Monday 30 May 2022

A sextuplet conjunction

Having missed the first round of closest conjunction between Jupiter and Mars yesterday morning through tiredness, I made it a point to wake up at 5.30am today just to set myself up to photograph these two planets together. What I wanted to achieve was to capture an image that included the four moons of Jupiter. What a sight that would be, wouldn't it, to have two planets and four moons together, right? 

Timing, weather, equipment and luck play important parts in this endeavour. The timing was right in this instance because I was sure that Jupiter's moon would be visible in the pictures, if my luck held. I was less confident with the weather although the forecast did not say rain in the morning. Clouds could come rolling in unannounced. I was even less sure with my equipment: the Olympus E-PL7. Sometimes, it performs superbly within limitations, and sometimes, it does not. And finally, luck. If you are not lucky, well, that's it. 

My first batch of images were, unfortunately, not good enough, despite mounting the camera on a tripod. I couldn't see the moons. It was not until my third batch of pictures that I managed to have two reasonably good frames to show off. Only two frames from 68 taken! Here is the better one, but it is still not as good as I had hoped for. Anyway, the moment has passed.


The four Galilean moons are, in order from the top, Callisto, Ganymede, Io and Europa. My last word on this conjunction is that seen with the naked eye - at least, with my own eyes - the two planets looked like one. They were so close together that to my bad eyesight, they looked like one merged point of light. But of course, the camera images tell a different story.  


Sunday 29 May 2022

Gunong Jerai in 2022


Finally, my wife and I had a most relaxing vacation at Gunong Jerai last month. It's one place that we have never been to together. I had visited the place way back during my bachelor days in 1982. After we married, we had tried going up that mountain once with friends, even gone to the extent of booking one of the bungalows there, but at the last moment our booking was cancelled because some government officials from Kedah wanted to use the place. After that incident, we said "forget it" to this place as there were other more accommodative hill destinations around the country.

But lately, some friends had told us how much they had enjoyed an overnight stay at the Gunong Jerai Hill Resort. We were intrigued. Would the place have changed since the last time we tried to stay there? I gave the hotel a call. Yes, there were rooms available and you could walk in anytime. No need to make reservations or bookings. This was during the Muslim month of Ramadan, mind you, or otherwise the place would be overrun by vacationers.

So we packed our bags and drove up to the hill resort (almost 1,000 metres above sea level). From the foot of the mountain till the hill resort, it was a journey of some 11 kilometres. A steady 30-minute climb uphill through many twists and turns along the route. But we made it without any difficulty. We asked for an upgrade to our room and was given an apartment unit which looked down onto the Kedah coastline and the padi fields around Yan town. Fabulous. (Note: Most pictures will appear at the end of this story.)

The hill resort covers some five acres or two hectares and it is possible to walk around the place freely. We noticed some day trippers around the place too. We decided to stop for tea at their café behind their reception area. We ordered some pastries and were delighted with them. They weren't too bad at all.

Like I mentioned earlier, this short sojourn up Gunong Jerai was meant to be a relaxation. And so it turned out to be. We spent about two hours on the balcony looking out to the coastline and islands as the sun gradually sank down. And all too soon it was time for dinner at their halal restaurant. Staff were very polite, waiting patiently to take our orders. Saw See ordered their chicken chop while I went for their mee rebus tulang which was described on their poster as their best selling item.

They weren't wrong on this point. The bowl was large and filled to the brim. In it was a huge chunk of bone with a lot of tender meat still dangling from it. This bowl of mee rebus was certainly worth every bit of the RM17 that we paid for it. It was quite a memorable dinner. Heartily recommended. But a word of caution: it's beef. So if anyone can't eat beef, I'm sorry....they'll have to order other food items from the menu.

Breakfast the next morning was also in the restaurant. Because it was the fasting month, there wasn't any buffet on offer. But we could order from their menu. Not many things to choose. Either a breakfast of nasi lemak or some localised Western breakfast, We plumbed for the Western breakfast of eggs, baked beans, ham, sausages and toasted bread. Not too bad, actually, although the bread came after we had finished out food. The kitchen's hiccup, maybe? Despite its simplicity, we quite enjoyed it.

Now, we have some two hours to kill before checking out from the resort. So what else could we do? Go visit the nearby waterfall, of course! We got the direction from the reception and went walking down the well-defined path until we could hear the water thundering down in the distance. Soon enough, we clambered over some rocks to reach the waterfall. But too bad we couldn't find the way down to the pool. We must have missed it. 

Looking at this waterfall, I wondered whether it was the same one that my friends and I had reached 40 years ago. Possibly, because there can't be too many waterfalls around the resort. All too soon, we had to head back to the apartment. By one o'clock, we were already on our way down the mountain. No doubt only a short vacation, but it was quite relaxing and done on our own terms.

Our accommodation. It was quite a spacious apartment, Very clean and well kept. Balcony gave a breath-taking view of the Andaman Sea and the padi fields around Yan. 

The bathroom was of the sunken type and may provide a small challenge to the more senior folks with mobility issues. However, there are railings to hold on.

We spent our time just sitting here and looking out ahead.

Enjoying the late setting sun and  and watching the last rays turn the sky into a brilliant orange

Another view of the setting sun, this time from inside the apartment

We stayed in one of these apartment blocks.

Other than the apartment blocks, these wonderful chalets are available for short stays. Other facilities here include a playground and two small pools.

The resort is officially 986 metres above sea level

The Kedah coastline at Yan comes with Bunting island in the background. The island is connected to the mainland by a short bridge. Many people claimed that the bridge is a white elephant, popular with anglers and nobody else. Actually, there are four islands sitting off the coast. Apart from Bunting, there are also Song Song, Telur and Bidan which couldn't be seen from the resort.

It's called the Simple Day Café. Very popular with day trippers to Gunong Jerai.

An exterior view of the café. The restaurant is located in the building on the right. That's where we went for dinner, breakfast and lunch.

My bowl of mee rebus tulang, one of the best selling items on the restaurant's menu. the serving is quite generous.

In my opinion, these three iconic pine trees is representative of the hill resort itself. They are magnificent against a brilliantly blue sky and can be enjoyed from the restaurant.

On a clear day, the padi fields of Yan stretch out for miles and miles. This cyclist is just one of many who come up to the resort grounds on a day trip.

The hill resort provides a camp site for anyone that wishes to stay outdoors. They'll have to register with the reception first. 

There's a botanical park at the hill resort but we did not explore it. Instead, we chose to walk down the well-trodden path to the Alor Naga waterfall. It's about a 20-minute easy walk one-way. Very difficult to lose one's way if everyone keeps to the walkway. Nevertheless, resort guests should inform the reception if they intend to visit the waterfall.



At the end of the 20-minute trek is the waterfall itself, but one will have to clamber through some gap in the boulders. 

I think it is possible to get to the pool below but I did not find the way. However, prudence should dictate that one should only go down there in a group of people; not when you come here alone or with just another person.

And lastly, before we left the hill resort, we spied some tourists going up this way to the mosque or masjid atop Gunong Jerai. It's a modern squarish building but capped by a dome.

Friday 27 May 2022

Teachers' Day

Was invited by the Headmaster to a belated Hari Guru function at Penang Free School this morning. There were only a few guests there - the others being Penang Port chairman Syed Mohamed Aidid, some members of the Parents-Teachers Association, a few recently retired teachers from the school, Andrew Lim, Zahari Zachariah and Loh Lean Kang. The rest were the school's teachers. Thank you, Syed Sultan, for the invitation!







Wednesday 25 May 2022

Moon, Jupiter and Mars conjunction

The things parents do for their kids. In my case, I was asked to be a human alarm clock. My son was to take a flight departing the Penang international airport at 8.30am and had wanted me to wake him up at 5.30am. "Don't worry," he assured me, "I have set other alarms to go off at this time too but I need you to be an additional alarm in case my other alarms fail me." Unfortunately, he does not live with his parents in Bukit Mertajam but preferred to stay on his own on the island. So like all good parents, I agreed to give him a telephone call at 5.30am. But first, I had to roll out of bed myself by 5.15am at the latest. 

The problem with me is that after I rouse myself up at this unearthly hour, it is normally impossible for me to go back to my warm bed. What to do under such circumstances? Why, go out and look at the sky, that's what!

The moment I looked eastwards, I was amazed to see the crescent moon to the right of Jupiter. I had forgotten all about this forthcoming conjunction! The wandering moon, getting thinner with each day, would be positioned close enough to Jupiter in the morning of the 25th of May. In addition, with the fainter Mars quite close by, the two planets and the moon formed a tight triangle in the eastern morning sky. Wow, what a sight indeed!

PS. There was a bonus too, When I digitally enhanced my pictures of this conjunction, the four Galilean moons of Jupiter showed up so clearly in a few of them. Io was almost touching the planet itself but not because it was going to fall into Jupiter. It's an optical illusion. A few minutes later, it would be transiting across the face of Jupiter and would be impossible for me to photograph it. So at this very moment, there were five moons and two planets in this picture. 

PS2. Mars and Jupiter would be closest together from our point of view on Sunday morning but it won't be anything as spectacularly bright as the Jupiter-Venus conjunction which was witnessed at dawn on the first of this month. But I hope that I can still wake up on Sunday to watch this natural phenomenon.



Tuesday 24 May 2022

Making the most from a blackout

I was trying to take a photograph of the Milky Way. Serious! There was a power failure here last night. My neighbourhood in Bukit Mertajam was plunged into darkness at about 9.15pm for about 50 minutes. I was changing channels on the television set and suddenly, poof! The lights went out. So I went outdoors - but still within my compound because the dratted automatic gate could not open without electricity - and peered upwards at the sky.

Well, I thought to myself, might as well see whether I can see some stars since normally, light pollution from the street laps and neighbours' houses would make that impossible. Didn't see many stars above me. Possibly due to my own deteriorating eyesight. But right up above me was Arcturus. And then I noticed Bootes and Spica. Further away northwards, I think I saw three stars from the Hercules constellation.

Looking westwards, I think it was Regulus in Leo but I can't be sure. Anyway, I couldn't see many stars there. Southwards gave me a bit more luck. As my eyes became more accustomed to the dark, there were quite a number of stars there but I couldn't make out what they were. A sky chart on my mobile phone told me that the Milky Way was in that direction.

Anyway, I wasn't thinking of any photography at that stage. Not until a former colleague phoned me to make the most of this opportunity to try out Milky Way photography. But my camera's not adequate for this job, I protested. Try lah, he said, and then he gave me some rough guidelines on my camera's settings. So I mounted my little Olympus E-PL7 on the tripod and aimed it southwards towards where I believed the Milky Way was.

As a first experiment, it wasn't successful. But I did manage to take several pictures of the sky in that southward direction and the results surprised me a lot. Stars that did not normally show up in my vision appeared in my images. So I did some digital manipulation on the computer and I think this picture could be considered the best among the batch I took last night at about 11.30pm. Maybe I should try again during the next blackout.

PS. I should add that this wasn't my first attempt at trying to photograph the Milky Way. The first time was in 2011 when I was in a small New Zealand town called Twizel. Read it here



Sunday 22 May 2022

Blue hour

A blue hour moment at 6.40am today




Temple is repaired

I saw on facebook yesterday that the repairs to the badly damaged Tua Pek Kong Temple in the old Bukit Mertajam town are almost nearing completion. The temple had been ravaged by fire on the third of July in 2019. After that, the whole of the temple premises was cordoned off and the hawkers that used to operate on the perimeter fringes of the temple, including the back and side lanes, were relocated to nearby coffee shops.

I had written something about the fire three years ago. The damage was so extensive that the temple's interior had been reduced to cinders. Click here for my original story which included some background into the temple's history itself. The original temple was built in 1866 and was the centre of social and religious life among the early inhabitants. The fire in 2019 was a devastating blow but it gave the perfect opportunity to reconstruct a safer premises that complies with today's fire regulations. I can't wait for the temple to reopen to the public. It's sure to attract a big crowd as people resumes paying homage to the town's main resident deity.

The picture below was taken from facebook. The link is here if anyone wants to see more pictures of the almost ready temple premises. 




Saturday 21 May 2022

Chess @ Hanoi SEA Games (blitz)

Well done! Our duo, Puteri Rifqah and Puteri Munajjah, have clinched the final Bronze medal at the women's blitz chess team competition of the 31st SEA Games in Vietnam. Heartiest congratulations to them. At least there are two Bronze medals to show from what could have been a disastrous outing for the Malaysian chess contingent at the biennial Games. The other Bronze medal came earlier from Sim Jia Ru who entered the semi-finals of the Women's Rapid Chess individual competition last Tuesday. 

The full results of all the chess competitions at this SEA Games can be viewed on the vietnamchess website. And sorry, I can't provide any more exclusive pictures from Vietnam because in the last few days as our chess fortune began plummeting, so too my trustworthy source sort of dried up completely. 

Puteri Munajjah (left) and her sister, Puteri Rifqah, both clutching at the soft mascot of the 31st SEA Games which was presented to all medal winners. Keep them well, girls, they will be very rare and precious in the future. You'll be the envy of many boys.

Note: Just to be very sure, all my stories on this blog pertaining to the chess competitions at the 31st SEA Games in Vietnam are my own and do not represent the private or public views of any chess organisation or persons connected to them. So don't go off on a tangent and ask who is SS Quah, okay? Go check up on your chess history. 


Frank Donovan Bisseker

Before direct election was introduced in the Straits Settlements and British Malaya, the Government appointed members of the business community and social elites to reflect the views and opinions of civil society at meetings of the Legislative Council. Known as unofficial members, they were part of the legislative body who did not hold government office. This appointment was prevalent not only in the Straits Settlements but throughout the British Empire and later, the Commonwealth. The Senior Unofficial Member was the highest-ranking unofficial member of the Council and he would be tasked with representing the opinions of all unofficial members to the Governor. 

Frank Donovan Bisseker was a respected member of the business community in the Far East, being resident for several years and a frequent visitor to Singapore and other business centres. For 25 years, he was associated with commercial enterprises and had sat on the boards of various companies. Bisseker came to Penang in September 1939 as General Manager of the Eastern Smelting Company and soon, he was elected as a Senior Unofficial Member to represent the Penang Chamber of Commerce on the Legislative Council in Singapore. The appointment was for three years from January 1940. 

Then came the merciless pounding of Penang from the Japanese air raids in December 1941. Bisseker was evacuated together with the rest of the European community on the island. On his arrival in Singapore, he made representations to the Government with a view to ensure that there would be lessons learnt from the failed defence of Penang; that there should not be a repetition in other Malayan towns of what took place in the Northern Settlement. It is all water under the bridge now but in a radio broadcast from Singapore on 20 December 1941, he gave a rather clear account of what had happened in Penang: all the poundings received at the hands of the Japanese bombers and the civilian population's subsequent reaction by running away to Singapore or the hills in the interior.

It is one of the earnest requests that I have made to the authorities already that menfolk and womenfolk of Penang who have seen and who know shall be posted to Singapore and to the other towns of Malaya in order to let the populations in those towns profit from our Penang experience. I have told them how the civil administration functioned in an emergency and have endeavoured to suggest improvements.

I have told them of the inadequacy of food distribution to a secondary point only. I have told them that it is essential to control labour and transport if the towns of Malaya are to function in extreme circumstances. I have told them of the futility of dual control and of the necessity, consequently, to eliminate those bodies which will not take orders from the Government. I have told them of the importance of the medical side where it concerns sewage and disease prevention. I have told them what I know to be essential in the strengthening of those units responsible for civil order. I have told them of the necessity of maintaining permanent touch with the leaders of all communities. I have told them of the need of reserve fighting equipment.

I have not only told them those things - I have urged with all the emphasis at my command that what I have said shall not be just listened to, but that immediate action shall be taken in an attempt to profit from our knowledge.

You may say and you will say that there is much more I should tell them. That is true and there is much more that I have said, but this talk is upon the issues which I have mentioned - issues with which we are all individually directly concerned and I am not here to go off into a dissertation upon the larger issues.

For obvious reasons there is much that I have had to say which it will be clear to the intelligent I cannot possibly repeat to you in a broadcast, but I give the most positive assurance now to my fellow townsmen and townswomen that your experiences and the immediate cause of them and of that which led up to them have been frankly and forcefully laid before the authorities.

I have not minced my words; and there can be a great lessening in the chances of a repetition of what you all have gone through and what I have gone through if the authorities will take immediately the essential steps necessary to prevent a repetition of what has been an entirely unnecessary episode.

And so I say to all my listeners, fight in the manner for which you are best suited. Your civil defence units are staunch and brave. Join them and help where and when you can. Have nothing to do with rumour and those whose pleasure it is to go about remarking 'they say'. Fight we must and fight we shall; that is the world that shall be in every man's mind day in, day out, until victory is won. There are no craven spirits in Singapore and the other towns of Malaya, even though the traitors and the rumour mongers will have made people believe that there are. 

The men and women of these towns are staunch member of the British Empire all under the Union Jack and to the Union Jack it is that we look up until with pride in Victory we see it waving at the masthead over free men. 

Bisseker began the broadcast by saying that he was speaking at his own request for the purpose of telling the truth because he hated rumour and loathed the words "they say", and he would try and give his listeners some idea of what bombing and machinegunning of an eastern city with its intermingled communities meant.

He said that he spoke without recrimination except where it could be of value in making preparations for helping to repel any attempt the Japanese might make to enter the cities, and he was addressing "those with stout hearts, with the determination to leave no stone unturned in organising in such a way as to make it certain that nothing is left to chance, as such is the true spirit of the menfolk and the womenfolk of the towns of Malaya." He then continued:

What I am about to say is not what has been said to me by others - it is what I know from my own personal experiences, nothing I shall say tonight is hearsay. I hope I have many listeners as there is much to learn. I shall speak plainly. Before the first intensive raid, Japanese aeroplanes in considerable force flew over and round Penang. They were watched by crowds. When a large force of enemy aircraft was seen approaching on a subsequent occasion, the occasion of the first actual raid, again the crowds thought that the same thing as had happened before was about to take place.

They were rudely disillusioned as, on this first occasion when Penang was bombed, it was no demonstration flight to trick the people into the streets as had been the earlier flights; that act had been performed already so that down upon the crowded population gazing into the sky came a rain of bombs causing innumerable and unnecessary casualties because the population had failed to take the first elementary precaution taught them so arduously by the A.R.P. leaders right from the beginning of the war. They stood up and watched instead of lying on the ground; and here I have to say something which I have not actually seen myself but something which I have been told by four different doctors attending the wounded.

You must take my word for it that it is accurate; I know the four doctors and I know what they say is right. They told me that an enormous percentage of the casualties were suffering from wounds above the level of the tops of their legs and there is no doubt about it that a great number of the wounded would have been well and safe today if they had lain down on the ground immediately the bombs started dropping. This raid set alight a great part of Penang. It was followed the next two days by promiscuous high-explosive-gunning but it is good to remark that casualties were infinitesimal.

The population sadly but truly had learned its lesson and you here in Singapore and in the other cities of Malaya must learn your lesson from the sufferings and the torture of the casualties in Penang. When and if the time should come and you are caught away from your prepared protection, if you cannot get into anything lie down where you are. Take a grip on yourself and stick it out flat on your stomachs till the raiders have passed. You may get up a bit shaken but you won't be lifted up, unless you are amazingly unfortunate, a scarred and shattered human being.

These three raids, to all intents and purposes, bombed Penang into impotency - and why? For the sad and true reason that the civilian population evaporated in a most amazing manner. The town became deserted: the countryside packed. No town can function without the essential services and if those in the various strata of the essential services are not there to do their bit, it does not take a great deal of intelligence to realise what chaos and what complete disruption can ensue - looting, pollution, dirt stink, debris, rats, blood - innumerable horrors which cannot be mentioned. This took place in Penang.

There was no labour for days; there was no transport for days; the light was there, the water was there, the food was there; I can think of nothing of outstanding importance which was not there except manpower essential for the functioning of any city. Normal human fear caused this evacuation to the countryside. Fear is natural to everybody but it goes in degrees. There are some who have had great experience of warfare and, although afraid, they know the need for stifling their natural desires.

Many in such cities as these have had no such experience. They rely quite naturally on the more experienced so it is essential to arrange for the experienced to be sprinkled among them less experienced brethren of every race and community as it is by such means that a repetition of the horrors of our experiences in Penang can best be prevented. This has to be accomplished and by us. It is up to us. We people from Penang have seen and learned but it is not enough that you my listeners should be satisfied by just hearing what I have to tell you. You have to act.

Nobody is suggesting Singapore is doomed or anything so demoralisingly untrue but we have got to fight to save it and fighting must be our motto from now on - and it is not just those few at the head who can accomplish all that is necessary: it is you who must act.

By this I do not mean that the authorities can be idle; on the contrary they must act too and, in so doing, they must no longer maintain official prejudice and the time service roster. They must act with the capable man at their command, the man who will obey the order without hesitation.

The Prime Minister told Great Britain after Dunkerque how serious was the situation then but he did not say that he was going to save Great Britain; he said that he was going to do all within his power. But he told the people of Great Britain that it was up to them and it was through them that Britain would be saved.

I am not pretending that Penang is a Dunkerque but I am most emphatically asserting that it is through you that Singapore and the other cities of Malaya are going to be saved. One other point on this count. The importance of Malaya in the Far East is so obvious and so well known as to need no comment but have you realised that if we in any way fail in our duties in the civil defence of Malaya we are failing our mothers and fathers, our brothers and sisters, our comrades of every race in other countries of the Empire.

That shall never be said. There is no question of East or West. Easterners and Westerners of the British Empire with out gallant Allies are brothers in this fight.

We must stick together and the leaders of our various communities must keep together now as well as in the most dire emergency as it is by such means that the masses know that is required of them and so are able to act. Where is an army without leadership? Where will be the peoples of this country if their leaders do not keep together?

I said at the commence of my remarks that I hate rumour. In the first day of my arrival in Singapore, I heard the most fantastic and cruel rumours. I know of a woman who has been sneered at because her menfolk "ran away" in Penang. Ridiculous, unmannerly, un-British. I wish I could meet that sneering man face to face. The civilians did not evacuate Penang. They had no desire to evacuate. The evacuation to the best of my belief was a military move about which neither you nor I knew anything. [My comment: Of course, he meant only the European civilians. He couldn't be referring to the Asiatic population that was left behind in Penang to fend for themselves when the Europeans - the military garrison included - suddenly vanished from the island within a matter of two or three days.]

We had to come: we were useless where we were. We wanted to stay and fight it out and if there had been defences behind which we could have fought side by side with the trained defence we should be there now in exactly the same way as the civilian population in Hong Kong is there, fighting in defence of the island side by side with the men of the Navy, the Army and of the Air Force behind prepared defences. There has been no cowardly "larrying" and there never will be and right up to the last moment there were the most heroic efforts on the part of the passive defence units of Penang.

In considering the remarks I am about to make on the passive defence units, first of all I want you to ask yourselves one question. Is it logical to expect that any organisation of any description can be 100 percent, perfect upon the occasion of its first experience of the purpose for which it is actually built up? Can any of us run our businesses 100 per cent successfully from the opening day?

Experience is essential before perfection can be attained but even so the passive defence units under their first dreadful attack stood up to an extent which amazed me personally and amazed the many who saw them.

By saying this I do not intend to convey that I did not think the passive defence units would live up to their peace-time reputations, but I am saying that the measure of effective efficiency was more than high - it was magnificent and as there is no reason to suppose anything but that the passive defence units in Singapore and the other towns of Malaya are equally staunch, you may have confidence in them to do what is expected of them and you may be sure that if the horrible time ever comes when Singapore and the other towns are forced to stand up to attack, it will not be long after the attack commences that these units will become completely efficient.

The A.R.P. worked till it dropped and until, to all intents and purposes, there was nobody in the city of Penang to serve. The A.F.S. was heroic, endeavouring to stem the full tide of fire ravaging the congested areas of the city. To describe what they were up against is not possible as nobody, without seeing it, can conceive what an Eastern city of such a nature is like when its houses, its rubber godowns and all the innumerable trading commodities in which a town as Penang deals are ablaze.

A soldier cannot fight without a weapon and a Fire Brigade cannot fight without equipment. That Penang burned is no fault of theirs. The A.F.S. was there but much of the equipment was badly despoiled by the first raid. Hoses riddled with shot are useless. The M.A.S. was no less magnificent. There were 606 casualties in the General Hospital at Penang. Every one of them had been dealt with and the hospital was even orderly less than 24 hours after the raid had taken place.

I maintain that this is clear evidence of foresight and organisation as no institution with 606 casualties rained upon it in a short period of time could have dealt with the situation in the manner the General Hospital did unless there had been foresight and organisation.

How were those 606 casualties carried to the hospital? They were taken there by the same means which you here in Singapore and in the other towns have organised and unless those means had stood up under the strain of actual war-fare, what was one could not have been accomplished.
The L.D.C. was staunch and loyal to a man. Their organisation proved itself also. They knew their job because they taught themselves to do it and when the time came they did it unflinchingly; and so I say that to all these units and to all these menfolk and womenfolk of the civilian population who have manned them, we in Penang shall be for ever grateful and you in Singapore and in the other towns of Malaya must be grateful for the opportunity of learning from them.

Obviously, the lessons were not learnt sufficiently well in Singapore because eventually the Japanese military overran the rest of the peninsula and had begun knocking at their backyard by the end of January 1942.  


Friday 20 May 2022

Vangelis

Side One: Titles, Five circles, Abraham's theme, Eric's theme,
100 metres, Jerusalem Side Two: Chariots of Fire

Word came out this morning that Vangelis had died at the age of 79. Vangelis is best known as the composer of the music heard in the film, Chariots of Fire. You know, that monumental piece of music score that has become associated with slow-motion running. Who can forget the vision of people running on the big screen in slow motion and accompanied by this piece with its uplifting piano sound? Not me. 

But Vangelis is also known as a pop artist before he made it big as a music composer. As part of the Aphrodite's Child pop group in the 1960s, he had a hit song called Rain and Tears. He soon gave up this part of his life to concentrate on composing music scores for the big screen.

But funnily enough, every time I hear the Chariots of Fire theme music, my mind goes back exactly 10 years to the opening of the Olympic Games in London. There's this one scene where Sir Simon Rattle was conducting the London Symphony Orchestra and right in the background was Rowan Atkinson in the role of Mr Bean, his most memorable character. 



Thursday 19 May 2022

Chess @ Hanoi SEA Games (rapid team 2nd day)

Clockwise from top left: Sim Jia Ru, Tan Li Ting, Wong Yinn Long and Lim Zhuo Ren

This may well be my last comment on the chess discipline at the 31st SEA Games in Vietnam. I shall be awfully busy tomorrow and on Saturday with errands, visitations and a private speaking engagement, and will need some time to bring my notes up to speed. So a few people both locally and overseas will feel much relieved that I shall finish with speaking my mind. As if I'm that influential that my comments can sway people's morale, including the players'. Hah!

That said, let me get back to the second day's play of the Rapid Chess team competitions. Whether I'm the harbinger of bad prognostications or not, I did mention yesterday that pretty soon if there's complacency among us, Thailand may overtake Malaysia in terms of strength to win. Who would have it that in the fifth and final round of the men's section, our two players lost both their games to their Thai counterparts. Has the day arrived when we cannot even best the Thais in this game? I despair.....and yet there are people who cannot see the wood for the trees.

The only bright spark in today's struggles in the men's competition was the fine attacking chess from Lim Zhuo Ren against the Vietnamese player in the fourth round. Sparkling, indeed. Even if his opponent had not given away the exchange, I doubt the game's result would be any different.

Meanwhile in the women's section, my other fear was realised too. In the fourth round, our team lost both games to Vietnam and were pushed down to fourth place in the standings. There was a fine fightback against the Philippines in the last round but the damage was already there. I would say the team fell short of a Bronze medal by half a point. The saving grace was again Sim Jia Ru rising to the occasion. She won from her Filipino opponent and salvaged some pride for the Malaysians.

I cannot but help believe that with the conclusion of the Rapid Chess team competitions, Malaysia's challenge for more medals in this 31st SEA Games has more or less ended. Only the blitz competitions remain in the final two days of the Chess discipline. Some will say there's still hope. Yes, sure, hope springs eternal but as I mentioned yesterday, the contingent have better be realistic about their chances. Nevertheless, I really, really hope that Yeoh Li Tian, Wong Yinn Long, Lim Zhuo Ren, Poh Yu Tian, Puteri Rifqah, Chua Jia Tien and Puteri Munajjah can finally salvage something from this outing. Good luck!

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "4"]
[Board ""]
[White "Le Quang Liem"]
[Black "Wong Yinn Long"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 e6 3. c4 Bb4 4. Bd2 Bd2 5. Qd2 d5 6. Nc3 O-O 7. e3 Qe7 8. cd5 ed5 9. Bd3 c6 10. O-O Nbd7 11. Qc2 Re8 12. h3 Ne4 13. b4 a6 14. a4 a5 15. b5 Nc3 16. Qc3 c5 17. dc5 Nc5 18. Rfd1 Be6 19. Bc2 b6 20. Nd4 Qf6 21. Ne2 Qc3 22. Nc3 Red8 23. Rd4 Rac8 24. Ne2 Nd7 25. Bb3 Nc5 26. Ba2 Ne4 27. Rad1 g6 28. Bb1 Nc5 29. Bc2 Nd7 30. R4d2 Kf8 31. f3 Ke7 32. Nd4 Kf6 33. Nc6 Re8 34. Kf2 Ne5 35. Ne5 Ke5 36. Bb3 Rc5 37. f4 Kf6 38. Bd5 Bf5 39. Bc6 Re7 40. Rd4 Rc2 41. R1d2 Rc3 42. e4 Be6 43. Rd6 Kg7 44. R2d4 h5 45. e5 Bf5 46. Bf3 g5 47. Bh5 gf4 48. Rf4 Re5 49. Rb6 Be6 50. Bf7 Rc2 51. Kg1 Bh3 52. Rg6 Kh7 53. Rh4 1-0

Position after 25 Rf6
[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "4"]
[Board ""]
[White "Lim Zhuo Ren"]
[Black "Tran Tuan Minh"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 b6 4. g3 Ba6 5. b3 Bb4 6. Bd2 Be7 7. Bg2 d5 8. cd5 ed5 9. O-O O-O 10. Nc3 Re8 11. Ne5 Bb7 12. Bc1 Nbd7 13. Bb2 Bd6 14. f4 a6 15. e3 Qe7 16. Rc1 Rad8 17. g4 c5 18. g5 Ne4 19. Ne4 de4 20. Qg4 Ne5 21. fe5 Bb8 22. h4 Qe6 23. Qg3 cd4 24. ed4 b5 25. Rf6 Qe7 26. Rcf1 Rf8 27. R6f4 Ba7 28. Be4 Rd4 29. Bh7 Kh7 30. Bd4 Bd4 31. Rd4 Qc5 32. Qf2 Qe5 33. Qf5 Qf5 34. Rf5 Kg6 35. Rff4 f6 36. Rd6 Bc8 37. Kf2 Rf7 38. b4 Rf8 39. Kg3 Rf7 40. a3 Rf8 41. Kf2 Rf7 42. Ke3 Bf5 43. gf6 gf6 44. h5 Kg5 45. Rd5 Re7 46. Kf3 Re5 47. Re5 fe5 48. Rf5 Kf5 49. h6 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "4"]
[Board ""]
[White "Tan Li Ting"]
[Black "Pham Le Thao Nguyen"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Qc2 g6 5. g3 Bg7 6. Bg2 O-O 7. O-O Bf5 8. Qb3 Qb6 9. c5 Qb3 10. ab3 Bb1 11. Rb1 Nbd7 12. b4 a6 13. Bf4 Rfe8 14. Bh3 Nf8 15. Rfd1 Ne4 16. Ne1 e5 17. de5 Be5 18. Be5 Re5 19. f3 Nf6 20. Kf2 Rae8 21. Rd2 h5 22. Nc2 Kg7 23. Nd4 R5e7 24. Ra1 Ne6 25. Nb3 h4 26. Bg2 Rh8 27. Na5 Ng5 28. Ra3 hg3 29. hg3 Rhe8 30. Rad3 Nfh7 31. Rd4 f5 32. g4 Ne6 33. R4d3 Nf4 34. e3 Nd3 35. Rd3 fg4 36. fg4 Ng5 37. Ra3 Rf7 38. Kg3 Ne4 39. Be4 Re4 40. Rb3 Kh6 41. Kh3 Kg5 0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "4"]
[Board ""]
[White ""Vo Thi Kim Phung]
[Black "Sim Jia Ru"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 dc4 3. e4 Nf6 4. e5 Nd5 5. Bc4 Nb6 6. Bb3 Nc6 7. Nf3 Bg4 8. Bf7 Kf7 9. Ng5 Ke8 10. Qg4 Qd4 11. Qd4 Nd4 12. Na3 e6 13. Be3 Bb4 14. Kf1 h6 15. Bd4 hg5 16. Nb5 Nd5 17. Rc1 Kd7 18. a3 Be7 19. Nc3 c5 20. Nd5 ed5 21. Bc5 Rac8 22. Be3 Rc1 23. Bc1 Rc8 24. Ke2 Ke6 25. Kd3 Rf8 26. Be3 Ke5 27. Ba7 Kd6 28. Rc1 Rh8 29. Bc5 Kd7 30. Be7 Ke7 31. Rc7 Kf6 32. h3 g4 33. hg4 Rh2 34. Ke3 Rg2 35. Kf3 Rg1 36. Rb7 Rd1 37. a4 Rd3 38. Ke2 Rd4 39. b4 Rg4 40. a5 Rg1 41. a6 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "5"]
[Board ""]
[White "Wong Yinn Long"]
[Black "Kulpruethanon Thanadon"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. Bf4 d5 3. e3 c5 4. c3 Nc6 5. Nd2 Bf5 6. Ngf3 Qb6 7. Nh4 Bd7 8. Qb3 e6 9. Qb6 ab6 10. Bc7 b5 11. Bb5 Nd4 12. Bd7 Kd7 13. cd4 Kc7 14. dc5 Bc5 15. Rc1 Kb6 16. a3 Rhc8 17. Ke2 Bd6 18. Rhd1 Rc6 19. Nhf3 Rac8 20. Nb3 Ne4 21. Ne1 Rc1 22. Rc1 Rc1 23. Nc1 Bh2 24. g3 Bg3 25. fg3 Ng3 26. Kf3 Ne4 27. Ncd3 f6 28. Nf4 Ng5 29. Ke2 Kc5 30. Nh5 Kc4 31. Ng7 Kb3 32. Nd3 b5 33. Ne8 e5 34. Nd6 e4 35. Nc5 Kb2 36. Nb5 d4 37. ed4 f5 38. d5 h5 39. d6 Nf7 40. d7 h4 41. a4 h3 42. Kf2 e3 43. Kg3 e2 44. Nd3 Kc2 45. Ne1 Kd2 46. Nf3 Ke3 47. Nd6 f4 48. Kg4 Nh6 49. Kg5 Kf3 50. d8Q e1Q 51. Qa8 Kf2 52. Ne4 Kg1 53. Kh6 h2 54. Qg8 Kf1 55. Qc4 Kg2 56. Qc2 Kg1 57. Qc5 Qe3 58. Qg5 Kf1 59. Qb5 Qe2 60. Nd2 Kf2 61. Qc5 Kg2 62. Qg5 Kh3 63. Qf5 Qg4 64. Qd3 Qg3 65. Qf5 Kg2 66. Qd5 f3 67. Nf3 h1Q 68. Nh4 Kh2 69. Qd2 Kh3 70. Ng6 Kg4 71. Kg7 Qb7 72. Kf6 Qgf3 73. Ke6 Qf5 0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "5"]
[Board ""]
[White "Arunnuntapanich Tinnakrit"]
[Black "Lim Zhuo Ren"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 dc4 5. e3 a6 6. a4 c5 7. Bc4 Nc6 8. O-O cd4 9. ed4 Be7 10. d5 ed5 11. Nd5 Nd5 12. Bd5 O-O 13. Be3 Bg4 14. h3 Bh5 15. Bc6 bc6 16. Qd8 Rfd8 17. Ne5 Bf6 18. Nc6 Rd6 19. Rac1 Bb2 20. Rc5 Bg6 21. Ne7 Kf8 22. Ng6 hg6 23. Rb1 Bd4 24. Bd4 Rd4 25. a5 Rd6 26. Rb7 Re8 27. Rcc7 Rf6 28. f3 Kg8 29. Rc5 Rfe6 30. Ra7 Rd8 31. Rcc7 Rf6 32. Kh2 Rd5 33. h4 Rh5 34. Rc8 Kh7 35. Kg3 g5 36. hg5 Rg5 37. Kf2 Ra5 38. Rc2 g6 39. Kg3 Ra3 40. Rc8 Kg7 41. Raa8 Rf5 42. Rc2 a5 43. Ra6 Ra1 44. Kf2 g5 45. Kg3 Ra4 46. Rf2 Rf6 47. Ra7 Kg6 48. Rc2 Rf5 49. Rc6 f6 50. Rcc7 Rd5 51. Rg7 Kf5 52. Rgf7 Rd6 53. Rfc7 Rd5 54. Rc6 Kg6 55. Rc8 Rd2 56. Rc1 Raa2 57. Rg1 a4 58. Ra5 a3 59. f4 Rd3 60. Kg4 Rc2 61. f5 Kf7 62. Ra7 Kf8 63. Kh5 Rcd2 64. Kg6 Rd7 65. Ra3 R7d6 66. Re1 g4 67. Ra8 Rd8 68. Rd8 Rd8 69. Kf6 Rd6 70. Kg5 g3 71. Re3 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "5"]
[Board ""]
[White "Frayna Janelle Mae"]
[Black "Tan Li Ting"]
[Result "1/2"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. d4 ed4 5. Nd4 Bb4 6. Nc6 bc6 7. Bd3 d5 8. ed5 cd5 9. O-O O-O 10. h3 c6 11. Qf3 Bd6 12. Bf4 Be6 13. Rfd1 Bf4 14. Qf4 Qb8 15. Qb8 Rab8 16. b3 c5 17. Rab1 g6 18. Be2 d4 19. Na4 Rfc8 20. c3 c4 21. bc4 Rb1 22. Rb1 Bd7 23. Bd1 Rc4 24. Bb3 Ra4 25. Ba4 Ba4 26. cd4 Bc6 27. Rc1 Bd5 28. a4 Kf8 29. Rc7 a6 30. Ra7 Bc4 31. Rc7 Bd3 32. Rc3 Be4 33. f3 Bd5 34. Rc7 Ke8 35. Ra7 Bc4 36. Rc7 Bd5 37. Ra7 Bc4 38. Rc7 Bb3 39. Rc6 1/2-1/2

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.19"]
[Round "5"]
[Board ""]
[White "Sim Jia Ru"]
[Black "San Diego Marie Antoinette"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. e4 g6 2. d4 Bg7 3. Nf3 c5 4. dc5 Qa5 5. c3 Qc5 6. Be3 Qc7 7. Bd3 Nc6 8. O-O d6 9. h3 Nf6 10. Qd2 O-O 11. c4 Rd8 12. Nc3 a6 13. Nd5 Nd5 14. cd5 Ne5 15. Ne5 de5 16. Rac1 Qd6 17. Qa5 Bd7 18. Rc2 f5 19. Bc5 Qf6 20. Qb4 Bf8 21. f4 ef4 22. Rcf2 e5 23. Bf8 Qf8 24. Qb7 Qd6 25. Rc1 Rdb8 26. Qc7 Qc7 27. Rc7 Bb5 28. Bb5 ab5 29. d6 Rd8 30. d7 fe4 31. Rfc2 e3 32. Rc8 e2 33. Kf2 Kf7 34. Ra8 Ra8 35. Rc8 1-0

Note: All my stories on this blog are my own and do not represent the views of any chess organisation.


Wednesday 18 May 2022

Chess @ Hanoi SEA Games (rapid team 1st day)

Our four representatives in the Rapid Chess Team competitions, clockwise from top left: Tan Li Ting, Sim Jia Ru, Lim Zhuo Ren and Wong Yinn Long

Realism. The need to be realistic. We should not be under any pretension that our Rapid chess men's team taking part in the 31st SEA Games in Vietnam are going after any medal. Challenge, yes. Successfully. no. Ratings-wise, they are just not strong enough to be among the top seeds. Vietnam came into this SEA Games with the objective of winning as many of the Gold medals as possible - there are 11 at stake - and they have already claimed three from the first four. In fact, Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son made it so easy in the Standard Chess and Rapid Chess individual events. Le Quang Liem had a setback in the Rapid Chess individual competition but he is now the steady bedrock for his country in the Rapid Chess team event. 

The other South-east Asian chess powerhouses in this Rapid Chess team event are the Philippines and Indonesia, and together with Vietnam, it is very likely that they will collect the Gold, Silver and Bronze - but not necessarily in that order. That leaves Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand trailing behind. Of these three, Thailand is the surprising performer. Pretty soon if there's complacency among us, their national team may overtake Malaysia in terms of strength to win. 

On the other hand, our women's Rapid Chess team do have a slim but better chance to pick up the Bronze. At the halfway stage of the women's section of the Rapid Chess team event, they are in third place among five teams but they haven't played Vietnam and the Philippines yet. Looking at the ranking table here, I'm surprised that the Philippines are below Malaysia in the standing but the situation will definitely change in the last two rounds. I fear our plucky team may be steamrolled tomorrow. But I'm hopeful for our representatives. Sim Jia Ru has been enjoying herself so far. Will be hoping her form continues.

The Rapid Chess team competition for the open and women's sections are held over two days. Because of the small number of countries involved in the Chess category, the two sections are organised as a five-round Round Robin. An all-play-all among the participating teams. Three rounds were completed today and the remaining two will be held tomorrow morning.

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "1"]
[Board "5"]
[White "Wynn Zaw Htun"]
[Black "Wong Yinn Long"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. Nf3 c5 2. g3 g6 3. Bg2 Bg7 4. O-O Nc6 5. e4 Nf6 6. d3 d5 7. Nbd2 O-O 8. Re1 e5 9. a4 b6 10. ed5 Nd5 11. Nc4 f6 12. c3 Be6 13. Qe2 Rc8 14. Bd2 Qd7 15. Rad1 Bg4 16. Qf1 Rfd8 17. Bc1 Nce7 18. a5 b5 19. Ne3 Be6 20. Nd5 Bd5 21. Bh3 Nf5 22. Nd2 Be6 23. Ne4 Qf7 24. f4 ef4 25. Bf4 Bf8 26. Qf2 Ng7 27. Bg2 Bf5 28. Be3 c4 29. Bd4 Ne8 30. dc4 bc4 31. Ba7 Rd1 32. Rd1 Qe6 33. Nd6 Qe5 34. Nc8 Bc8 35. Re1 Qb5 36. Qb6 Qd7 37. Bc6 Qd2 38. Re8 Bh3 39. Qf2 Qd6 40. Bg2 Bd7 41. Bc5 Qd1 42. Re1 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "1"]
[Board "6"]
[White "Lim Zhuo Ren"]
[Black "Nay Oo Kyaw Tun"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. c4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. d4 Nf6 4. g3 dc4 5. Bg2 c5 6. O-O Nc6 7. dc5 Qd1 8. Rd1 Bc5 9. Nbd2 c3 10. bc3 O-O 11. Nb3 Be7 12. Nfd4 Bd7 13. a4 Rac8 14. Nb5 a6 15. Nd6 Rc7 16. c4 e5 17. Be3 Bg4 18. f3 Be6 19. Nc5 Nd4 20. Ne6 Ne6 21. Rab1 Rd8 22. Nf5 Rd1 23. Rd1 Bf8 24. Bb6 Rc4 25. a5 Bc5 26. Kf1 Bb6 27. ab6 g6 28. Nd6 Rc6 29. Nb7 Rb6 30. Na5 Rb5 31. Nc4 Rc5 32. Ne3 a5 33. Bh3 Nd4 34. f4 ef4 35. gf4 Nb3 36. Rd8 Kg7 37. Ra8 Rc3 38. Kf2 Ne4 39. Kf3 Nbd2 0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "1"]
[Board "7"]
[White "Tan Li Ting"]
[Black "Aulia Medina Warda"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 e6 2. c4 Nf6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. cd5 ed5 6. Bg5 h6 7. Bf6 Qf6 8. a3 Bc3 9. Qc3 Nc6 10. e3 O-O 11. Nf3 Bf5 12. Bd3 Be4 13. Be4 de4 14. Nd2 Rfe8 15. O-O Rad8 16. f3 ef3 17. Rf3 Qe6 18. Raf1 Re7 19. Nc4 Rd5 20. Rg3 Rg5 21. Rff3 Qd5 22. Nd2 a5 23. Qb3 Qb3 24. Nb3 Rb5 25. Nc5 Rb2 26. Rf2 Rb1 27. Rf1 Rf1 28. Kf1 b6 29. Nd3 f6 30. Kf2 Kf7 31. Rf3 Ke6 32. Ke2 Kd5 33. Kd2 Nd8 34. Kc3 Ne6 35. Nf2 Ng5 36. Rf5 Kd6 37. Kd3 Ke6 38. Rb5 f5 39. h4 Nf7 40. Nh3 Nd6 41. Rb1 Kd7 42. h5 Re4 43. Nf4 c5 44. dc5 bc5 45. Rb8 c4 46. Ke2 Kc6 47. Rg8 Re7 48. Kd2 Ne4 49. Kc2 Nd6 50. Kd2 Rb7 51. Ra8 Kb5 52. Nd5 Ne4 53. Kc2 Ka4 54. Rc8 Ka3 55. Rc4 Rb2 56. Kc1 Rg2 57. Rc7 a4 58. Ra7 Kb3 59. Rb7 Kc4 60. Nb6 Kd3 61. Na4 Ke3 62. Nb2 f4 63. Nd1 Kf3 64. Rb5 Kg4 65. Re5 Nf6 66. Nc3 Nh5 67. Nd5 g5 68. Kd1 Ng3 69. Nf6 Kf3 70. Ra5 Rg1 71. Kd2 Ne4 0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "1"]
[Board "8"]
[White "Fisabilillah Ummi"]
[Black "Sim Jia Ru"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 dc4 3. e3 e5 4. Bc4 ed4 5. ed4 Bd6 6. Nf3 Nf6 7. O-O O-O 8. Bg5 h6 9. Bh4 Nc6 10. h3 g5 11. Bg3 Bg3 12. fg3 g4 13. hg4 Bg4 14. Nc3 Kg7 15. d5 Ne5 16. Be2 Ng6 17. Qd4 Kg8 18. Rf2 Nd7 19. Qg4 Nf6 20. Qd4 Qe7 21. Nh4 Nd7 22. Nf5 Qe5 23. Qe5 Nde5 24. Nh6 Kh7 25. Nf5 Rae8 26. Ne4 Nd7 27. Ng5 Kh8 28. Kh2 Nde5 29. Rh1 f6 30. Kg1 Kg8 31. Ne6 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "2"]
[Board ""]
[White "Chuemsakul Sarocha"]
[Black "Tan Li Ting"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. Nf3 d5 2. g3 c5 3. Bg2 Nf6 4. O-O Nc6 5. d4 e6 6. c4 dc4 7. Qa4 Bd7 8. Qc4 Qb6 9. dc5 Bc5 10. Nc3 Qb4 11. Qd3 Rd8 12. a3 Qa5 13. Bg5 Be7 14. b4 Qf5 15. e4 Qg6 16. Rad1 O-O 17. Qe2 e5 18. Bc1 Bg4 19. h3 Nd4 20. Qe3 Nf3 21. Bf3 Bh3 22. Rfe1 b6 23. Bb2 h5 24. Nd5 Nd5 25. ed5 f6 26. Qb3 Bd6 27. Kh1 Bg4 28. Qe3 Kf7 29. Kg2 Rh8 30. Be4 Bf5 31. Bf5 Qf5 32. Qe4 Qe4 33. Re4 Rc8 34. Ba1 Rc2 35. Kf1 Rhc8 36. f4 ef4 37. gf4 R8c4 38. Red4 Rd4 39. Bd4 Bf4 40. Bf2 Bd6 41. Re1 Rd2 42. Rc1 Rd5 43. Rc6 g5 44. Bb6 ab6 45. Rb6 h4 46. Kg2 g4 47. a4 h3 48. Kg1 Rd1 49. Kf2 h2 0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "2"]
[Board "10"]
[White "Sim Jia Ru"]
[Black "Buhagiar Melita Sunan"]
[Result "109"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cd4 4. Nd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. f3 e6 7. Be3 b5 8. Qd2 Bb7 9. a4 b4 10. Na2 Qa5 11. Nb3 Qd8 12. Nd4 Qa5 13. Nb3 Qa4 14. Nb4 Qd7 15. Be2 Be7 16. O-O O-O 17. Rfd1 Qc7 18. Bd4 Rd8 19. Na5 h6 20. Kh1 Kh8 21. c3 d5 22. Nb7 Qb7 23. ed5 ed5 24. Bd3 a5 25. Re1 Rd7 26. Bf6 Bf6 27. Re8# 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "2"]
[Board "9"]
[White "Lim Zhuo Ren"]
[Black "Taher Yoseph Theolidus"]
[Result "0-1"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. Nf3 d5 2. c4 c6 3. d4 Nf6 4. g3 dc4 5. Bg2 g6 6. O-O Bg7 7. a4 a5 8. Na3 Na6 9. Nc4 O-O 10. Bd2 Nb4 11. Bb4 ab4 12. e3 Be6 13. Qe2 Nd7 14. Rfc1 Nb6 15. Nb6 Qb6 16. Nd2 f5 17. Rc5 b3 18. Nb1 Ra5 19. Ra5 Qa5 20. Nc3 Bf7 21. f4 Rd8 22. Rc1 Qb4 23. Qf3 Rd7 24. g4 c5 25. d5 Bc3 26. Rc3 Bd5 27. Qd5 Rd5 28. Bd5 Kg7 29. Bb3 c4 30. Bc2 fg4 31. Kf2 h5 32. Kg2 Qb6 33. h3 gh3 34. Kh3 Qb2 35. Rc4 Qc1 36. Kg2  0-1

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "2"]
[Board "1"]
[White "Priasmoro Novendra"]
[Black "Wong Yinn Long"]
[Result "1/2"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4. e5 Nd5 5. O-O Nc7 6. a4 g6 7. Nc3 Bg7 8. Re1 O-O 9. d3 d6 10. ed6 ed6 11. Bg5 f6 12. Bf4 Ne5 13. d4 Nf3 14. Qf3 cd4 15. Ne4 d5 16. Nd6 a6 17. Bd3 b6 18. Nc8 Rc8 19. Bc7 Qc7 20. Qd5 Kh8 21. Re6 Rfe8 22. Rae1 Re6 23. Re6 a5 24. g3 f5 25. h4 f4 26. g4 f3 27. Qf3 Rf8 28. Qg3 Qd7 29. Rb6 Qa4 30. Rb8 Qa1 31. Kg2 Qe1 32. Qd6 Qf2 33. Kh3 Qe3 34. Kg2 Qf2 35. Kh3 Qf3 36. Kh2 Qf2 37. Kh3 Qf3 38. Kh2 Qf2 39. Kh3 Qf3 1/2-1/2

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "3"]
[Board "5"]
[White "Wong Yinn Long"]
[Black "Bersamina Paulo"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nc3 Nc6 3. g3 g6 4. Bg2 Bg7 5. d3 Rb8 6. Be3 d6 7. Nge2 b5 8. Qd2 Nf6 9. h3 O-O 10. O-O b4 11. Nd1 Nd7 12. a3 a5 13. ab4 ab4 14. Bh6 Bb7 15. Bg7 Kg7 16. Ne3 Ra8 17. f4 f6 18. h4 e6 19. f5 e5 20. fg6 hg6 21. h5 Rh8 22. hg6 Ne7 23. Ra8 Ba8 24. c3 bc3 25. bc3 Nf8 26. Ra1 Nfg6 27. Ra7 Bc6 28. Qa2 Bd7 29. Qa6 Nf8 30. g4 Kg6 31. Qd6 Nc8 32. Qb8 Ne6 33. Ra6 c4 34. Nc4 Qf8 35. Qb7 Qc5 36. Kf1 Rh7 37. Qd5 Qf8 38. Re6 Be6 39. Qe6 Re7 40. Qf5 Kg7 41. Ng3 Ra7 42. Nh5 Kh8 43. Ne5 Nd6 44. Qf6 Qf6 45. Nf6 Nb5 46. c4 Nd4 47. c5 Ra5 48. Nfd7 Ra1 49. Kf2 Ra2 50. Kg3 Kg7 51. Bf3 Kh6 52. Nf7 Kg6 53. Nde5 Kg7 54. g5 Rc2 55. c6 Rc1 56. Nd6 Ne6 57. Nf5 Kh8 58. g6 Rc5 59. d4 Rc3 60. d5 Ng5 61. Nf7 Nf7 62. gf7 1-0

[Event "31st SEA Games 2021"]
[Site "Quang Ninh Exhibition Of Urban Planning & Expo"]
[Date "2022.05.18"]
[Round "3"]
[Board "6"]
[White "Laylo Darwin"]
[Black "Lim Zhuo Ren"]
[Result "1-0"]
[EventCountry "VIE"]
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. e3 Bd6 5. b3 O-O 6. Bb2 b6 7. Nbd2 Bb7 8. Bd3 Nbd7 9. O-O c5 10. cd5 ed5 11. Ne5 Re8 12. f4 a5 13. Qe2 a4 14. g4 g6 15. Bb5 a3 16. Bc3 Rf8 17. g5 Be5 18. fe5 Ne8 19. Qg4 Nb8 20. dc5 Nc7 21. Bd3 bc5 22. Rf6 Ne6 23. Raf1 Qe7 24. h4 Nd7 25. h5 d4 26. hg6 hg6 27. ed4 cd4 28. Bd4 Nd4 29. Qd4 Nf6 30. gf6 Qd8 31. Qe3 Qd7 32. Qh6 Qd4 33. Rf2 Qg4 34. Kh2 Qh5 35. Qh5 gh5 36. Rf5 Rfd8 37. Rg5 Kf8 38. Rh5 Kg8 39. Bh7 Kf8 40. Nc4 Bf3 41. Rh3 Bd5 42. Nd6 Be6 43. Bf5 Kg8 44. Rg3 Kf8 45. Bh7 1-0

Note: All my stories on this blog are my own and do not represent the views of any chess organisation.