World News

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    Travel vs international health insurance: Which coverage do you need overseas?

    The Thaiger key takeaways Travel insurance is ideal for short-term trips, covering emergencies, cancellations, and lost luggage, but not routine care. International health insurance suits expats and long-term residents, offering full medical coverage, including checkups, maternity, and chronic care. Choosing...

  • Cape Verde: Turning wastewater into useful energy | Thaiger

    Cape Verde: Turning wastewater into useful energy

    This university student wants to avoid wasting water. Patrick Gomes invented a portable sewage tank. The equipment filters wastewater by decantation. But the “RECYCLE BE” project is not just for purifying water. “RECYCLE BE” works autonomously. It seeks to solve water scarcity in Cape Verde. The ecological tank is a sustainable alternative to septic tanks. The environmental impact is lower…

  • COP26: Saudi Arabia’s climate strategy: Greenwashing or genuine transformation? | Thaiger

    COP26: Saudi Arabia’s climate strategy: Greenwashing or genuine transformation?

    It was a regular hot and sunny day in late October in Riyadh, when Dalia Samra-Rohte, delegate of the German Industry for Saudi Arabia, and Germany’s ambassador to the kingdom, Dieter Lamle, were busy planting a crown-of-thorns sapling in Bödeker Park. It won’t be growing tall alone — earlier this year, the Saudi kingdom revealed plans to plant 7.5 million…

  • Chinese travellers forced to stay home as rest of Asia re-opens to tourism | Thaiger

    Chinese travellers forced to stay home as rest of Asia re-opens to tourism

    With Asian countries re-opening to foreign arrivals, there will be one significant tourism market missing for now – the Chinese. In China, according to a Reuters report, international air travel is currently at just 2% of pre-pandemic levels, as officials continue to pursue zero-Covid status. The absence of Chinese visitors will mean a US$255 billion annual spending hole in the…

  • New York’s mayor-elect Adams: The working-class candidate who embraces big businesses | Thaiger

    New York’s mayor-elect Adams: The working-class candidate who embraces big businesses

    New Yorkers on Tuesday elected Eric Adams as their next mayor in a landslide election in which the Democrat trounced Republican challenger Curtis Sliwa. Adams, a 61-year-old former police captain, will be the city’s 110th mayor and only the second Black man to lead the largest city in the United States — the first being Democrat David Dinkins, who was…

  • Afghan refugees in Uzbekistan live in uncertainty, facing deportation | Thaiger

    Afghan refugees in Uzbekistan live in uncertainty, facing deportation

    Almost every day Marina’s family turns the living room carpet of their flat into a dance floor. When the music starts, her two little sons immediately bop and twist to the song, as the whole family claps along. Marina, a 26-year-old Afghan journalist and women’s rights activist, fled from the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in mid-August, along with her husband, her…

  • South Korea, US at odds over deal to end Korean War | Thaiger

    South Korea, US at odds over deal to end Korean War

    The governments of South Korea and the United States have publically reiterated that they are making progress in discussions on an agreement that all sides in the 1950-53 Korean War can agree to and finally formally end the conflict. Analysts suggest, however, that the show of unity is forced and designed to give the impression that the alliance remains resilient.…

  • US approves Pfizer vaccine for children 5 to 11 years old | Thaiger

    US approves Pfizer vaccine for children 5 to 11 years old

    US health officials have announced that children 5-11 years old can now receive the Pfizer BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine. This approval came yesterday after both the Food and Drug Administration and the Centre for Disease Control gave their authorisation. This approval qualifies around 28 million American children to now receive the Covid vaccine. President Joe Biden expressed his approval in a…

  • Ethiopia: The Tigray crisis one year on | Thaiger

    Ethiopia: The Tigray crisis one year on

    Ethiopia’s Tigray crisis in pictures SOURCE: DW News

  • COVID: India opens for international travel – what happens next? | Thaiger

    COVID: India opens for international travel – what happens next?

    After nearly 18 months of closure, India will finally open its borders to fully vaccinated foreign tourists on November 15. The Home Ministry announced that tourist visas would be issued to those arriving on chartered flights first, whereas travelers on commercial flights would start getting their visas approved from November. “Foreign tourists entering into India by flights other than chartered…

  • How Germany’s new government could impact young Africans | Thaiger

    How Germany’s new government could impact young Africans

    It’s young, developing and brimming with potential. Yet, the African continent doesn’t seem to feature prominently on Germany’s foreign policy agenda. Just over a month after Germany’s much-anticipated federal election, coalition talks are still ongoing. Headline-grabbing issues like climate change and migration are on the agenda: But many young Africans are also keenly waiting for the outcome, with the new…

  • One Free Press Coalition spotlights rampant impunity in killings of journalists | Thaiger

    One Free Press Coalition spotlights rampant impunity in killings of journalists

    Since 2011, 278 journalists have been killed in line of duty. In the past seven days alone, two journalists in Mexico and one reporter in the Phillippines have been killed, one of them even tortured. Last week, the Committee to Protect Journalists published its Global Impunity Index stating that 81% of journalists’ murders in the past decade remained unsolved. In…

  • Indonesia approves Novavax Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use | Thaiger

    Indonesia approves Novavax Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use

    The Indonesian government has approved the Novavax Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use, the first country in the world to do so. The Bangkok Post reports that the manufacturer and its partner, Serum Institute of India, has confirmed the approval. The vaccine will be sold under the brand name Covovax. The manufacturers have applied for emergency use authorisation in several countries,…

  • North Macedonia: PM Zoran Zaev, the man who went ‘all in’ is all out | Thaiger

    North Macedonia: PM Zoran Zaev, the man who went ‘all in’ is all out

    North Macedonia is set to enter a new phase of political instability after Prime Minister Zoran Zaev announced his resignation following the heavy defeat of his Social Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM) in Sunday’s local elections. “I take responsibility for the outcome of these elections and therefore I’m resigning as prime minister and as president of the Social Democratic Union,”…

  • AfricaLink on Air – 1 November 2021 | Thaiger

    AfricaLink on Air – 1 November 2021

    Africa Link is 10 years today! The channel has expanded by introducing various segments giving a voice to individuals who are often ignored by both local and international media. ++++ A historic UN climate summit begins in the UK, but how well is Africa represented? SOURCE: DW News

  • Why Pakistan has some of the most polluted cities in the world | Thaiger

    Why Pakistan has some of the most polluted cities in the world

    Air pollution is a major problem confronting Pakistan, with cities like Lahore and Karachi ranking among the most polluted worldwide. According to data released by IQAir, a global environmental think tank,Lahore is the most polluted place in the world, with the city’s air quality index (AQI) standing at 372 on Monday morning, way ahead of the world’s second most polluted…

  • Afghanistan: Victims’ families decry glorification of suicide bombers | Thaiger

    Afghanistan: Victims’ families decry glorification of suicide bombers

    As she heard the news of the Taliban “honoring” families of their suicide bombers, 19-year-old Sharifa, who lost her father in a 2018 suicide attack in Kabul, burst into tears. “It’s like rubbing salt in the wound,” she said. On October 20, Sirajuddin Haqqani, the Taliban’s interim interior minister, lauded the “sacrifices” of the suicide bombers, who perpetrated countless violent…

  • Spain: Fight for the Ebro Delta | Thaiger

    Spain: Fight for the Ebro Delta

    In the Ebro Delta, the government wants to buy large areas of land — as a natural buffer zone for expected sea level rise. The plan has prompted strong opposition from the local population. SOURCE: DW News

  • After 600 days shut off from the world, Australia re-opens in a flood of emotion | Thaiger

    After 600 days shut off from the world, Australia re-opens in a flood of emotion

    There have been tears of joy at Sydney airport today as loved ones reunited for the first time in nearly 600 days. Sydney and Melbourne have re-opened to international travellers, permitting vaccinated Australian citizens to return without quarantine. Since the start of the pandemic, families and loved ones have been separated, with thousands of Australians stranded overseas due to one…

  • Prince Andrew asks sexual assault case be dismissed in US court | Thaiger

    Prince Andrew asks sexual assault case be dismissed in US court

    The Duke of York, Prince Andrew of Britain, filed a motion asking a New York court to dismiss a sexual assault suit against him. Prince Andrew’s attorneys said that he is asking respectfully for the complaint brought on by plaintiff Virginia Giuffre to be dismissed. He has been battling the accusations for more than 6 years. The lawsuit was filed…

  • 5 million deaths – 22 months of Covid-19 | Thaiger

    5 million deaths – 22 months of Covid-19

    Covid-19 has killed more than 5 million people across the globe, a grim milestone after nearly 20 months of lockdowns, information overload, misinformation and misery. The US has contributed the largest single body count from the coronavirus – 4% of the world’s population but 15% of the total deaths. Covid-19 is now a leading cause of death in the US,…

  • Sinovac or vaccine mix now accepted for Australian travel | Thaiger

    Sinovac or vaccine mix now accepted for Australian travel

    Sinovac has now been recognized as an approved vaccine brand by the Australian government, which will also permit the mixing of vaccine brands, allowing these options for those who wish to travel to Australia. This is a very helpful announcement for many Australian expats living in Thailand who are vaccinated locally with the Chinese-made vaccine and perhaps an AstraZeneca booster…

  • Forever Is Now: Art exhibition in the desert sand | Thaiger

    Forever Is Now: Art exhibition in the desert sand

    A premiere after 4,500 years: Egypt is hosting its first art exhibition against the backdrop of the Giza Pyramids. Various artists have created large installations in the desert sand. SOURCE: DW News

  • Are Southeast Asian nations meeting their climate commitments? | Thaiger

    Are Southeast Asian nations meeting their climate commitments?

    Southeast Asia is among the world’s most at-risk regions when it comes to the impact of global warming. The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned in its most recent report that the region is facing rising sea levels, heat waves, droughts and increasingly intense rainstorms. “Recent studies estimate that up to 96% of the ASEAN region is likely…

  • Donovanosis: ‘Flesh-eating’ STI has doctors worried | Thaiger

    Donovanosis: ‘Flesh-eating’ STI has doctors worried

    Donovanosis causes thick ulcers on the genitals. Both men and women can contract it, but men are twice as likely to be affected. It is generally transmitted through unprotected sex. Also called granuloma inguinale, donovanosis is a bacterial infection that has been dubbed “flesh-eating” because it causes extensive inflammation of the genitals. It does not actually eat the flesh. Typical…

  • COP26: Great expectations — and gripes — in Glasgow | Thaiger

    COP26: Great expectations — and gripes — in Glasgow

    Glasgow is a city of contradictions. It’s famous for knife crime, deep-fried Mars bars and rainy weather but also the warmth and benevolence of its inhabitants. Its grayish skyline is punctuated with graceful spires and historic domes and with poorly maintained high-rise flats in almost equal measure. It has the highest rate of drug deaths in Europe, while its world-renowned…

  • Ghana: Growing COVID vaccine acceptance | Thaiger

    Ghana: Growing COVID vaccine acceptance

    At the West Hospital in Tamale, residents wait for the COVID jab. Ghanaians are slowly overcoming hesitancy and rejection. Conspiracy theories initially crippled inoculation efforts. Even health workers were hesitant. Community leaders were educated about the vaccines. They took the vaccines publicly to encourage others. Advocacy workers battled to change mindsets. But their efforts were held back by a flood…

  • Why African countries are skeptical of OECD tax reform plan | Thaiger

    Why African countries are skeptical of OECD tax reform plan

    Kenya and Nigeria have withdrawn from a global tax reform plan preventing multinational corporations from easily shifting their profits to low-tax countries. The regional economic heavyweights had been weighing up taking part in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) led project, which envisages introducing a global minimum tax aimed at giving countries a partial share of the tax…

  • Pakistan: Media regulator accused of ‘moral policing’ | Thaiger

    Pakistan: Media regulator accused of ‘moral policing’

    The Pakistani government’s media watchdog has imposed a ban on “intimate” scenes on television amid growing religious conservativism in the country. Activists have decried the move. SOURCE: DW News

  • Togo: A rare female motorcycle taxi | Thaiger

    Togo: A rare female motorcycle taxi

    Suzanne N’Dati Tignindo is tackling gender stereotypes: The young Togolese is a motorcycle cab driver: a job usually reserved for men. She picked up the job to save money to open her own hairdressing shop. Suzanne loves her job, but she doesn’t intend to do it all her life. She was trained as a hairdresser. She has two big dreams:…

  • Japan: Economy and security top concerns ahead of election | Thaiger

    Japan: Economy and security top concerns ahead of election

    Japan goes to the polls for parliamentary elections on Sunday, just weeks after Fumio Kishida became prime minister and with significant challenges at home and abroad in the forefront of the electorate’s minds. Opinion polls in the run-up to the election for Japan’s powerful House of Representatives suggest that the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) could lose some seats in…

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