Local drivers chafe at costly fees at Lao-China railway station

Authorities at a rail station in the Lao capital Vientiane are charging motorists high fees to access station parking lots, angering drivers who want only to deliver passengers or pick them up, Lao sources say.

Beginning Sept. 12, the Lao-China Rail Line Company has charged all vehicles entering the train station’s compound, with fees ranging from 10,000 ($0.63) to 30,000 kip ($1.88) depending on the vehicle’s size and number of passengers it carries.

One bus operator who takes tourists to and from the station every day must now pay 30,000 kip each time he enters, the driver told RFA on Monday, speaking on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

“But I never have to pay when I drop passengers off at the Wattay International Airport, the Lao-Thai Mekong Friendship Bridge No. 1 or the North-South Bus Station.

“I only have to pay at the rail station now. This makes me sad and disappointed,” he said.

Also speaking to RFA, a Vientiane taxi driver who each day drops passengers off and returns them from the train station said he had been charged 10,000 kip just the day before to pick someone up.

“I was there for only three minutes, so the charge was completely unjustified. The company should eliminate these rules,” he said.

Another driver who used his own car to take a relative to the station still had to pay 10,000 kip to enter, “even though I just dropped him off and left again as quickly as I could,” he said.

Meanwhile, overnight parking at the station now costs 80,000 kip, he added.

Vehicle operators parking just a few minutes at the station should be charged only around 3,000-5,000 kip each time they enter, a driver for a tour company in the capital said.

“I’m not happy that I’m being charged with higher fees now just to drop someone off.”

Tourism threatened by costs

The charging of high fees to take passengers to and from the station will hurt Laos’ tourist industry, since drivers will lose money if they have to take only or two passengers at a time, a Vientiane resident said.

“They won’t want to provide services to people wanting to ride the train,” the resident said.

Reached for comment by RFA, representatives of the Lao-China Rail Line Company and Boten Frontier Service Ltd., the company contracted to collect the fees, declined to discuss the matter. But a former Lao official called Lao-China Rail Line a privately owned company with a right to collect fees.

 “All vehicles entering a company’s private property should respect that company’s rules and regulations for their own safety and protection,” he said.

RFA Lao also called the Chinese company to ask why they are charging fees for cars dropping people off, but the contact deferred to management and refused to provide a phone number or e-mail address.

Opened in December 2021, the Lao-China high-speed rail line is a centerpiece of China’s Belt and Road Initiative of state-led lending for infrastructure projects tying countries across Asia to China.

The railway offers landlocked Laos the promise of closer integration with the world’s second largest economy, but also the peril of deeper indebtedness to Beijing, analysts say.

Translated by Sidney Khotpanya for RFA Lao. Written in English by Richard Finney.

Xi trip sparks US concern over Chinese influence in Central Asia

Chinese leader Xi Jinping met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Uzbekistan on Thursday, the first meeting between the Russian and Chinese leaders since the Ukraine war began.

Putin lauded Xi for what he termed Beijing’s “balanced” position on the conflict, which the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has refused to criticize publicly or to call an invasion.

“We highly value the balanced position of our Chinese friends when it comes to the Ukraine crisis,” Putin told Xi ahead of the meeting. “We understand your questions and concern about this. During today’s meeting, we will of course explain our position.”

Xi’s trip will focus on broad strategic concerns in response to the United States’ formation of the Quad alongside Japan, Australia and India in a bid to counter Beijing’s increasingly assertive foreign policy.

Xi and Putin met during the eight-member SCO Summit, which also includes Uzbekistan, India and Pakistan, and as the CCP gears up for its 20th National Congress on Oct. 16, during which Xi is widely expected to secure an unprecedented third term in office following constitutional amendments in 2018.

The last time Xi met Putin at the February 2022 Winter Olympics — shortly before Russian launched its invasion of Ukraine — the two leaders declared a “no limits” friendship that has seen China claim neutrality amid a large spike in its exports of electronics components and other raw materials to Russia.

Xi’s visit has put the spotlight on concerns in Washington over China’s growing influence in the region, especially the heavy levels of debt borne by developing countries who sign up to Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Donald Lu, Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs and former US Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan, told a recent hearing of the House Foreign Affairs Committee that Xi’s visit comes at “a defining moment for the people of Central Asia.”

President Xi Jinping receives the Order "Oliy Darazhali Dustlik" from Uzbekistan's President Shavkat Mirziyoyev during their meeting on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, Sept. 15, 2022. Credit: Press service of the President of Uzbekistan/Handout via Reuters
President Xi Jinping receives the Order “Oliy Darazhali Dustlik” from Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev during their meeting on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, Sept. 15, 2022. Credit: Press service of the President of Uzbekistan/Handout via Reuters

Loans coming due

Lu said the Russian invasion of Ukraine had increased insecurity in the region, while rising energy and food prices had plunged millions into poverty and uncertainty.

“Unfair People’s Republic of China (PRC) loan payments are about to come due and these countries do not have the capacity to repay this crushing debt,” Lu told the hearing.

“The United States and like-minded countries have an opportunity to demonstrate … that we offer an alternative to Russian bullying and Chinese debt,” he said.

“There exists a genuine fear that the PRC’s Belt and Road Initiative loans are creating unsustainable debt,” Lu said, adding that Chinese migrant workers are seen as taking jobs from Central Asian workers.

Änjali Kaur, deputy assistant administrator of USAID’s Asia Bureau, said the U.S. could help by offering alternative financial options.

“The region is experiencing heightened vulnerability to misinformation and disinformation; encroachment upon its independence and sovereignty; and growing external debt to the PRC,” she said.

“Increased regional cohesion and robust cooperation with the United States, Europe, and other global partners is critical in reducing the region’s reliance on Russia and the PRC,” Kaur said.

The CCP-backed Global Times newspaper said Xi’s visit would highlight how “barren” the Western world view is.

“The minds of American and Western elites are full of domineering and paranoid confrontational thinking,” the paper said in an editorial on Thursday.

It said the SCO, by contrast, allowed cooperation between different political systems in an inclusive manner.

“[The SCO has] explored a path beyond the Cold War mentality in a world with increasing diversity and differences,” it said.

Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.

Former BBC presenter Htet Htet Khine sentenced to 3 years by Myanmar junta court

UPDATED AT 12:44 PM EST ON 9-15-22

A special court in Myanmar on Thursday sentenced Htet Htet Khine, a former BBC television presenter, to three years in prison with hard labor for “incitement” and “illegal association” for her reporting work, according to family members and her legal team.

The face of BBC Media Action’s national television peace program Khan Sar Kyi (Feel It) from 2016 to 2020, which documented the impact of war on Myanmar society, the freelance journalist and video producer had been in detention in Yangon’s notorious Insein Prison awaiting trial since Aug. 15, 2021, when she was arrested with fellow reporter Sithu Aung Myint.

A lawyer representing Htet Htet Khine, who spoke on condition of anonymity citing security concerns, told RFA Burmese that she accepted her sentence with little emotion at the conclusion of her trial in the prison courtroom on Thursday.

“She bravely faced the case that was filed without any evidence,” he said.

“She was accused of inciting a situation that was already under control. The order was handed down based on the plaintiff’s testimony.”

The lawyer said that his client is “in good health” and “stable.”

A family member, who also declined to be named, told RFA that Htet Htet Khine and Sithu Aung Myint were “unjustly accused” and called for the court to free them.

“I already expected this [outcome]. They were wrongly arrested and I want them to be released as soon as possible,” the family member said.

“[The judges] unjustly sentenced her to three years imprisonment.”

The family member also expressed concern over Htet Htet Khine’s well-being in prison.

“She has been in jail for more than a year now and I worry about her,” they said.

“As a family member, I am worried about her health because inmates are extremely vulnerable to COVID-19.”

Threat to press freedom

Reacting to Thursday’s sentencing, veteran journalists told RFA that reporters must subject themselves to serious personal risk to carry out their work under military rule in Myanmar.

Myint Kyaw, the former secretary of the Myanmar Press Council, said the threat of arrest has had the biggest impact on press freedom in the country since the coup.

“The work has become dangerous. [The junta] pressures journalists politically,” he said.

“Reporters can be arrested and sent to prison simply for writing a story that they don’t like.”

Myint Kyaw said journalists are finding it increasingly difficult to uphold media ethics in the current climate.

“Reporters are being forced to develop contacts on Facebook because of the risk of arrest associated with reporting on the scene,” he said.

“There is a limit to the objectivity they can maintain because of this. It’s more challenging to publish balanced reporting than ever.”

Zay Tai, the editor-in-chief of Kanbawza Tai, noted that since the formation of anti-junta People’s Defense Force (PDF) paramilitary groups last year, authorities have increasingly charged reporters for “illegal association.”

“Nowadays, reporters are being imprisoned under anti-terrorism laws,” he said.

“When a reporter gets a tip about a development, they are going to contact the source. You have to communicate with that person, regardless of who they are. So when reporters call PDF sources, the junta can arrest and charge them this way.”

Zay Tai added that journalists are now targeted for doing their work out in the open.

“In the past, a reporter could go around town with a camera around their necks, but that’s no longer the case,” he said. “Now they have to rely on citizen journalists and freelancers, because of the risks of reporting from the field.”

2021 arrest

Htet Htet Khine was arrested six months after the Feb. 1, 2021 military coup by junta security forces along with freelance journalist Sithu Aung Myint while the two discussed reporting work at the Shwe Gone Yeik Mon housing complex in Yangon’s Bahan township.

BBC Media Action Myanmar released a statement at the time confirming her arrest and expressing concern for her safety.

Sithu Aung Myint remains in detention awaiting trial on charges of “incitement” and “sedition,” for producing content authorities say was critical of the military. He faces up to three years in prison for the first charge and up to 20 for the second.

Sithu Aung Myint’s lawyer said in April that the journalist and others had been denied access to medical care by authorities while in custody.

According to Detained Journalists Information Myanmar, a media watchdog group, at least 142 journalists have been arrested in the 19 months since the coup, 95 of whom have been prosecuted under various sections of the country’s penal code.

The junta has previously denied targeting journalists for their reporting work.

This story has been updated to clarify that Htet Htet Khine was the face of the BBC Media Action’s national television peace program Khan Sar Kyi and to include comments from veteran journalists about the state of media freedom in Myanmar.

ApiLabs, R&D Sister Company to ApiJect, Launches Its Field Research Network

ApiLabs logo

ApiLabs logo

GENEVA, Sept. 15, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ApiLabs, an R&D company developing innovative, affordable medical technologies to maximize healthcare access for patients in all world regions, has launched its ApiLabs Field Research Network (AFRN).

AFRN gathers qualitative and quantitative data from real-world settings through ground level investigations, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Resulting information helps ApiLabs engineers develop medical devices for all global markets, which its sister company ApiJect Systems then helps commercialize with pharmaceutical partners.

“Our Field Research Network is vital in the development of medical devices that truly meet the needs of local populations anywhere in the world,” said Edward Kelley, PhD, ApiLabs’ Chief Global Health Officer. “Historically, medical devices for global markets have been designed in laboratories with far too little interaction and feedback from field healthcare personnel and their patients.”

ApiLabs launched AFRN in collaboration with two highly experienced healthcare support organizations. Butterfly Works recently completed its first AFRN project in Kenya’s Kwale county, researching intradermal injections and injectable contraceptives that give women greater control of their reproductive health.

A team from Dalberg Design (India) recently commenced AFRN research in two Indian states, Bihar and Karnataka. ApiLabs will gradually expand AFRN to include additional organizations in other world regions, ensuring universal device viability.

Each team assesses needs, behaviors, attitudes, preferences, and aspirations of patients and health workers; obtains qualified feedback from end users on a new device from concept through prototypes; and identifies potential obstacles to effective distribution and use. Resulting data guides ApiLabs engineers in developing devices for ApiJect, whose platform combines Blow-Fill-Seal pharmaceutical packaging with attachable components, such as needle hubs.

ApiLabs’ Co-founder and Head of R&D is Marc Koska, OBE, creator of the K1 auto-disable syringe. “I have always believed creating medical devices starts with patients and their environment,” says Mr. Koska. “At ApiLabs, our design process first determines local healthcare professionals’ and healthcare systems’ needs and conditions, so every device is suitable for every market.”

Merel van der Woude, Creative Director at Butterfly Works, confirmed this approach: “After two intense weeks of observations and speaking with more 100 healthcare providers and their clients, we had a much deeper understanding of the needs for safety, affordability, comfort and accessibility. The results are described in context of specific healthcare stories that allow us to see a problem from different perspectives.”

Prerak Mehta, Director at Dalberg Design, highlighted AFRN’s strategy: “Today’s medical products should satisfy people’s needs, align with their preferences, take socio-economic realities into consideration and meet their aspirations. That is when sustainable product innovation becomes a widespread success.”

Additional senior members at ApiLabs include Paul Rutter, MD, and Jane Chen, MPA-MBA.

Learn about ApiLabs’ Global Health Team at apijectglobalinitiative.comRead their free newsletter globe.substack.com.

Visit Butterfly Works at www.butterflyworks.org.

Dalberg Design is at www.dalbergdesign.com.

Contact

Kate Scott, kscott@apiject.com

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Logo of ApiLabs, LLC, sister R&D company to ApiJect Systems.

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Philips highlights FetView cloud-based image sharing and reporting software for obstetrics and gynecology at ISUOG 2022

September 15, 2022

Philips FetView will offer real-time, off cart remote patient management with access to data from any ultrasound system, anytime and anywhere, to enhance diagnostic confidence for physicians and provide peace of mind for expectant mothers

Amsterdam, the Netherlands and London, United Kingdom – Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, today announced the upcoming addition of  the FetView cloud-based fetal ultrasound image sharing and reporting software for obstetrics/gynecology (OB/GYN). As a vendor-neutral cloud-based platform for ultrasound images, FetView will utilize the ultrasound image data to convey fetal growth projections and provide a user-friendly platform for physician to physician and physician to patient communication.

Philips Fetview is an integrated solution that combines fetal ultrasound imaging with enhanced reporting and easy access to an expectant mother’s medical data and fetal images. All results are securely stored and displayed in real time. With this upcoming addition of FetView into Philips’ advanced portfolio for Ultrasound in OB/GYN – which includes Lumify Handheld Ultrasound, diagnostic ultrasound systems EPIQ, Affiniti and mobile app Pregnancy+ – pregnant women and their care teams will have access to a comprehensive overview of how a pregnancy is progressing to help provide peace of mind to patients and enhance diagnostic confidence for clinicians.

With OB/GYN ultrasounds performed in different clinical settings, immediate remote access to ultrasound images and medical histories for collaborative decision-making and easy sharing of images with patients is a challenge. Philips FetView will allow physicians to view, analyze, and annotate ultrasound images in real time via a cloud-based browser-accessible platform for secure image sharing, to help improve quality access to care, reduce patient mobility in case of high-risk pregnancies or post-surgery conditions, and reduce the need to rescan patients. By enabling full digitalization of OB/GYN workflows and patient management, Philips FetView will help drive greater departmental efficiency, reduce costs, and provide a better patient and staff experience.

“I see multiple patients from many areas in my daily practice, and the implementation of FetView has meant a turbo boost in productivity for my practice,” said Prof. Alexander Scharf,  Managing Director, MVZ PraenatGyn, Mainz, Germany. “The flexibility of the software is seamlessly integrated into my existing workflows and everything I need to access in the reporting is just one click away. FetView has also had a very positive impact on my patients, who have showed great enthusiasm for this program. The digital sharing of ultrasound images taken as part of prenatal care in accordance with data protection regulations and shared via a secure portal, help provide added peace of mind which is so important to expectant mothers.”

“The cloud-based reporting and image sharing capabilities of Philips FetView enhance remote communication between physicians and patients,” said Matthijs Groot Wassink, General Manger, OB/GYN Ultrasound at Philips. “By digitizing the workflow, we are taking ultrasound to the next level, delivering smart ultrasound documentation to any OB/GYN practice. The digital reporting and image sharing, and fully customizable design are hugely helpful for physicians, helping to drive efficiency and cost savings with increasing patient satisfaction in their daily practice.”

Philips FetView’s vendor-neutral software will retrieve images and measurement data via a secure encrypted DICOM interface and display them in a structured layout where care team members can easily add new information and data in line with their individual specialisms and produce easy-to-read growth curves. The application also streamlines the generation of reports in PDF format to be uploaded to electronic patient records and shared online with other clinicians and individual patients.

Philips FetView will be featured with additional Philips OB/GYN solutions helping to drive earlier and more definitive diagnoses being showcased at this year’s International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology (ISUOG) World Congress (September 16 – 18, 2022, London, U.K.). Philips is also hosting a Satellite Symposium [1] on September 16 at ISUOG 2022 (Hall 3, 12:30 – 13:30 BST), where international thought leaders, including Prof. Scharf, will discuss the future of obstetric and gynecological care and fetal medicine.

[1] Available for 12 months after the event on the ISUOG on-demand portal

For further information, please contact:

Kathy O’Reilly
Philips Global Press Office
Tel.: +1 978-221-8919
E-mail : kathy.oreilly@philips.com
Twitter: @kathyoreilly

About Royal Philips

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) is a leading health technology company focused on improving people’s health and well-being, and enabling better outcomes across the health continuum – from healthy living and prevention, to diagnosis, treatment and home care. Philips leverages advanced technology and deep clinical and consumer insights to deliver integrated solutions. Headquartered in the Netherlands, the company is a leader in diagnostic imaging, image-guided therapy, patient monitoring and health informatics, as well as in consumer health and home care. Philips generated 2021 sales of EUR 17.2 billion and employs approximately 79,000 employees with sales and services in more than 100 countries. News about Philips can be found at www.philips.com/newscenter.

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Alchip Technologies Sets Record First Half Revenue and Net Income

Q2’ 22 Revenue Sets Record

Taipei, Taiwan, Sept. 15, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Alchip Technologies sets revenue and net income records for the first half of 2022 and record revenue for Q2 2022.

First half revenue reached a record $194.6 million, while net income for the same period achieved a record $30.5 million.

Second quarter 2022 revenue notched another record of $101.1 million, up 3.9 percent over the $97.4 million from Q2 2021 and up 8.2 percent over Q1 2022 revenue of $93.5 million. At the same time, second quarter net income reached $14.5 million, up 4.3 percent over Q2 2021 net income of $13.9 million, but fell short of Q1 2022 net income of $16 million by 9.5 percent.  Second quarter operating income was reported at $19.3 million, a 10.7 percent increase over Q2 2021 operating income of $17.5 million, but down slightly from Q1 2022 results of $19.6 million.  Earnings per share for Q2 2022 were NTD 6.0.

Revenue for Q2 came in mildly lower than expected, due to ABF substrate supply constraints. Design demand, however, remained robust with no demand weakening in sight amid a slowing macro-environment.

Laying out the company’s view going forward, Alchip President and CEO, Johnny Shen announced that strong mass production demand remains unchanged and that the company would maintain its hallmark advanced technology leadership.

“We’re seeing our highest business inquiries for advanced technology 7nm, 6nm, 5nm and 4nm opportunities.  This is on top of the fact that our announcement of accepting 3nm design created a great deal of interest in the high-performance computing and AI communities.  In addition, we are experiencing significant market penetration in a number of automotive applications,” he said.

Alchip is traded on the Taiwan stock exchange.  The company is extremely well respected in North America, Japan, Israel, Taiwan, and China for its high-performance ASIC design methodology, flexible business model, best-in-class IP portfolio and advanced packaging technology expertise.

For a more information on Alchip, go to www.alchip.com

 

About Alchip

Alchip Technologies Ltd., founded in 2003 and headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, is a leading global provider of silicon and design and production services for system companies developing complex and high-volume ASICs and SoCs. The company provides faster time-to-market and cost-effective solutions for SoC design at mainstream and advanced, including 7nm, 6nm, 5nm and 4nm processes. Alchip has built its reputation as a high-performance ASIC leader through its advanced 2.5D/3D package services, CoWoS/chiplet design and manufacturing experience. Customers include global leaders in AI, HPC/supercomputer, mobile phones, entertainment device, networking equipment and other electronic product categories. Alchip is listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange (TWSE: 3661) and is a TSMC-certified Value Chain Aggregator.

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Charles Byers
Alchip Technologies
+ (408) 310-9244
chuck_byers@alchip.com