Videos

Interview: Marilee Pierce Dunker, World Vision Ambassador

Team AFTNN had the honour of meeting and interviewing Marilee Pierce Dunker, World Vision ambassador and daughter of founder, Bob Pierce. This was recorded at the World Vision office in Kuala Lumpur in May 2019. During her visit to Malaysia, Ms. Dunker visited and gave inspirational talks at schools and colleges.

Date:
19 April 2020 (Sunday)

Time:
7am – 9am

Venue:
Dataran DBKL 1,
Jalan Raja Laut, Kuala Lumpur (starting and finishing line)

RM60 per participant
There will be a child-friendly 2.5km route in addition to the normal 7km route.

AsiaFitnessToday.com is a proud supporter of World Vision’s #RunforChildren. Visit https://www.worldvision.com.my/run-for-children to sign up.

Tengku Abdillah (Malaysia) receives Compagnon D’Honneur award at 113th FAI General Conference, Lausanne

AFT News Network // Lausanne, 8 December 2019 – Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, FAI – The World Air Sports Federation conferred the prestigious award of “Compagnon D’Honneur” to Malaysia’s Tengku Abdillah – Regional Vice President for East and South East Asia.

Tengku Abdillah (Malaysia) receiving the prestigious Companions of Honour award from FAI President, Bob Henderson (New Zealand)

In a phone interview, Tengku shared his excitement.

https://www.australiafitnesstoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/WhatsApp-Audio-2019-12-08-at-23.40.23-1.ogg
AFT speaks with Tengku Abdillah in Lausanne

When they mentioned my name, I was shocked and tears start coming from my eyes. I never never expected it, not at all. What I’ve done for FAI was just my passion and my love for airsports… After seven and a half years as regional Vice President of FAI, I’ve said that’s it, I’ve got to stop somewhere and end of this year, I’ll stop”.

“I started airsports by flying the aeromodelling aircraft with my son and a few of my friends. When the Department of Civil Aviation at that time decided to organise an air carnival, they wanted all activities of airsports to be there. A DCA representative contacted me, and I became the leader for aeromodelling… DCA was very happy, and after four air carnivals, they contacted me and mentioned that Tun Dr. Mahathir, the Prime Minister then asked to setup an Air Sports Federation. They gathered four disciplines; aeromodelling, parachuting, paragliding and hot air balloon and started the Malaysia Sport Aviation Federation. I was elected as MSAF President from 2012-2015 (correction: 2011-2015) and then concentrated on regional basis for the FAI, and then I was the one who initiated the AirSports Federation of Asia (AFA),”.

“Next year, I want to concentrate more time in Malaysia especially on drone, and eSports,”.

Photo credit: FAI / Marcus King

The 113th FAI General Conference took place in Lausanne, Switzerland, on 5 and 6 December 2019 and was attended by 110 delegates from Active, Associate, and Temporary Member Countries alongside International Affiliate Members, FAI elected Officers, Presidents of Honour, Companions of Honour, delegates appointed by Presidents of Commissions and Observers.

FAI COMPANIONS OF HONOUR

Tengku Abdillah (FAI Regional Vice President for East & Southeast Asia / Malaysia Sports Aviation Federation) and Dr John LANGFORD (National Aeronautic Association of the USA) were appointed FAI Companions of Honour by the Conference for their services to FAI.

Tengku Abdillah will join a team of two Malaysian pilots at the 2019 FAI World Drone Racing Championships in Xiangshan Ningbo, China next week from 11-14 December 2019. The championship, which attracts over 100 top drone racing pilots from around the world is a major highlight in the international drone-racing circuit.


What is the FAI?

The FAI was founded in 1905 and is a non-governmental and non-profit making international organisation with the basic aim of furthering aeronautical and astronautical activities worldwide, ratifying world and continental records and coordinating the organisation of international competitions. It is recognised by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

AsiaFitnessToday is a proud media supporter of the Malaysian team once again, having supported the pilots at the inaugural 2018 World Drone Racing Championships held in Shenzhen last year. Drone racing is adopted as a Move8 movement program for youth empowerment. Find out more: www.move8.org.

30th SEA Games 2019 Philippines

Highlights from Philippines

Medal Tally

Updated 9.12.19 at 2.30pm (+8GMT)

Click here to view: https://www2.2019seagames.com/medals/

AFT News Network – The Philippines plays host for the 30th South East Asian Games from 30 November to 11 December 2019, with all major activities taking place in the northern city of Clark at the newly built New Clark City Sports Village with other locations at Subic Bay Freeport Zone and Metro Manila. The 12 day games will showcase 56 sports including eSports as a first showcase game this year and will welcome over 8,750 athletes and team officials, 2,050 technical officials, 1,500 members of the media, 12,000 volunteers and over than 500 million viewers.

eSports

DOTA Gold Medal Match / Ceremony 16:00 (+8GMT)
Via ANC Who will sweep the Southeast Asian Games eSports event? A monumental first time ever for eSports to be a medal event for the regional games.

Gymnastics, 4 December 2019

Via ESPN5 Carlos Yulo bagged his fifth SILVER medal in the 30th Southeast Asian Games in the men’s gymnastics horizontal bar.

Badminton, 3 December 2019

Via Toggle SG Indonesia vs Malaysia – Badminton Men’s Team Finals – Match 1 #SEAGAMES2019

Beach Volleyball, 3 December 2019

Via Rappler Thailand’s beach volleyball teams beat the Philippine teams on Tuesday, December 3. Finals will be played on Friday, December 6 #SEAGames2019

Basketball (Men’s), 3 December 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1_4aJfqQSwA
Via GMA News Full game and awards ceremony of the SEA Games 2019 3×3 basketball men’s finals between the Philippines and Indonesia.

Bowling (Women’s), 3 December 2019

Via SG Sports TV Singapore’s New Hui Fen and Shayna Ng won Gold and Bronze respectively at the Bowling Women’s Singles at the 2019 SEA Games in the Philippines.

Weightlifting (Women’s), 2 December 2019

Gymnastics (Women’s), 2 December 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Dv5kvQTou0
Via ABS-CBN Philippines 2019 Southeast Asian Games Women’s Gymnastics on December 2, 2019

Volleyball (Men’s), 2 December, 2019

Via Rappler The Philippine men’s volleyball team gets its campaign off to a rousing start, winning in straight sets vs Cambodia Monday, December 2, 2019 #SEAGames2019

Wushu, 2 December 2019

Via ESPN Agatha Wong clinches the Philippines’ second GOLD in the 30th Southeast Asian Games after leading the Women’s Wushu Taijiquan competition with 9.67 points. ‬

Figure Skating (Freeskating Senior Category), 1 December 2019

Awards ceremony for the Figure Skating – Senior Men #SEAGames2019
Gold: Julian Zhi Jie Yee (Malaysia) Silver: Christopher Caluza (Philippines)
Philippines’ Alisson Krystle Perticheto’s at the Senior Ladies – Free Skating at the Figure Skating competition of SEA Games 2019.

Single Dance Quickstep, 30 November 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jh04D_c9XmI

Opening Ceremony Finale, 30 Nov 2019

Via CNA Filipino boxing champions Manny Pacquiao and Nesthy Petecio light up the 2019 SEA Games cauldron, sparking spectacular fireworks to cap the opening ceremony on Nov 30, 2019.

Opening Ceremony (Full), 30 November 2019

Via GMA News The Full Opening Ceremony of the 30th SEA Games 2019 in Philippines

Football (Women’s), 29 November 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hBl3YAV7GI4
Via ABS-CBN Game Highlights where Philippines defeated Malaysia to make its way into the finals at the Southeast Asian Games Women’s Football

Transparency highlighted in Tokyo 2020 Olympic Boxing Regulations

28 Nov 2019 Newsflash: The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced that it has stopped planning for the boxing tournament at Tokyo 2020 and launched an investigation into its governing body the International Boxing Association (AIBA) – via Reuters

20 Nov 2019 – The International Olympic Council (IOC) Boxing Task Force has complemented existing International Boxing Association (AIBA) regulations with specific amendments to deliver its commitment to transparency while minimising the impact on boxers at the upcoming Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.

The IOC Boxing Task Force has confirmed that the judges’ scores of all rounds will now be displayed at the end of each round. All officials will be selected from the IOC Boxing Task Force pool of eligible officials, which will consist of qualified AIBA-certified individuals who have been reviewed to ensure they meet the selection criteria. The IOC Boxing Task Force will then randomly select every official for each competition from the pool of eligible individuals.

The full referee and judge selection process will be conducted under the independent supervision of PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and include extensive independent background checks of each individual. No referees or judges involved in the Olympic Games Rio 2016 will be eligible to participate in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic boxing qualifiers or Olympic competition.

Download a summary version of the Boxing Technical Officials Selection Process here.

Mr Morinari Watanabe, IOC Boxing Task Force CHAIRMAN said:

“The main objective of the IOC Boxing Task Force is to ensure the completion of the mission of delivering events, while putting the boxers first, and with transparent and credible sporting results and fair play.”

“It is only fair to the boxers not to change the fundamental competition rules so close to the Olympic qualifiers and the Olympic competition in Tokyo. The IOC Boxing Task Force has therefore focused on the full review of the rules enforced by AIBA in the current year of 2019, limiting changes which impact on boxers while increasing transparency by displaying the scoring and in the selection process for referees and judges.”

Boxing Athlete Ambassador Shelley Watts (AUS), a 2014 Commonwealth Games gold medallist and Rio 2016 Olympian, said:

“The IOC Boxing Task Force amendments to the AIBA Rules will have a positive impact on the conduct of Olympic Boxing Qualifying Events and at Tokyo 2020, as they focus on key areas such as clarity, transparency and integrity. These amendments are the result of an inclusive decisional process that took into consideration the athletes’ voice: we made sure that changes will not impact the dynamics of the current practice of the sport, while improving the standard of the competitions.”

The AIBA Rules, effective as of 9 February 2019, and following the IOC Boxing Task Force Amendments, shall constitute the Tokyo 2020 IOC Boxing Task Force Event Regulations, applicable at the Olympic Boxing Qualifying Events and the boxing tournament at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.

Download the “Event Regulations for the Olympic Boxing Qualifying Events and the Boxing Tournament at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020” here.

About the IOC

The International Olympic Committee is a not-for-profit independent international organisation made up of volunteers, which is committed to building a better world through sport. It redistributes more than 90 per cent of its income to the wider sporting movement, which means that every day the equivalent of 3.4 million US dollars goes to help athletes and sports organisations at all levels around the world.


Video: Boxing Men’s Middle (75kg) – Gold Medal Final – Brazil v Japan Full Replay – London 2012 Olympics

Boxing Fight Night | Undefeated Malaysian Fighter Aiman Abu Bakar vs Wilford Wade | Quibors

27-year-old from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia super feather boxer, Aiman H Abu Bakar has been fighting since 2015. Standing at 5′ 7″ and 170cm, Aiman AB remained undefeated as he entered the ring across Wilford Wade, 30-year-old at 5′ 5″ and 165cm from Iligan City, Lanao del Norte, Philippines.

Boxing Fight Night video credit: Powcastsports

Language: Tagalog

Olympic Channel presents All Around: Gymnastics Episode 1

Twelve teams will head to the Olympic Games 2020 in Tokyo after two qualification days at the 49th FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships held in Stuttgart from 4-13 October 2019. Here are the results.

Right from the heart of the official Olympic Channel, we are pleased to feature the first episode of All Around. It’s 3 episodes all about gymnastics, following gymnasts Morgan Hurd, Chen Yile, and Angelina Melnikova on their journey preparing for the upcoming Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

Click here to watch the first episode here.

Hiroshima to host 1st Parkour World Championships in 2020

The Executive Committee of the Federation Internationale de Gymnastique (FIG) announced on 23 August 2019 that they will hold the first World Championships in Parkour, the FIG’s new urban sport discipline.

The inaugural edition will take place in April 2020 in Hiroshima, Japan while the Trampoline Gymnastics World Championships will return to Sofia in 2022 and, in that same year, Baku will welcome the Acrobatic Gymnastics World Championships.

The EC also confirmed the definitive inclusion of the Junior World Championships on the competitions calendar for both Artistic and Rhythmic Gymnastics.

About the FIG

The International Gymnastics Federation is the governing body for Gymnastics worldwide. It is the oldest established international federation of an Olympic sport and has participated in the Olympic Games since their revival in 1896. The FIG governs eight sports: Gymnastics for All, Men’s and Women’s Artistic Gymnastics, Rhythmic Gymnastics, Trampoline – including Double Mini-trampoline and Tumbling -, Aerobics, Acrobatics, and Parkour. It counts 146 national member federations and has its headquarters in the Olympic Capital of Lausanne (SUI).

About parkour

Parkour is a training discipline using movement and was initially developed for military obstacle course training. The traceurs, as they are called get from one point to another in a complex environment, without assistive equipment and in the fastest and most efficient way possible.

AFTnewsnetwork

Adopting a healthy lifestyle helps reduce the risk of dementia

One of the greatest fears most people don’t speak about is cognitive decline and dementia. How do they cope in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia?

The World Health Organization (WHO) has just released its guidelines about how people can address this fear and reducing their risk of dementia. Believe it or not, it’s as simple as:

#Move8 fitness movement at KL Car Free Morning – photo courtesy www.move8.org.

  • getting regular exercise

  • not smoking

  • avoiding harmful use of alcohol

  • controlling their weight

  • eating a healthy diet

  • maintaining healthy blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels

And who’s a poster model for this? Malaysia’s and the world’s oldest Prime Minister Tun Dr. Mahahir Mohammad, of course! At the age of 93 years young, Tun M as he’s fondly known to Malaysians, said this, “I would advise people not to rest when they grow old because if you rest, you will soon become very weak and incapable, and may become senile. Be active after you reach retirement age.

Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad courtesy of https://aarondell.home.blog/tag/mahathir-mohamad/

It is the same as your muscles. If you don’t use your muscles and lie down all the time, the muscles cannot even carry your weight. You cannot stand. You cannot walk.

The brain is the same. If you don’t use your brain, you don’t think, you don’t read, you don’t write, the brain regresses and you become senile. So always be active,” Tun M advised.

In the press statement issued on 14 May 2019 from its Geneva headquarters, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus shares that in the number of people with dementia is expected to triple in the next 30 years. “We need to do everything we can to reduce our risk of dementia. The scientific evidence gathered for these Guidelines confirm what we have suspected for some time, that what is good for our heart, is also good for our brain.”

WHO’s Global Dementia Observatory, launched in December 2017, is a compilation of information about country activities and resources for dementia, such as national plans, dementia-friendly initiatives, awareness campaigns and facilities for care. Data from 21 countries, including Bangladesh, Chile, France, Japan, Jordan and Togo, have already been included, with a total of 80 countries now engaged in providing data.

Creating national policies and plans for dementia are among WHO’s key recommendations for countries in their efforts to manage this growing health challenge. During 2018, WHO provided support to countries such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Qatar, Slovenia and Sri Lanka to help them develop a comprehensive, multi-sectoral public health response to dementia.

An essential element of every national dementia plan is support for carers of people with dementia, said Dr Dévora Kestel, Director of the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse at WHO. “Dementia carers are very often family members who need to make considerable adjustments to their family and professional lives to care for their loved ones. This is why WHO created iSupport. iSupport is an online training programme providing carers of people with dementia with advice on overall management of care, dealing with behaviour changes and how to look after their own health.”

Dementia: a rapidly growing public health problem

Dementia is an illness characterized by a deterioration in cognitive function beyond what might be expected from normal ageing. It affects memory, thinking, orientation, comprehension, calculation, learning capacity, language and judgement. Dementia results from a variety of diseases and injuries that affect the brain, such as Alzheimer disease or stroke.

Dementia is a rapidly growing public health problem affecting around 50 million people globally. There are nearly 10 million new cases every year. Dementia is a major cause of disability and dependency among older people. This is a rampant non-communicable disease (NCD) and inflicts a heavy economic burden on societies as a whole, with the costs of caring for people with dementia estimated to rise to US$ 2 trillion annually by 2030. The increasing numbers of people with dementia, its significant social and economic impact and lack of curative treatment, make it imperative for countries to focus on reducing modifiable risk factors for dementia. Action area 3 of the Global action plan on the public health response to dementia 2017–2025 is risk reduction. Download the global action plan here.

Some highlights from the plan on the areas for action include: increasing prioritisation and awareness of dementia; reducing the risk of dementia; diagnosis, treatment and care; support for dementia carers; strengthening information systems for dementia; and research and innovation.

This topic has recently been covered by The Star newspaper in Malaysia, “Dealing with Dementia”.

Dementia patients require assistance with even the basic needs

And also in Singapore, their Ministry of Health website addresses citizen’s concerns about the ever rising occurrences of dementia in elderly folks. Find out more about dementia signs here.

Warning signs of dementia

Dementia affects memory, judgement, language, planning and behaviour.

The video above, is inspired courtesy from Indonesia’s popular poco-poco dance. Some believe this helps prevent Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia by stimulating the brain. In the CGTN news channel video description, they share that Alzheimer’s affects the elderly, has no cure and experts have been looking for ways to prevent it.

Source: World Health Organisation // Ministry of Health Singapore // Ministry of Health Malaysia