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Showing 1 - 10 of 9,509

OPINION

Clean air reform stalls

Oped, Editorial, Published on 29/04/2026

» The government of Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul has yet to decide whether to keep the current Clean Air Bill for deliberation during the parliamentary session. Cabinet has to make a decision by May 13 on whether to put the current version of the Clean Air Bill into parliament's legislative reading process. If not, the current draft -- developed over years of effort by civic groups and political parties -- could be discarded.

OPINION

'Paris of the East' turns 'Concrete Oven'

Oped, Drew B Mallory, Published on 29/04/2026

» If you stand on the banks of the Khlong Saen Saep today, near the glossy high-rises of Wireless Road, you are witnessing a battle for the soul of Bangkok. On one hand, you see the future: concrete embankments and new walkways, part of a government push to connect the city in the vein of European capitals or our neighbour, Singapore. On the other hand, you see the ghosts of the past: fresh stumps of rain trees that stood for decades, severed to make way for the very cement intended to "beautify" the city. It is a paradox that defines modern Bangkok. We are a city desperate to be green, yet addicted to grey.

OPINION

Thailand's need for AI sovereignty

Oped, Craig Warren Smith, Published on 29/04/2026

» Thailand is building a serious AI policy architecture. Last year, the National AI Committee, formed by then Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and Digital Economic Minister Prasert Jantararuangtong, initiated drafting a unified AI law, officially known as the Draft Principles of the Artificial Intelligence Law.

OPINION

Asean is adrift

Oped, Postbag, Published on 28/04/2026

» Re: "Rupture, reform and how to rebuild", (Opinion, April 23). 

OPINION

Land Bridge not viable

Oped, Editorial, Published on 28/04/2026

» The Southern Land Bridge project -- the Thai government's long-standing plan to build a logistics corridor linking the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea -- is back on the agenda.

OPINION

The art of speaking English badly in Africa

Oped, Gwynne Dyer, Published on 28/04/2026

» It is a matter of chronic surprise that politicians, otherwise well-trained in saying just the right thing for the audience they are addressing, forget that whatever they say can be heard everywhere. Right away. By anybody who cares to listen, including journalists always hungry for the next story.

OPINION

Work stress needs more attention

Oped, Kaori Nakamura-Osaka, Published on 28/04/2026

» A delivery rider works 14 hours a day to meet algorithm-driven targets. A factory worker quietly endures relentless pressure and harassment. A middle-aged manager pushes away thoughts of suicide resulting from stress.

OPINION

Volunteer firefighters left to plight

News, Sanitsuda Ekachai, Published on 27/04/2026

» They die quietly, one by one, doing the forest officials' job, rewarded with little more than praise that masks state hypocrisy.

OPINION

The real reason why slums keep coming back

News, Luciene Pereira, Published on 27/04/2026

» The standard policy response to slums -- relocate people, bulldoze the settlement, and build public housing elsewhere -- is older than the slums themselves. It has never worked.

OPINION

The lesson that was all over the map

Roger Crutchley, Published on 26/04/2026

» Last week's item regarding the wonderful world of maps and atlases sparked memories of how a map played a key cameo role during my early days in Bangkok. It was 1969 and I was teaching at a commercial college. One of the subjects I was assigned was geography. After the first lesson it was clear there was a language problem. None of the Thai class understood a word I was saying.