Page 2 n THE ASIAN REPORTER ASIA / PACIFIC September 3, 2018 Nissan launches China-focused electric car GUANGZHOU, China (AP) — A Nissan electric sedan that is the first in a wave of dozens of planned lower-cost electric models being developed by global auto brands for China will soon roll off an assembly line. The Sylphy Zero Emission has started production at a factory operated by Nissan Motor Co. and a Chinese partner, Dongfeng Motor Group. Automakers, including General Motors and Volkswagen, plan to release electric models designed for China starting this year. The government is pressing the industry to accelerate development of the technology. Brands including Nissan, Tesla, GM, and Audi sell imported electrics in China but their high price limits their appeal. The Sylphy is based on Nissan’s electric Leaf. The Sylphy costs 166,000 yuan ($25,850) after government subsidies, or just more than half the sticker price of the Leaf. Indonesian officials defend parade of veiled kids with guns JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian officials are defending a street parade that involved veiled kindergarteners carrying replica weapons, but police say they’ll arrest the person who uploaded a viral video of the event to Facebook. The video of children dressed head-to-toe in black marching with wooden guns has caused a sensation in Indonesia, which in May suffered one of its worst attacks in years when militants used their children as suicide bombers in the second-largest city, Surabaya. The parade was one of the thousands held across Indonesia to mark independence. Probolinggo police chief Alfian Nurrizal told The Associated Press that police are investigating who uploaded the video. He said it may have been edited to convey the wrong impression. Local media reported that education minister Muhajir Effendy said the parade was misinterpreted. China’s Didi suspends one carpooling service after killing BEIJING (AP) — Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing has fired two executives and will suspend one of its carpooling services nationwide after a woman was allegedly raped and killed by a driver in eastern China, the company said. The moves come as the country’s largest online ride-hailing platform scrambles to address public complaints it isn’t doing enough to ensure the safety of its users, who it says book 30 million rides daily. The killing of the female passenger was the latest violent crime involving a Didi driver, only three months after another Didi driver allegedly killed a flight attendant. Police in the city of Yueqing in Zhejiang province said they arrested a Didi driver who admitted to raping and killing the 20-year-old woman. A day later, Didi Chuxing apologized, saying it has “inescapable responsibility” for the incident. The victim had used the carpooling service in the afternoon and after getting into a car, sent a text message to her friends calling for help, police said. Didi Chuxing halted its “Hitch” service, it said, referring to a carpooling service, one of several ride-hailing options available on Didi’s platform. Duterte faces new “crimes against humanity” complaint MANILA, The Philippines (AP) — Relatives of several people slain in the Philippine president’s anti-drug campaign have asked the International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute him for alleged crimes against humanity, in the second such request for a ruling on thousands of deaths that have occurred during the crackdown. Lawyer Edre Olalia said a complaint against President Rodrigo Duterte was sent to an ICC prosecutor by e-mail that accuses him of ordering, inciting, or tolerating the drug killings from the start of his presidency in mid-2016 to August. Olalia said a similar complaint against Duterte filed by a Filipino lawyer before the ICC last year focuses on killings during an earlier crackdown by Duterte when he was a mayor. Duterte denies condoning extrajudicial killings and has moved to withdraw the Philippines from the ICC. China denies visa for BuzzFeed writer in likely retaliation BEIJING (AP) — China has refused to renew the journalist visa for an American correspondent for BuzzFeed News in what appears to be punishment for her reporting on topics considered sensitive by the authorities. Megha Rajagopalan tweeted that the foreign ministry declined to issue her a new visa in May. She said the ministry indicated it was a procedural issue and that it was unclear why. Asked about Rajagopalan’s case, the ministry responded with a statement saying only that it handled such matters “according to laws and regulations.” During her six years in China, Rajagopalan had reported extensively on human-rights abuses and the plight of China’s Uighur (pronounced WEE-gur) Muslim minority, among other subjects. China’s government sometimes delays or refuses to issue or renew visas for journalists if it is displeased with their reporting, their media outlets, or both. Those include a reporter for the Al Jazeera television network who was forced to leave the country in 2012 when her visa expired, and a correspondent for France’s L’Obs magazine who had to leave in 2015. Rajagopalan has taken up a new position with BuzzFeed reporting on technology and human-rights based in the Middle East. In a statement, the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of China said it found Rajagopalan’s treatment “extremely regrettable and unacceptable for a government that repeatedly insists it welcomes foreign media to cover the country.” The club further said, “We are attempting to get clarity from the Foreign Ministry on its reasoning for effectively ejecting a credentialed foreign journalist from China.” CURSORY CATCH-UP. Identification cards for Ham Sung-chan, left, and his wife Kim Hyung-ae for the Separated Family Reunion meeting are shown by Ham during an interview at his house in Dongducheon, South Korea. After nearly 70 years of a separation forced by a devastating 1950-1953 war that killed and injured millions and cemented the division of the Korean Peninsula into North and South, Ham, 93, and his North Korean brother only got a total of 12 hours together. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon) “Way too short” — A 93-year-old meets his North Korean brother By Kim Tong-Hyung The Associated Press ONGDUCHEON, South Korea — Ninety-three-year-old Ham Sung- chan’s eyes widen with excitement as he describes the shock and euphoria of reu- niting with his baby brother, now 79, during three days of family reunions in North Korea. But there’s a deep and bitter regret, too, and it stems from a simple bit of math: After nearly 70 years of a separation forced by a devastating 1950-1953 war that killed and injured millions and cemented the division of the Korean Peninsula into North and South, Ham and his North Korean brother only got a total of 12 hours together. Ham was one of the 197 South Koreans who visited North Korea’s scenic Diamond Mountain resort for the first set of rare reunions with relatives in the North. The heart-wrenching images of elderly Koreans embracing each other for the last time continued in a second set of reunions involving around 300 South Koreans days later. “There’s a large sense of dejection that has set in,” said Ham, who described the details of his trip in an Associated Press interview in his home in Dongducheon, north of Seoul. “The time we spent together was too short, way too short. It wasn’t a week; it wasn’t 10 days. Just after we met, we had to depart.” Here’s how Ham described the brief but intense time he spent with his North Korean brother after so many decades apart: Sleepless in Sokcho Born in eastern North Korea, Ham was in D his 20s, selling fish and cosmetics in the South when war broke out in June 1950 and pre- vented him from returning to his hometown. Ham thought his mother was still in the North until he met her in the South in 1983, several years before her death. But he did not expect any of the three brothers he’d left in North Korea to be alive. If they weren’t killed by the war or North Korea’s devastating 1990s-era famine, he thought they would have died of old age. One of his brothers, however, 79-year-old Ham Dong Chan, was frail but still alive and eager to meet his oldest brother. But Ham’s joy when he learned of this soon gave way to anxiety. His mind raced with endless questions. Who’s this person they say is my brother? Will he resemble the skinny, quiet kid I remember? What if I don’t recognize him? Did he have a difficult life? Does he have grand- children? Ham’s two daughters and son bought gifts for their uncle, filling four large bags with underwear, long johns, duck-down parkas, medicine, vitamins, sugar, candy, instant noodles, and five boxes of “Choco Pies,” a brand of South Korea-made chocolate-covered cakes known to be popular among North Koreans. The day before the reunions, Ham, his wife, and younger daughter drove to a resort in the South Korean coastal town of Sokcho where the South Korean participants spent a night before crossing into North Korea by bus. Red Cross officials arranged health check- ups for the participants, who were told not to Continued on page 4 PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND SAVE MONEY Asian Currency Exchange Rates Kelaiah Erickson Units per U.S. dollar as of 8/31 (Key-lay or Mrs. Erickson) Funeral & Cemetery Arrangement Specialist (971) 407-3243 Kelaiah.Erickson@DignityMemorial.com Lincoln Memorial Park & Funeral Home 11801 S.E. Mt. Scott Blvd. Portland, OR 97086 h en . nne n. n Volunteer to help Portland area seniors get the groceries they need. Learn more at: StoretoDoorofOregon.org/volunteer/ . Bangladesh Taka· · Cambodian Riel · · China Renminbi · · Fijian Dollar · · · · Hong Kong Dollar · Indian Rupee · · · · Indonesian Rupiah · Iranian Rial · · · · Japanese Yen · · · Laos New Kip · · · Malaysian Ringgit · Nepal Rupee · · · · Pakistani Rupee · · Papua N.G. Kina · · Philippine Peso· · · Russian Ruble · · · Saudi Riyal· · · · · Singapore Dollar · · South Korean Won · Sri Lankan Rupee · Taiwan Dollar · · · Thai Baht · · · · · Vietnam Dong · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 83.85 4051.9 6.8298 2.0944 7.8484 70.982 14801 42018 110.99 8503.9 4.1316 113.84 122.18 3.263 53.466 67.646 3.7693 1.3712 1116.2 161.49 30.848 32.736 23312