Showing 1-7 of 7 results
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Press freedom splits Brits, Americans
News, Published on 14/12/2012
» Witnessed from across the Atlantic, the UK's heated debate over Justice Brian Leveson's inquiry into the press after a phone-hacking scandal must be startling.
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Pursue charter middle ground
News, Published on 14/12/2012
» The government botched, and tacitly admits it has bungled the attempt to amend the constitution. The stated purpose of charter change is supposedly twofold. It is meant to make the supreme law more democratic. It also is designed as a major support of the government's policy to press for national reconciliation.
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Postbag: Expecting OIC balance
News, Published on 14/12/2012
» Allow me to clarify some points made in the article ''Where OIC was correct'' published in the editorial section on Dec 3.
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In courthouse kerfuffle, hubris reigns supreme
News, Ploenpote Atthakor, Published on 14/12/2012
» If you still don't know this, it's about time you did: We are losing the old Supreme Court building, a vintage structure that is part of our national heritage. It is being quietly demolished.
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The good, the bad and the BBC's ugly Abhisit interview
News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 14/12/2012
» A good interview raises more questions than it answers, while a bad one raises more questions about the interviewer than the interview. A mix of both was in play last week when former prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was interviewed by BBC news presenter Mishal Husain about murder charges recently levelled against him.
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Let leaders sit in the democracy of the traffic jam
Life, Anchalee Kongrut, Published on 14/12/2012
» I remembered feeling startled after hearing my Chinese friend mention motorcades _ with their resulting traffic diversions or blockages to allow official vehicles to pass _ exist in China.
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Abhisit caught in dirty political trick?
Veera Prateepchaikul, Published on 14/12/2012
» As a criminal suspect is regarded as innocent unless proven otherwise, he or she is entitled to the rights accorded by the law. That includes the right to privacy and not to be photographed while being fingerprinted by the police to acknowledge charges.
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