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Search Result for “Congo Funk”

Showing 1 - 10 of 25

OPINION

Socialism's novel brand of nomenclature

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 18/11/2025

» On Nov 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall collapsed. On a very ordinary night, thousands of East Germans started crossing the dividing barrier between the communist East and capitalist West Berlin after the East German regime had suddenly opened tightly controlled border crossings. In a matter of hours, history was made. Throngs of people soon swamped the Wall and then started smashing the hated communist barrier into concrete rubble.

OPINION

UN picks rights council members with bad records

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 23/10/2025

» In a ritual of near-farcical folly, the UN General Assembly has elected 14 new members to join the Geneva-based Human Rights Council on Oct 15.

OPINION

UN assembly opens amidst wars, other woes

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 23/09/2025

» Presidents, prime ministers, kings and potentates are converging on New York for the United Nations General Assembly session. The upcoming General Debate, starting today, will bring together a cast of thousands of delegates for 10 days.

OPINION

A Nobel Prize for band-aid peace deals?

Oped, Sally Tyler, Published on 05/09/2025

» The Bangkok Post editors suggested I revisit the topic of Thailand's border conflict since I had written about it for the newspaper earlier this year, and since the conflict was heating up again.

OPINION

UN assembly shadowed by clouds of chaos

Oped, John J. Metzler, Published on 03/09/2025

» When the new UN General Assembly session opens next Tuesday, world leaders and diplomats will commemorate the 80th anniversary of the global organisation established in the wake of World War II to "maintain international peace and security" for future generations. But at headquarters here oin New York, delegates and staff will be doing far less celebrating than previously planned.

OPINION

The scramble for the world's critical minerals

Oped, Rabah Arezki & Rick van der Ploeg, Published on 07/08/2025

» The world's superpowers have developed a seemingly insatiable appetite for the critical minerals that are essential to the ongoing energy and digital transitions, including rare-earth metals (for semiconductors), cobalt (for batteries), and uranium (for nuclear reactors). The International Energy Agency forecasts that demand for these minerals will more than quadruple by 2040 for use in clean-energy technologies alone. But, in their race to control these vital resources, China, Europe, and the United States risk causing serious harm to the countries that possess them.

OPINION

Why faith is indispensable to global development

Oped, Alaa Murabit, Published on 04/06/2025

» For nearly two decades, I have worked at the intersection of development, health, and security. In roundtables with heads of state, emergency briefings, and donor forums, I have noticed a glaring pattern: faith-based actors are often excluded from global strategies. When present at all, they are sidelined, treated as symbolic figures rather than as genuine partners. This isn't just a blind spot. It's a strategic failure.

OPINION

Jets can't fix trade

Oped, Postbag, Published on 03/05/2025

» Re: "Arms deals tied to US tariff talks", (BP, April 22).

OPINION

Sudan's war and the Africa we don't see

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/04/2025

» Last Tuesday, British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: "Many have given up on Sudan, but that is wrong. It's morally wrong when we see so many civilians beheaded, infants as young as one subjected to sexual violence, more people facing famine than anywhere else in the world.... We simply cannot look away."

OPINION

Different kinds of thieves with the same goal

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 18/02/2025

» What's the difference between smash-and-grab raids and protection rackets? Not all that much from the legal point of view, but protection rackets have a lower level of risk and a higher rate of returns.