Landmark agreements on airspace, extradition and defence are not only a sign of a new age in bilateral relations, but a show of unity in contentious times.
With the pandemic worsening inequality and poverty, governments and businesses should help workers attain a living wage – which goes beyond subsistence needs.
Compulsory vaccinations targeting specific high-risk workers or sectors make more sense, but there needs to be a fair and firm system of penalties so as to not add to the mental health pressures of an ongoing pandemic.
In societies such as Hong Kong, with strong law enforcement, victim-blaming and fear of second trauma result in women staying silent, while a Singapore parliament debate has illuminated the problem of unhelpful societal attitudes.
Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand kept the virus under control in 2020 but are now seeing flare-ups. Singapore is on ‘a knife’s edge’ with its rise in community cases. These examples are a wake-up call to go get vaccinated.
Quarantine-free scheme will begin with one flight per day carrying 200 passengers, with a second flight added from June 10 if the coronavirus situation remains stable; vaccination exemptions will be made for medical reasons, those under age 16.
The two terror attacks in Indonesia this week point to an alarming trend: women are taking a leading role in extremist causes, and in some cases supplanting men as frontliners.
This needs to be an area of focus for Singapore this year. Similarly, Asian policymakers should promote gender awareness training in schools and zero tolerance for harassers, while celebrating positive male role models.
Corruption, unclear policies and a failure to battle misinformation fuelling vaccine hesitancy will compromise the potential benefits of mass inoculation.
Domestic political dynamics continue to shape Jakarta’s foreign policy. But Beijing needs to navigate its relationship with Southeast Asia’s largest economy on new terms it has hitherto been unused to in its dealings with Asia.
A Singapore children’s book depicted a school bully as dark skinned while other pupils were fair. It’s just one of many racist tropes in media and literature.
Vancouver-based developer Concord Pacific, which was once controlled by the Hong Kong billionaire, lost its suit against Oei over a multimillion-dollar waterfront site last week.
Speaking before the Belt and Road Forum, Ramon Lopez’s comments come after President Rodrigo Duterte threatened to deploy soldiers after Beijing allowed vessels to sail near a Philippine-claimed island in the South China Sea.
The vice-presidential candidate said the first economic priority of the Prabowo government would be to woo investments in the energy and agriculture sectors.
Indonesia’s presidential challenger Prabowo Subianto has been accused of playing to conservative Muslims in his effort to unseat Joko Widodo. No, his running mate tells This Week in Asia: they stand for unity – and the economy
Prabowo’s ties with ethnic Chinese once wary of him reflects how his appeal may be broader than previously thought – but the election is about whether voters want to reward Jokowi with a second term.
Tasked with leading the Lion City between the reigns of Lee the father and Lee the son, Singapore’s second prime minister had a vital, but underappreciated, mission: showing there was life after the death of a legend.
Identity of the Lion City’s fourth prime minister will emerge soon after the ruling People’s Action Party’s internal elections next Sunday, says former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong