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Search Result for “poet”

Showing 1 - 10 of 29

OPINION

Arab fraternity weakens and hegemons rule

News, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 01/11/2025

» 'This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper," wrote T S Eliot in 1925, probably responding to the profoundly unsatisfactory aftermath of World War I (although with a poet, you never really know). At any rate, it's happening again, this time in the Middle East.

OPINION

Time to let Afghan women lead

News, Palwasha Hassan & Shafiqa Khpalwak, Published on 10/03/2025

» This year's International Women's Day is marked by a sense of foreboding, even despair. Progress on women's rights and representation is stalling: the number of women in parliaments grew last year at the lowest rate in a generation, and the global financing gap for gender initiatives remains wide. At a time of widespread democratic backsliding -- and with US President Donald Trump freezing foreign aid, including for gender initiatives -- the prospects for improvement appear bleak.

OPINION

Matter of decency

News, Published on 16/01/2023

» Re: "PM term limit proposal blasted," (BP, Jan 14).

OPINION

Negotiating with Putin is the only way forward

News, Oscar Arias, Published on 02/04/2022

» As the crisis in Ukraine becomes more acute, so does the need for negotiations. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned that Ukraine is "being decimated before the eyes of the world", with the only reasonable option being "an immediate cessation of hostilities and serious negotiations based on the principles of the UN Charter and international law".

OPINION

An unforgettable taste of romance

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 13/02/2022

» In Thailand the silly season is never far away and things usually get even more daft around Valentine's Day, which happens to be tomorrow. However, the festival has taken bit of a hit in recent years courtesy of Covid. With kissing, canoodling, caressing, cuddling, snogging and hugging generally frowned upon by authorities the occasion has inevitably lost a lot of its romance.

OPINION

When great debate went into extra time

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 05/09/2021

» No-confidence debates like that taking place during the past week have become something of a tradition in Thailand, but it is rare for them to be successful. Perhaps the biggest excitement came some years ago when in the middle of such a debate one MP called a leading a politician a "toad", which didn't go down too well. But at least it livened up proceedings.

OPINION

The girl who was all 'eyelashes and legs'

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 25/07/2021

» I was rightly admonished by a reader for not mentioning model Twiggy in last week's column concerning the "Swinging Sixties" in London. After all Twiggy was dubbed "The Face of 66" in a huge spread in the Daily Express.

OPINION

Don't worry, be happy … like the Finns

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 28/03/2021

» For the second year running Thailand was ranked 54th in the UN-sponsored World Happiness Report which covers 149 countries. It seems that although we have not quite descended into the depths of Les Miserables, Thai people are not exactly dancing in the streets with joy either. However, considering the Covid situation, one suspects there's not one country in the world that is particularly happy.

OPINION

Myanmar's coup stalls settlement of Rohingya saga

News, Laetitia van den Assum and Kobsak Chutikul, Published on 06/03/2021

» Shortly after Myanmar's military coup on Feb 1, a boat packed with Rohingya refugees left Bangladesh. Ten days later, the refugee agency UNHCR reported that the vessel was adrift in the Andaman Sea. It appealed to maritime authorities to provide swift assistance. In late February the vessel was found in Indian waters. Of the 81 people on board, eight had died. A diplomatic spat between India and Bangladesh followed. Neither country wanted to take responsibility for the group.

OPINION

Long in the tooth and fearing the pain

News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 21/02/2021

» Ever since the horrors of the school dentist who had an uncanny knack of hitting the nerve, I have always regarded dental visits with some trepidation. The very word "extraction" is enough to spark spasms of terror. So last week, as I was sitting in a dentist's chair in Bangkok about to have a misbehaving tooth extracted, I was not exactly a vision of joy.