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Search Result for “separatists”

Showing 1 - 10 of 13

OPINION

Time for Thai govt, BRN to talk

Oped, Matt Wheeler, Published on 12/03/2025

» Dialogue between the Thai government and Malay separatists marked its 12-year anniversary on Feb 28, but violence in the southernmost provinces remains an open wound on the Thai body politic. A dreadful routine of bombings, shootings and clashes in these provinces has killed some 7,680 people since 2004, yet the simmering violence goes largely unnoticed outside the region.

OPINION

Testing the Trump-Modi bromance

Oped, Brahma Chellaney, Published on 15/02/2025

» Last time Donald Trump was president, ties between the United States and India flourished. But the bilateral relationship began to fray during Joe Biden's presidency, owing not least to divisions over the Ukraine war. Will Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's latest meeting with Mr Trump at the White House mark the first step toward restoring this critical relationship?

OPINION

The lost cause of the 'Catalan Pimpernel'

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 14/08/2024

» Carles Puigdemont, the self-exiled leader of the Catalan separatist movement, aspires to become the new Scarlet Pimpernel. Last week he left Belgium, where he has lived as an unwelcome guest since he led a failed attempt to secede from Spain seven years ago, and had himself smuggled back to Barcelona, the capital of the region of Catalonia.

OPINION

France's West Sahara move a 'thunderclap'

Oped, John J. Metzler, Published on 08/08/2024

» In what's described as a thunderclap in French North African policy, the Paris government recognised Morocco's sovereignty over the long disputed Western Sahara, a region long contested by rival Algeria and a lingering subject of endless United Nations deliberations.

OPINION

Indonesian poll serves up a curious outcome

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 20/02/2024

» Indonesia's President Joko Widodo concluded his second five-year term last Tuesday with a national election in which his chosen successors won a convincing victory. "Jokowi", as everybody calls him, still enjoys 70% public approval, and he has every right to be proud of his past.

OPINION

Southern comfort?

Oped, Editorial, Published on 05/01/2024

» Yesterday was no run-of-the-mill Thursday; rather, it was a red-letter day marking the decades-long violence plaguing the three southernmost provinces.

OPINION

Key 2024 poll in California affects India

Oped, JOE MATHEWS, Published on 03/01/2024

» On Jan 28, people in my home state of California will finally get to cast ballots in a historic vote on whether to create a new independent country.

OPINION

The roots of the India-Canada diplomatic spat

Oped, Brahma Chellaney, Published on 07/10/2023

» Rarely have two major democracies descended into as ugly a diplomatic spat as the one now unfolding between Canada and India.

OPINION

Why Turkey's Erdogan continues to be triumphant

Oped, Daron Acemoglu, Published on 20/05/2023

» It is hard not to be disappointed about the outcome of the first round of Turkey's presidential and parliamentary elections on Sunday. In a campaign defined by the aftermath of February's huge earthquake, mounting economic problems and deepening corruption, hopes were high that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's increasingly authoritarian 20-year rule would end. Some polls suggested that the six-party opposition led by the centre-left Kemal Kilicdaroglu, from the Republican People's Party (CHP), would be able to win a majority or, at the very least, enter the second round with an advantage over Mr Erdogan.

OPINION

How Tolstoy hurts Putin's attempt to rewrite history

Oped, Jacob Lassin, Published on 10/08/2022

» On April 10, Moscow police arrested Konstantin Goldman for brandishing a book in public. Mr Goldman had posted an image on social media in which he posed holding a copy of Tolstoy's War and Peace next to a section of a World War II monument that commemorates Kyiv's status as a Soviet "hero-city" -- a distinction given to cities that endured some of the harshest moments of the Nazi invasion. He was charged with violating Russia's prohibition against discrediting the military, a new law that carries a punishment of up to 15 years in jail.