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    How one hospital visit in Thailand could cost more than your whole trip

    Thailand is a favourite spot for travellers who want to enjoy more while spending less. From cheap street food to low-cost hotels and fun attractions, it’s easy to stretch your budget here. But there’s one thing many people don’t think...

  • Bicycling picks up speed among youth in Kashmir | Thaiger

    Bicycling picks up speed among youth in Kashmir

    A growing number of Kashmiris are taking up bicycling in the restive mountainous region, both to stay fit and fight environmental pollution. SOURCE: DW News

  • Officials mull rehabilitation over incarceration for drug offences following fire at Indonesian prison

    Officials mull rehabilitation over incarceration for drug offences following fire at Indonesian prison

    Yesterday, the Thaiger wrote about a fire at an Indonesian prison that killed 41 people. Now, the death toll has risen to 44. Prison officials have declared that they will look into whether more inmates could receive rehabilitation for drug related offences to reduce overcrowding in prisons. The death toll, originally placed at 41 lives, saw 3 more people who…

  • Europe’s medicine regulator adds extremely rare autoimmune disorder as possible side effect of AstraZeneca

    Europe’s medicine regulator adds extremely rare autoimmune disorder as possible side effect of AstraZeneca

    An extremely rare autoimmune disorder, Guillain-Barré syndrome, has been added as a possible side effect of the AstraZeneca Covid vaccine. The side-effect was noted by Europe’s medicine regulator. The European Medicines Agency says a causal relationship between the syndrome and AstraZeneca is “at least a reasonable possibility”. They made their assessment based on 833 cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome being reported…

  • El Salvador: first country worldwide to make bitcoin legal tender

    El Salvador: first country worldwide to make bitcoin legal tender

    Cryptocurrency has been making inroads at gaining more and more mainstream acceptance, but this week marked a new major milestone. El Salvador just became the first country worldwide to accept bitcoin as legal tender, on Monday purchasing 400 bitcoins at a price of US $21 million. The announcement caused such a swell of interest, the country’s cyber wallet system was…

  • Opinion: Jair Bolsonaro tests Brazil’s democracy

    Opinion: Jair Bolsonaro tests Brazil’s democracy

    Jair Bolsonaro stopped governing a while back. In three years, his government has inaugurated a few local infrastructure projects and liberalized gun laws, which has led to a sharp increase in arms sales in a country that is already notoriously violent. Apart from that, Brazil’s president has promoted the ongoing destruction of the Amazon rainforest and mismanaged the COVID-19 pandemic…

  • ‘Governing Afghanistan today will not be easy’

    ‘Governing Afghanistan today will not be easy’

    A Taliban spokesman announced on Tuesday the names of those who would fill key government posts as the group assumes complete power over Afghanistan. Despite previously claiming that they would rule differently to the group’s repressive regime in the 1990s, the list was filled with mostly old guard stalwarts. The Taliban’s supreme leader said the new government would be guided…

  • Can the Taliban govern Afghanistan?

    Can the Taliban govern Afghanistan?

    The Taliban leadership took a long time to announce their interim government — three weeks after taking control of Kabul. Analysts say the fight for Panjshir province kept them busy all this while, and once the last resistance stronghold fell to the group, their spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, unveiled the caretaker government on Tuesday. Even though it is just a caretaker…

  • Iran: The girls choosing education over tradition

    Iran: The girls choosing education over tradition

    Reporter: Dominika Nooripur / Presenter: Ineke Mules SOURCE: DW News

  • World in Progress: Change sweeps the East

    World in Progress: Change sweeps the East

    From the Middle East to Central Asia, new societal trends are emerging that are challenging long-held norms. In Iran, women and girls are banking on education as the key to progress. Young entrepreneurs in Egypt are reaping the rewards of start-ups. Meanwhile in Turkey, Afghan refugees are stuck in a state of limbo. SOURCE: DW News

  • Afghanistan: What Taliban rule means for Sikhs and Hindus

    Afghanistan: What Taliban rule means for Sikhs and Hindus

    After taking shelter at the Gurdwara Dashmesh Pita at Karta-E-Parwan near Kabul for weeks, Afghan Sikhs and Hindus have left for their homes in different parts of the country. The collapse of Afghanistan’s civilian government and the takeover of the conflict-stricken country by the Taliban last month have thrown the lives of religious minorities in disarray. Just about 250 Sikhs…

  • 45 Thais working in Malaysia deported to Songkhla

    45 Thais working in Malaysia deported to Songkhla

    45 Thais that were working in Malaysia have been arrested for illegal entry. Following their arrests, they were deported back to Thailand. 1 of the workers had Covid. The Thai citizens returned earlier this week to the southern Thai province of Songkhla, which borders Malaysia. Most of the returned citizens are now in quarantine at the Siam Thana Hotel until…

  • Major earthquake near Acapulco, Mexico kills 1

    Major earthquake near Acapulco, Mexico kills 1

    A major earthquake shook the southwestern Mexican beach town Acapulco, yesterday. The earthquake has killed at least 1 person after a post fell on him. There were also rockfalls that damaged buildings, and power outages across several states as a result of the earthquake, says local officials. The earthquake, or temblor, had a magnitude of 7.0, which Michigan Tech estimates…

  • Survey shows most Singaporeans reluctant to travel internationally for now

    Survey shows most Singaporeans reluctant to travel internationally for now

    A survey carried out by online travel agency, Booking.com, shows that 63% of Singaporeans are not planning to travel abroad for now. While Singapore is on the “green list” for most countries, the survey shows that most Singaporeans remain cautious about overseas travel. In general, over a year and a half since the start of the pandemic, travel in the…

  • Paris: Can a trial help heal victims of the Bataclan terror attacks?

    Paris: Can a trial help heal victims of the Bataclan terror attacks?

    Ever since November 13, 2015, Sebastien Dauzet has been feeling vulnerable. That night, nine gunmen attacked what he considers the heart of his neighborhood. Theterrorists killed 130 people in attacks at the Stade de France stadium just north of Paris, as well as in several bars and the Bataclan music venue in the capital. It was France’s bloodiest terror attack…

  • Why Afghan asylum-seekers are protesting in India

    Why Afghan asylum-seekers are protesting in India

    Many Afghan migrants and asylum-seekers, especially single mothers and their children, have been camping outside the office of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in New Delhi for more than a week. They’re demanding recognition as refugees and better economic security for their children. Many of them arrived in India several years ago but are struggling to make…

  • Belarus: Germany, EU slam Kolesnikova verdict

    Belarus: Germany, EU slam Kolesnikova verdict

    The news from Minsk did not come as much of a surprise: A court in the Belarusian capital on Monday sentenced the well-known Belarusian opposition figure Maria Kolesnikova to 11 years in prison. Her colleague in the Belarusian opposition’s Coordination Council, the lawyer Maxim Znak, was handed a 10-year jail sentence. Kolesnikova became one of the most prominent faces of…

  • Singaporean who repeatedly refused to wear a face mask jailed for 16 weeks

    Singaporean who repeatedly refused to wear a face mask jailed for 16 weeks

    A Singaporean woman who repeatedly refused to wear a face mask in public spaces has been sentenced to a 16-week jail term. According to a Coconuts report, 54 year old Phoon Chiu Yoke has pleaded guilty to 9 counts of breaching Covid-19 regulations. The woman achieved notoriety when a video of her refusing to wear a mask at the Marina…

  • Mikhail Khodorkovsky: ‘Dialogue only strengthens Putin’s regime’

    Mikhail Khodorkovsky: ‘Dialogue only strengthens Putin’s regime’

    DW: About a year ago, Alexei Navalny was poisoned. What impact did this have on political life in Russia and on the country’s opposition? Mikhhail Khodorkovsky: Fortunately, this event hasn’t ended badly so far. Alexei Navalny might be in prison but he is still alive. Nevertheless, the poison attack against him is a move away from normal statehood and towards…

  • Guinea’s future uncertain as coup leaders tighten grip on power

    Guinea’s future uncertain as coup leaders tighten grip on power

    The morning after the coup, the capital woke up on Monday to a new reality which has left Guineans with mixed feelings. “There is a great sense of uncertainty,” said DW’s correspondent in Conakry, Bangaly Conde. “Today we saw an image of Guinea we are not used to see. We are very disappointed with the army,” one Guinean told DW.…

  • India’s ambitious palm oil push triggers biodiversity fears

    India’s ambitious palm oil push triggers biodiversity fears

    The Indian government introduced a new plan in August to boost the production of palm oil. India is one of the largest consumers of palm oil, which is used in almost everything from soaps to chips. But the country still imports most of its palm oil. India also produces a range of other vegetable oils, like mustard and soybean, but…

  • Battling through Ghana’s lean season

    Battling through Ghana’s lean season

    The World Food Programme reports hunger has increased by 30% higher since year than last year and it is the highest level in a decade. But one man’s initiative is helping those struggling. Nanleeb Konlan farms large plantations of grains,which he distributes for free to poorer communities in the lean season. SOURCE: DW News

  • Facebook video recommendations disabled after labelling black men Primates

    Facebook video recommendations disabled after labelling black men Primates

    Facebook has disabled their topic recommendation features on videos today after the AI software appears to have mistaken black men in a video for monkeys. The video in question was from the British tabloid The Daily Mail and was title “White man calls cops on black men at marina.” But under the video where auto-generated suggestions are made to encourage…

  • Why is Gambia’s President Adama Barrow scared of his military?

    Why is Gambia’s President Adama Barrow scared of his military?

    Gambian President Adama Barrow wants Senegal to send over 600 troops to his country ahead December elections. This is in addition to the Senegalese forces already there as part of the ECOWAS peace mission deployed in 2017. DW’s Jane Nyingi spoke to Omar Walle in Banjul and first wanted to know if the Gambian army is capable of handling its…

  • Japan to donate 300,000 more AstraZeneca vaccines next week

    Japan to donate 300,000 more AstraZeneca vaccines next week

    The Japanese embassy in Bangkok made an announcement today that their government will again donate AstraZeneca vaccines to Thailand. Japan donated 1.05 million AstraZeneca vaccines to Thailand at the beginning of July and have declared that another shipment of 300,000 vaccines will be forthcoming. The second shipment of AstraZeneca vaccines from Japan is slated to arrive on September 8, this…

  • Moroccan elections will be about math, not change

    Moroccan elections will be about math, not change

    The Moroccan elections take place next Wednesday and will be the first time that newly formulated electoral rules apply, including one particularly contentious one. In Morocco, rules on how elections are conducted are often amended before the event. Although the country’s King Mohammed VI holds the most power, Morocco has staged a national vote around every five years since 1993.…

  • Poland: ‘State of emergency’ worsens Afghan refugees’ plight

    Poland: ‘State of emergency’ worsens Afghan refugees’ plight

    People look at the camera from afar, with heavily armed soldiers separating them and the photographer. Some of the people in the photos seem to be waving, but few are smiling. They do not look particularly serious, but they do seem desperate. These are rare pictures of the 32 Afghans who have been waiting at the border between Poland and…

  • Poland: ‘State of emergency’ worsens Afghan refugees’ plight

    Poland’s ‘state of emergency’ worsens Afghan refugees’ EU border plight

    People look at the camera from afar, with heavily armed soldiers separating them and the photographer. Some of the people in the photos seem to be waving, but few are smiling. They don’t look particularly serious, but they do seem desperate. These are rare pictures of the 32 Afghans who have been waiting at the border between Poland and Belarus…

  • COVID: Why is Europe donating so many vaccines to Vietnam?

    COVID: Why is Europe donating so many vaccines to Vietnam?

    Italy and Romania became the latest European countries to donate COVID-19 vaccines to Vietnam on August 25. In the weeks beforehand, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and France gave doses to Hanoi. DW estimates that EU states have so far donated or pledged to provide a combined total of 2.6 million inoculations to Vietnam, a key actor in Asian politics.…

  • India to allow women to join top defense institutions

    India to allow women to join top defense institutions

    The Indian Supreme Court ruled last month that female students will now be allowed to train at one of the country’s elite military training institutions, the National Defence Academy (NDA). In another move aimed at creating gender balance in the armed forces, the Sainik Schools (soldier schools) will be opened to female students. These schools, while also teaching a standard…

  • Belarusian Cyber Partisans want to overthrow the regime through hacking

    Belarusian Cyber Partisans want to overthrow the regime through hacking

    In July and August, a group of hackers that go by the name of Belarus Cyber Partisans claimed responsibility for a number of cyberattacks on government and police databases in Belarus, including those of the Interior Ministry. It recently said that it now had access to the passport details of all Belarusians, as well as internal security plans, and also…

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