World News

World news, global politics, business, technology, and culture—stay updated with breaking stories, international trends, and major events. Get the latest from The Thaiger, your trusted source for global news.

  • Sponsored

    Is private health insurance in Thailand worth it? Real costs vs risks explained

    Thailand has a strong healthcare system with both public and private options. Public hospitals offer affordable care, but many people, including expats, choose private health insurance for faster service, modern facilities, and more treatment choices. To decide if private health...

  • Tension in Ethiopia as Tigrayan forces advance

    Tension in Ethiopia as Tigrayan forces advance

    When Adam* returned to his home after a haircut on the morning of Saturday, November 6, he saw his parents and sister being forced into a police van. With them were two other families living in the compound – all of them of Tigrayan origin. Before leaving, Adam’s mother was able to lock the house, he said, taking with her…

  • WHO: Global pandemic exposed unpreparedness and inequality

    WHO: Global pandemic exposed unpreparedness and inequality

    A new report by the World Health Organisation Global Preparedness Monitoring Board says that the Covid-19 pandemic exposed the world’s lack of preparedness, accountability, and equality. The first year of Covid-19 showed that so many countries failed to be serious about preparedness and taking action on scientific data, while national Covid-19 responses ignored the interconnectedness of the world, revealing massive…

  • How realistic is Bangladesh’s climate prosperity plan?

    How realistic is Bangladesh’s climate prosperity plan?

    At the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina called on wealthy nations to fulfill their pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions and provide the promised $100 billion (€86 billion) annually in financial aid to less wealthy countries to help them adapt to climate change and mitigate further rises in temperature. Only a tiny fraction of…

  • COVID-19 means disruption, change for new set of ‘boomerang kids’

    COVID-19 means disruption, change for new set of ‘boomerang kids’

    Not much had changed in the room where Faissal Sharif spent his childhood, in a small village in a remote part of the central German state of Hesse. Various posters, his old bed, a desk covered by a thin layer of dust — it was all still there. He set out to explore the world at the age of 18,…

  • The era of tech whistleblowing is here — but will it lead to lasting change?

    The era of tech whistleblowing is here — but will it lead to lasting change?

    Whistleblower Frances Haugen says she hates attention so much she stopped throwing birthday parties years ago. She never wanted the world to know her name. And the idea of stepping in front of thousands of people gives her anxiety. And yet, the data scientist decided to give up her anonymity to expose wrongdoing at tech giant Facebook, she told some…

  • What are the chances for peace in Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict?

    What are the chances for peace in Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict?

    “The situation in Ethiopia is currently very perilous. This is probably the most dangerous moment in the country for decades,” Murithi Mutiga, International Crisis Group Project Director for the Horn of Africa, based in Nairobi, Kenya, told DW. “The primary issue is that all sides have decided that they can settle this conflict militarily.” According to the analyst, the Tigrayan…

  • Who are the Tigray fighters, and why is Ethiopia at war with them?

    Who are the Tigray fighters, and why is Ethiopia at war with them?

    Since early November 2020, the Ethiopian government and Tigray fighters have been exchanging fire in a conflict that has claimed thousands of lives and has left more than 400,000 people facing famine, according to a recent UN estimate. The conflict has escalated rapidly since June, when fighters began to retake most of Tigray and expand into neighboring regions. The fighters…

  • Yazidis still displaced in their own country

    Yazidis still displaced in their own country

    A wide gravel road extends into the distance and blurs into the horizon. To the left is a sea of corrugated metal containers and electric poles — beyond that, nothing. This is where the Mam Rashan camp ends. The refugee camp in the Nineveh district of the autonomous Kurdistan region is like a small town. Over 1,500 Yazidi families live…

  • Africalink 05.11.21 – 16 UTC – MP3-Stereo

    Africalink 05.11.21 – 16 UTC – MP3-Stereo

    Ethiopia rebels ‘join forces to defeat Abiy government +++ Preparations are in top gear in Cameroon for tomorrows celebration of Paul Biya’s 39 years in power, but his opponents see it as a mockery. +++ Nigeria state votes in key test for the presidential race++++Sports SOURCE: DW News

  • Will Russia’s new push in ASEAN be another failure?

    Will Russia’s new push in ASEAN be another failure?

    Speaking at the fourth Russia-ASEAN summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated his country’s eagerness to boost cooperation with Southeast Asian nations. Moscow has made similar pledges almost annually since Putin announced a new eastward-looking foreign policy in 2010. “Russian interest in its far eastern flank remains unchanged since Peter the Great: access to the region’s development and prosperity,” said Joshua…

  • Deputy minister in Vietnam prosecuted in fake medicine scandal

    Deputy minister in Vietnam prosecuted in fake medicine scandal

    A deputy health minister in Vietnam is being prosecuted, accused by security officials of looking the other way for a ring that was busted trading fake medication. 59 year old Truong Quoc Cuong is the current head of drug and cosmetics management in Vietnam after becoming a deputy minister in 2016. The Ministry of Public Security in Vietnam is run…

  • American woman convicted of mother’s murder deported from Indonesia to USA to face charges

    American woman convicted of mother’s murder deported from Indonesia to USA to face charges

    An American woman who was convicted of murdering her mother in Indonesia, has been deported to the US to face charges in her home country. Heather Mack, from Chicago, Illionois, was convicted back in 2015, for killing her mother in Bali. Her boyfriend, Tommy Schaefer, was also charged. Police say the couple stuffed her mother, Sheila von Wiese Mack’s dead…

  • Pop megastars ABBA release first album in 40 years

    Pop megastars ABBA release first album in 40 years

    Some said it would never happen. In fact, they themselves frequently said it would never happen. But pop fans around the world are rejoicing over the return of Swedish supergroup, ABBA. Agnetha, Bjorn, Benny and Anni-Frid have reunited for the release of Voyage, their first album in 40 years. It will be followed by an “avatar” concert planned for March…

  • Fighting internet censorship with fashion

    Fighting internet censorship with fashion

    Introducing DW’s new Uncensored Collection, designed to draw attention to freedom of information. SOURCE: DW News

  • EU-funded hijab campaign sparks outrage

    EU-funded hijab campaign sparks outrage

    Young European Muslims say a decision to cancel a newly launched EU online campaign to promote acceptance of hijab is “an attack on human rights.” “Attacks on this vital campaign take place in a wider environment of a shrinking of civic space, where government actors routinely censor and limit the freedom of speech when it doesn’t fit their political agenda”…

  • Opinion: Ethiopia at risk of Balkanization

    Opinion: Ethiopia at risk of Balkanization

    Jeffrey Feltman’s visit to Ethiopia on Thursday is the West’s last desperate attempt to rescue the tottering country. The US special envoy for the Horn of Africa will try topersuade Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to agree to a ceasefire and peace talks. The hope is to bring an end to the war between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray…

  • COVID: How India is vaccinating isolated tribes in insurgency-hit areas

    COVID: How India is vaccinating isolated tribes in insurgency-hit areas

    Minpa village, an isolated settlement in Sukma district in Chhattisgarh state, has just over 650 residents. Located nearly 500 kilometers (310 miles) from the state capital Raipur, the village has no electricity, no potable drinking water supply and no road connectivity. One has to embark on an arduous journey to reach the place as it is located in the dense…

  • Britain the first to approve Covid-19 antiviral pill Molnupiravir

    Britain the first to approve Covid-19 antiviral pill Molnupiravir

    Molnupiravir, the antiviral pill that fights Covid-19, has just been approved for use in Britain, the first country in the world to do so. The pill was developed by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics and has been shown to reduce the severity of symptoms in patients infected with Covid-19. The drug is recommended to be used as soon as possible after a…

  • Burmese junta adds third charge for American journalist Fenster

    Burmese junta adds third charge for American journalist Fenster

    The managing editor of Frontier Myanmar, American journalist Danny Fenster, has been held for months by the Burmese junta and has now been charged with a third criminal offence. He had originally been arrested in May when attempting to leave the country. After being held for nearly 6 months, Fenster is still on trial, accused of promoting dissent against the…

  • 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…

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

    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

    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…

  • Kenya’s first female wildlife rangers unit

    Kenya’s first female wildlife rangers unit

    Team Lioness is Kenya’s first all female unit of community wildlife rangers. Created in 2019, the team is stationed near the traditional community land around Amboseli National Park on the border of Tanzania and Kenya. The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) team of 16 female rangers. The unit patrols the community lands of the Olgulului-Ololarashi Group Ranch (OOGR). Through…

  • 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…

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

    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

    Ethiopia: The Tigray crisis one year on

    Ethiopia’s Tigray crisis in pictures SOURCE: DW News

  • Facebook facial recognition system being ditched amid growing privacy concerns

    Facebook facial recognition system being ditched amid growing privacy concerns

    Facebook is getting rid of its facial recognition system, which currently identifies and suggests tagging of individuals in photos and videos. The company’s vice-president of artificial intelligence, Jerome Pesenti, says the technology is being ditched due to uncertainty over its use. “Regulators are still in the process of providing a clear set of rules governing its use. Amid this ongoing…

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

    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…

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

    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

    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,…

Broke? Find employment in Southeast Asia with JobCute Thailand and SmartJob Indonesia. Rich? Invest in real estate across Asia with FazWaz Property Group or get out on a yacht anywhere with Boatcrowd. Even book medical procedures worldwide with MyMediTravel, all powered by DB Ventures.