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Live2Learn Ideas: A Sabahan Entrepreneur's Vision at Shell LiveWIRE 2025
In this interview with Daily Express, Cheryl Joanne Chan—Creative Manager of Live2Learn Ideas—shares her entrepreneurial ...
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Daily Express
17 hours ago
- Daily Express
Taman PPR Putera Kionsom partially opens after 22-year delay
Published on: Friday, July 11, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jul 11, 2025 Text Size: Nga and others with some of the home owners. KOTA KINABALU: After 22 years, the long-delayed Taman PPR Putera Kionsom is finally partially open for occupancy, with four of its 10 blocks completed and occupied since May. Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming said the remaining six blocks are expected to be completed by the end of August. Once fully ready, the RM152.9 million project will accommodate 1,000 families. Launched in 2003 under the Eighth Malaysia Plan (RMK-8), the project includes kindergartens, a surau, shops, and disabled-friendly units. Nga also announced the introduction of a hotel-style access card system to encourage timely rental payments, following its successful pilot in Johor. To date, Sabah has 39 PPR projects, with 35 completed. A total of RM195.35 million has been allocated this year for 48 development and repair projects across the state, including several new PRR and PPR initiatives. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia


Daily Express
19 hours ago
- Daily Express
China denies asking firms to collect data illegally after new EU probe
Published on: Friday, July 11, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jul 11, 2025 By: AFP Text Size: TikTok was fined €530 million in May by the Data Protection Commission over sending personal data to China. (AP pic) BEIJING: Beijing denied today asking firms to 'illegally' collect and store users' personal information, after an Irish regulator helping the EU regulate data privacy began investigating Chinese social media giant TikTok. 'The Chinese government attaches great importance to and protects data privacy and security in accordance with the law,' foreign ministry spokesman Mao Ning said. Beijing 'has never and will never require companies or individuals to illegally collect or store data', Mao said. 'We hope that the European side will respect the market economy and fair competition, and provide a fair, just and non-discriminatory business environment for companies from all countries,' she told a regular news conference. The social media giant has been in the crosshairs of Western governments for years over fears that personal data could be used by China for espionage or propaganda purposes. However, TikTok has insisted that it has never received any requests from Chinese authorities for European users' data. TikTok was fined €530 million in May by the Data Protection Commission over sending personal data to China, although the Chinese social media giant had insisted this data was only accessed remotely. TikTok, which has 1.5 billion users worldwide, is a division of Chinese tech giant ByteDance. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia


Daily Express
19 hours ago
- Daily Express
Vietnam jails 30 people for graft worth US$45 million
Published on: Friday, July 11, 2025 Published on: Fri, Jul 11, 2025 By: AFP Text Size: Phuc Son Group chairman Nguyen Van Hau spent over US$5 million bribing officials. (AFP pic) HANOI: A court in Vietnam today jailed 30 people including several former senior officials over graft that cost the state US$45 million, with one ex-official convicted of taking suitcases stuffed with cash bribes. The communist nation's crackdown on corruption in recent years has seen two presidents and three deputy prime ministers deposed and top business leaders taken down. Today, state media said a Hanoi court announced verdicts for 30 former officials and 11 businessmen charged with bribery, abuse of power and violating bidding and contracting laws. Thirty of the 41 were convicted of corruption that prosecutors say caused damages worth more than 1.16 trillion dong (US$44.6 million) to the state, Public Security News said. The bribes themselves totalled far less. Prosecutors said that between 2010 and 2024, chairman of the Phuc Son Group, Nguyen Van Hau, spent over US$5 million bribing officials to win contracts in over a dozen multi-billion-dollar infrastructure projects in three provinces. Hau brought suitcases of cash to other defendants' offices or private residences for the bribes, prosecutors say. For that and other violations he was handed 30 years in prison. Former party chief of Vinh Phuc province Hoang Thi Thuy Lan was given 14 years behind bars for taking the biggest bribes – almost US$2 million in suitcases weighing up to 60kg. 'I recognise my mistakes and my crime and fully accept the indictment,' Lan told the court. 'I would like to ask the court to reduce sentences for my comrades in the most humanitarian manner,' she said. According to lawyers, Hau and his group paid over US$45 million as compensation for the damages in the case. In April, Vietnam jailed former deputy minister of industry and trade Hoang Quoc Vuong for six years after finding him guilty of 'power abuse' in a solar energy development plan. The 62-year-old had admitted to taking a US$57,600 bribe to favour solar power plants in southern Ninh Thuan province, but his family paid the amount back before the sentencing. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia