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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...

  • FBI releases 9/11 file documenting probe into Saudi Arabia’s possible role | Thaiger

    FBI releases 9/11 file documenting probe into Saudi Arabia’s possible role

    The FBI has released a document pertaining to its investigation into any involvement by the Saudi Arabian government in the 9/11 terror attacks. The release was ordered by US President Joe Biden following demands from the victims’ families, but does not provide any proof of official Saudi involvement. According to a Nation Thailand report, in 2019, the Trump administration responded…

  • German election: What’s at stake for India? | Thaiger

    German election: What’s at stake for India?

    At the end of October 2019, German Chancellor Angela Merkel embarked on one of her last major international visits before the pandemic struck. Accompanied by a dozen key government officials, as well as a high-profile business delegation, Merkel traveled to India with the specific goal to “deepen and consolidate” a relationship that has undoubtedly grown in importance since she became…

  • 14 Burmese migrant workers arrested in Songkhla | Thaiger

    14 Burmese migrant workers arrested in Songkhla

    14 Burmese migrant workers were arrested yesterday in Songkhla, a southern Thai province. They were on the Thai border opposite Malaysia’s Kedah State. The migrants were arrested in 2 groups. One group was arrested yesterday afternoon after a Toyota truck was stopped along the border at the Rai Tok village. Officials discovered 7 Burmese migrant workers inside, 4 men and…

  • Italy: Palermo puts migrant children center stage | Thaiger

    Italy: Palermo puts migrant children center stage

    When the Rainbow Choir reunited for its first rehearsals after the pandemic last summer, the sense of excitement was palpable. “Louder,” bellowed the ensemble’s maestro, snapping his fingers as he paced around the room. The young singers needed little encouragement — grinning in unison, they soared through another verse of an Italian movie soundtrack. Run by the Teatro Massimo, Palermo’s…

  • Is Africa ready to produce a malaria vaccine? | Thaiger

    Is Africa ready to produce a malaria vaccine?

    There’s a ray of hope in the fight against tropical diseases: German pharmaceutical company BioNTech said it wants to develop vaccines against malaria and tuberculosis. Clinical trials are expected to start by the end of 2022. The vaccines will use use BioNTech’s messenger RNA technology that’s already proven effective against COVID-19. BioNTech also said it wants to produce the vaccines…

  • Angela Merkel in Poland: Bidding good-bye to a difficult partner | Thaiger

    Angela Merkel in Poland: Bidding good-bye to a difficult partner

    After Angela Merkel was elected chancellor of Germany in the fall of 2005, Warsaw was one of the first capitals she visited, along with Paris and Brussels. Poland had joined the European Union a year earlier. Germany was full of hope as it eyed its new partner on the right bank of the Oder River. Sixteen years later as Merkel…

  • 9/11, the ‘war on terror’ and the consequences for the world | Thaiger

    9/11, the ‘war on terror’ and the consequences for the world

    Twenty years have passed since the September 11 attacks. At Ground Zero in New York, the towers of a new World Trade Center rise above the skyline, and there is a memorial to the nearly 3,000 victims of the attacks. The city has bounced back and now has more residents than in 2001. Until the pandemic, the economy was booming. …

  • PM Prayut lays out 10-year plan at China-ASEAN Expo | Thaiger

    PM Prayut lays out 10-year plan at China-ASEAN Expo

    To kick off the 18th annual China-ASEAN Expo taking place in Nanning, China from September 10 to September 13, PM Prayut Chan-o-cha gave a speech by video conference discussing a post-pandemic Asia. In his remarks, PM Prayut praised the Chinese government and pledged to focus the ASEAN-China relationship on public health, economic recovery, and sustainability. The Thai prime minister gave…

  • Indian farmers vow to turn up the heat on Modi’s government | Thaiger

    Indian farmers vow to turn up the heat on Modi’s government

    Thousands of farmers gathered at a grain market outside the Indian capital New Delhi this week in protest against new market-friendly agriculture laws that they say threaten their livelihoods. It came after another rally on Sunday involving tens of thousands of farmers vowing to remain defiant against the government over the controversial measures. These rallies proved some of the biggest…

  • Japan: Does Suga’s demise mean a return to revolving door politics? | Thaiger

    Japan: Does Suga’s demise mean a return to revolving door politics?

    Yoshihide Suga’s failure to stay on as prime ministerof Japan much beyond a single year has triggered concern that the nation is edging back towards an era of political uncertainty and upheaval. Tokyo has been unsettled by the prospect of a revolving door of leaders, each with insufficient time to implement effective change. Suga took over from Shinzo Abe on…

  • COVID: How the delta variant has shattered Vietnam’s success | Thaiger

    COVID: How the delta variant has shattered Vietnam’s success

    Through the first four months of this year, Diep Nguyen was enjoying Vietnam’s impressive containment of COVID-19. Her cafe in an upscale area of Ho Chi Minh City was becoming more popular, and she had begun experimenting with serving cocktails. On May 31, she stopped in-person service as several of her employees lived in neighborhoods that were turning into infection…

  • Young Slovenian Obama scholar spearheads the fight for water and equal rights | Thaiger

    Young Slovenian Obama scholar spearheads the fight for water and equal rights

    Sunday, July 11, was a typical summer’s day in Slovenia, with temperatures hovering just below 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit). In the evening, as a storm brewed over the capital, Ljubljana, Nika Kovac, the leader of the campaign against the Water Act, was listening to the first unofficial results of the referendum. “The most important thing we have done with…

  • DW correspondents able to leave Afghanistan | Thaiger

    DW correspondents able to leave Afghanistan

    Just over a week after international coalition forces pulled out of Afghanistan, DW’s correspondents and their families have managed to leave the country via Pakistan. DW had asked all employees in Afghanistan to go to Kabul as soon as possible when it became clear that the Taliban would take control over the country. The situation for journalists in Afghanistan had…

  • Vietnam to trial sandbox re-opening to foreign tourists on Phu Quoc island | Thaiger

    Vietnam to trial sandbox re-opening to foreign tourists on Phu Quoc island

    Vietnam will trial a sandbox project on Phu Quoc, re-opening the island to vaccinated foreign tourists by the end of the year. The plan has been confirmed by the Vietnamese PM, Pham Minh Chinh, according to a TTR Weekly report. The government hopes to attract 2 – 3 million foreign tourists through the Phu Quoc sandbox, although officials have not…

  • How much is gold worth to these young miners in Ghana? | Thaiger

    How much is gold worth to these young miners in Ghana?

    Osino is a community rich in gold. Mining moves the economy for years here. But illegal mining in eastern Ghana causes concern.”Galamsey” is done on a small scale and without a license. Young men are arrested, and their tools are destroyed. Miners dump waste into the water sources. There is no recovery of the exploited land. Traditional leaders worry about…

  • The lone hero of Abidjan’s cleanup | Thaiger

    The lone hero of Abidjan’s cleanup

    Djo Drigbé is 37 years old and has one mission: to see the city of Abidjan clean. He removes trash from beaches, streets, and gutters. He is unemployed and doesn’t receive any salary for his work. Donations guarantee a meal for his family. Drigbé lives with his partner and son. His dedication has drawn admiration. Drigbé dreams of working for…

  • NUG announces defensive war to battle Myanmar coup forces | Thaiger

    NUG announces defensive war to battle Myanmar coup forces

    In Myanmar, the National Unity Government made up of deposed former leaders announced a defensive war in the name of the Burmese people, but other countries are urging peace to allow humanitarian efforts to continue. The NUG formed a shadow government to represent the people of Myanmar in the wake of the February military junta that took over claiming election…

  • The comeback of Gambia’s dictator | Thaiger

    The comeback of Gambia’s dictator

    Human rights groups in the Gambia have decried the possible return of former President Yahya Jammeh, who ruled the Gambia from 1994 until he was forced into exile after refusing to accept defeat in the 2016 elections. Jammeh is accused of human rights violations and killings of political opponents during his 22-year reign. Ahead of upcoming presidential elections in December,…

  • 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 | Thaiger

    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…

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

    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…

  • Gambia: Rights groups decry Jammeh’s possible return | Thaiger

    Gambia: Rights groups decry Jammeh’s possible return

    Human rights groups in the Gambia have decried the possible return of former president Yahya Jammeh, who ruled the Gambia from 1994 until he was forced into exile after refusing to accept defeat in 2016 elections. Jammeh is accused of gross human rights violations and killings of political opponents during his 22-year reign. Ahead of upcoming presidential elections in December,…

  • Opinion: Jair Bolsonaro tests Brazil’s democracy | Thaiger

    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’ | Thaiger

    ‘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…

  • Iran: The girls choosing education over tradition | Thaiger

    Iran: The girls choosing education over tradition

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

  • Getting Middle East start-ups off the ground | Thaiger

    Getting Middle East start-ups off the ground

    Reporter: Tilo Spanhel / Presenter: Sam Baker SOURCE: DW News

  • World in Progress: Change sweeps the East | Thaiger

    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 | Thaiger

    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…

  • Major earthquake near Acapulco, Mexico kills 1 | Thaiger

    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…

  • Fire kills 41, injures dozens more at Indonesian prison | Thaiger

    Fire kills 41, injures dozens more at Indonesian prison

    At least 41 people have been killed and over 70 others have been injured after a fire ripped through an Indonesian prison on western Java, today. The fire at the Tangerang Penitentiary tore through the prison in the early morning hours. Most inmates were asleep at the time. Police speculate that the fire could have been caused by an electrical…

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