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

Showing 1 - 10 of 13

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

Forgetting what democracy is for and all about

Oped, Antara Haldar, Published on 10/07/2025

» On June 2, I got a sense of history coming full circle in the Polish town of Sopot, on the Baltic Sea just a few kilometres from the Gdańsk Shipyard. Sharing a stage at the Plenary Session of the European Financial Congress with Lech Wałęsa, the legendary trade unionist who led the 1980 Solidarity strike at the Lenin Shipyard and later became Poland's first post-communist president, I felt I was witnessing the end of an era.

OPINION

Breaking the silence over North Korea

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 29/05/2025

» Speaking out to break the information barrier inside the North Korean dictatorship is in itself nothing new, and usually quickly forgotten. North Korean exiles, friendly governments, and humanitarian organisations periodically raise the oft-forsaken banner of human rights, only to be confronted by realpolitik through another round of North Korean missile launches or nuclear proliferation.

OPINION

Is the 'middle-income trap' real?

Oped, Keun Lee, Published on 31/12/2024

» The term "middle-income trap" refers to the tendency of fast-growing developing economies to lose momentum well before they achieve high-income status. First introduced by World Bank economist Indermit Gill and the Brookings Institution's Homi Kharas in 2007, the concept has since become the subject of intense debate among economists.

OPINION

The utility of neutrality, now in steep decline

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 02/03/2024

» Neutrality used to be a European thing, but it is now in steep decline. If it were an animal, we'd have to declare it an endangered species.

OPINION

Russia's hope for 'General Winter' missed the bus

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 11/03/2023

» 'The cold is coming soon," gloated former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev last June. He predicted that the citizens of the European Union, deprived of the Russian gas that normally supplied about 40% of their energy, would be freezing in their homes when "General Winter" arrived.

OPINION

UN slams Xinjiang rights abuses

Oped, John J Metzler, Published on 08/11/2022

» A high-level UN panel on Oct 26 slammed Beijing's ongoing and egregious human rights abuses in the western Xinjiang regions of the People's Republic. China's human rights violations have been committed through the use of "severe and undue restrictions" that are "characterised by a discriminatory component, as the underlying acts often directly or indirectly affect Uyghur and other predominantly Muslim communities".

OPINION

The West needs an energy alliance

Oped, Morten Svendstorp, Published on 03/11/2022

» The old line that "history does not repeat itself, but often rhymes", is an apt description of the evolving relationship between the West and its rivals. During the Cold War, the Soviet Union was a global superpower, owing to its military prowess. Today, Russia's armed forces appear to be in a dismal state, but the country has become an energy superpower that can use its vast natural-gas reserves as a weapon. Similarly, today's standoff between the West and Russia over Ukraine echoes the Cold War confrontation between authoritarianism and democracy.

OPINION

Russia is stuck in a vicious circle while it plays bluff

Oped, Manlio Graziano, Published on 03/06/2022

» The Russian war in Ukraine is a calamity -- for the people suffering through it, for Ukraine, for Russia, for China (which needs stability to develop faster than its competitors), and for most of the world (due to the resulting energy and food crises).

OPINION

Farewell to neutral Sweden and Finland

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 19/05/2022

» It's easy to imagine Vladimir Putin coming into the shop marked "Sweden", breaking some fine china accidentally on purpose, and growling: "Nice little shop you've got here. It would be a pity if something happened to it." But Sweden is not a pottery shop, Mr Putin is not a Mafia capo, and what's going on in the Baltic now is not a protection racket.