FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “injured soldier”

Showing 1 - 10 of 446

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

From conflict to shared prosperity

News, David Jay Green, Published on 10/02/2026

» The news from the front line, the border between Cambodia and Thailand, has a depressing familiarity. Another ceasefire is agreed upon, but it is accompanied by hostile statements from officials of both governments, and, in the past, such statements have led to aggressive action by one or both military forces. This opens the door to armed combat. People are killed or injured, property and infrastructure damaged, and people's livelihoods disrupted. We need to break this cycle; we need real peace.

OPINION

School bus safety ignored

Oped, Editorial, Published on 05/02/2026

» In January alone, there were eight school bus accidents, the Thailand Consumer Council says -- a prominent civic group campaigning for school bus safety. These incidents claimed one life and injured 122 others, yet they were treated as snippet news that drew little public attention.

OPINION

It could take 1 Danish soldier in Greenland

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 23/01/2026

» In 1910, Henry Wilson, the British army officer charged with planning for a possible war with Germany, visited the French officer doing the same job in Paris, Ferdinand Foch. The Anglo-French alliance was still a tentative, semi-secret thing, so Wilson asked Foch, "What is the smallest British military force that would be of any practical assistance to you?"

OPINION

Try snail mail

Oped, Postbag, Published on 21/01/2026

» Re: "90-day puzzle" & "Ninety-day riddle", (PostBag, Jan 15 & 16).

OPINION

Safety failures cost lives

Oped, Editorial, Published on 16/01/2026

» First and foremost, this newspaper extends its condolences to the families of the victims of two deadly crane collapses -- one on Wednesday at a railway construction site in Nakhon Ratchasima province, and another yesterday on a section of Rama II Highway in Samut Sakhon. We join the public in praying for those injured and receiving treatment in hospital, hoping for their full recovery.

OPINION

Big step forward

Oped, Postbag, Published on 06/01/2026

» Re: "Actor sued under new harassment law", (BP, Dec 30).

OPINION

Somaliland: Mixed motivations

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 03/01/2026

» Last week Israel was the first country in the world to establish diplomatic relations with Somaliland. Not Somalia, a wreck of a country on the East African coast that has been mired in civil war for the past thirty-five years, but Somaliland, a different country just north of there that has been peaceful, relatively prosperous and even democratic for all those years.

OPINION

A year of shocks, but Thailand endures

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 30/12/2025

» The year 2025 is not just your typical annus horribilis. Some may say that an appropriate term to describe the year is "hell on earth," or narok bon din in Thai, when many bad things happen all at once.

OPINION

What Sudthisak's return means

News, Alona Fisher-Kamm, Published on 29/12/2025

» The return on Dec 10 of the remains of Sudthisak Rinthalak, the last Thai national abducted by Hamas on Oct 7, 2023, closes a painful circle; but it does not close the wound. His return is not only a moment of relief but a moment of remembrance. It forces us to confront, once again, the human cost of the massacre carried out by Hamas on that dark day.