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Asia-Pacific students mic up on coexistence of civilizations

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By Lu Wanqing and Yang Wanli in Bangkok | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: Sept 02, 2024
Thanh Theerapasiri (third from left) from Regents International School Pattaya, Thailand, and Myat Noe Phyu of MCTA: RVi Academy Mandalay in Myanmar (second from left) are crowned champions of the junior and youth categories, respectively. [Photo by Lu Wanqing/chinadaily.com.cn]

A crowd of education authorities and specialists was revved up as 27 young voices from Asia-Pacific shared their perspectives on the coexistence of civilizations in a regional English-speaking competition in Bangkok, Thailand, on Aug 7.

Now in its second year, the MicUp! English Speaking Competition cum Belt and Road Youth English-Speaking Competition (Thailand) reached new heights, bringing together 600 committed young orators from local secondary schools and universities since the competition's kick-offs in Thailand, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Nepal earlier this year and rounded off by a rousing regional final held at Chulalongkorn University.

Thanh Theerapasiri, a Thai student from Regents International School Pattaya, and Myat Noe Phyu of MCTA: RVi Academy Mandalay in Myanmar were crowned champions of the junior and youth categories, respectively. The winners from each participant country will move on to the next leg of their competition journey – the Global Final to be held in Wuxi, China, in October.

With multiple global challenges hitting a tipping point – from extreme weather in full swing to geopolitical conflicts on the edge – this year's speech topic Civilizations: Clash and Coexistence was applauded for being a vital stimulus for young talents to reflect on varied global trends, and for allowing them full rein to advocate closer bonds of friendship and multilateral cooperations.

Grabbing the room's attention with an elaborate aqua ensemble consisting of a top inspired by traditional Chinese qipao and a dress piece made of Thai silk, Roongpraew Wiwatkamolwat, a 16-year-old student of Ekamai International School in Bangkok, noted that it was her genuine affection for her Chinese roots and belief in cultural inclusiveness that motivated her to get into this competition and strive to excel.

"My costume echoes today's topic — civilization, which is an ongoing process of exchanges and fusion," she said, adding that her great-grandparents were from Beijing and her grandparents lived in South China's Guangdong province.

"I'm a generation of such culture fusion, a mixture of Thailand and China. The culture, common values, and many other connections, such as cuisine, are bridging the two nations closer than ever before," said Roongpraew.

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