OTC Markets Group ขยายกิจการไปทั่วโลกและยินดีต้อนรับพนักงานใหม่ในสิงคโปร์

นิวยอร์ก, Sept. 13, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — OTC Markets Group Inc. (OTCQX: OTCM) ซึ่งเป็นผู้ประกอบการในตลาดที่มีการควบคุม โดยมีหลักทรัพย์ 12,000 รายการ ในสหรัฐอเมริกาและต่างประเทศ มีความยินดีที่จะประกาศว่าบริษัทได้ว่าจ้าง Catherine Chao Shang ขึ้นดำรงตำแหน่งรองประธานฝ่ายบริการองค์กรและการพัฒนาธุรกิจข้อมูลการตลาด ซึ่งมีสำนักงานใหญ่ตั้งอยู่ที่สิงคโปร์

การขยายกิจการของ OTC Markets Group ไปยังเอเชียเป็นส่วนหนึ่งของกลยุทธ์ในวงกว้าง เพื่อช่วยเหลือผู้ออกตราสารทั่วโลกที่ต้องการเข้าถึงตลาดทุนของสหรัฐฯ รวมทั้งเพื่อตอบสนองต่อความต้องการในการกระจายข้อมูลการซื้อขายหลักทรัพย์นอกตลาดหลักทรัพย์ (OTC) ทั่วทั้งภูมิภาค

Jason Paltrowitz รองประธานอาวุโส ฝ่ายบริการองค์กรของ OTC Markets Group กล่าวว่า “เรารู้สึกตื่นเต้นที่ได้ต้อนรับ Catherine เข้าสู่ทีมนานาชาติของเรา” “การก่อตั้งบริษัทของเราในสิงคโปร์มีบทบาทสำคัญต่อการเติบโตของตลาดการซื้อขายหลักทรัพย์นอกตลาดหลักทรัพย์ในระดับนานาชาติ อีกทั้งยังช่วยให้เราพัฒนาความสัมพันธ์กับบริษัทต่าง ๆ ทั่วเอเชียได้”

Catherine นำประสบการณ์ด้านตลาดการเงินที่สั่งสมมานานกว่าทศวรรษมาใช้ ล่าสุดเธอดำรงตำแหน่งรองประธานที่ Trumarx Data Partnership โดยทำหน้าที่เป็นตัวแทนจากเอเชียในการจัดจำหน่ายแพลตฟอร์มการซื้อขายพลังงานนอกตลาดหลักทรัพย์ ก่อนหน้านั้น เธอเคยทำงานที่ Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley และ Omega ในฐานะผู้จัดการและเทรดเดอร์

Matt Fuchs รองประธานกรรมการบริหารของ Market Data กล่าวต่อว่า “การเพิ่มทรัพยากรในพื้นที่ของภูมิภาคเอเชียจะช่วยให้เราสามารถใช้ประโยชน์ได้อย่างเต็มที่จากอุปสงค์ที่เราเห็นได้จากโบรกเกอร์ สถาบัน และนักลงทุนรายย่อยทั่วทั้งภูมิภาค เรารู้สึกตื่นเต้นที่ได้ร่วมงานกับ Catherine เพื่อช่วยกันขับเคลื่อนความพยายามในการพัฒนาธุรกิจของเราทั่วเอเชีย”

เกี่ยวกับ OTC Markets Group Inc.
OTC Markets Group Inc. (OTCQX: OTCM) ดำเนินธุรกิจในตลาดที่มีการควบคุมสำหรับการซื้อขายหลักทรัพย์ 12,000 รายการ ในสหรัฐอเมริกาและต่างประเทศ มาตรฐานการเปิดเผยข้อมูลที่ขับเคลื่อนด้วยข้อมูลเป็นหลักถือเป็นรากฐานของตลาดสาธารณะสามแห่งของเรา: OTCQX® Best Market, OTCQB® Venture Market และ Pink® Open Market
OTC Link® Alternative Trading Systems (ATS) ของเรามีโครงสร้างพื้นฐานของตลาดที่สำคัญ ซึ่งโบรกเกอร์-ผู้ค้าหลักทรัพย์ต่างก็พึ่งพาระบบนี้เพื่ออำนวยความสะดวกในการซื้อขาย รูปแบบที่เป็นนวัตกรรมของเราช่วยให้บริษัทต่าง ๆ เข้าถึงตลาดการเงินในสหรัฐอเมริกาได้อย่างมีประสิทธิภาพมากขึ้น

OTC Link ATS, OTC Link ECN และ OTC Link NQB ต่างก็เป็น ATS ภายใต้การควบคุมของ SEC ซึ่งดำเนินการโดยโบรกเกอร์-ผู้ค้าหลักทรัพย์จดทะเบียน สมาชิก SIPC ของ OTC Link LLC, FINRA และ SEC

หากต้องการเรียนรู้เพิ่มเติมเกี่ยวกับวิธีที่เราสร้างตลาดที่มีข้อมูลสนับสนุนมากขึ้นและมีประสิทธิภาพมากขึ้น โปรดเยี่ยมชม www.otcmarkets.com

ติดต่อด้านสื่อ:
OTC Markets Group Inc., +1 (212) 896-4428, media@otcmarkets.com

 

Vietnamese authorities call ‘Jesus Church’ in northern provinces an ‘evil religion’

UPDATED AT 2:19 EST ON 9-13-22

Vietnamese police and government authorities are trying to crack down on a religious group that is growing in popularity in the country’s northern provinces.

On Monday state-controlled media quoted the Hai Phong City Police as saying the “Jesus Church” is operating in many localities without permission. The Government Committee for Religious Affairs has not yet recognized the “Jesus Church” as a religious organization, the news organizations said.

All religious groups in Vietnam are required to obtain government approval, otherwise they are banned.

The “Jesus Church” is concentrated in provinces including Dien Bien, Lai Chau, Son La, Lao Cai, Yen Bai, and Thanh Hoa.

It was founded around five years ago, according to the Ministry of Public Security, which called it an “evil religion,” saying it was concerned about the rapid growth of the church among the Hmong community. 

The ethnic group originally followed animist beliefs but many Hmong converted to Christianity in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Hai Phong City Police Department said there are about 100 Hmong people living there and, although they were not “Jesus Church” followers they had issued a warning to try to stop them joining the religion.

Police said the “Jesus Church” was founded by a man calling himself David Her whose real name is Ho Cha Sung. The department said he is a Hmong from Xiangkhoang province in Laos, currently living in California.

David Her identifies himself as a messenger of Jesus, who he says will return to protect the Hmong people, according to the Baogiaothong news site. He said God gave the Hmong land but they were not united so their land was taken by other groups, the site said, adding that Her claims God urged the Hmong to go back to Laos to set up a state.

In April, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) issued a proposal to put Vietnam back on the list of countries of special concern for not respecting religious freedom, saying the government continues to persecute independent religious communities.

This story has been updated to include background on David Her.

Myanmar’s people, shadow govt mourn UK monarch amid junta silence

UPDATED at 9:03 a.m. EDT on 9-13-2022.

Citizens of Myanmar reacted to the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, who died last week at age 96 after 70 years on the British throne, with sadness on Monday, remembering the monarch as a champion of democracy and a source of comfort in the face of national adversity.

Elizabeth’s reign began in 1952, just four years after the end of more than a century of British rule in Myanmar, at a time of strong anti-British sentiment in the fledgling Southeast Asian nation. Myanmar did not join the Commonwealth after independence, like most other former colonies.

However, many Burmese remember her as overseeing improved bilateral relations that culminated in substantial support from London for democratic reforms in Myanmar under the National League for Democracy (NLD) government of Aung San Suu Kyi, prior to its ousting by the military last year.

“The queen was part of the ruling class of the country that has continuously supported the cause of Myanmar’s democracy,” Thet Oo, a resident of Salingyi township in northern Myanmar’s Sagaing region, told RFA Burmese. “I wish for her to rise into heaven.”

Khin Maung Nyo, a Yangon-based writer who previously studied in the U.K., told RFA that while the queen’s role was largely ceremonial, she was seen as a steadying and unifying presence.

“People saw her as their guardian angel watching from above as a loving mother would or as a good ruler should. That’s why her subjects from all the 15 Commonwealth realms loved and respected her,” he said.

“During the time I was in England, the country was having economic problems but the people struggled hard in unity. Though there are a lot of problems at the Palace, I’m sure Prince Charles will be able to steer the country, as King Charles III, out of danger.”

The Burmese people can empathize with the grief currently felt by Britons, a Mandalay resident who requested anonymity for security reasons, told RFA.

“I can see the entire British population is in grief because she had done many good deeds during her 70 years of rule. It’s sad to see them like this. Stories about their grief made me remember the time when our people were similarly in grief when General Aung San was assassinated [in 1947],” the Mandalay resident said, referring to Aung San Suu Kyi’s father, who was a revolutionary hero that many consider to be the founder of modern Myanmar.

“Nobody would be grieving for those leaders who didn’t do any good for the country. Just look at [previous military rulers] Gen. Ne Win and Senior Gen. Saw Maung. Nobody was moved or sorry for them. People only grieve for good rulers,” he said.  

Junta silence

Though the junta has remained silent on the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, the shadow National Unity Government (NUG) made a point of publicly showing condolences both at home and abroad, a NUG spokesman told RFA.

The NUG’s Acting President Duwa Lashi La sent his official message shortly after learning of the queen’s death on behalf of the shadow government, formed by former lawmakers who were ousted by the junta in the Feb. 1, 2021 coup.

“The prime minister has also sent a similar message on behalf of the NUG government, and our representative in Britain has, in person, signed the Book of Condolences,” said NUG spokesman Kyaw Zaw.

The British government and the royal family have continuously supported the democracy movement in Myanmar and the queen had been, according to Kyaw Zaw, a “good friend” of Aung San Suu Kyi, the most well-known figure in the movement who served as State Counselor prior to the coup.

The junta’s official newspaper reported on the queen’s death in its Sept. 9 issue.

RFA attempted to reach junta Deputy Minister of Information Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment on why the junta, which claims to be Myanmar’s legitimate government, had not sent a message of condolence to London, but received no reply.

Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing sent such a message to the government of Japan after the assassination of its former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in July.

Post-coup relations

Thein Tun Oo, executive director of the Thayningha Strategic Studies Institute, made up of former military officers, told RFA that the junta likely chose to stay silent because Britain and the international community have been putting pressure on Myanmar since the coup.

“Diplomatic relations with countries like Britain … have not been very good since February 1 [2021],” said Thein Tun Oo. 

“As you know, former British ambassador Vicky Bowman was also recently arrested [by the junta] and punished for meddling in Myanmar politics. So, politically, especially diplomatically, relations are not very good.”

Last week, former U.K. Ambassador to Myanmar Vicky Bowman and her Burmese husband, Htein Lin, were sentenced to one year in prison each on immigration violation charges, which activists said were concocted by the junta.

Authorities arrested Bowman, who served as ambassador from 2002-2006, and her husband, an artist and former political prisoner, on Aug. 25 for allegedly violating immigration laws and jailed them in Yangon’s notorious Insein Prison. The arrests came after the U.K. announced a new round of sanctions against the junta.

Than Soe Naing, a political observer, said the snub was a result of political and economic sanctions on the junta.

“The British royal family stands with the democratic forces of the world who are fighting against the military dictatorship today and so, they have no reason to send a message of condolences to the death of a state leader of England which is putting all kinds of political and economic sanctions on the junta,” Tan Soe Naing said.

“That’s why their papers only announce the news of the death. They have not acknowledged and expressed sorrow in any way,” he said.

The British government has consistently supported Myanmar’s democracy since the 1988 military coup. When Aung San Suu Kyi, whose late husband was a British national, was released from house arrest in June 2012, she traveled to Britain on her first trip away from Myanmar. The queen and the British government received her.

Translated by Khin Maung Nyane. Written in English by Eugene Whong.

This story has been updated to remove a comment that was published in error.

Philippines Logged 2,038 New COVID-19 Cases, 38 Deaths

The Philippines reported 2,038 new COVID-19 infections yesterday, bringing the number of confirmed cases in the country to 3,908,295.

The Department of Health (DOH) said, the number of active cases dipped to 25,262, while 38 more patients died from COVID-19 complications, pushing the country’s death toll to 62,342.

Metro Manila, the capital region, with over 13 million people, tallied 810 new cases.

The Philippines reported its highest COVID-19 single-day tally of 39,004 new cases on Jan 15. The country, with a population of around 110 million, has fully vaccinated over 72.7 million people.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Malaysia to procure new COVID-19 vaccine for elderly, children with chronic diseases

Malaysia’s Ministry of Health (MOH) will procure a new variant of the COVID-19 vaccine, especially for children with chronic diseases and the elderly, said Minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

He added that the vaccine will be administered free of charge, but not to all groups as the coronavirus situation in Malaysia is under control.

“A decision on this procurement will be announced later along with the vaccines for children under five,” he told a press conference Tuesday.

According to Khairy, the vaccines will be administered in government and private health facilities.

To kick-start the vaccination process, the ministry had asked the Public Health and Paediatric Departments to provide data on patients with comorbidities and high-risk children in the country, he said.

“These data will be collected in the MOH’s database. They will help the ministry to procure enough vaccines,” he said.

To date, 72 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccines have been administered to Malaysians, including the elderly, adolescents, and children.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK