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Tuesday 18 May 2021

UNESCO World Heritage Young Professionals Forum 2021 - Fuzhou (China)/Online




Application Deadline: June 2nd 2021

World Heritage Young Professionals Fora are among the flagship activities of the World Heritage Education Programme, serving as a platform for bringing young professionals and heritage experts together to foster intercultural learning and exchange, to debate about common concerns and to discover new roles for themselves in heritage conservation.

As an integral part of the extended 44th session of the World Heritage Committee (Fuzhou (China)/Online, 2021), and within the framework of the UNESCO World Heritage Education Programme, the National Commission for the People’s Republic of China for UNESCO will host the World Heritage Young Professionals Forum 2021 online, under the theme of “World Heritage and Sustainable Livelihoods”, from 5th to 9th July 2021.

Application and Selection

Eligible applicants should meet the following requirements:
■ Aged between 23 and 32 years;
■ Available for the entire duration of the Forum;
■ Proficient in English, as the Forum will be conducted entirely in English.
■ Experienced in the field of World Heritage; working on conservation and promotion of heritage in their regular activities, along with other young people;
■ Motivated and committed to implementing the outcomes of the Forum in their respective countries.

Click Here to apply: https://bit.ly/2SZJPIf

Samsung thrives as Seoul mulls pardon of corporate heir



SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Pressure is mounting on South Korean President Moon Jae-in to pardon Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong, who is back in prison after his conviction in a massive corruption scandal, even though business has rarely looked better at South Korea’s largest company.

Lee is just the latest South Korean corporate boss to run his business from behind bars, communicating decisions through visiting company executives. But his imprisonment is causing national handwringing over the future of the technology giant in the country sometimes called the “Samsung Republic.”

Many people — from business leaders and editorial writers to even Buddhist monks — have urged Moon to release Lee for the sake of an economy heavily dependent on Samsung’s technology exports. They worry Lee’s imprisonment could compromise Samsung’s speed and decisiveness, hindering its competitiveness in the fast-changing technology business.

Lee has been in prison for nearly four months and few expect him to serve his full prison sentence through July 2022. There’s speculation Moon could free him on Buddha’s Birthday, which falls on Wednesday.

There’s also Liberation Day in August, which celebrates Korea’s independence from Japanese colonial rule at the end of World War II. That also has often brought presidential pardons of high-profile politicians and businesspeople.

Moon’s office said he will consider both the intensifying competition in the semiconductor market and public feelings about fairness before deciding whether to pardon Lee.

Lee runs Samsung as vice chairman. He’s also the country’s richest person. He is serving a 2 1/2-year sentence for bribing then-President Park Geun-hye and her close confidante, who are serving lengthier prison terms, to win government support for a 2015 merger between two Samsung affiliates that tightened his control over the corporate empire.

Samsung’s latest results suggest it is doing just fine.

The company posted a near 50% jump in operating profit and its $58 billion revenue was the highest ever in the first three months of the year. Demand for its mainstay computer memory chips, TVs and other products has surged as the pandemic has forced millions to stay home. And Samsung’s sleek Galaxy smartphones and tablets are the biggest competition for Apple’s iPhones and iPads.

Samsung has announced ambitious plans to expand its computer chip manufacturing. Last week it said it will invest 171 trillion won ($151 billion) through 2030 in higher-margin logic chips and its foundry business for contract chipmaking as it expands beyond its dominance in memory chips. The company expects demand for advanced chips to soar in coming years, lifted by emerging technologies such as fifth generation (5G) wireless networks, artificial intelligence and self-driving cars.


Still, analysts say Samsung is increasingly falling behind Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. in the race for high-tech chips. The world’s biggest contract chipmaker, TSMC controls 55% of the global foundry business versus Samsung’s 17% share, according to South Korea’s Trade Ministry.

Both could be threatened by U.S. efforts to reduce American dependence on Asian supply chains and rebuild the declining U.S. chip industry in response to chip shortages that have hobbled American auto manufacturing in recent months.

In a statement to The Associated Press, Samsung said Lee’s role is to “contribute to the company’s overall strategic direction, and make decisions related to the future growth through his insights and global network of business leaders.” The company declined to comment on calls for Lee’s release and also would not say how often company officials are visiting him.

“It’s not difficult for Lee to manage the company from prison through his visitors, and it’s not like he had ever run Samsung like an omnipotent king,” said Chung Sun-sup, chief executive of corporate analysis firm Chaebul.com. Even though Lee is the grandson of Samsung’s founder and is the family’s third generation helmsman of the company, important decisions are still weighed by the board, he noted.

“But who knows what Samsung is missing when Lee isn’t visiting business sites or traveling abroad for new opportunities?” he said.

Lee’s imprisonment comes at a time when Samsung should be pushing for a major reshaping of its semiconductor business, said Lee Seung-woo, a senior analyst at Seoul-based Eugene Investment and Securities.

Samsung’s rise as a global technology powerhouse drew from its dual strength in parts and finished products. But that’s proving a disadvantage in its competition with TSMC as major clients like Apple shift orders to TSMC to avoid relying on chips manufactured by a competitor.

Samsung should be considering bold moves, such as splitting its foundry business into a separate company and listing it on the U.S. stock market to ease the concern of clients, Lee said.

“Lee Jae-yong clearly has a role to do,” he said. “Lee could be meeting (Apple CEO) Tim Cook asking Apple to invest in the new foundry company.”

Samsung’s daily operations are mainly handled by co-CEOs who each lead its semiconductor, smartphones and consumer electronics divisions. Samsung reaped robust profits during Lee’s earlier stints in jail, in 2017 and 2018, when it finalized a deal to acquire American auto electronics firm Harman. That assuaged jitters about a possible void in decision making.

Legal troubles have long dogged the company. Lee’s late father, its former chairman Lee Kun-hee, received suspended sentences in 1996 and 2008 for crimes including bribery and tax evasion.

The scandal that snagged Lee Jae-yong again underscored traditionally cozy ties between “chaebol,” or South Korea’s family-owned conglomerates, and the government. Park was ousted and jailed in 2017 following months of protests by millions.

Moon has been sidestepping the pardon issue for months, having taken office vowing to curb the excesses of chaebol families after winning the presidential by-election following Park’s ouster.

South Korea has long been lenient toward white-collar crimes, letting convicted tycoons run their businesses from prison. Officials say that’s best for the economy even though the crimes committed by chaebol bosses usually put their personal interests ahead of corporate concerns.

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won held nearly 1,800 meetings with his lawyers and other visitors in 17 months through July 2014 while serving a four-year prison term for embezzlement and other crimes, according Justice Ministry comments to lawmakers.

Hyundai Motor Corp. reportedly set up a “liaison office” nearby to receive guests and staff visiting its former chairman Chung Mong-koo after he was arrested in 2006 on charges of embezzling company funds to bribe officials.

Chey and Chung received presidential pardons, as did Lee’s father.

The calls for Lee’s release show Samsung still holds excessive influence, said Park Sang-in, a professor of public enterprise policy at Seoul National University. He believes pardoning Lee would damage public trust.

“Was there ever a time when pardoning a chaebol boss really helped a company or the Korean economy? No, not even once,” Park said.

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Fiame Naomi Mataafa: Samoa set to appoint first female PM

Samoa’s supreme court overrules attempt by head of state to void April election results, paving way for the opposition to form a government.



Fiame Naomi Mataafa is poised to become Samoa’s first female prime minister, after the Pacific nation’s top court helped break a month-long political impasse that followed a tightly contested election in April.


Samoa’s Supreme Court on Monday afternoon overruled an attempt by the head of state Tuimalealiifano Vaaletoa Sualauvi II to void the election results, local media reported.

The top court also rejected the post-election creation of an additional parliamentary seat that briefly gave the incumbent government a majority.

The court decisions clear the path for Mataafa’s FAST party to form a government, ending the rule of Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi, who has fought to hold onto power after governing for 22 years.

Mataafa, a former deputy prime minister, said it was a “a day to give thanks to God and to all of you for having the heart for this country”.

“This is not about you or me, this is about the future of Samoa and protecting our inheritance of our ancestors,” she said. “We were almost too late, it was nearly taken forcefully from us.”

The daughter of independent Samoa’s first prime minister, Mataafa was previously with Malielegaoi’s HRPP, which has been in power for four decades.

The 64-year-old split with the government last year after opposing changes to Samoa’s constitution and judicial system.

Malielegaoi said he would appeal the court’s rulings.

“There are major reasons for an appeal to be lodged,” he said in a televised address. “These are mechanisms of the judiciary in the pursuit of justice.”

The April election initially ended in a 25-25 tie between the FAST Party and the HRPP, with one independent candidate.

But then the electoral commissioner appointed another HRPP candidate, supposedly to conform to constitutional gender quotas. The independent candidate, meanwhile, chose to go with Mataafa, making it 26-26.

The head of state then stepped in to announce fresh elections to break the tie. Those elections in the nation of 220,000 were supposed to be held later this week.

Mataafa’s party appealed and the Supreme Court finally ruled against both the appointed candidate and the plans for the new elections, restoring the FAST Party to a 26-25 majority.

Following the decisions, hundreds of FAST supporters, dressed in red, gathered outside the court and celebrated with singing.

“Glory to our Father!” the FAST Party wrote on Facebook. “Now its time to get to work.”

New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said it felt like a significant moment.

“It is certainly a meaningful thing when you see a historic decision made when the office is held by a woman,” Ardern said.

Samoa gained independence in 1962 after nearly 50 years as a New Zealand protectorate.

The Pacific nation shut its borders early in the coronavirus pandemic and has any avoided widespread community transmission of COVID-19 infections.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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Microsoft investigated Bill Gates’s involvement with an employee

The board used an external law firm for a ‘thorough investigation’ but did not reach a conclusion as Gates stepped down.



Microsoft Corp. conducted an investigation into co-founder Bill Gates’s involvement with an employee almost two decades ago after it was informed in 2019 of his attempt to start a romantic relationship with that person.

The board reviewed the matter and held a “thorough investigation” with the help of an external law firm, the software giant said. It didn’t reach a conclusion to the probe because Gates had stepped down before it was completed, Microsoft said.

“Microsoft received a concern in the latter half of 2019 that Bill Gates sought to initiate an intimate relationship with a company employee in the year 2000,” Microsoft said in a statement. “A committee of the Board reviewed the concern, aided by an outside law firm, to conduct a thorough investigation. Throughout the investigation, Microsoft provided extensive support to the employee who raised the concern.”

Dow Jones earlier reported that Microsoft’s directors found Gates’ involvement with the female employee to be inappropriate and decided last year that he had to step down from the board, citing people familiar with the matter who weren’t identified.

Microsoft didn’t provide further details on the investigation.

The billionaire said in March last year that he was stepping down from the board to devote more time to philanthropy. Gates hasn’t been active in a day-to-day role since 2008, Microsoft said at that time. Gates co-founded the software company in 1975 and served as its CEO until 2000, the same year his foundation was started, and was chairman until February 2014.

‘An Affair’

A spokeswoman for Gates said his decision to leave the board has nothing to do with the romantic involvement with an employee.

“There was an affair almost 20 years ago which ended amicably,” she said, adding that his “decision to transition off the board was in no way related to this matter.”

The belated investigation into the affair came at a time that was marked by a groundswell of discussion at Microsoft about the treatment of women and Me-Too conversations in the broader industry. Since 2000, Microsoft had also put in place processes for investigating allegations and overhauled them with the goal of making them stronger, the company said.

Intel Corp. Chief Executive Officer Brian Krzanich resigned after the board was informed that he had had a consensual relationship with a subordinate, even though that relationship had ended years before and predated his appointment to the top job at the company. The board conducted investigations internally and via external counsel to confirm the violation of the company’s policies and made the announcement June 2018.

Gates and Melinda French Gates announced their divorce earlier this month after 27 years of marriage. Several reports, including those that emerged over the weekend, said she had raised concerns over his dealings with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The New York Times had reported in 2019 that Gates had met with Epstein several times, and once stayed late at his New York townhouse. Epstein had died in jail two months prior while awaiting trial on federal charges related to sex trafficking.

Gates’s spokeswoman denied the reports. The “characterization of his meetings with Epstein and others about philanthropy is inaccurate,” she said. “The rumors and speculation surrounding Gates’ divorce are becoming increasingly absurd.”

While Gates’ dealings with Epstein weren’t a part of the scope of the Microsoft investigation, it was discussed by some board members, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public.

Stock Transfers

The split also put a spotlight on the Gates fortune, valued at about $144 billion by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, as well as their foundation.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is the largest of its kind on the planet. With more than 1,600 employees and offices around the world, it has already distributed more than $50 billion since its inception to causes like vaccine development and women’s empowerment.

Last week, Cascade Investment, the investment company created by Gates, transferred stock in Deere & Co. to his wife, bringing the total amount she’s received since they announced their divorce to more than $3 billion.

The investment vehicle transferred about 2.25 million shares worth about $851 million, according to a regulatory filing. That followed similar disclosures tied to Mexican companies Coca-Cola Femsa and Grupo Televisa and about $1.8 billion of stock in Canadian National Railway Co. and AutoNation Inc.

SOURCE: BLOOMBERG

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ANGOLAN PRESIDENT AT DEBATE ON AFRICAN ECONOMY


Luanda - The Angolan Head of State, João Lourenço, is participating Tuesday, along with several African counterparts, in the Summit on the African Economy, being held in the French capital, Paris.

The meeting, an initiative of the French government, brings together dozens of African leaders at the Grand Palais Éphémère-Champ de Mars to debate the re-launch of growth in the economies of African countries, based on the involvement of international partners and the creation of a massive support package.

At the launch of the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron's African advisors said that the meeting would aim to deepen two lines of aid.

The first is the creation of a massive support package destined for the continent to overcome the shock of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The second aims to lay the foundation for a new cycle of growth that will benefit the people of Africa, but which can also be an engine for the entire global economy.

The Summit agenda, to which ANGOP had access, indicates that the event will take place in two sessions, all in the afternoon. The first will be on "External financing and treatment of debts" and the second on "African private sector, reforms and infrastructures".

In the sessions, which will be interactive, participants will have the right to three minutes per speech.

The Summit closes with a press conference to be given by the French Head of State, Emmanuel Macron, in the presence of the Acting President of the African Union, Félix Tshisekedi.

In addition to dozens of Presidents of African nations, the leaders of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the African Development Bank, the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation, the UN, the African Union and the European Union will attend the sessions.

The IMF estimates that African countries have financing needs equivalent to $450 billion by 2025, hence the idea of increasing emergency aid to Africa.

Meetings with Macron and António Costa

On Tuesday morning, the Angolan Head of State, João Lourenço, will meet with the host, Emmanuel Macron, and the two are due to discuss issues linked to bilateral cooperation, as well as current African and world affairs.

At the beginning of the evening, after the summit, President Lourenço will meet the Prime Minister of Portugal, António Costa, who has come to the French capital to take part in the summit on Africa's economy.

ANGOLAN, SOUTH AFRICAN LEADERS ANALYSE BILATERAL COOPERATION

Luanda - Cooperation between Angola and South Africa was under analysis Monday in Paris during a meeting between the Angolan Head of State, João Lourenço, and his South African counterpart, Cyril Ramaphosa.



The two heads of state are in the French capital to take part Tuesday in the Summit on the African Economy, an initiative of the French government, with the involvement of the African Union.

During their 35-minute meeting, the two leaders reviewed the political, peace and security situation in the Southern and Central African region.

Both countries are members of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and enjoy excellent cooperation relations in the political, diplomatic, economic and cultural fields.

In recent years, the two states have strengthened bilateral relations with the signing of several trade agreements, which include cooperation in the oil sector and the abolition of visas in ordinary passports.

Angola and South Africa are the largest economies and military powers in SADC, which means they are responsible for economic integration, preservation of peace, security and stability in the region.

DR CONGO EID CLASHES: COURT HANDS DOWN DEATH SENTENCES

Twenty-nine people have been sentenced to death in the Democratic Republic of Congo in connection with Eid violence that erupted in the capital, Kinshasa.

One police officer was killed and dozens of others were injured in clashes between rival Muslim groups.

They had gathered to mark the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, but fell out over who should lead the event.

The death penalty is no longer applied in DR Congo and those found guilty will serve life sentences instead.

Trial broadcast live

The police had used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse thousands of people who gathered outside the Martyrs' Stadium in Kinshasa on Thursday for the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Some of the officers injured in the violence are still in a critical condition, the authorities say.

The clashes were fuelled by a leadership dispute between two camps within the Muslim community.

Forty-one people were arrested at the scene and were put on trial on Friday.

The court session was broadcast live on television and went on all night.

There were 31 convictions - 29 people were given the death sentence and two received five-year jail terms.

Given the speed with which the sentences were passed there are bound to be concerns over the fairness of the trial, says BBC World Service Africa editor Will Ross.

COVID-19: ANGOLA REPORTS 18 DEATHS, 280 RECOVERIES

Luanda- Angola registered, for the first time, 18 deaths of Covid-19 since March 2020, the Secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda said on Monday.



According to the Government official, who was speaking at the usual session to update on the pandemic, the deaths, which involve 12 male and 6 female patients aged between 30 and 81 years, were registered in Luanda, with 11, in Huíla, with 4 and 3 in Cabinda.

Among those recovered, he said, 253 reside in Luanda, 20 in Huíla, 5 in Cabinda, 1 in Bié and 1 in Benguela.

The new cases, totalling 150, were diagnosed in Luanda, with 131, Huambo, with 14, Huíla, with 4, Bié, with 3, Benguela with 1 and Zaire with 1.

Among the new cases, whose ages range from 8 months to 83 years, are 92 men and 63 women.

There are 284 patients in hospitalization centres, while 40 are in institutional quarantine centres and 1,500 contacts of positive cases are under follow-up by medical authorities.

The laboratories have processed 1,115 samples, with a daily positivity rate of 13.8 per cent.

The overall picture indicates the registration of 30,791 positive cases, with 677 deaths, 25,995 recovered and 4,119 active. Of the active ones, 23 are critical, 42 severe, 165 moderate, 54 mild and 3,835 asymptomat

WORLD MARKED 156 YEARS OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS



Luanda - The World celebrated Monday (May 17) the 156th anniversary of interaction and social approach through Information Communications Technology (ICT).

Angola has been full member of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), since the 1970s.

The World Telecommunication and Information Society Day was established on May 17, 1865, following the creation of International Telegraphic Union and the signing of the first International Telegraphic Convention.

Sixty-seven years later, starting in 1932, the International Telegraphic Union was renamed the International Telecommunication Union - ITU, the United Nations specialized agency for this sector.

The date aims to celebrate progress in information technologies and draw people's attention to the changes that have taken place in society, lately with the power of the internet and other forms of telecommunication, reflected in the sharing of information worldwide and in the interconnection of the globe.

Onr the date, the Ministry of Telecommunications, Information Technologies and Social Communication (MINTTICS) reiterated the county’s commitment to the continuous improvement of the provision of public and basic telephony and internet access services, he described as crucial for process of modernizing governance.

In the message, signed by minister Manuel Homem, the Ministerial Department considers the sector as essential, also in terms of social and economic development and social inclusion.

In view of the current moment, marked by Covid-19, MINTTICS encourages professionals in the sector to continue to work with courage and dedication, to ensure the services of electronic communications and to strengthen the prevention and fight against this pandemic, with the support of technological means available.

To the users, the ministry appeals to the responsible use of digital services and social networks, stressing that the International Telecommunications and Information Society Day represents an evaluation moment, both for society as a whole and for electronic communications operators in particular.

"The Angolan Executive is aware of the primary role that Telecommunications and Information Technologies in the social context and the national economy and recognises the sector as a fundamental lever in the process of socio-economic development, in the fight against poverty and in the pursuit of the Millennium goals", he said.

Official data from the Ministry of Telecommunications, Information Technology and Social Communication indicate that Angola has more than 15 million mobile phone subscribers, 7 million internet users and more than 2 million pay-TV users.

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