Tag Archive | "SCMP"

Cape songstress riding the HK wave


On Friday October 1, 2010 we featured former Capetonian Brigitte Mitchell as our Victoria Harbour Sundowner Sessions artist number 9.

We use the title “former Capetonian” with the utmost of care because we are so well aware of the Cape Town saying:

“You can take the Capetonian out of Cape Town… but you can never take Cape Town out of the Capetonian.”

As an expat for some 10 years, experience speaks for itself.

Brigitte recently released her debut album titled Don’t Explain right here in Hong Kong and it has since also been released back home in South Africa.

While Howzit-HongKong.com has been actively supporting South African bands, musicians and artists resident here in the SAR, Brigitte Mitchell has captured our special support as she has managed to transcend the industry obstacles and released her debut album on a scale not yet seen in the South African musicians’ community locally.  For this we salute Brigitte as well as Gary Da Silva from Silva Records.

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The Sunday Morning Post on Sunday November 28, 2010 featured the following review in their Blue Notes feature:

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Lizette Smook’s Hong Kong mission


A former Matie, Lizette Smook is an executive member of the South Africa Women’s Chamber of Commerce (Hong Kong) and was featured in last Sunday’s Sunday Morning Post Magazine, a local English daily newspaper.

In 2008 a group of Hong Kong-based South African business women met to discuss ways of supporting the entrepreneurial spirit of young people and women in business and how to build a cultural bridge between South Africa and China.  Smook was instrumental in this gettogether and the outcome was the formation of the South Africa Women’s Chamber of Commerce (Hong Kong).

Lizette Smook is also the founder and CEO of Innovasians, a development and manufacturing company located in Hong Kong since 2007.

This is what the Sunday Morning Post Magazine had to say:

Who?

Lizette Smook’s mission is to make innovative products from materials most people would discard, such as dinner plates from rice husks, towels from plastic bottles and bed sheets from bamboo. Smook founded her company, Innovasians, three years ago in Hong Kong to help companies become greener and cleaner.

Why are the products unique?

Her handsome beige dishes and cutting boards are crafted from the skin of rice husks, which are bound with bio-resin and then heat-compressed. They are reusable, biodegradable and microwave safe.

Bamboo fibres can be harvested to make fabric for bed sheets, says Smook, who studied science in South Africa, where she was born. Bamboo is ideal for mass production because it grows extremely quickly, requires no pesticides and uses only 33 per cent of the water that cotton production requires.

Her non-snag towels (pictured) are made from organic cotton and recycled plastic bottles and are, according to Smook, more durable than conventional towels.

Another fabric gaining international recognition is e-leather.

Traditionally, the leather that is harvested from cows comes from their backs because that is where the thickness and grain is most consistent,” Smook says. “The rest is discarded and thrown into landfills, where it produce copious amounts of methane gas.”

E-leather is leather that has been broken down into a fibre form, using hydro-electricity. It is then reconstructed to reduce waste.

“It is leather – only it doesn’t stretch like leather. It’s easy to clean, more durable, tear-resistant and lighter,” Smook says. “[India's] Jet Airways used the fabric in their seats and found they were 40 per cent lighter.”

Why did she jump from working for mass producers such as Nike and Next to founding a sustainable design company?

Actually, that was the impetus – when you see the impact on the environment that cheap, disposable fashion has, you realise that trends come and go, but the fabric and pollution created from producing these textiles lingers,” Smook says.

Where are her products used?

Shangri-La Hotels and Resorts uses the rice dinnerware in its staff canteens and for guests with babies. Hong Kong hairdresser Emmanuel F uses the towels.

Sources: SCMP, SAWCC(Hong Kong) and Innovasians

Carrol Boyes, Champagne Gifts and MORE!

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The SCMP also hates the vuvuzela


The South China Morning Post‘s PostMagazine of June 27, 2010 carried a story by one Daniel Jeffreys in their regular “Toast rack” feature.

Before I continue, let me come clean by saying that said writer and I share at least one belief and that is:

(Jeffreys wrote) “Democracy and free speech go hand in hand but there has to be a limit.”

Those who know me will know that I also advocate that “too much democracy is not a good thing.”

Anyway, where Mr Jeffreys and I differ is his obvious disdain for our vuvuzela.

To the rant below, all we can say is:

Dear Mr Daniel Jeffreys (who is obviously a sour-puss England football fan) where is your “Gees” ?

(Click on the pic below to read full screen)

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SCMP features World Cup 2010


Here at Howzit-HongKong.com we do a lot to draw our readers’ attention to the 2010 Soccer World Cup.  So seeing the local English daily South China Morning Post feature the World Cup in it’s Sunday Morning Post edition (30 May 2010) comes as a welcome bonus.

The newspaper’s page 4-5 spread features key un-biased facts about South Africa such as the economy, main issues (poverty, Aids, crime and energy), weather and sport.  Feature writer Barry Moody also writes about the positive outlook on the tournament while there is also a Reuters story about the iconic Makarapa helmet.

Baie Dankie SCMP!

(You can click on the pictures below to view the stories)

 

 

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One last chance for 7′s tickets!


The South China Morning Post (SCMP) has one last chance for readers to score a couple of Cathay Pacific/Credit Suisse Hong Kong Sevens tickets:

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“The Cobra” loves Asia!


On this website’s homepage, I write of how I often meet fellow-South Africans around Hong Kong and how easy it is to recognise our countrymen and women in this cosmopolitan city.  Funny enough, I probably meet most Saffas in the party-district of Wan Chai.  Regular readers of this Blog will know that I hang out at Delaney’s Irish Bar because we often meet there to watch rugby (they have a satellite dish that picks up Supersport).  Whenever I cover a major Hong Kong sports event, Wan Chai is often where after-work drinks are to be had.

So it was, late one night during the 2009 UBS Hong Kong Golf Open.  A friend and I literally bumped into a Saffa coming out of, shall I say, one of the popular ladies establishments in Lockhard Road.  He recognised us because we were speaking Afrikaans and the connection was immediately made.  The next day I followed that guy for the first couple of rounds at the Fanling golf course where he was playing.

James Kamte is a real stand-up bloke and a good golfer, though not in Hong Kong last year.

Here are some of the pics I took of “The Cobra” on the second hole at the Hong Kong Country Club:

Jason Dasey wrote this article about James Kamte in today’s Sunday Morning Post:

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SCMP gives Fish some ‘China love’


Although only about a week old, SA 2010 Ambassador Mark Fish’s baby daughter is already making ripples on the other side of the world.

On the day that we were supposed to attend a media conference with South African 2010 Ambassador Mark Fish, the Hong Kong media was alerted that the press conference was cancelled due to the birth of Fish’s baby-daughter.

As I’ve mentioned before, there are two things dear to the Chinese heart: one is their food with the other being their kids; and not always in that order.  The latter showed during the unveiling of the 2010 countdown clock.  The MC started his questions (see video) to the former Bafana Bafana (SA soccer team) player with a question about his baby.  I also heard two other reporters start their questions with the same issue. 

Insurance for women

The local English daily’s sports reporter Alvin Sallay, though of Sri Lankan descent, was not left out and he filed the following story in the South China Morning Post the following day: 

(click on the pics to open larger image) 

 

 

 

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Last ball six earns South Africa a dramatic victory


South Africa won the 2009 Hong Kong Cricket Sixes title in the most dramatic fashion at Kowloon Cricket Club on Sunday evening as Farhaan Behardien smashed a six off the final delivery of the tournament to down a gallant Hong Kong . 

Set a total of 98 runs to win the title for a third time, the South Africans left it late to claim the trophy – and the first prize of US$55,000 – when Behardien thumped Mark Wright’s final ball into the stands to the delight of his team mates. 

The defeat was a cruel blow for a Hong Kong side that had impressed throughout the competition and who went into the final having won all six of their previous matches, including two against South Africa. 

Cheered on by the majority of the crowd at Kowloon Cricket Club, the home side were put into bat for the first time in the entire competition after the South Africans won the toss.  Hong Kong made a disappointing start to the final, however, losing captain Najeeb Amar with the first ball of the game and then creeping tentatively through the opening overs. 

Star man Irfan Ahmad was next to go when he holed out to Rory Kleinveldt off the bowling of David Jacobs for just seven runs – his lowest score of the tournament – in the second over with 17 on the scoreboard.  Nerves looked to have taken hold of a Hong Kong team that was opening the batting for the first time in the competition.

The pressure to set a substantial total was threatening to take its toll, but Munir Dar steadied the ship for the home side alongside wicketkeeper Hussain Butt, with Dar eventually retiring with an unbeaten 31 runs.  Butt scored 24 before being caught by Behardien off the bowling of Coetzee while Tanwir Afzal claimed 20, only to be run out, but by the end of their innings Hong Kong had set a respectable target of 98 runs for South Africa to win. 

The South Africans started confidently enough, claiming 21 runs off the first over from Dar, but a spectacular spell from Tanwir Afzal put the result back in the balance.  The 21-year-old picked up the wicket of Loots Bosman with his first ball and, two balls later, Kleinveldt was heading back to the pavilion after being bowled. By the end of the over, Jacobs had joined Afzal’s casualty list, leaving South Africa on 32 for 3.

However, the South Africans steadied the ship until the final over, when Mark Wright claimed the wicket of David Wiese to set up a grandstand finish. 

Seven runs from the next four balls left South Africa needing six off the final ball to win the title, and Behardien duly obliged, dispatching Wright’s half volleyed delivery over the boundary.  There was some consolation for Hong Kong ’s Irfan Ahmad, who won the Ben Hollioake Trophy – which is awarded to the competition’s leading player – as a result of his performances throughout the weekend.

Earlier in the day, New Zealand handed Australia a comprehensive defeat to win the Plate competition, winning by five wickets when they successfully chased down a total of 69 runs to pick up US$13,000 in prize money.

Alvin Sallay’s article in Monday’s South China Morning Post (Pic: Oliver Tsang)

SCMP article

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