1st Cambodian American Mayor in US Takes Office

A refugee who survived the Khmer Rouge’s brutal rule has become the first Cambodian American mayor in the United States.

 

Sokhary Chau, a city councilor in Lowell, Massachusetts, was unanimously picked by his council peers to assume the legislative body’s top post on Monday. He also became the city’s first Asian American mayor.

 

“God bless America, right? I was a refugee, now I’m mayor of a major city in Massachusetts,” the 49-year-old, who works for the U.S. Social Security Administration, said after being officially sworn in. “I don’t know if that could happen anywhere else in the world. I’m still trying to absorb it.”

 

Chau, in his inaugural remarks, reflected on his family’s perilous escape from Cambodia and the former industrial city of Lowell’s deep immigrant roots.

 

Located on the Merrimack River near the New Hampshire state line, Lowell was an early center of America’s textile industry, drawing waves of European and Latin American immigrants over generations.

 

Today, the city of more than 115,000 residents is nearly 25% Asian and home to the nation’s second-largest Cambodian community.

 

“As a proud Cambodian American, I am standing on the shoulders of many immigrants who came before me to build this city,” Chau said Monday before a crowd that included his wife and two teenage sons.

 

Chau recounted how his father, a captain in the Cambodian army, was executed by the communist Khmer Rouge in 1975 during the country’s civil war.

He said his mother, who died last year, managed to keep her seven children alive for four years, surviving “landmines, jungles, hunger, sickness and uncertainty” to deliver them safely to the U.S.

 

Chau said America may not have “streets paved with gold” as his family imagined while living in refugee camps, but it’s a land where democracy is possible because of “systems of checks and balances” and principles like fairness, equality and transparency.

 

In an interview later, Chau said he was around 9 years old when his family initially settled in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with the help of the Catholic Church — an experience that prompted the family to convert to Christianity.

 

They made their way to Lowell’s growing Cambodian community in the mid-1980s, where some of his older siblings immediately set to work in local factories.

 

Chau, however, continued his studies and eventually earned a scholarship to Phillips Academy, a exclusive boarding school in nearby Andover. He went on to Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he studied economics and political science, also on a scholarship.

 

Before running for office, Chau said he worked mostly in financial services, including running a mortgage lending company in Lowell with his wife before the housing market crashed in the early 2000s.

 

Chau’s election follows the ascendance of new Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, whose parents immigrated to the U.S. from Taiwan. She was sworn in last November as Boston’s first woman and first person of color elected to the post.

 

Chau is also among the growing list of Cambodian American officeholders in Massachusetts: at least two other city councilors, a school committee member and two state lawmakers, all from Lowell, according to Vannak Theng, president of the Cambodian Mutual Assistance Association of Greater Lowell.

 

But while Cambodian Americans served on local boards and state legislatures nationwide, none were elected mayor, according to the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies, a Washington nonprofit that helps Asian Pacific Americans pursue public office and maintains a listing of current officeholders.

 

In fact, Long Beach, California, home to the nation’s largest Cambodian community, only elected its first Cambodian American city councilor in 2020, the organization noted.

 

Chau’s election also comes on the heels of a federal court lawsuit that argued Lowell’s election process violated the voting rights of minority residents, who comprise nearly 50% of its population.

 

A recent settlement in the case prompted the city to change its election process, starting with the 2021 elections. The result was the city’s most diverse class of officeholders, said Oren Sellstrom, litigation director at Lawyers for Civil Rights, a Boston group that brought the 2017 suit.

 

“Just four years ago, the city’s elected officials were all white and largely unresponsive to the needs of the city’s communities of color,” Sellstrom said. “This historic change in the city’s power structure would never have been possible under the old electoral system.”

 

To be sure, the mayoral office in Lowell is largely ceremonial.

 

The city, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Boston, is run by a city manager picked by the council. The mayor is effectively the council president, leading its meetings and also serving as chair of the city’s school committee.

 

Still, Chau acknowledged his election’s significance to the wider Cambodian diaspora, calling on others to step up in their communities.

 

“We can no longer be just victims,” he said as he closed his inaugural remarks. “It is our time now to be leaders and to succeed.”

 

 

Source: Voice of America

6.9-Magnitude Quake Strikes Off Japan’s Ogasawara Islands, No Tsunami Warning Issued

TOKYO – An earthquake, with a magnitude of 6.9, early today, struck, off Japan’s Ogasawara Islands of Tokyo Prefecture, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA).

 

The temblor occurred at around 6:09 a.m. local time, with its epicentre at a latitude of 27.1 degrees north and a longitude of 142.5 degrees east, and at a depth of 70 km.

 

The quake logged five upper in some parts of Ogasawara Islands, on the Japanese seismic intensity scale, which peaks at seven.

 

So far, no tsunami warning has been issued.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Maldives’ Tourist Arrivals Increased 138 Percent In 2021

MALE – Tourist arrivals in the Maldives increased 138 percent in 2021, compared with 2020, state media, citing data from the Ministry of Tourism, reported here, yesterday.

 

State-owned news reported that, the Maldives recorded 1.3 million tourist arrivals in 2021, compared to 55,494 tourist arrivals in 2020.

 

The data from the Tourism Ministry showed that, India was the largest source of tourists to Maldives in 2021, accounting for 22.1 percent of all arrivals. Russia and Britain accounted for 16.8 percent and 7.2 percent of arrivals, respectively.

 

Meanwhile, Senior Executive Director of the Ministry of Tourism, Ali Razzan, was quoted by state-owned news as saying that, the fifth Tourism Master Plan for the country, will be drafted in three months.

 

The plan will reportedly focus on continuing recovery from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Tourism accounts for over 28 percent of the Maldives’ gross domestic product.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

India’s Merchandise Export Rose 37 Percent In Dec

NEW DELHI– India’s merchandise export in Dec, 2021, stood at 37.29 billion U.S. dollars, the highest ever monthly achievement, showing an increase of 37.0 percent over the same month last year, showed official figures issued yesterday by the federal commerce ministry.

 

The export figure stood at 27.22 billion U.S. dollars in Dec, 2020.

 

Compared to 27.11 billion U.S. dollars’ worth of merchandise export in Dec, 2019, last month’s exports were an increase of 37.55 percent.

 

According to the ministry’s figures, the country’s merchandise export in Apr-Dec, 2021 was 299.74 billion U.S. dollars, an increase of 48.85 percent over 201.37 billion U.S. dollars in Apr-Dec, 2020, and an increase of 25.80 percent over 238.27 billion U.S. dollars in Apr-Dec, 2019.

 

India’s merchandise import in Dec, 2021, was 59.27 billion U.S. dollars, an increase of 38.06 percent over 42.93 billion U.S. dollars in Dec, 2020, and an increase of 49.7 percent over 39.59 billion U.S. dollars in Dec, 2019.

 

India’s merchandise import in Apr-Dec, 2021 was 443.71 billion U.S. dollars, an increase of 69.27 percent over 262.13 billion U.S. dollars in Apr-Dec, 2020, and an increase of 21.84 percent over 364.18 billion U.S. dollars in Apr-Dec, 2019.

 

The trade deficit in Dec, 2021 was 21.99 billion U.S. dollars, while it was 143.97 billion U.S. dollars during Apr-Dec, 2021.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Malaysia Reports 2,690 New COVID-19 Infections, 28 More Deaths

KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia reported another 2,690 COVID-19 infections as of midnight, bringing the total to 2,767,044, according to the health ministry.

 

Some 300 of the new cases are imported, with 2,390 being local transmissions, data released on the ministry’s website showed.

 

Another 28 deaths have been reported, bringing the death toll to 31,560.

 

Another 3,535 patients have been released after recovery, bringing the total number of cured and discharged to 2,695,751.

 

There are 39,733 active cases, with 265 in intensive care and 147 in need of assisted breathing.

 

The country reported 208,327 vaccine doses administered yesterday alone and some 79.7 percent of the population have received at least one dose, 78.5 percent are fully vaccinated and 20.3 percent have received boosters.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Indonesia Extends Mobility Restrictions Outside Java, Bali Till Jan 17

JAKARTA– The Indonesian government decided to extend the policy on public mobility restrictions, locally known as PPKM, outside the islands of Java and Bali, from today to Jan 17, 2022, although COVID-19 cases continue to decline, a senior minister said yesterday.

 

The number of districts/cities with PPKM level 1, currently increased from 191 to 227, those with level 2 dropped from 169 to 148, and those with level 3 decreased from 26 to 11, and no districts/cities were on status 4, coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, Airlangga Hartarto, told a virtual press conference yesterday.

 

PPKM level 1 means the vaccination of the first dose reaches at least 70 percent and that for the elderly aged over 60 years is at least 60 percent,

 

PPKM level 2 means that the number of positive cases of COVID-19 is between 20 and 50 persons per 100,000 people per week, level 3 is when the number of positive cases ranges between 50 and 150 persons per 100,000 people per week, and level 4 is when the number of positive cases is more than 150 cases of COVID-19 per 100,000 people

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK