Belt and Road becomes ball and chain for Chinese construction workers

They signed up at job fairs to work as carpenters, bricklayers, plumbers and painters at a housing project in the North African country of Algeria and were promised round-trip air fare, room and board, and better wages than they’d earned in China. They thought working for companies serving China’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was a safe bet.

When the migrant workers from Sichuan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Henan, and Hebei–China’s relatively poorer inland provinces–arrived in the country, however, they soon found themselves living in sheds without air conditioning in desert heat and facing a nightmare of withheld wages, mysterious extra fees, confiscated passports, and dismal food. Many are trapped in Algeria.

Chinese labor lawyers say their treatment not only besmirches China’s reputation, undermining the goals of the nearly 10-year-old Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) of infrastructure projects aimed at boosting Beijing’s global profile, but also constitutes human trafficking under international conventions China has signed. The BRI is seen as Chinese President Xi Jinping’s signature international policy.

Following up on tips received from workers who’ve been stranded some 6,000 miles (9,200 km) from home, RFA Mandarin interviewed numerous workers employed in Algeria’s Souk Ahras Province, Chinese diplomats, labor lawyers and an executive of Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd, the eastern China-based company the laborers accuse of luring them to Algeria under false pretenses.

“When I came here through an agent, I realized the situation is not good. It is worse than in China,” said Worker A, whose name has been withheld to protect him and his family from retaliation.

“The contract is good for two years, and the pay listed on the contract is more than 10,000 yuan ($1,480) per month––between 15,000 ($2,220) and 20,000 yuan ($2,960). After landing here, I made less than 10,000 yuan ($1,480) a month,” he told RFA.

“The pay is far from what was promised,” said a second man, identified as Worker B.  “It is worse than what we earned in China. Here the monthly pay on average is 3,000 yuan ($444).”

When he and fellow workers “arrived here and found out that the situation was far from ideal, we wanted to go home,” said Worker A.

“We spoke with the company, and the company said ‘no.’ They said ‘Because you already signed the contract, if you go home now, that is a breach of contract.’”

According to Worker A, Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd. told the workers to “ask your family to wire 28,000 yuan ($4,145) over to pay for the penalty. After you pay the penalty, then you can go home.”

He told RFA wages were only paid every six months, with 70 percent paid, and the other 30 percent withheld until the workers fulfilled their two-year contracts.

That pay arrangement meant the workers “usually have no money to live on” and had to borrow advances against their wages.

“In the process, the workers were ripped off by other costs,” added Worker A, who said the company profited by loaning money to them at an exchange rate to the local Algerian Dinar currency that was about half the actual rate.

A Chinese worker walks by a building at a construction site in Algeria's Souk Ahras province. Credit: A Chinese worker.
A Chinese worker walks by a building at a construction site in Algeria’s Souk Ahras province. Credit: A Chinese worker.

‘Pig food’ and hot sheds

Worker B said it took a strike by workers in September 2021 to get the company to pay the 70 percent they were due in the middle of that year.

He said the workers were told by the company: “Feel free to sue. We’re not afraid. Just sue us, go back to China to sue us.”

But a third worker involved in the dispute said that path was impossible for poor workers to take

“The lawsuit costs money. To hire someone costs money. If you file a complaint in China, you’re dragging your family in too. Who can afford to sue? said Worker C.

A chief reason the workers had to borrow money was to cook their own meals because the three daily meals they were promised under their contracts was inedible.

“To say it bluntly, the food was worse than those given to pigs. Sometimes the food was just impossible to eat,” said Worker B.

“In the winter, they gave you marinated cucumber salad or marinated tomatoes, plus two eggs per person. That’s it. Or two eggplants each person,” he said.

“The food we ate was mixed with sand and gravel. The noodles were black,” added Worker B.

“Workers in many construction sites that this company operates received the same treatment. Why? The company does not want to cook the food well, because if it’s delicious, you’d eat more. By offering lousy food, you’d pay out of pocket to buy your own food and cook your own meals,” Worker A surmised. 

The make matters worse, Worker A said, the workforce had to “live in regular sheds, with no air-conditioning, no matter how hot it is.”

“In the summer, the temperature goes as high as 41 or 42 Celsius (105 or 107 Fahrenheit),” he added.

Food provided to workers by Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd. ay its construction site in Algeria. Credit: A worker
Food provided to workers by Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd. ay its construction site in Algeria. Credit: A worker

Overpriced plane tickets, improper visas

Another grievance shared by the workers in Algeria who spoke to RFA in recent months was the failure to provide return airfare to China as promised.

After checking with the Chinese Embassy in Algiers, workers who were trying to go home were told that tickets to China ran about 22,000 yuan.

“The boss has told them that a flight ticket costs ¥42,000 yuan, and we have to pay our own ticket. He wanted us to pay by ourselves,” said Worker D.

“It seemed that the ticket was around ¥22,000 yuan, and he charged you more than ¥30,000, said Worker E. “’Immigration clearance fee,’ they said,” he added.

Worker D explained that because the company applied for business visas for the workers, when the workers return to China, they have to go through departure procedures at the Algerian immigration, police bureaus, and the courts. That is the so-called “immigration clearance fee.”

“When we were recruited, we applied and submitted our passports to the recruiting agents. The agents then handed our passports to the company, which applied for the visas for us,” said Worker D.

“Supposedly we should apply for workers’ visas, which cost more but allow you to stay for one or two years. But no, the company applied for the business visa, which only allows a stay of three months,” he added.

“I asked the company to give me a work visa, but when we came, we got business visas. Then we became illegal workers. Now we have to pay out of pocket to ‘clear immigration’ and for our flight tickets,” said Worker E.

The company also took away the workers’ passports, several of them said.

“As soon as I stepped out of the airport in Algeria upon arrival, my passport was taken away. They said workers here have to buy local insurance, and they took away our passports and our IDs,” said Worker D.

The boss “keeps our passports with him, and once he has your passport, he has you,” added Worker D, who said eight out of 10 workers eventually ended up with compensation disputes.

Construction workers' quarters at a construction site in Algeria. Credit: A worker
Construction workers’ quarters at a construction site in Algeria. Credit: A worker

‘There is no such thing’

RFA reached out to Sun Zongting, the general manager of Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co., Ltd., which had entered the Algerian market in 2013 to provide labor services, asking him about the workers’ complaints.

“There is no such thing. Where does this come from?” said Sun, who also denied the firm was stopping workers from returning to China.

“The reason why they didn’t return to China was because there were no flights available. With regards to payments, this is how it’s being done in Algeria. We do not owe the workers any wages.”

Pressed on the workers’ numerous complaints, Sun asked RFA: “Who said that? Give me phone numbers of those who said that. We can verify.”

“On the third or the fourth day after my arrival, I called the (Chinese) embassy. I told the embassy staff that I felt I have been conned, and that all my documents, my ID and my passports have been taken away. I asked the embassy to help me return to China,” said Worker D.

“The staff then ask me whether I’d signed a contract. I said I did when I was in Beijing. The person at the embassy told me: ‘If you are sick or if he does not pay you for your work, you can call me, but in your situation, now that you’ve come here, and you’ve signed a labor agreement…’

“The embassy staff said they did not dare to let me go,” said Worker D.

Worker D said he and his fellow workers see the embassy as working with the company.

“If you want to go to the consulate for help, for example, when a couple of people go, they’d ask you which company you work for and what your boss’s name is. Then they notify your boss. The boss then comes by car, and he sweet talks you back,” he said.

“This is what happens when two or three people go to the consulate for help. If there are more people that go, say more than a dozen of them or even two dozen, maybe the consulate will help us. Yet when there are only so few of us, it doesn’t work.”

A worker's contract to work in Algeria for the Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd. Credit: A worker
A worker’s contract to work in Algeria for the Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co. Ltd. Credit: A worker

Powerless embassy

A staffer at China’s embassy in Algiers confirmed that disgruntled workers who spoke to RFA had indeed asked for help and that the mission had helped negotiate some return plane tickets to China.

“The Embassy has helped them negotiate with the company many times, but the Embassy has no managerial power over the company to enforce the agreements, so we cannot force the company to pay up,” the embassy staffer told RFA.

 “Also, the Embassy does not have any jurisdictional powers, and that’s the reason why the embassy is unable to get involved in labor disputes. Therefore, we have asked them to resolve their disputes through reasonable and legal channels in China,” added the staffer.

“We can of course speak with the company, but whether the company listens to us is another matter.” 

Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co., Ltd. had tried to deny it had anything to do with the BRI, but RFA found that the affordable housing project was identified in as part of the BRI framework on the website of Beijing Urban Construction, a state firm, which had also built the Algeria Opera House, a 500-unit public commercial housing tract and a fiber optic cable plant.

Worker D told RFA that the affordable housing project contract was awarded to the 14th Bureau of China Railway, the 17th Bureau of China Railway, China Hydropower, Beijing Urban Construction and other state-owned enterprises, and that Shandong Jiaqiang Real Estate Co., Ltd. was a private subcontractor.

“When the company gets the job, it’s gone through dozens of hands, with only 300,000 to 400,000 yuan left in the budget. Think about it: The profits must have been taken by the state-owned enterprises on the top of the food chain,” said Worker D.

“There isn’t much profit left. What does he do when the profit margin is slim? He exploits the workers. Basically, it’s just like China: Peeling the layers.

“The state-own enterprises peeled away one layer and subcontract the job to small businesses. The owners of small businesses then peeled away another layer, and as a result, we workers couldn’t get our money,” added Worker D.

“Some companies do have the money but won’t pay you. They know that once they’ve conned you over here, you can’t do anything. Whomever you might call for help, that help will not come.”

Lawyers see human trafficking

Peng Yan––a prominent attorney in China with 30 years specializing in state-owned enterprises, private enterprises, and foreign enterprises–told RFA the workers appeared to be in the right in the dispute in Algeria.

“If the employer breached the contract first, then based on the circumstances, the workers have the right to terminate the contract. Since the company is the party that breached the contract, the company should bear the costs of roundtrip airfares for their returns to China,” Peng said.

Yu Ping, former director of the China Office of the American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative, said the workers’ complaint is a serious issue that may even entail human trafficking under the 2000 United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, to which China is a signatory.

“Under the Convention, human trafficking is defined as the act of recruiting, transporting, receiving, and sheltering human beings to another country, as actions that involve coercion, fraud, deception, and as actions whose purpose is for profits,” he told RFA.

“If you apply these three criteria to the case, then you can see that the actions of the recruiting agency, the state-owned enterprise, and the private contractor all constitute the internationally recognized definition of human trafficking,” said Yu.

“In fact, even the recruiting agent is part of this chain of human trafficking, an accomplice, or even a prime suspect. They cannot push off the responsibility to others,” he added.

Yu said the aggrieved construction workers should be able to seek legal redress back in China, which has provisions covering offenses listed as internationally recognized crimes in the UN Convention.

“Even if they lack the financial means to do so, there is an emerging channel called the ‘legal assistance system,’ in which some non-profit legal organizations or pro bono lawyers will go to court for them,” he said.

Yu also recommended that China “establish a regulatory system in the BRI program, which has oversight on the projects and the power to curtail illegal operations.”

Failing to do so, he said, will negate the international influence and goodwill that China aims to generate with the BRI program, and “on the contrary, provide opportunities for lawbreakers to make illegal profits, while China’s reputation is tarnished.”

For the workers caught broke and without plane tickets and passports in Algeria, however, the legal and international issues pale next to the personal cost of being in limbo and missing the weddings of their children or the funerals of elderly parents.

“It’s been more than two years, two-and-a-half years. I don’t know when I can go back. I fulfilled the contract, but it has become a life sentence,” said Worker B.

Translated by Min Eu. Written and edited by Paul Eckert.

Shanghai data breach exposes suppression of ‘white-hat’ security research in China

Ren, a U.S. citizen who has lived in China for decades, didn’t realize she was the victim of what could be the biggest data breach in Chinese history until she got a call from RFA.

She held her breath as, one by one, her ID card number, date of birth, entry and exit information and home address were read out to her from the massive data leak from the Shanghai police computer system, and confirmed that they were all correct.

Ren was left reeling at the public exposure of so much of her personal information, but also with a sense of helplessness; that there was little she could do about it.

“It feels so weird and creepy at the same time, as if all your personal information are just out there,” she said. “I also think about my [COVID-19 test results], health code, everything related to me is tied to my passport number. Are they all public?”

“What can I do now? I can’t change any information, that is my identity in China, and it was leaked from the government. It’s annoying, alarming, but I just can’t do anything about it,” she said.

Security experts estimate that Ren’s details, like those of around one billion other people, were exposed online as early as April 2021.

But it wasn’t until June 30 that the leak came to the attention of the media, after a hacker forum user with the handle ChinaDan posted to offer for sale 23 TB of data from the Shanghai police department that included sensitive personal information on a billion people, for 10 bitcoin (around U.S.$200,000).

ChinaDan didn’t specify how they came by the data; only that it was hosted on Alibaba Cloud.

But they uploaded three folders containing some 750,000 database entries by way of a sample for potential buyers, among which RFA found Ren’s information.

As well as names, photos, phone numbers, street addresses, age, gender and ID number of victims, the data files on offer included people’s hometowns — an important part of law enforcement and access to public services under the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP)’s household registration, or “hukou,” system — details of business trips, and even instructions left for delivery couriers.

The hack included citizens’ ID card numbers, which are required for many things in China, including COVID-19 tests. Credit: Reuters
The hack included citizens’ ID card numbers, which are required for many things in China, including COVID-19 tests. Credit: Reuters

Shortcomings on data protection

China is one of the few countries in the world to enforce total real-name registration requirements for online services, which critics say enables the authoritarian regime’s sweeping surveillance of its people.

Now, the Shanghai leak has exposed massive shortcomings in the way the authorities protect all the data they hold on anyone living in China, not just Chinese nationals.

RFA found at least 55 other U.S. citizens in the third folder of people who had come to the attention of police, mostly because they didn’t register with their local police station within 24 hours of arriving in China.

This has been a requirement for all foreigners arriving in the country since the Exit and Entry Administration Law took effect in 2013.

“If you want to live in China, you have no choice but to submit this information again and again,” Ms. Ren told RFA.

A U.S. State Department spokesman told RFA in background comments that the department was aware of reports of a data leak in Shanghai, but declined to comment further due to privacy concerns.

The State Department’s information page for China warns U.S. citizens that their movements will be monitored.

“Security personnel carefully watch foreign visitors and may place you under surveillance,” it says.

It warns that hotel rooms, meeting rooms, offices, cars, taxis, telephones, internet usage, digital payments, and fax machines used by overseas nationals could all be monitored on site or remotely, while personal possessions in hotel rooms, including computers, may be searched without their consent or knowledge.

“Security personnel have been known to detain and deport U.S. citizens sending private electronic messages critical of the Chinese government,” the page says.

Neither the Shanghai government, nor the police department, nor the municipal branch of the Cyberspace Administration had responded to requests for comment at the time of writing.

The U.S. State Department's information page for China warns U.S. citizens that 'security personnel carefully watch foreign visitors and may place you under surveillance.' Credit: AFP
The U.S. State Department’s information page for China warns U.S. citizens that ‘security personnel carefully watch foreign visitors and may place you under surveillance.’ Credit: AFP

‘Reliable population data’

The leaked folder of data relating to people who have come to the attention of the Shanghai police department includes cases of fraud, theft, domestic violence, child abuse and rape.

But it also includes details of two people who reposted or posted tweets relating to China’s leaders on Twitter, getting around China’s Great Firewall of internet censorship.

Both were shocked and worried when contacted by RFA, and had no idea their details had been leaked.

“How did you get this number?” one asked. “Who are you, and where did you get this [information]?” the other wanted to know.

RFA dialed some phone numbers from the samples at random, in a bid to confirm at least some of the details were correct.

Some numbers were no longer valid, while some people hung up the moment they heard about the data breach.

At least 10 verified to RFA that their information was correct.

One woman said she had been getting two or three calls a day from unknown numbers in the days immediately following the data breach.

Some internet users have been confirming the authenticity of the data using phone number and name searches via the Alipay digital payments system.

Chinese population statistics researcher Yi Fuxian of the University of Wisconsin-Madison said the Shanghai data sample posted by ChinaDan was highly dispersed and random, covering almost every county in China, and were in line with data from the 2010 census.

“It shows that the quality of the sampling is very high, and that overall, this is reliable population data,” Yi said.

Online security experts told RFA that the leak came as no surprise to them, but were cautious about commenting further.

“These three sets of data are different from previous [leaks] because they contain police intelligence,” a Hong Kong-based technology company founder surnamed Wong told RFA.

This means that the data could already have been sold off to a private buyer, before ChinaDan offered it for general sale.

“For hackers, the most valuable thing isn’t to sell the data publicly, but [privately,] without the hacked platform knowing anything about it,” he said. “Then they can use it to do something illegal and lucrative.”

“Once that’s happened, then the first layer of value has been used up … and it will get cheaper and cheaper over time,” Wong said.

A customer shows her Alipay electronic payment confirmation to an employee at a beverage shop in Beijing in 2020. Some internet users have been confirming the authenticity of the stolen data using phone number and name searches via the Alipay system. Credit: AFP
A customer shows her Alipay electronic payment confirmation to an employee at a beverage shop in Beijing in 2020. Some internet users have been confirming the authenticity of the stolen data using phone number and name searches via the Alipay system. Credit: AFP

Ransom note

The leak intelligence website LeakIX has found that data from the Shanghai police database had been exposed as early as April 2021.

When the programmer was using the ElasticSearch server to build a big data search system for the Shanghai Public Security Bureau, he backed up the data to Alibaba Cloud, but turned it into a data visualization website in error, making all the information downloadable or viewable through Kibana.

Bob Diachenko, founder of cybersecurity research firm Security Discovery, has said via Twitter that his company was concerned about the exposure of this set of data in April this year, and no password was set until the database was hacked in June.

ChinaDan’s “for sale” notice was in fact a ransom note.

“This data has been circulating for a long time, and now it has attracted attention because it has been sold on a forum used by many people,” a data practitioner familiar with the industry in both China and the United States told RFA.

Alibaba Cloud won the bid for the Shanghai Public Security Bureau’s “Smart Public Security Comprehensive Service Platform Construction Project” July 15, 2019 with a budget of 22.53 million yuan (U.S. $3.3 million), which was to include the building of a portal and search function for the database.

In 2020, on CSDN, China’s largest technical blogging platform for programmers, a user shared how to back up data to Alibaba Cloud, and in doing so, inadvertently leaked the access key to the Shanghai police server.

This isn’t the first time a breach like this has happened.

In 2019, 90 million documents belonging to the Jiangsu provincial police department were exposed on the publicly accessible ElasticSearch server.

And at the end of 2020, a list with the personal details of 1.95 million CCP members from Shanghai was leaked online.

David Robinson, founder of the data security analysis agency “Internet 2.0,” said such breaches aren’t linked, but are the result of systemic, political issues.

“The major concern is how they publish leaked data with [indicators of people’s identity] with no regard for privacy,” he said. “A lot of the time this type of leak the data can be tampered with, have deleted sections or additions to the data.”

Anyone inadvertently exposing access keys can be arrested and charged with “destroying computer information systems,” so they are unlikely to report any security breaches to their employer, industry insiders told RFA.

The seller offered in a forum to sell a database of 1 billion people from the Shanghai Public Security Bureau for 10 bitcoins. Credit: Web screengrab
The seller offered in a forum to sell a database of 1 billion people from the Shanghai Public Security Bureau for 10 bitcoins. Credit: Web screengrab

‘White hats’ at risk

Meanwhile, “white hat” data security researchers also face similar fears, meaning that vulnerabilities are unlikely to be identified, much less patched.

The shutdown of white hat hacker platform Wuyun.com in 2016, just six years after it started trying to get companies to pay more attention to cybersecurity, left the industry in disarray.

No reason for the shutdown was given at the time, but one suggestion is that Wuyun hackers may have exposed vulnerabilities in systems belonging to the CCP’s outreach and influence arm, the United Front Work Department.

“If I find a loophole, I may contact software companies, developers or institutions in other countries, but you can’t do that in China,” a Chinese programmer surnamed Ma told RFA. “You have to submit it to the Cyberspace Administration first, and then to the state, but you don’t know what they will do with it.”

The central government has been strengthening controls over the management of security vulnerabilities.

The “Regulations on the Management of Online Security Vulnerabilities” jointly issued by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of China, the Cyberspace Administration and the Ministry of Public Security in July 2021, state that when a security vulnerability is discovered, the information must be shared with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology within two days.

In December 2021, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology punished Alibaba Cloud for discovering an online security loophole linked to the U.S.-based Apache Software Foundation, but failing to report it to the telecommunications authorities in a timely manner.

Instead, the Alibaba Cloud security team had first notified Apache.

And the “Measures for Security Assessment of Data Exports” published on July 7 require a national security review for any transfer of personal data involving more than 100,000 people.

Companies undergoing such reviews must show the purpose of the data transfer, the security measures being taken, and the laws and regulations of the destination country, which investigators then review based on the possibility of data breaches.

Meanwhile, all references to the data breach have been censored on Chinese social media, with blog posts about the breach quickly deleted.

“Most Chinese people are asking similar questions, and the ones that are censored and deleted the most are: Has my data been leaked? How much data do they have about me? Why isn’t my personal information stored securely?” Charlie Smith, co-founder of the China-based internet censorship watch website GreatFire.org, told RFA.

As one social media user commented wryly after the news broke: “Data is leaked; everyone’s running around naked. It’s a lovely day on the Chinese internet.”

Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.

Hannah Stocking ได้เแสดงภาพยนตร์ของ Ryan Kavanaugh เรื่อง ‘SKILL HOUSE’ ร่วมกับ Bryce Hall, 50 Cent, Neal McDonough, Paige VanZant และอีกมากมาย

โปรเจกต์นี้ถือเป็นภาคแรกในแฟรนไชส์ภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญซึ่งได้ยกระดับหนังเรท R ไปอีกขั้นหนึ่ง

ลอสแองเจลิส, July 16, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Proxima Media ของ Ryan Kavanaugh ได้ประกาศว่าเน็ตไอดอลและนักแสดง Hannah Stocking ได้เข้าร่วมแสดงในหนังสยองขวัญเรื่องใหม่ SKILL HOUSE ภาพยนตร์เรื่องนี้นำแสดงโดยผู้มีชื่อเสียงบนโซเชียลมีเดียและดาว TikTok Bryce Hall ร่วมกับ Paige VanZant นักแสดงที่มีความช่ำชองในการต่อสู้แบบผสมผสานจาก UFC และยังเป็นซุปเปอร์สตาร์จาก BKFC และ AEW รวมถึงไอคอนฮิปฮอประดับโลก 50 Cent ซึ่งทำหน้าที่เป็นโปรดิวเซอร์ผ่าน G-Unit Film & Television เช่นเดียวกับ Neal McDonough ซึ่งล่าสุดได้มีบทบาทสำคัญในภาพยนตร์เรื่อง Yellowstone, The Arrow, The Flash, Resident Evil, Van Helsing และอีกมากมาย

SKILL HOUSE เป็นภาคแรกในแฟรนไชส์ภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญเรท R ซึ่งได้ยกระดับไปอีกขั้นนั้น มีเรื่องราวเหมือนกับ Saw ที่เจาะลึกในเรื่องของชื่อเสียงและวัฒนธรรมในโซเชียลมีเดีย SKILL HOUSE นำเสนอการพรรณนาถึง “อิทธิพล” ที่ไม่สั่นคลอนและสำรวจปรากฏการณ์ใหม่ ของ “อินฟลูเอ็นเซอร์” ทั้งในเรื่องชื่อเสียงของพวกเขา และสิ่งที่พวกเขาเต็มใจจะทำเพื่อให้ได้มาซึ่งชื่อเสียง ภาพยนตร์จากลอสแองเจลิสซึ่งกำลังถ่ายทำเป็นหลักใน “Sway House” ต้นฉบับนั้น นำเสนอโลกโซเชียลมีเดียและก้าวข้ามขีดจำกัดเมื่อ “การคลิก” และ “อิทธิพล” กลายเป็นชีวิตหรือความตายได้อย่างแท้จริง โดยจะมีศิลปินผู้สร้างสรรค์เทคนิคพิเศษผู้ชนะรางวัล Emmy อย่าง Steve Johnson (ผู้สร้างสรรค์เทคนิคพิเศษในเรื่อง GHOSTBUSTERS, BICENTENNIAL MAN, SPIDER-MAN 2) เป็นผู้นำเสนอความดิบเถื่อนเลือดกระเซ็นออกมาให้สมจริงที่สุดมากกว่าครั้งใด

Hannah Stocking เป็นผู้สร้างที่มีความสามารถหลากหลาย เป็นเน็ตไอดอล นักแสดง และพิธีกร ซึ่งประสบความสำเร็จในวงการความบันเทิงดิจิทัลอย่างรวดเร็ว และสุดท้ายก็ได้ก้าวเข้ามาอยู่ในแวดวงสื่อแบบดั้งเดิม เธอกลายเป็นหัวหอกของแบรนด์ตลกที่มีความเป็นเอกลักษณ์ ซึ่งมักจะยกระดับด้วยการผสมผสานอารมณ์ขันเข้ากับเนื้อหาทางวิทยาศาสตร์ และขณะนี้ได้มีผู้ติดตามมากกว่า 50 ล้านคนในแพลตฟอร์มทั้งหมดของเธอ ชื่อเสียงของ Stocking นั้นได้แก่ ภาพยนตร์อันดับ 1 ของ Tyler Perry นั่นคือ BOO 2! A MADEA HALLOWEEN และ SATANIC PANIC เธอยังได้แสดงในตอนหนึ่งของ Stories From Our Future ซึ่งเป็นซีรีส์หนังสั้นที่ผลิตร่วมกับ Black Mirror ของ Netflix และเคยปรากฏตัวในมิวสิควิดีโอ Hard 2 Face Reality ของ Poo Bear ซึ่งมี Justin Bieber ร่วมแสดง และ Electronica รวมถึง Find Me โดย Marshmello

“ผู้มีชื่อเสียงบนโซเชียลมีเดียอย่าง Bryce และ Hannah นั้นถือเป็นบุคคลที่มีชื่อเสียงในแนวใหม่ เช่นเดียวกับที่ภาพยนตร์เรื่องนี้เป็นแนวสยองขวัญแนวใหม่รุ่นแรก ๆ ด้วยเช่นกัน เรากำลังทำลายกำแพงแห่งความคิดสร้างสรรค์และขอบเขตอาชีพ ณ ที่แห่งนี้” Josh Stolberg ผู้กำกับกล่าวอธิบาย “Hannah มีพรสวรรค์ที่เต็มเปี่ยมไปด้วยพลังและความคิดสร้างสรรค์ และดูแลทุกอย่างเกี่ยวกับโปรเจกต์นี้ ทั้งในเรื่องชื่อเสียงทางอินเทอร์เน็ตและวิวัฒนาการในอุตสาหกรรมบันเทิง เรารู้สึกตื่นเต้นที่เธอจะได้เข้าร่วมเป็นนักแสดงของเรา”

โปรเจกต์นี้ได้รับการสนับสนุนเงินทุนและควบคุมโดย Proxima Media ซึ่งดำเนินงานและเป็นเจ้าของโดย Ryan Kavanaugh โปรดิวเซอร์ผู้ยิ่งใหญ่ที่ได้รับการเสนอชื่อทั้งในรางวัล Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, และ Tony ภาพยนตร์เรื่องนี้ได้รับการเขียนและกำกับโดยผู้เป็นตำนานแห่งภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญ ได้แก่ Josh Stolberg ผู้เขียนร่วมของภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญเช่น SPIRAL: FROM THE BOOK OF SAW (แสดงโดย Chris Rock และ Samuel L. Jackson), JIGSAW, PIRANHA 3D, SORORITY ROW, และภาพยนตร์ SAW ภาคถัดไป (ชื่ออย่างไม่เป็นทางการ SAW X) Jackson จะดำเนินการผลิตร่วมกับ Kavanaugh, Alex Baskin และ Amy Kim และ Jaime Burke แห่ง Lifeboat Productions ผ่านทาง G-Unit Film & Television Daniel Herther ผู้ดูแลการผลิตและการพัฒนาเชิงสร้างสรรค์ที่ Proxima จะทำหน้าที่เป็นผู้อำนวยการสร้างร่วมกับ Jason Barhydt และ Bobby Sarnevesht

นักแสดงอื่น ๆ อาทิ Leah Pipes (SORORITY ROW, The Originals), McCarrie McCausland (Army Wives, The Originals), Ivan Leung (THE TENDER BAR, All American, Grey’s Anatomy), John DeLuca (Spree, American Horror Story) และ Caitlin Carmichael (MIDNIGHT IN THE SWITCHGRASS, EPIPHANY)

สำหรับข้อมูลเพิ่มเติมและข้อมูลล่าสุดเกี่ยวกับ SKILL HOUSE โปรดติดตามInstagram(@skillhousemovie)Twitter(@skillhousemovie) และTikTok(@skillhousemovie)

เกี่ยวกับ Hannah Stocking
Hannah Stocking เป็นครีเอเตอร์ นักแสดง และพิธีกรมากความสามารถหลากหลายซึ่งประสบความสำเร็จในวงการความบันเทิงดิจิทัลอย่างรวดเร็ว และสุดท้ายก็ได้ก้าวเข้ามาอยู่ในแวดวงสื่อแบบดั้งเดิม เธอกลายเป็นหัวหอกของแบรนด์ตลกที่มีความเป็นเอกลักษณ์ ซึ่งมักจะยกระดับด้วยการผสมผสานอารมณ์ขันเข้ากับเนื้อหาทางวิทยาศาสตร์ เธอเป็นบุคคลที่มีอิทธิพลอย่างมากในโซเชียลมีเดีย ด้วยการมีผู้ติดตามรวมกันในทุกแพลตฟอร์มมากกว่า 50 ล้านคน อีกทั้งยังมีผู้กดติดตามกว่า 7.8 ล้านคนบนยูทูบอีกด้วย ช่อง YouTube ของเธอมีผู้ติดตามเกินหนึ่งล้านคนโดยใช้เวลาไม่ถึง 5 เดือน และมีการดูเนื้อหาสะสมรวมกันเป็นจำนวนมากถึง 2,100 ล้านครั้ง และเธอยังมีผู้ติดตามมากกว่า 26 ล้านคนบน TikTok และกว่า 22 ล้านคนบน Instagram อีกด้วย

Stocking มักจะนำพื้นฐานวิชาเคมีและชีววิทยาของเธอมาแทรกเป็นส่วนเสริมพิเศษลงในเนื้อหา Stocking ได้นำรูปแบบที่เป็นเอกลักษณ์นี้มาใช้ในการสร้างซีรีส์ต้นฉบับแนววิทยาศาสตร์หลาย ๆ เรื่อง และที่สะดุดตาที่สุดก็คือ การที่เธอได้ร่วมมือกับ ATTN: เพื่อสร้างชุดวิดีโอที่ให้ข้อมูลการนำเสนอแนวคิดในชีวิตประจำวัน เช่น การไดเอทแบบหักโหมและสมองของวัยรุ่น ด้วยรูปแบบที่เข้าถึงง่ายและให้ความบันเทิง

พรสวรรค์และความสามารถพิเศษของเธอเปล่งประกายอย่างมากในสื่อแบบดั้งเดิมเฉกเช่นเดียวกับทางออนไลน์ นอกจากนี้ เธอยังได้เข้าร่วม E! News ในฐานะผู้สื่อข่าวรับเชิญสำหรับการรายงานข่าวรางวัล Grammy ปี 2017 เธอได้เปิดตัวเดบิวต์บนจอยักต์ในภาพยนตร์อันดับ 1 ของ Tyler Perry นั่นคือ BOO 2! A MADEA HALLOWEEN และตามด้วยการเข้าร่วมแสดงใน SATANIC PANIC ซึ่งกำกับโดย Chelsea Stardust ในปี 2019 เธอยังได้แสดงในตอนหนึ่งของ Stories From Our Future ซึ่งเป็นซีรีส์เรื่องสั้นที่ผลิตร่วมกับ Black Mirror ของ Netflix

อาชีพของเธอมีลักษณะที่โดดเด่นจาก นิตยสาร PAPER, นิตยสาร GQ Thailand, นิตยสาร Modeliste และผลงานตีพิมพ์อื่น ๆ เพื่อให้เธอสามารถแสดงออกถึงความงามและแฟชั่นในฐานะผู้สร้างสรรค์ผลงานทางดิจิทัลและผู้ให้ความบันเทิง เธอได้รับการยกย่องด้วยรางวัล Pioneer Award จาก Women’s Entrepreneurship Day โดยเธอเป็นผู้สร้างสรรค์ผลงานทางดิจิทัลคนแรกที่ได้รับการยกย่อง

Stocking ได้รับการดูแลโดย John Shahidi และ Sam Shahidi จาก Shots Studios

เกี่ยวกับ Josh Stolberg
Josh Stolberg เป็นนักเขียน ผู้กำกับ และโปรดิวเซอร์ที่รับผิดชอบภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญยอดนิยมที่สุดในปัจจุบันหลายเรื่อง ซึ่งได้แก่ JIGSAW, PIRANHA 3D, SORORITY ROW และเรื่องล่าสุดคือ SPIRAL เขาเขียนภาพยนตร์ให้กับ Netflix, Disney, Lionsgate และอีกมากมาย ปัจจุบันเขากำลังเขียนบทให้นักแสดงหนังบู๊ Dwayne Johnson ที่ Netflix รวมถึงกำลังเขียนภาคต่อของแฟรนไชส์ Saw ยอดนิยมอยู่อีกด้วย

เกี่ยวกับ Lifeboat Productions
Amy Kim และ Jaime Burke เป็นโปรดิวเซอร์ที่ได้รับรางวัลซึ่งมาพร้อมกับประสบการณ์อันหลากหลายกว่า 20 ปี ทั้งสองได้ผลิตเนื้อหาต้นฉบับให้กับสตรีมเมอร์และสตูดิโอชั้นนำมากมาย ด้วยผลงานล่าสุดอันได้แก่ซีรีส์ Surfside Girls สำหรับ Apple+ และ Undone ของ Amazon Kim เริ่มต้นการผลิตของเธอด้วยภาพยนตร์สั้นเรื่อง WEST BANK STORY ซึ่งชนะรางวัล Academy Award และได้ดำรงตำแหน่งหัวหน้าฝ่ายผลิตที่ Vuguru ซึ่งเป็นสตูดิโอดิจิทัลของ Michael Eisner ก่อนที่จะก่อตั้ง Lifeboat Productions ร่วมกับ Jaime Burke ในปี 2012 Burke เริ่มอาชีพด้านการผลิตภาพยนตร์ของเธอด้วยภาพยนตร์เรื่องต่าง ๆ เช่น THE POSSESSION OF MICHAEL KING และ ภาพยนตร์สยองขวัญคลาสสิกแนวอินดี้อย่าง THE PACT ซึ่งเป็นความร่วมมือครั้งที่สองกับ Josh Stolberg นักเขียนและผู้กำกับ

เกี่ยวกับ Proxima และ Ryan Kavanaugh
Ryan Kavanaugh ผู้ก่อตั้งร่วม Triller เขาเป็นหนึ่งในผู้บริหารที่ประสบความสำเร็จมากที่สุด มีผลงานมากที่สุด และมีเกียรติมากที่สุดในประวัติศาสตร์ของวงการบันเทิง ด้วยการนำโมลเดลทางการเงินอันชาญฉลาดมาใช้ในด้านการเงินของภาพยนตร์นี้เอง ทำให้เขาได้รับการขนานนามว่าเป็นผู้สร้าง “Moneyball สำหรับภาพยนตร์” เขาผลิต จัดจำหน่าย และ/หรือจัดโครงสร้างทางการเงินให้กับภาพยนตร์มากกว่า 200 เรื่อง ซึ่งสร้างรายได้จากบ็อกซ์ออฟฟิศทั่วโลกมากกว่า 20,000 ล้านดอลลาร์สหรัฐฯ และได้รับการเสนอชื่อเข้าชิงรางวัลออสการ์ทั้งสิ้น 60 เรื่อง เขาเป็นผู้ผลิตภาพยนตร์ที่ทำรายได้สูงสุดตลอดกาลอันดับที่ 25 ผลงานต่าง ๆ ของเขาได้แก่ Fast and Furious 2-6, 300, The Social Network, Limitless, Fighter, Talladega Nights, Step Brothers และ Mamma Mia! Kavanaugh และ Proxima เป็นผู้บุกเบิกนวัตกรรมข้อตกลงทางการเงินให้กับ Marvel หลังจากที่ล้มละลาย ทำให้สตูดิโอและโครงสร้างทางการเงินเดินหน้าและนำไปสู่การเป็น Marvel Cinematic Universe ได้ เขาสร้างหมวดหมู่ SVOD (สตรีมมิง) กับ Netflix ซึ่งทำให้มูลค่าการตลาดของบริษัทเพิ่มขึ้นจาก 2 ดอลลาร์สหรัฐฯ เป็น 1 หมื่นล้านดอลลาร์สหรัฐฯ Kavanaugh เป็นผู้ก่อตั้งร่วม Triller 1 ใน 3 แอปโซเชียลมีเดียที่เติบโตเร็วที่สุด เมื่อไม่นานมานี้เขาได้เป็นผู้นำการเข้าซื้อกิจการ การควบรวมกิจการ และการเปิดตัวใหม่ของแอปโซเชียลมีเดียและเพลง

นอกจากนี้ เขายังได้สร้างบริษัทโทรทัศน์ที่ทรงอิทธิพล ซึ่งปัจจุบันรู้จักกันในชื่อ Critical Content โดยเป็นบริษัทที่ผลิตรายการยอดนิยมอย่าง Catfish ทาง MTV และ Limitless ทาง CBS ซึ่งเขาได้ขายไปโดยมีมูลค่าการขายที่ 200 ล้านเหรียญ บริษัทดังกล่าวมีละครโทรทัศน์ 40 เรื่องใน 19 เครือข่ายก่อนที่จะขายไป Kavanaugh ประสบความสำเร็จและได้รับรางวัลมากมาย ตั้งแต่ Producer of the Year Award ของ Variety ไปจนถึง Leadership Award ของ The Hollywood Reporter รวมถึงรางวัล 40 Under 40 Most Influential People in Business ของ Fortune ตลอดจน Fortune 400 ของ Forbes, Billion-Dollar Producer ของ Daily Variety และ the 100 Most Influential People in the World ของ Vanity Fair Proxima และ Kavanaugh เป็นตัวแทนจาก Neil Sacker

ภาพถ่ายที่แนบมาพร้อมกับประกาศนี้มีอยู่ที่https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/24aae164-2a42-42ff-84d5-912661b2aedd

ติดต่อด้านสื่อ
Jive PR + Digital
Lynsey Gray
lgray@jiveprdigital.com

Italy-USA: the Italy Run Comes Back to New York, Central Park Is Tinged With the Tricolor

Sold-Out 2022 Italy Run by Ferrero 4M to Host More than 5,000 Runners Celebrating Italian Heritage

Pictured from left to right, Gerald Kunde, Senior Vice President Government & Institutional Affairs for Ferrero, Italian Consul Fabrizio Di Michele, and George Hirsch, Chairman of the Board of NY Roadrunners (NYRR), at a press conference announcing this year’s Italy Run on Friday, July 15, 2022, in New York City. For the first time since 2019, the Italy Run by Ferrero 4M, a celebration of Italian heritage, will host more than 5,000 runners of all ages in Central Park. (Stuart Ramson/AP Images for LaPresse)

NEW YORK, July 15, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — On Saturday morning in Central Park you will breathe a bit of Italy, with the third edition of the ‘Italy Run’, the 4-mile (6.5 km) marathon organized by the Consulate General of Italy with the contribution of the New York Road Runners (NYRR) and Ferrero North America. With 6 thousand participants who registered in just three weeks, the race is “sold out”, explains Consul General Fabrizio Di Michele, who after the three-year stop imposed by the pandemic wanted to celebrate the return to normality with a new edition of the race. “After three years of incredibly difficult challenges, fear and grief, the is something we needed to heal the wounds of Covid,” the consul said at the presentation press conference at the Park Avenue consulate, to which took part also the chairman and CEO of LaPresse, Marco Maria Durante.

What Di Michele already announces as a “fantastic success” for the number of entries, would not have been possible without the “commitment and support” of the New York Road Runners, one of the leading US running organizations, inventors of the New York Marathon. “For me the Italy Run is a special event, don’t tell it around, but this is my favorite race in Central Park”, jokes George Hirsch, president of NYRR and legendary figure of US running.
The race that will unfold along Central Park was born from “an incredible idea” – says Hirsch – “it is a great act of friendship between Italy, America and the city of New York”.

Another fundamental partner for the Italy Run is Ferrero, which with its products will delight the participants and the public in the post-race festival set up in Central Park. “It was difficult to restart a race like this” after the stop due to Covid, but “we are lucky to be partners in the race”, says Gerard Kunde, senior vice president for institutional relations at Ferrero North America, who is promises a real treat on Saturday with the ‘Crepe Station’ based on Nutella, set up in the Park. Testimonial of the race, which will start at 8 from the East Side of Central Park, will be the iceskater Francesca Lollobrigida, silver and bronze medalist for Italy at the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, who will take part in the race.

For more information:

LaPresse SpA Communication and Press Office Director
Barbara Sanicola barbara.sanicola@lapresse.it +39 02 26305578 M +39 333 3905243

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/fe491f9f-02c7-4f07-9124-be22b8a161d1

The photo is also available at Newscom, www.newscom.com, and via AP PhotoExpress.

Malaysia’s youth unemployment rate declines in Q1 2022 – PM

TUARAN (Sabah, Malaysia), Malaysia’s unemployment rate among youths aged between 15 and 40 has dropped to 5.3 per cent in the first quarter of this year compared to 5.9 per cent in the same period last year, said Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob.

He said the percentage showed that the number of unemployed persons in the first quarter of this year was 585,000, down from 627,000 people in the same period last year.

“This number is expected to continue to decline if we take note of the various initiatives and programmes available for youths,” he said when launching the 2022 National Youth Day, here today.

To ensure that the youth unemployment rate continues to drop, Ismail Sabri said the government, among others, through strategic cooperation between the Ministry of Youth and Sports, the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industries and the Department of Director General of Lands and Mines, would focus more on urban farming.

He said the effort was a strategy to increase youth involvement in the agro-food sector as well as the Young Agropreneur programme.

The Prime Minister said a total of 8,000 young entrepreneurs had received assistance comprising grants, funding, short-term courses, as well as technical and financial advisory services.

“The agro-food sector can provide a lucrative income if it is well managed using the latest technology. It can guarantee the quality of production that can be exported to help increase national income.

“Youth involvement in the agro-food sector will be strengthened through the organising of the Agro Job Fair programme at MAHA (Malaysia Agriculture, Horticulture and Agro-tourism Expo) 2022 next month which offers 5,000 job opportunities by participating companies. I call on interested graduates and youths to seize these job opportunities,” he said.

Ismail Sabri said 21.4 per cent or seven million of the 32.7 million Malaysians were youths aged between 15 and 30, while those aged between 15 and 40 have reached almost 15 million.

He said it was a significant figure that influenced every national development plan.

Therefore, the aspirations and views of the youths were also crucial for the government to formulate a direction for the country’s future, he added.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Malaysia Reported 5,230 New COVID-19 Infections, Eight New Deaths

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia reported 5,230 new COVID-19 infections as of midnight, bringing the national total to 4,613,998, according to the health ministry.

There are 11 new imported cases, with 5,219 cases being local transmissions, data released on the ministry’s website showed.

Eight new deaths have been reported, pushing the death toll to 35,844.

The ministry reported 2,927 new recoveries, bringing the total number of cured and discharged to 4,536,946.

There are 41,208 active cases, with 64 being held in intensive care and 44 of those in need of assisted breathing.

The country reported 21,788 vaccine doses administered yesterday, and 85.9 percent of the population have received at least one dose. Among them, 83.8 percent are fully vaccinated, 49.5 percent have received the first booster and 0.6 percent have received the second booster.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK