pandemic lockdown - are now in the regulators' crosshairs, potentially closing down another revenue route for small alcohol producers. 

GranMonte lost 30 million baht ($964,000) in three months during the shutdown - and Mimi says their recovery will be further hampered by new rules slated to ban all online booze sales.

 

- Monopoly players -

 

But Nipon Chinanonwait, director of the Ministry of Health's Alcohol Control Board, rejects criticism that established giants are given an unfair advantage.

"Both big and small companies face the same procedure," he told AFP, while the ministry insists the laws are there only to prevent underage drinking.  

The sisters have teamed up with dozens of small-scale craft brewers, importers and bars to petition the government to axe the advertising law, and to halt the impending online booze sales ban. 

"People cannot live like this," said brewer Supapong Pruenglampoo, who hid his Sandport Brewing Facebook page from public view in fear of a crackdown.

"In these COVID times, (the fines) are impossible to pay," he told AFP. 

But in an unequal kingdom, any efforts to change the monopoly culture are bruising. 

It's "a reflection of how Thailand operates," says Mimi.

"The lawmaking, the enforcement and everything surrounding it is to benefit the small group of people holding most of the wealth in Thailand," she said. 

As Nikki tastes their recent batch of Syrah grapes kept in imported barrels, she says the challenges to start were numerous. Now, they are working to stay on top.

"It's our passion -- we like it so we do it," she says. 

dhc/apj/lto/rbu/to

 

Dont Miss

The Foreign Post is the newspaper of the International Community in the Philippines, published for foreign residents, Internationally-oriented Filipinos, and visitors to the country. It is written and edited to inform, to entertain, occasionally to educate, to provide a forum for international thinkers.

READ MORE ...


Contact Us

3/F Rolfem Building, 4680 Old Sta. Mesa
corner Bagong Panahon Streets
Sta. Mesa, Manila, Philippines
T: (+ 632) 8713 - 7182 , (+632) 8404-5250
advertise@theforeignpost.info

 

Graffiti