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OPINION

Curious case of Sunak's snap election decision

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/06/2024

» 'Why did he do it? We were all told it would be the autumn and we were hoping by then we could turn things around. It is very perplexing," said a former cabinet minister after Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called a surprise election for July 4.

OPINION

Has crunch time arrived for 'Bibi' Netanyahu?

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 24/05/2024

» It has not been a good week for Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, chief decision-maker in the war in the Gaza Strip that has already cost at least 35,000 civilian deaths. (Some thousands of those 35,000 may have been Hamas fighters.)

OPINION

World oblivious to risk of all-out war in Africa

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 02/05/2024

» 'We could see an all-out war between all the tribes and that is really the doomsday scenario. At this point, it's not unrealistic," the head of an international non-government organisation that is working in Sudan told the Al Jazeera news agency last week. (She asked them to withhold her name to protect her in-country team in North Darfur.)

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OPINION

South Korea: Very competitive and childless

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 05/03/2024

» There are enough people to go around: eight billion now, compared to two billion less than a hundred years ago. Fifty-one million in South Korea, compared to only twelve million a hundred years ago. So why are South Koreans obsessed about their low birth rate?

OPINION

Mideast missile madness gets even worse

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 25/01/2024

» Not all that long ago, attacking another country's territory was still seen as a big deal. It was, in legal terms, an "act of war", liable to have unpleasant and potentially unlimited consequences, including full-scale war. Very powerful countries occasionally made small, one-off attacks on very weak ones to "discipline" them, but even that was relatively rare.

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OPINION

Schrödinger's Island: Taiwan election 2024

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 12/01/2024

» Taiwan's fate is as unknowable as usual, even though we know who the next president will be. The Democratic Progressive Party's (DPP) William Lai, vice-president under outgoing President Tsai Ing-Wen, will almost certainly win the election tomorrow because the two opposition parties failed to agree on a joint candidate and will split the slightly-less-anti-China vote between them.

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OPINION

The unravelling of Burma's military rule

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/12/2023

» The Burmese army is a leading candidate for Nastiest Army in the World. Even more than Pakistan's army, it is the tail that wags the dog: rather than the army serving the country, it's the other way around.

OPINION

The whys and wherefores of expanding Brics

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 29/08/2023

» You can expand the curious organisation called the Brics, but you can't define it. In fact, it's hardly even an organisation: no headquarters, no secretariat. Even the (British) Commonwealth and la Francophonie have more substance: at least they share a former oppressor. Yet the Brics are expanding.

OPINION

Boing! The Anthropocene is upon us

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/07/2023

» 'I was there when the Anthropocene was born. It was so amazing," said Dr Katherine Richardson, leader of the Sustainability Science Centre at the University of Copenhagen. "It was actually in 2000, at one of these meetings of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme Scientific Steering Committee."

OPINION

Soft dictatorship threatens India's democracy

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 23/06/2023

» We're not surprised when religious zealots in some benighted part of the American heartland ban the teaching of evolution in the local school, but what could have possessed the national government of a grown-up country like India to do the same thing?