World News

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    12Go introduces Japan Rail Passes to enhance travel accessibility for international travellers

    For those who have travelled throughout Thailand, 12Go is a well-known provider of various trips, though the platform itself has a much wider reach. Ranging from buses to planes, 12Go is undoubtedly a leading booking platform for travel throughout the...

  • Australian government to lift ban on overseas travel for vaccinated citizens

    Australian government to lift ban on overseas travel for vaccinated citizens

    Over 18 months after it was implemented, a ban on Australian citizens travelling overseas will soon be lifted. According to an AFP report, the government has confirmed that fully vaccinated Australians will no longer need permission to leave the country. Officials have also confirmed that Australian borders will re-open to skilled workers and foreign students by the end of the…

  • Cambodia confirms partial reopening to international tourists from November 30

    Cambodia confirms partial reopening to international tourists from November 30

    The Tourism Ministry in Cambodia has confirmed that the country will reopen partially to vaccinated travellers from the end of next month. The country’s prime minister also reportedly ordered that quarantine be waived for air arrivals from Thailand. The first areas in Cambodia set to reopen to overseas travellers are the popular tourist destinations of Sihanoukville and Koh Rong, as…

  • Burkina Faso’s silent refugee crisis

    Burkina Faso’s silent refugee crisis

    Jacob Ouermi does not like to talk about what his family has gone through. He, his wife Elisabet Simpore and their seven children lived in a village in northern Burkina Faso — until the violence started. “People were kidnapped, so we fled and didn’t take anything with us,” said Ouermi, sitting on a narrow wooden bench in the shade of…

  • Explained: Why Turkish President Erdogan is backpedaling in diplomatic row

    Explained: Why Turkish President Erdogan is backpedaling in diplomatic row

    What happened exactly? Over the weekend, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan instructed his Foreign Ministry to declare the ambassadors of 10 states, including those of Germany and the US, “persona non grata.” Following a Cabinet meeting on Monday, Erdogan stuck a more conciliatory tone, explaining that the embassies had “taken a step back from this slander against our country and…

  • In pictures: A rare look into Amazon tribe’s funeral rites

    In pictures: A rare look into Amazon tribe’s funeral rites

    When the chief dies, the endangered Indigenous people in Brazil’s Xingu region gather for a unique ritual. A Reuters photographer was the only journalist invited to the funeral ceremony in September. SOURCE: DW News

  • Why Iran fears chaos in Afghanistan

    Why Iran fears chaos in Afghanistan

    Iran is hosting a meeting of Afghanistan’s neighbors plus Russia on Wednesday to discuss the current situation in the war-ravaged country. The conference, organized by the Iranian Foreign Ministry, will see the foreign ministers of Iran, China, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Russia holding talks in the Iranian capital Tehran on Afghanistan’s political future and the formation of a new…

  • A Rasta president for The Gambia? | Thaiger

    A Rasta president for The Gambia?

    The Gambia is going to the polls in December, to vote their new president. And among those who wants to be president is independent candidate, Rasta man Bankole Yao Jojo Ahadzie, aka Banky. It is the first presidential and parliamentary election since the departure of Yahya Jammeh, who ruled for 22 years. SOURCE: DW News

  • Critics seek proof after Israel designates Palestinian rights groups as terrorists

    Critics seek proof after Israel designates Palestinian rights groups as terrorists

    The Israeli Defense Ministry’s unexpected decision to designate six Palestinian human rights and civil society establishments as terror organizations has resulted in swift criticism from Palestinians and several international organizations. Palestinian civil rights activists, international human rights organizations and some United States lawmakers have denounced the move, which was first announced Friday. They have accused Israel of trying to silence…

  • Japan: Princess Mako marries commoner amid controversy

    Japan: Princess Mako marries commoner amid controversy

    Japanese Princess Mako has quietly married a commoner without traditional wedding celebrations and said their marriage “was a necessary choice to live while cherishing our hearts.” The couple’s marriage document was submitted by a palace official Tuesday morning and made official, the Imperial Household Agency said. There was no wedding ceremony, reception banquet or other marriage rituals for the couple.…

  • US President Biden to join ASEAN summit as leaders poised to discuss key regional issues

    US President Biden to join ASEAN summit as leaders poised to discuss key regional issues

    US President Joe Biden is taking part in Tuesday’s virtual summit with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, marking the first time the US has joined at a presidential level since his predecessor, Donald Trump, attended a meeting in 2017. Reuters reports that the US embassy in Brunei has confirmed Biden will lead the US delegation for the ASEAN-United States summit…

  • Why Dubai plans to build infrastructure in Kashmir

    Why Dubai plans to build infrastructure in Kashmir

    The government of Dubai, one of the UAE’s seven emirates, recently inked an agreement with India to ramp up infrastructure in Jammu and Kashmir. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government said the deal will see Dubai building infrastructure in the troubled region including industrial parks, IT towers, multi-purpose towers, logistics centres, a medical college and a speciality hospital. “The world…

  • Japan: Princess Mako marries commoner amid controversy

    Japan: Princess Mako set to marry commoner amid controversy

    Hours before Japan’s Princess Mako is due to marry her commoner fiance, Kei Komuro, there is little indication of the public or the domestic press relenting their criticism of the first imperial family wedding in nearly 30 years. An unforgettable day of traditional pomp and finery will instead be reduced to the signing of paperwork and a press conference. The…

  • Ho Chi Minh launches 3-stage reopening plan, international on January 1

    Ho Chi Minh launches 3-stage reopening plan, international on January 1

    Shortly after announcing plans to restart tourism tentatively beginning with Phu Quoc Island, the Vietnamese government launched a road map to reopen Ho Chi Minh City to international travellers at the beginning of next year. The megacity and financial hub of Vietnam has a 3-stage plan for tourism recovery with strict Covid-19 safety measures in place. The plan is designed…

  • Criminal gangs smuggle sodas into Portugal to avoid sugar tax

    Criminal gangs smuggle sodas into Portugal to avoid sugar tax

    Customs officer Helder Mendes has lost count how of many trucks he has already stopped on this October day. “Good afternoon, your papers, please. What is your load?” he asks a truck driver. Since seven in the morning, he and five colleagues have been checking trucks en route from Spain at Vilar Formoso, one of Portugal’s busiest border crossings. The…

  • Joe Biden’s Taiwan gaffes create concern in China and Asia

    Joe Biden’s Taiwan gaffes create concern in China and Asia

    In August, ABC television asked US President Joe Biden what he thought of Chinese media’s claims that the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan without a fight had shown Taiwan that Washington could not be relied on to come to its defense. Biden replied that the US’s commitments to Taiwan, South Korea and NATO were fundamentally different situations than what had happened…

  • Vietnam to test reopening starting with Phu Quoc Island

    Vietnam to test reopening starting with Phu Quoc Island

    Vietnam was one of the earliest countries to lockdown due to Covid-19, a strategy that had done it well until a massive outbreak in April, just like Thailand. And now, also like Thailand, they are looking to relaunch their tourism industry after close to two years of closures. Vietnam is now looking to reopen in late November, starting with the…

  • Ethiopia: Renewed airstrikes pummel Tigray region

    Ethiopia: Renewed airstrikes pummel Tigray region

    Ethiopian authorities have confirmed that its military launched airstrikes on Tigray’s regional capital Mekele on Friday. It is the fourth wave of airstrikes to hit Mekele since Monday as the government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed seeks to regain control of the northern region from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF). Getachew Reda, a TPLF spokesperson, told Reuters news agency…

  • Ecuador grapples with spiraling violence

    Ecuador grapples with spiraling violence

    It was meant to be a fun family trip to an ice cream parlor. But it ended in tragedy. Eleven-year-old Sebastian was standing at the counter; his parents were sitting at a table with his little sister. Suddenly, shots rang out. Two gunemen exchanged fire with the police on the street corner in front of the ice cream parlor. The…

  • Turkey’s Osman Kavala case: A break with Europe?

    Turkey’s Osman Kavala case: A break with Europe?

    Turkish philanthropist and activist Osman Kavala has never been convicted of a crime — yet he has been in prison for almost four years in Turkey, despite the ruling of a top European court. On September 17, the Council of Europe issued Turkey its final warning to release the 64-year-old entrepreneur, warning that infringement proceedings against Ankara would start at…

  • Philippines: What happened to the victims of Marawi’s deadly siege?

    Philippines: What happened to the victims of Marawi’s deadly siege?

    The siege had been raging for two days before Gilda could contact her son Jessie. He worked in a bakery in Marawi, a city on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. Aged 17, he wanted to help his mother provide for his three sisters. “He said there was no electricity and they had nothing to eat. He said it was…

  • Niger’s Festival of Nomads | Thaiger

    Niger’s Festival of Nomads

    The Cure Salee, or Festival of Nomads, takes place at Ingal, northern Niger. Here, nomadic people of the Sahara celebrate their culture, music and animals. The camel race is just one of the event’s highlights. SOURCE: DW News

  • EU leaders call for tougher migration controls amid border surge

    EU leaders call for tougher migration controls amid border surge

    The divisive issue of refugees and migrants was top of the agenda as European Union leaders met in Brussels for the second day of their summit. Their meeting came amid a surge of migrants and refugees trying to cross the Belarusian border into Poland, Lithuania and Latvia from countries including Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq and Iran. Many EU leaders have accused…

  • 1 dead, 1 injured in prop gun shooting on Alec Baldwin movie set

    1 dead, 1 injured in prop gun shooting on Alec Baldwin movie set

    A prop gun malfunction on the set of a movie in Santa Fe, New Mexico in the US led to 1 death and 1 person in emergency care after being shot on set. The film “Rust”, a Western movie produced and starring Alec Baldwin and directed by Joel Souza was the site of the tragedy where what should have been…

  • Biden reaffirms US would defend Taiwan against Chinese attack

    Biden reaffirms US would defend Taiwan against Chinese attack

    US President Joe Biden said that the US would defend Taiwan in the case of a Chinese attack. He was asked about this hypothetical situation yesterday during a CNN town hall segment. His response is a departure from the typical US stance on the Taiwan issue, but follows the trend of increasingly firm policy approaches towards China. China, historically, considers…

  • Pinktober puts spotlight on breast cancer in Middle East

    Pinktober puts spotlight on breast cancer in Middle East

    As cancer rates increase in Middle Eastern countries, various NGOs and charities have joined the annual Pinktober campaign to fight stigma, raise money and highlight the importance of breast cancer education and research. “Among Arabs, cancer is growing at an alarming pace,” according to a 2020 paper by the World Health Organization (WHO). “We estimate that the incidence numbers in…

  • China to prioritize foreign students returning

    China to prioritize foreign students returning

    The Chinese ambassador said on Wednesday that students from Thailand would be one of the first groups allowed to return to China when the country reopens. This was announced during an online interview with the media, which was also attended by a top Chinese education official. Thailand has more than 30,000 students enrolled in educational programmes in China, the nation…

  • Indonesia to introduce strict air travel measures for end-of-year holiday period

    Indonesia to introduce strict air travel measures for end-of-year holiday period

    Anticipating a jump in visitor numbers over the end-of-year holiday period, Indonesia is strengthening its air travel rules. According to a Bloomberg report, the country is anxious to avoid a spike in infections as a result of the increase in tourist numbers. A spokesman for the country’s Covid-19 task force says all airlines serving Indonesia must isolate passengers who develop…

  • Indonesia cuts Covid-19 quarantine period to 5 days

    Indonesia cuts Covid-19 quarantine period to 5 days

    The Indonesian government has cut the mandatory, Covid-19 quarantine from 8 to 5 days for those entering the country. The 5-day quarantine applies to international travellers, including Indonesian citizens and foreign nationals arriving in the country. The Indonesian National Armed Forces, Indonesian Police, relevant Ministries and Institutions, and volunteers under the Commander of the Regional Defense Command will supervise the…

  • In Taiwan, tea harvest suffers as the climate changes

    In Taiwan, tea harvest suffers as the climate changes

    Drought and heavy rainfall: Chien Shun-yih’s tea plantation in Taiwan is severely affected by climate change, it seems. This year, almost half the harvest was lost. SOURCE: DW News

  • Ghana’s thriving smock industry

    Ghana’s thriving smock industry

    Ghana’s famous smocks are defninitely in fashion. But imported cotton has boosted production, and the smocks ubiquity has left weavers and producers struggling to keep up with demand, and make a living. SOURCE: DW News

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