FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “Coronavirus”

Showing 1 - 10 of 208

OPINION

Oil traders optimistic on war risks

News, Published on 23/04/2024

» Petroleum prices have fallen following Iran's missile and drone assault on Israel, confounding expectations that the escalation of the shadow war would cause them to rise.

Image-Content

OPINION

Global freight to 'lift fuel prices'

News, Published on 02/04/2024

» Global trade flows, which showed signs of acceleration at the start of 2024, indicate a recovery from the late 2022 slump in major industrial economies, likely boosting demand for transport fuels such as diesel.

Image-Content

OPINION

Just the tonic for Covid

Oped, Editorial, Published on 28/10/2023

» As the country has overcome the coronavirus crisis, interest in promoting research into green chiretta or fah talai jone, a herbal medicine that played a role in treating a large number of patients at the peak of the pandemic, has subsided. This is unfortunate.

Image-Content

OPINION

Japan LGBT law watered down amid culture war

News, Published on 24/06/2023

» Japan enacted a law to promote LGBT understanding last Friday after months of debate, but for some activists, the discussions did as much to entrench existing discrimination as encourage more open attitudes.

Image-Content

OPINION

Combatting fake news the Asean way

Oped, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 06/06/2023

» Three weeks have passed since the general election, and the Thai media is still flooded with fake news and disinformation of all kinds. Essentially, these are designed to harm a particular individual, a political group or the country. Overall, the country's domestic environment is very fluid. Aside from efforts to form a new coalition government, the most important issues are related to national security and diplomacy.

Image-Content

OPINION

The only way to eliminate polio

News, Published on 23/05/2023

» When Jonas Salk's polio vaccine was found to be safe and effective in 1955, following a successful trial involving nearly two million American children, it marked a turning point in the fight against a highly infectious disease causing incurable paralysis or even death. Prior to Salk's discovery, between 25,000 and 50,000 cases were recorded each year in the United States alone, and little was known about how the virus spread.

Image-Content

OPINION

Equality still a dream

Life, Thana Boonlert, Published on 09/01/2023

» In the lead-up to its second reading, the civil partnership draft bill marks a decade since its inception, dating back to a gay couple who were denied legal recognition in 2012 because the law limits marriage to a man and a woman. Given the conservatism of earlier decades, civil partnership was "the first brick" at a time when marriage equality was almost inconceivable. However, history is often ignored. Despite its long journey in conjunction with the new bill, the uphill push for marriage rights will remain an unfinished business under the current government.

Image-Content

OPINION

Too lax on Covid curbs?

Oped, Editorial, Published on 06/01/2023

» This Sunday, the Great Wall of Covid quarantine in China finally will be lifted, with millions of Chinese travellers set to make their first overseas trip in three years after an outbound travel ban that has been in place since January 2020.

Image-Content

OPINION

Revamp 7-day campaign

Oped, Editorial, Published on 20/12/2022

» The New Year is just under two weeks away, and after almost three years of living under Covid-19 pandemic restrictions, many people are expected to travel to celebrate. This will be the first time in a while that people will feel free to travel and enjoy life to the fullest without the fear of being infected with the coronavirus. Yet, it also means that more road accidents are expected, particularly on highways, rural roads, and in big cities.

Image-Content

OPINION

Life, liberty and lost China output

Oped, Published on 15/12/2022

» The anti-quarantine protests that erupted across China last month highlight the gulf between the Chinese people and Communist Party leaders regarding the necessity of the strict zero-Covid policy. Given the obvious disconnect, it is worth examining how and why the authorities and the public have grown so far apart in their assessment of the policy's costs and benefits.