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Search Result for “fuelling unease”

Showing 1 - 10 of 154

OPINION

Anutin fuels border fear

News, Editorial, Published on 14/02/2026

» From a dubious plan to tightly seal the border with Cambodia, caretaker Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who is seeking to form a coalition government, has now given the nod to construct additional fencing along the frontier -- a move that signals extended hostility towards Thailand's immediate neighbour.

OPINION

China military purge exposes Xi's unease

News, John J Metzler, Published on 14/02/2026

» Strange and mysterious events are transpiring inside the walls of Beijing's Forbidden City. In the massive nearby government compound Zhongnanhai there's a clear unease as Communist Party Chief and military supremo Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, has shuffled the political cards in the powerful Central Military Commission (CMC), by purging his two top generals.

OPINION

Trump's Greenland logic rattles Europe, Nato

News, Sara Sjolin & Andrea Palasciano & Sanne Wass, Published on 08/01/2026

» Donald Trump's rationale for decapitating Venezuela's government is fuelling concerns among European officials that they could soon face an existential dilemma over Greenland.

OPINION

Crackdown theatre masks border graft

News, Paskorn Jumlongrach, Published on 06/12/2025

» The thunderous explosion that sent a 12-storey building crashing to the ground in the border backwater of Shwe Kokko at midday on Wednesday sounded like a major accident, if not an earthquake.

OPINION

COP30 must be more focused on human welfare

Oped, Bjorn Lomborg, Published on 13/11/2025

» With the United Nations climate summit, COP30, now in full swing in the humid jungle city of Belém, Brazil, Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates has cut through the noise with a blunt truth: these UN climate gatherings must zero in on lifting human lives, rather than fixating solely on slashing emissions or dialling down global temperatures. It's a perspective that's long overdue yet seems so obvious.

OPINION

Is Takaichi Sanae the 'Iron Lady' of Japan?

Oped, Koichi Hamada, Published on 10/11/2025

» For the first time in its history, Japan's parliament has selected a woman, Takaichi Sanae of the Liberal Democratic Party, to be prime minister. In this sense, Ms Takaichi has already followed in the footsteps of her political idol, Margaret Thatcher -- the UK's first female PM. But whether she is remembered as Japan's own "Iron Lady" will depend on her ability to manage three key challenges: inflation, low female labour-force participation and a fraught geopolitical environment.

OPINION

Economy will pop with AI bubble

News, Mike Dolan, Published on 07/10/2025

» The old truism that the stock market is not the economy risks underplaying how much today's powerful investment trends could impact the prosperity and lives of the whole country.

OPINION

High Treasury yields could slow down AI boom

News, Joachim Klement, Published on 29/09/2025

» Tech giants are ploughing money into artificial intelligence, fuelling the ongoing US stock market rally in the process.

OPINION

Polycrisis merits renewed ethos

Oped, Edgar Morin & Claudio Pedretti, Published on 24/09/2025

» In 1999, one of us (Morin) introduced the term "polycrisis" to describe the web of interconnected catastrophes threatening our world. At the time, the concept was meant to serve as a warning, but it has since become our reality. We are facing a confluence of escalating ecological, political, economic, technological, and existential crises, each of which is reinforcing the others.

OPINION

Solving the conflict in Myanmar

News, Charles Petrie, Published on 15/09/2025

» The Myanmar military has recently launched a new offensive in different parts of the country, determined to claw back territory it has steadily lost since the coup of Feb 1, 2021. These operations, though at times tactically successful, are being carried out through brute force: airstrikes, mortar attacks, and the increasing use of drones. Entire areas are being destroyed. What will follow is not liberation, but military occupation. But how viable and effective will be the administrative structures that the generals will impose to govern these shattered spaces?