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Singapore races to clean up beaches after oil spill

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Singapore authorities are scrambling to clean up a major oil spill that has blackened the city-state’s southern coastline, days after a shipping accident.

On Friday, a Netherlands-flagged dredging boat crashed into a Singaporean fuel ship moored in the shipping straits off the nation.

Authorities said the dredger’s loss of engine power led it to drift into the Singaporean vessel, puncturing its oil tank.

At least half the oil in its tank, about 400 tonnes, spilled out, with large quantities washed ashore.

“The allision caused a rupture of one of the Marine Honour’s oil cargo tanks, and its contents of low-sulphur fuel oil were released to the sea,” Singapore maritime and environment agencies said in a joint statement.

Visitors to some of the beach clubs on the popular resort island of Sentosa reported the water was still dark and oily and a smell lingered three days after the incident.

Swimming and other sea activities are prohibited for now in Sentosa, while several beaches across the country are closed until further notice.

There are concerns for wildlife – with reports from responders of sea snails and other creatures coated in oil.

However, initial biodiversity surveys have come back with no major damage reported.

“No significant impact to marine biodiversity had been observed, though oil was observed on the roots of some mangrove plants in the area,” Dr Karenne Tun from the National Parks Board told the city’s Straits Times newspaper.

However volunteers taking part in the clean up say it could still be too early to tell.

“It is a good sign that we did not see any wildlife in distress today, but we will have to monitor the situation. It could take a while before we see the true impacts from the oil spill,” Kua Kay Yaw told the newspaper.

(BBC News)

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S. Korea President faces impeachment

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South Korea’s president yesterday shocked the country when, out of the blue, he declared martial law in the Asian democracy for the first time in nearly 50 years.

Yoon Suk Yeol’s drastic decision – announced in a late-night TV broadcast – mentioned “anti-state forces” and the threat from North Korea.

But it soon became clear that it not been spurred by external threats but by his own desperate political troubles.

Still, it prompted thousands of people to gather at parliament in protest, while opposition lawmakers rushed there to push through an emergency vote to remove the measure.

Lawmakers were also able to make their way around the barricades – even climbing fences to make it to the voting chamber.

Shortly after 01:00 on Wednesday, South Korea’s parliament, with 190 of its 300 members present, voted down the measure.

President Yoon’s declaration of martial law was ruled invalid.

Defeated, Yoon emeged a few hours later to accept the parliament’s vote and lift the martial law order.

Now, he faces the prospect of possible impeachment and even expulsion from his own party.

Source: BBC

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S. Korean President declares martial law

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South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol has declared emergency martial law.

The move comes as Yoon’s People Power Party and the main opposition Democratic Party continue to disagree over next year’s budget bill

In a surprise late night television address he says the measure is necessary to protect the country from North Korea’s communist forces and to eliminate anti-state elements

Analysis: Yoon is mired by several controversies and has been a lame duck president since the last general election

Both the ruling party and opposition have vowed to block the declaration, Yonhap news agency reports.

(BBC News)

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Michelin chef ‘gutted’ at theft of 2,500 pies

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A van containing 2,500 pies destined for a Christmas market has been stolen, prompting an appeal from a Michelin-starred chef.

Tommy Banks, who runs award-winning restaurants in North Yorkshire, says “nearly a tonne” of pies, worth £25,000 in total, were taken after the van was driven away from Barker Business Park in Melmerby on Sunday night.

The refrigerated vehicle was due to make a delivery to the chef’s pop-up pie stall at York Christmas Market, however staff found it had vanished on Monday morning.

“The team are very gutted because it’s days and days of work gone,” he told the BBC.

“Vans get replaced on insurance but all that work and all those ingredients, just nicked.”

The stolen items, which included steak and ale pies, turkey and cranberry pies and butternut squash pies, would have been enough to stock Tommy’s Pie Shop for a week, according to the chef.

He continued: “The thing that I’m gutted about especially is, what are they going to do with them, are they going to dump them somewhere?

“It’s just a real shame.”

North Yorkshire Police said it had been informed of the theft and asked anyone with information to get in touch.

“The guys are absolutely scrambling but I think we have enough to get through today and we’re just working like crazy to make more,” he said.

“Hopefully we’ll be able to stock ourselves back up again.”

Mr Banks put out a video message on social media appealing for the thieves to “do the right thing” and donate the pies to a community centre to avoid thousands of meals going to waste.

“I know they’ve gone now and we obviously aren’t going to recover them to sell them,” Mr Banks said.

“I just think that’s 2,500 people we could feed and there’s a lot of people who could do with a hot meal right now. If we can find them, they can have them.”

(BBC News)

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