Huawei Hosts the 9th Global Rail Summit in Berlin

BERLIN, Sept. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — In parallel with InnoTrans 2022, Huawei held the 9th Huawei Global Rail Summit, themed “Driving Digitalization in Future Rail, Create New Value Together”. The summit brought together global industry leaders, ecosystem partners, and technical experts to discuss the future of the rail industry.

At the summit, Huawei launched the Future Railway Mobile Communication System (FRMCS) Solution, which aims to help build a more secure, efficient, and smarter railway mobile communications system. Mr. Wang Guoyu, COO of Huawei Aviation & Rail BU, and other guests attended the launch.

Launch of Huawei's FRMCS Solution

“Huawei helps customers go digital. We use innovative technologies — such as FRMCS, Wi-Fi 6, and all-optical networks — to reshape connections, reconstruct digital platforms, and facilitate data sharing and collaboration across multiple service systems in the rail industry. We hope to enable intelligent rail operations and O&M through joint innovation with our partners.” said Mr. Xiang Xi, Vice President of Huawei Aviation & Rail BU.

Adhering to the concept of openness and cooperation, Huawei is committed to driving digital transformation along with rail customers and ecosystem partners. We complement each other’s strengths, innovate together, explore industry standards, and build an ecosystem for rail digitalization.

At the summit, Jeffrey Sim, CEO of SBS Transit Rail Business, explained the company’s digital journey. Vincenzo Bloise, International Sales Director of Almaviva, introduced how modern ICT solutions can boost digitalization in railways and Mr. Li Jie, President of Huawei Enterprise Wireless Domain, demonstrated how Huawei’s FRMCS solution enables railway digitalization. In addition, Steven Xiong, CTO for the rail industry of Huawei Aviation & Rail BU, delivered a keynote speech titled “Driving Digitalization in Future Rail, Create New Value Together” and shared industry digitalization cases.

Huawei exhibited its innovative solutions and flagship products for the rail industry at InnoTrans 2022. These include leading ICT infrastructure, green energy, smart urban rail, and smart railway solutions.

Huawei aims to reshape rail connectivity and enable secure, intelligent, green, and sustainable development. We will continue to dive into innovative practices and deploy its leading ICTs to lay a digital foundation for the industry. Huawei will build smart applications in collaboration with our partners, steadily advancing industry digital transformation.

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Campus With A Conscience hosts a-week long SDG festival

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Sept. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Innovation, inspiration, dedication and entertainment were just some of the key factors that brought a city together in a united effort to drive interest and action toward the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In a wonderful display of unity, corporate leaders, non-governmental organisations, local school children, special society groups, influencers and over 20,000 students from all across the Klang Valley gathered at Sunway University, Sunway City for a week-long festival of events and activations in support of the United Nations 17 SDGs and its worldwide initiative of Local Action for Global Goals 2022, celebrated from Monday 19th of September through to Friday 23rd of September.

Tengku Zatashah, Tan Sri Dr Jemilah Mahmood and Professor Sibrandes Poppema with Students from SMK Assunta and International Students from Sunway University

This unique festival and the first of its kind in Asia featured talks, performances, interactive workshops, corporate displays on sustainability from Volvo, Uniqlo, The Body Shop and Huawei, daily flag parades, on-stage demonstrations, a sustainable marketplace and a space to connect with leaders, changemakers, activists, private sector as well as a live musical performance, including a heartwarming rendition by the children from the Spastic Children’s Association of Selangor and Federal Territory which captured the hearts of those who are lucky enough to catch the concert.

A splendid and memorable adaptive fashion show by Dawn Adaptive also ensured the occasion was a truly inclusive event at Sunway University.

Joining the excited visitors on campus were a host of international dignitaries including HE Dr Joachim Bergström, Swedish Ambassador to Malaysia who officially opened the event, HE Sami Leino, Ambassador of Finland to Malaysia and Brunei, HE Dr Peter Blomeyer, German Ambassador to Malaysia and Anikó Farkas, Deputy Head of Mission at Embassy of Hungary Ambassador in Malaysia.

Representing the local community was YB Michelle Ng, ADUN Subang Jaya who added, “Slowing climate change requires behavioural change – and it is the duty of governments to facilitate this for its citizens.”

During the event, there was an e-waste collection where staff and students were able to environmentally dispose their unwanted electrical items. Since the start of the initiative, over 34,000kg electrical waste has been collected.

The noteworthy occasion also received royal approval as Selangor Princess Y.A.M Tengku Zatashah Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah who delighted crowds with her passionate address on the planet. The environment advocate Selangor Princess mentioned, “It is truly important, how we treat planet earth, other fellow citizens of this planet and every living being here. With the recent climate change we have been experiencing, we must be very concerned about the state of our planet.”

Younger participants enjoyed an interactive “Treasure Our Planet Trail” across the campus, learning new 17 SDG facts every step of their journey of enlightenment, ensuring the next generation will continue to carry the message of influence and action.

Daily on-stage demonstrations included soap making from used cooking oil by Pusat Wanita Berdaya, cooking demonstration of edible vegetable scraps by Professional Culinaire Association Malaysia and a creative upcycling demonstration by Maslisa Zainuddin from Sunway University.

The week-long event was an overwhelming success and a great advert for Malaysia in the global world of sustainability. Professor Elizabeth Lee, Chief Executive Officer of the Sunway Education Group said, “This is our aim with the Local Action Global Goals 2022 – to educate and re-educate and also to remind everyone that we need to work collectively to bring about sustainable and meaningful change.”

Whilst President of Sunway University Professor Sibrandes Poppema added he was very pleased the event was hosted at Sunway University as the institution works tirelessly to merit its growing reputation as A Campus With A Conscience.

The Local Action for Global Goals 2022 emphasised the need for the world to work together to deliver the Global Goals by 2030 through a range of special events and inspiring activations for all ages and interests. It brought together world leaders, policy-makers, decision-makers, business leaders, partners, academics, scientists, stakeholders, activists, and advocates from around the world to connect, examine solutions, identify a path forward, and work collectively in achieving the Global Goals at a critical time.

Malaysia can be rightly proud of its exceptional contribution towards this global goal.

#CampusWithAConscience is an underlying principle that embraces everything students will experience during their time at Sunway College and Sunway University. This is the fundamental spirit at the heart of Sunway Campus Life; educating, encouraging, and engaging students in all aspects of a diverse and inclusive community to support them in adopting a lifestyle and lifestyle habits that truly reflect a society determined to create a better living environment for this generation and generations to come.

Photo:  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1906237/Tengku_Zatashah__Tan_Sri_Jemilah__Professor_Poppema_with_students_from_SMK_Assunta.jpg

Russia’s war on Ukraine is ‘immoral’: New Zealand premier tells UN

Urging reform within the UN to avoid “risk of irrelevancy,” New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Friday called Russia’s war on Ukraine as “immoral.”

 

“Let us all be clear Russia’s war is illegal. It is immoral,” Ardern said, emphasizing significance of the UN “remains as relevant today as it was” when founded in 1945.

 

She said Moscow’s war on Ukraine was “a direct attack on the UN Charter and the international rules-based system and everything that this community should stand for.”

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “suggestion that it could at any point deploy further weapons that it has at their disposal reveals the false narrative that they have based their invasion on,” said Ardern.

 

“What country who claims to be a liberator, threatens to annihilate the very civilians they claim to liberate?

 

“This war is based on a lie,” she added.

 

The New Zealand prime minister said Ukraine war has “severely undermined any confidence that we have the tools as a global community to act swiftly and collectively.”

 

However, striking an optimistic note, she said: “We will not give up on the ability of our multilateral institutions to stand up against this illegal war, or to take on the many challenges we face.”

 

‘Disarmament of nukes, still a choice’

 

Pointing to use of nuclear weapons, Ardern said the nukes “do not make us safer.”

 

“In New Zealand, we have never accepted the wisdom of mutually assured destruction,” she said, adding in any such situation Wellington would choose the “challenge of disarmament than the consequences of a failed strategy of weapons-based deterrence.”

 

She said this choice of disarmament was available with nuclear-armed states.

 

Notably, in recent past, Australia, a neighbor and ally of New Zealand, signed a trilateral defense pact – AUKUS — with the US and the UK who will supply Canberra with nuclear-armed submarines.

 

If and when ready for use, the AUKUS submarines, however, cannot enter New Zealand’s waters as Wellington maintains a nuclear-free policy.

 

“New Zealand’s position in relation to the prohibition of nuclear-powered vessels in our waters remains unchanged,” Ardern had said after the AUKUS was signed.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

Pakistani premier appeals world not to leave his country alone in crises

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday drew attention to the devastation left behind by catastrophic floods in the South Asian country.

 

Addressing the UN General Assembly in New York, he said: “As I stand here today to tell the story of my country, Pakistan, my heart and mind have not been able to leave home.”

 

“My real worry, is about the next stage of this challenge, when the cameras leave, and the story just shifts away to conflicts like the Ukraine, my question is, will we be left alone, to cope with a crisis we did not create,” Sharif asked the world leaders.

 

The South Asian nation is witnessing super floods caused by “monsoon on steroids,” a calamity that has affected more than 33 million people, and resulted in the death of nearly 1,600, and caused damages to private and public infrastructure worth $30 billion, according to official estimates.

 

Sharif said they have saved many lives during the last 12 weeks but some 11 million people will be pushed further below the poverty line, while others will drift to cramped urban shelters, leaving little room for climate-smart rebuilding.

 

“For now, we have mobilized all available resources towards the national relief effort, and repurposed all budget priorities including development funds, to the rescue and first-order needs of millions.

 

“But at this point, the gap between our urgent needs and available resources is amplified by the sheer, unprecedented scale of the disaster. Our manpower and resources are totally overwhelmed,” he said.

 

Monsoon season in Pakistan, like in other countries in the region, usually results in heavy rains, but this year has been the wettest since 1961.

 

“Pakistan has never seen a more stark and devastating example of the impact of global warming. Life in Pakistan has changed forever,” he added.

 

He warned what happened in Pakistan, will not stay there, but spread to other parts of the world.

 

Kashmir dispute

 

“We look for peace with all our neighbors, including India. Sustainable peace and stability in South Asia, however, remains contingent upon a just and lasting solution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute,” he said,

 

He criticized India for its actions in August 2019 to scrap the special status of the disputed region.

 

Sharif urged the US to release the frozen Afghan assets as 30 million Afghans are left without a functional economy and a banking system.

 

“Pakistan urges the international community to respond in a positive way to the UN Secretary-General’s appeal for $4.2 billion in humanitarian and economic assistance to Afghanistan; release Afghanistan’s financial reserves, essential to revive its banking system,” he said.

 

Sharif also expressed deep concerns over growing Islamophobia, especially “the officially sponsored campaign of oppression against India’s over 200 million Muslims.”

 

“They are subjected to discriminatory laws and policies, Hijab bans, attacks on mosques, and lynchings by Hindu mobs. I am particularly concerned by the calls for ‘genocide’ against India’s Muslims by some extremist groups,” he added.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

US private sector output falls at softer pace, new orders grow in September

US private sector companies registered a softer decline in output during the month of September, according to latest flash purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data released by the US-based financial services company S&P Global on Friday.

 

The company said its headline Flash US PMI Composite Output Index came in at 49.3 in September, up from 44.6 in August.

 

“Although manufacturers continued to register a slight fall in production, service providers signaled a much slower pace of decline in output,” it said in a report.

 

The Manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI), which measures the activity of managers in the manufacturing sector, rose slightly by 0.3 point from the previous month to 51.8 in September — the second-lowest reading since July 2020.

 

A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector, while a figure below 50 represents contraction.

 

S&P Global said new orders received by private sector firms returned to expansionary territory in September, adding this upturn was the fastest since May this year.

 

“New orders grew for the first time in four months at the end of the third quarter, albeit only slightly. Subdued demand conditions reportedly stemmed from concerns regarding inflation and economic uncertainty,” the report said.

 

“Although input costs increased at a softer pace during September, firms raised their output charges at a sharper rate,” it added.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

UK announces $49B in tax cuts sending pound crashing

British Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng unveiled Friday a mini-budget in parliament comprised of a debt-financed package of £45 billion ($49 billion) in tax cuts — the biggest round in 50 years.

 

Kwarteng told parliament his fiscal statement was “one of the most significant interventions the British state has ever made,” and the package would “turn the vicious cycle of stagnation into a virtuous cycle of growth.”

 

“This is a new approach for a new era focused on growth,” he added, saying it was based on three priorities: “reforming the supply-side of the economy, maintaining a responsible approach to public finances and cutting taxes to boost growth.”

 

British Prime Minister Liz Truss won the recent Conservative Party leadership race with an explicit commitment to cut taxes. Friday’s fiscal statement was the biggest tax-cutting since 1972.

 

The scale of the tax cuts, funded through government borrowing, while the government is already increasing spending, also funded through government borrowing, to deal with the energy crisis triggered concern among experts and financial markets.

 

Kwarteng said the cost of the energy bailout plan would be £60 billion in government borrowing for the first six months alone starting in October.

 

Tax cuts

 

The headline tax cut announced was the abolition of the top rate of tax, which was 45% for those earning more than £150,000 per year.

 

From April 2023, the top rate of tax for the highest earners will be 40%, the same for those earning £50,271.

 

At the other end of the tax spectrum, the 1p cut in the basic rate income tax will be brought forward by one year and take effect in April. This means the basic rate will be 19% rather than 20%.

 

The corporation tax will remain at 19% with a planned increase to 25% now scrapped. A planned increase in alcohol duty was also scrapped.

 

Stamp duty, the tax paid when people buy property, will be cut. It will be done by doubling the exemption level, the point above which it has to be paid, from £125,000 to £250,000 and from £300,000 to £425,000 for first-time buyers.

 

In another controversial move, Kwarteng announced a cap on bankers’ bonuses will be scrapped.

 

The cap, which limited bonuses to twice a banker’s salary, was introduced in 2008 by the EU following the financial crisis.

 

“We need global banks to create jobs here, invest here, and pay taxes here in London, not in Paris, not in Frankfurt, and not in New York,” said the chancellor. “All the bonus cap did was to push up the basic salaries of bankers, or drive activity outside Europe. It never capped total remuneration, so let’s not sit here and pretend otherwise. So we’re going to get rid of it.”

 

From November, National Insurance contributions, or social security payments, will also be cut.

 

Kwarteng announced his intention to create new low-tax investment zones with lower taxes for businesses and looser planning rules to encourage investment.

 

Those on unemployment benefits, known in the UK as universal credit, will have to take more proactive steps to find more and better paid work or face a reduction in benefits.

 

Trade union legislation was also tightened, with new legislation put forward to force unions to put pay offers to members to a vote.

 

VAT-free shopping was also introduced for overseas visitors.

 

Nervous reaction

 

The UK is facing multiple and growing economic woes. Inflation is surging, interest rates are rising, the country is thought to be tipping into recession and all those factors have contributed to and exacerbated an escalating cost-of-living crisis.

 

The Bank of England warned Thursday that the UK could already be in recession. It also increased interest rates, with the level now standing at 2.25%. Markets are expecting further interest rate hikes as a result of the announcement to keep inflation under control.

 

Following Kwarteng’s announcement, the pound sank to a 37-year low against the US dollar, with the sterling falling below $1.10 for the first time since 1985. So far this year, the pound has declined 17% against the greenback.

 

It also fell 1.1% against the euro and the FTSE 100 share index dropped 2.3% following the announcement.

 

Unlike Margaret Thatcher’s tax cuts in the 1980s, which were funded through public spending cuts, Kwarteng’s package is funded through increased government borrowing, which is an approach that has less in common with Thatcher and more with former US President Ronald Reagan.

 

As a result of investors selling UK government bonds, the cost of government borrowing has increased. A year ago, the two-year cost of borrowing was 0.4% – it is now 3.95%.

 

“This huge fiscal event is a radical economic gamble; a ‘go big or go home’ gamble that will put UK debt on an unstable footing,” Bethany Payne, a bond portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors, told the Financial Times.

 

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, was quoted by the newspaper as saying: “The plan seems to be to borrow large sums at increasingly expensive rates, put government debt on an unsustainable rising path, and hope that we get better growth.”

 

Labour Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves echoed those sentiments in her response to Kwarteng’s statement, saying Truss and himself were “two desperate gamblers in a casino chasing a losing run.”

 

“The chancellor has made clear who his priorities are today, not a plan for growth – a plan to reward the already wealthy. A return to the trickle-down of the past – back to the future, not a brave new era,” said Reeves.

 

She added: “The Conservatives cannot solve the cost-of-living crisis, the Conservatives are the cost-of-living crisis. And the country cannot afford them anymore.”

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ukraine revokes accreditation of Iranian ambassador

Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry on Friday revoked the accreditation of Iran’s ambassador to Kyiv after accusing Tehran of supplying weapons to Russia.

 

The Foreign Ministry summoned the charge d’affaires of Iran in Ukraine and justified its move citing the alleged use of Iranian-made weapons by Russian troops.

 

“The Iranian side was told that the supply of Iranian weapons to Russia for its further use by Russian troops against the Ukrainian civilian population and the defense forces directly contradicts the position of neutrality, respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, publicly declared by the top leadership of Iran,” the ministry said in the statement.

 

Supplying Russia with weapons “to wage war against Ukraine is an unfriendly act that deals a serious blow to Ukraine-Iran relations,” it added.

 

Earlier on Friday, Ukraine’s presidential spokesman Sergii Nykyforov claimed they had proof that Iranian-made weapons were used by Russia in Ukraine, where the war is in its seventh month.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

Fed chair says US economy deals with ‘unusual set of disruptions’

The Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Friday the American economy deals with “unusual set of disruptions” after the central bank made a rate hike of 75 basis points of rate hike for the third consecutive time on Wednesday.

 

“We continue to deal with an exceptionally unusual economic set of disruptions. As policymakers, we are committed to using our tools to help steer the economy through what has been a uniquely challenging period,” he said during a Fed Listens event held in Washington, D.C.

 

Powell referred to the current record high inflation and low economic growth environment as “the new normal” and said “The insights you share in these events help us home in on the challenges and opportunities that are shaping what we might think of as the new normal of the American economy.”

 

The Fed has prioritized lowering inflation over economic growth, but there still remains the risk of a recession in the US economy.

 

The central bank now expects the American economy to grow 0.2% this year, down from its previous forecast of 1.7% growth made in June. The growth estimate for 2023 was also lowered to 1.2%, down from the earlier expectation of 1.7%, according to its latest projections.

 

Consumer inflation in the US showed an annual increase of 8.3% in August, above the 8.1% market estimate, after it peaked at 9.1% in June on an annual basis.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

White House thanks Türkiye for help in brokering Russia-Ukraine prisoner swap

The US thanked Türkiye on Friday for its assistance in brokering an agreement between Russia and Ukraine that saw hundreds of prisoners of war released, including two Americans.

 

White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre thanked Türkiye and Saudi Arabia “for facilitating the exchange of prisoners between Ukraine and Russia.”

 

“The United States welcomes a negotiated prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia,” she told reporters. “We are appreciative of Ukraine including all prisoners regardless of nationality in its negotiations, and we look forward to these US citizens being reunited with their families.”

 

On Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that Russia and Ukraine agreed on a prisoner swap deal as a result of Ankara’s mediation and diplomatic exchanges with the leaders of the two countries.

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed the exchange of 215 Ukrainian soldiers in a video statement and thanked Türkiye for its role. Russia, for its part, said 55 of its servicemen were released by Kyiv.

 

Two Americans captured in Ukraine were also released.

 

Alexander John-Robert Drueke, 39, from Tuscaloosa, Alabama and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh, 27, of Hartselle, Alabama, were taken prisoner while fighting alongside Ukrainian forces in the northeast Kharkiv region in June.

 

Source: Anadolu Agency