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This Year in Asia: a Philippine F-bomb, China vaccines, Kim Seon-ho cancelled, Wang Leehom’s divorce and other highlights of 2021

  • Malaysia’s Cantonese-speaking Yum Cha Kor offers laid-back career advice, Indonesian president Jokowi’s son and his girlfriend break up, and investors gush about SPACs
  • These stories are just some of the favourites from around the region chosen by members of SCMP’s Asia desk

Reading Time:6 minutes
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A health worker prepares a dose of the Sinovac Covid-19 vaccine in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Xinhua

As much of the Asia-Pacific spent 2021 in degrees of lockdown, people quit their jobs for their well-being, climate policies made headlines, a K-drama idol was cancelled (and then un-cancelled), and a politician apologised for cursing at China. Here’s a look at some of the year’s most memorable stories.

Oh no, they didn’t

Poet Yun Dong-ju’s birthplace. Photo: Handout
Poet Yun Dong-ju’s birthplace. Photo: Handout
Historical differences between South Korea and China came to the fore early this year when an online dispute erupted over the late poet Yun Dong-joo, who was born in Mingdong, a village in present-day northeast China.
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A plaque on his ancestral home refers to Yun – the son of Korean Christians who left the Korean peninsula in the late 19th century to escape famine – as a “Chinese ethnic-Korean patriotic poet”, drawing howls of disapproval from South Korean netizens who argued that if Yun were Chinese, “he would have written poems in Chinese”.

One irate user said: “I would not be surprised if the Chinese claim [the Korean alphabet] Hangeul belongs to them as well.”

The saga was the latest Chinese-Korean disagreement to emerge in recent times – with netizens having earlier clashed over the origins of kimchi and the Dragon Boat Festival in arguments so intense that they prompted diplomats in Seoul and Beijing to respond. Maria Siow

A calculated shot

A doctor administers a Sinovac vaccine shot at a private clinic in Singapore. Photo: Xinhua
A doctor administers a Sinovac vaccine shot at a private clinic in Singapore. Photo: Xinhua
No good deed goes unpunished, so the saying goes. In China’s case, its efforts this year to donate as well as sell its Covid-19 vaccines – in particular the CoronaVac jabs by Sinovac – received lots of negative publicity.
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