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Africa Now – Weekly Newsletter (Week 5, 2022)

Week 5, 2022Welcome to Africa Now, your weekly newsletter for Africa, presenting the most important developments in the continent – news that matters.

COMMENTARY

Burkina Faso is the site of Africa’s latest coup. How many more are coming?

The African continent was rattled by another military coup Monday—its fourth in less than two years—after Burkina Faso’s military ousted President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré from power. Click here to read…

African Politics: Return of The Military

The military seized power in Burkina Faso on Monday, ousting the country’s democratically elected President, Roch Marc Christian Kaboré. I was in a conference on security in the Sahel last November and already at that time, the conversation was that the military had decided to seize power in the country and the only question was when not if they would. Click here to read…

NEWS

Burkina Faso crowd celebrates West Africa’s latest coup

More than 1,000 people gathered in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougou on Tuesday in support of a military coup that a day earlier ousted President Roch Kabore, dissolved the government and suspended the constitution. Click here to read…

Denmark pulls troops from Mali as military gov’t swipes at France

The decision comes amid rising tensions after several countries imposed sanctions on Mali for failing to organise elections following two military coups. Click here to read…

Ethiopia PM open to talks with Tigray forces

Ethiopia’s prime minister has said there will be negotiations on a cease-fire between his government and the rival Tigray forces who have been waging war for almost 15 months. Click here to read…

Senegal ruling coalition suffers setbacks in key cities

Senegal’s ruling coalition suffered crushing defeats in the capital and other major cities in Sunday’s local elections, local media reported, in a vote seen as a key test for the president. Click here to read…

US envoy for Horn of Africa to visit Turkey to discuss Sudan crisis

The newly appointed United States special envoy for the Horn of Africa will visit five countries, including Turkey, to discuss Sudan and regional peace, the State Department said Tuesday. Click here to read…

Egypt sceptical of Ethiopia call for cooperation on Nile dam

Egypt sees Ethiopia’s latest call for cooperation over its controversial Nile dam as mere ink on paper, as Cairo continues to insist on resuming the negotiations to reach a legally binding agreement. Click here to read…

Sudanese protest against UN talks to resolve post-coup crisis

Sudanese pro-military demonstrators have taken to the streets of the capital, Khartoum, to protest against a UN attempting to resolve a political crisis that has been marred by a wave of bloody protests since a military coup in October. Click here to read…

Shell hits oil and gas in Namibian offshore well

Shell (RDSa.L) has made a significant oil and gas discovery at an closely-watched offshore well in Namibia which could spark a wave of investment in the southern African country. Click here to read…

The Republic of Congo to Receive $455 million IMF Loan

The board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved a $455 million loan for the Republic of Congo with the objective of extending fiscal relief and stimulating re-growth for the hard-hit economy of the central African country. Congo’s economy has been adversely impacted by the pandemic and the loan is vital for the country with a 52.5% poverty rate. Click here to read…

China writes off $25.3m of debt owed by Mauritania

Mauritania and China yesterday signed an agreement under which China wrote off part of its debts owed by the Mauritanian government. Click here to read…

Beijing puts Djibouti at odds with West by helping equip its army

Beijing is pushing ahead with its policy of providing military equipment by donating 160 Dongfeng trucks to the army, having already supplied two vessels to the Djibouti navy last year. Click here to read…

Uncertainty shrouds Arab League summit in Algeria

The Arab League is facing a third year without a meeting, as the summit due to be held in Algeria in March is set to be delayed. Click here to read…

Libyan parliament committee urges change of interim PM

A Libyan parliament committee has said the chamber should choose a new interim prime minister, a move that could set major factions against each other in the wake of a failed election. Click here to read…

Zambia’s president visits South Africa to discuss trade and security

Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema arrived on Wednesday in South Africa to discuss security and trade between the two nations. Click here to read…

Kenya on High Alert After France Warns of Impending Terror Attack

The French Embassy in Kenya has issued a terror alert to Western nationals, urging them to avoid places this weekend where foreigners gather, such as hotels and shopping centers, especially in the capital, Nairobi. Click here to read…

Rwanda to re-open border with Uganda as relations thaw

Rwanda will re-open on Monday a border crossing with Uganda that was shuttered nearly three years ago, even as tensions rise between the central African neighbours, fuelled by accusations of espionage and support for each other’s dissidentsClick here to read…

Death Toll from Tropical Storm Ana in Mozambique, Malawi Rises to 12

The death toll from tropical storm Ana has risen to at least 12 in Mozambique and Malawi, authorities said, although officials and aid agencies are still assessing the full impact of the storm that swept through southern Africa on Monday. Click here to read…

Book Review: Politics of Change in Middle East and North Africa since Arab Spring

After decades of suffering and deprivation under authoritarian regimes, the incident motivated the Arab masses to take their anger and frustration to the streets and demand justice, freedom and democracy. Click here to read…

Where Is Pan-Africanism Today?

Kwame Nkrumah foresaw a period when Africa would be unified and coined the term ‘pan-Africanism’ in the 1960s. He thought that African unification was essential for the continent’s economic, social, and political growth. Click here to read…

INDIA IN AFRICA

Shri G. Balasubramanian appointed as the next High Commissioner of India to the Federal Republic of Nigeria

Shri G. Balasubramanian (IFS: 1998), presently Joint Secretary in the Ministry, has been appointed as the next High Commissioner of India to the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Click here to read…

India-South Africa trade exceeds USD 10 billion target set by leaders

Trade between India and South Africa has exceeded the USD 10 billion target set by the leaders of the two countries, Consul General Anju Ranjan announced at a reception here on Wednesday to celebrate India’s 73rd Republic Day. Click here to read…

Tanzania, India agrees on new areas of cooperation

Tanzania and India have expressed readiness to open up new areas of cooperation to ensure sustainable development for mutual benefits. Click here to read…

Nigeria, India Deepen Ties to Boost ICT, Renewable Energy

The federal government and the Republic of India have mapped out ways through which they can strengthen the existing bilateral relations between both countries to enhance development in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and renewable energy. Click here to read…

India calls for countering terror in Africa’s Sahel and Libya

India has called on the international community to focus its attention on the threat of terrorism in Africa, in particular the Sahel region. Click here to read…

PM Modi thanks Zambian President for R-Day greetings, says ‘India greatly values its friendship’

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday thanked Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema for his greetings on the occasion of India’s 73rd Republic Day on January 26. Click here to read…

Indian community marks 75th independence anniversary in Accra

The Indian High Commissioner to Ghana, Mr Sugandh Rajaram, has called for the strengthening of the bilateral relations between Ghana and India.
According to Mr Rajaram, the achievements chalked by his country had been possible due to the help of its global partners of which Ghana was tops. Click here to read…

Indian embassy in Madagascar celebrates 73rd Republic Day by unfurling national flag

Indian ambassador in Madagascar inaugurated the event by unfurling the Indian flag.Click here to read…

73rd Republic of India: Prime Minister inaugurates the Ashoka Stambh in Ebène

The Prime Minister, Minister of Defence, Home Affairs and External Communications, Minister for Rodrigues, Outer Islands and Territorial Integrity, Mr Pravind Kumar Jugnauth, inaugurated the Ashoka Stambh to mark the 73rd Republic Day of India, this evening, at the High Commission of India, in Ebène. Click here to read…

Tanzania’s avocados now hit Indian markets

Efforts to find international markets for Tanzania’s avocados achieved a milestone after a maiden consignment was exported to India on Friday. This is good news to smallholder growers, traders and the government alike.Click here to read…

Made-in-India Nissan Magnite is now exported to 15 global markets

The Made-in-India Nissan Magnite is now on sale in 15 countries across the world. They are: India, Indonesia, South Africa, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Brunei, Uganda, Kenya, Seychelles, Mozambique, Zambia, Mauritius, Tanzania, and Malawi. Click here to read…

NeoCov: India to monitor deadlier Covid variant found in South Africa

India is keeping an eye on reports of a Chinese study on coronavirus type NeoCov, which spreads among bats in South Africa. Click here to read…

Bharti Airtel’s subsidiary Airtel Africa to be added to FTSE 100 Index

Telecom major Bharti Airtel on Thursday informed that its subsidiary Airtel Africa has been made a part of the FTSE 100 Index with effect from Monday, 31 January, 2022. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, January 31, 2022

Xi takes part in annual Chinese New Year gathering with non-CPC members: Xinhuanet
January 29, 2022

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, on Saturday took part in an annual gathering with non-CPC members ahead of the Spring Festival, or the Chinese New Year. Click here to read…

China firmly opposes malicious U.S. suppression of Chinese telecom operator: Xinhuanet
January 28, 2022

China firmly opposes the United States’ generalization of the concept of national security, its abuse of state power and its repeated malicious suppression of Chinese telecom operators in the absence of facts, the Ministry of Commerce said on Friday. Click here to read…

China’s real estate loan growth moderates in 2021: Xinhuanet
January 30, 2022

China’s real estate loan growth eased at the end of 2021 compared with a year before, according to data from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) on Sunday. At the end of 2021, outstanding yuan-denominated real estate loans nationwide stood at 52.17 trillion yuan (8.18 trillion U.S. dollars), up 7.9 percent year on year, 3.7 percentage points lower than at the end of 2020, the PBOC data shows. Click here to read…

China unveils new rules to better regulate overseas lending: Xinhuanet
January 29, 2022

Chinese financial regulators published new rules on overseas lending by domestic banks to facilitate the use of renminbi in such business and fend off risks in cross-border capital use on Saturday.A unified policy framework that covers overseas loans in both renminbi and foreign currencies will be established, according to the document jointly released by the People’s Bank of China and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange. Click here to read…

Tibet advances “toilet revolution” to improve living conditions in rural, pastoral areas: Xinhuanet
January 28, 2022

Southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region renovated 46,600 toilets for household use to improve living conditions in rural and pastoral areas in 2021, said the regional agriculture and rural affairs department. The region has so far renovated a total of 316,600 toilets for the locals. Click here to read…

Xi extends Spring Festival greetings to all Chinese, stressing unity, hard work for shared future: Quishi
January 30, 2022

Chinese President Xi Jinping, on behalf of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the State Council, extended Spring Festival greetings to all Chinese Sunday at a reception in Beijing. Click here to read…

China completes first megaton carbon capture project: China Daily
January 29, 2022

Sinopec, China’s largest oil refiner, said Saturday that it has completed the country’s first megaton-scale project of carbon capture, utilization and storage. The project is expected to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 1 million tonnes per year, an amount equivalent to the effect of planting nearly 9 million trees. Click here to read…

32 world leaders to attend Beijing Olympics amid bankruptcy of US’ boycott calls: Global Times
January 28, 2022

Chinese President Xi Jinping will attend the opening ceremony of the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, and hold a welcome banquet for at least 32 foreign heads of state, heads of government, members of the royal family and heads of international organizations, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson announced on Friday. Click here to read…

Xi pledges China’s greater contribution to world peace: Global Times
January 28, 2022

President Xi Jinping urged Chinese peacekeepers to play a bigger role in defending world peace during an inspection to the Central Theater Command of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on Friday. When talking with Chinese peacekeepers posted overseas via video link, Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, also told them to strengthen safety precautions and step up COVID-19 prevention and control amid complicated circumstances. Click here to read…

China mulls regulations for deep synthesis technology: Global Times
January 28, 2022

The Cyberspace Administration of China (GAC) is mulling regulations for deep synthesis technology in China, in order to protect people’s legitimate rights and interests. The draft, which was posted on the official website of the GAC on Friday, said that deep synthesis service providers should strengthen training data management, ensure that data processing is legal and proper, and take necessary measures to ensure data security. Click here to read…

China hikes first rare-earth quota of 2022 by 20% to meet surging new energy demand: Global Times
January 29, 2022

China has set a quota for the first batch of rare-earth mining in 2022 at 100,800 tons, up by about 20 percent compared with the level of last year, with a quota for smelting and separation at 97,200 tons, also up from the 81,000 tons in 2021. Click here to read…

China to end patent subsidies by 2025: People’s Daily
January 28, 2022

China plans to stop all patent subsidies by 2025 to help shift its intellectual property (IP) focus from quantity to quality. All types of financial aid for patent licensing should be reduced by at least 25 percentage points every year until they are canceled by 2025, according to a notice issued by the National Intellectual Property Administration. Click here to read…

China to strengthen anti-monopoly efforts in pharma industry: Reuters
January 30, 2022

China will toughen law enforcement to curb monopoly practices and unfair competition in the pharmaceutical industry as the government seeks to foster a good business environment, the industry ministry said on Sunday. The action follows November’s regulatory guidelines to stamp out monopolies in active pharmaceutical ingredients (API). China leads the world in making and exporting these products. Click here to read…

Hong Kong home affairs chief Caspar Tsui resigns: Reuters
January 31, 2022

Hong Kong’s Secretary for Home Affairs Caspar Tsui, who recently attended the birthday party of a delegate to China’s legislature, where two of the nearly 200 guests tested positive for COVID-19, resigned on Monday, effective immediately. Tsui said he had made a wrong decision to attend the banquet on Jan. 3 when all efforts should have been devoted to controlling the spread of the virus. Click here to read…

China allows U.N. rights chief to visit Xinjiang: Kyodo
January 29, 2022

China will allow U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet to visit the far western region of Xinjiang, the Foreign Ministry said Friday. Bachelet received Beijing’s approval to visit the region with the understanding that it would be a “friendly” trip rather than an investigation into alleged human rights abuses against Uyghur Muslims, according to The South China Morning Post. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: January 31, 2022

Afghanistan
Afghans Want Inclusive Govt, Women’s Rights: Karzai: Tolo News

Former president Hamid Karzai said that the formation of an inclusive government and respecting the rights of women are the will of the Afghans, not only the international communityClick here to read…

Opinion: Why Afghan nationals across the Durand line are given Pakistani IDs?: The Khaama Press

Thousands of Afghan villagers along the Durand Line have received a national identity card from Pakistan, all though they hold valid Afghan tazkira (national id card). Pakistan is alleged to have issued national identity cards in the Af-Pak border villages – which were the site of fierce battles between Afghanistan and Pakistan over their territorial disputeClick here to read…

Bhutan
National taskforce eases lockdown: Kuensel

The National Covid-19 Task Force (NC19TF) last night announced that from today residents in Thimphu can move within their mega zones following the timing on their movement cards until February 3. Click here to read…

Export of agricultural goods to India could see improvement: Kuensel

Export of goods from Bhutan to India could be smoothed with the Economic Affairs minister, Loknath Sharma, discussing issues related to trade and commerce with top Indian leaders during a recent visit to India earlier this month. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
Covid-19 pandemic continues to impact in 2022: Dhaka Tribune

The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic will continue to significantly impact Bangladesh throughout the year of 2022, experts told a roundtable on Sunday.Click here to read…

Op-ed- Australia and Bangladesh: 50 years strong: Dhaka Tribune

Today, January 31, Australia and Bangladesh celebrate 50 years of diplomatic relations. It was on this day 50 years ago, that Australia’s Foreign Minister Nigel Bowen, announced that Australia had recognized the government led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as the government of the new state of BangladeshClick here to read…

Maldives
Maldives: Where is Abdulla Yameen’s ‘India Out’ campaign heading? – First Post

Recent reports of harassment of Indian teachers in Maldivian islands have suddenly made the 26,000-strong migrant community from the larger neighbour feel uncomfortable, if not feel unsafe as yet. The harassment comes in the wake of the Opposition PPM-PNC combine’s ‘India Out’ campaign, which has since taken the shape of wall graffiti in the islands and also capital Male. Click here to read…

China steps up info war against India in Maldives – Siasat

China has stepped up its information against India in the Maldives with much help from both the local news portal Dhiyares and former President Abdulla Yameen ahead of next year’s Presidential elections in the atoll nation. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Over 1,000 Junta Soldiers Killed in Western Myanmar Last Year: Chin Resistance Forces – The Irrawaddy

Almost 1,030 Myanmar military soldiers were killed in firefights with resistance forces in Chin State last year, according to the Chinland Joint Defense Committee. The committee is comprised of around 16 ethnic Chin People’s Defense Forces (PDF) representing each of the nine townships in the western Myanmar state. Click here to read…

UN urges more pressure on Myanmar junta to cease violence – TRTWorld

The United Nations has urged the world to ramp up the pressure on Myanmar’s junta to halt violence against the country’s own people and quickly restore civilian rule. Click here to read…

Myanmar army’s landmines at oil, gas pipelines near China ‘likely to backfire’ as coup rebellion grows – SCMP

The Myanmar military’s recent placement of landmines around oil and gas pipelines connected to southwestern China suggests the junta is hypersensitive to possible attacks on the projects amid an escalating national rebellion, experts say. Click here to read…

Nepal
Nepal’s second international airport to be operational from May 26: Moneycontrol

All international flights can take off and land at the Gautam Buddha International Airport (GBIA) from May 26, the birth anniversary of Lord Buddha, Nepal’s Minister for Tourism and Civil Aviation Prem Ale informed while inspecting the airport under construction in Bhairahawa, situated in Western Nepal. Click here to read…

Lawmakers call for measures to retain hill, mountain populations: The Kathmandu Post

Bhojpur has been facing a monkey menace for the last few years as people are deserting the rural areas in search of better lives in urban centres and other districts with better amenities. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Islamabad, Kabul agree to ease border crossing: Dawn

Pakistan and Afghanistan have decided to establish a national-level coordination mechanism for enhancing facilitation at border crossing points. Click here to read…

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Fawad Chaudhry asks judiciary to improve image: Dawn

Justice Umar Ata Bandial will take charge as new CJP replacing Justice Gulzar Ahmed on Feb 2. The notification for his appointment was issued by the law ministry on Jan 17. Click here to read…

Islamabad eyes $3b loan from Beijing: The Express Tribune

Government sources said that in addition to political engagement, the premier would also seek Chinese support in areas of finance, trade and investment. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Dangerous cargo poses threat to Colombo Port: Daily Mirror

The US Dollar crisis in Sri Lanka has caused a long delay in securing the release of several imported items at the Colombo Port, and among them are goods classed as dangerous cargo. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, January 28, 2022

China hands punishments to 19,489 officials in December 2021 for violating frugality rules: Xinhuanet
January 27, 2022

China handed punishments to 19,489 officials in December 2021 for violating the country’s eight-point rules on improving Party and government conduct, China’s top anti-graft body announced on its website on Thursday. Click here to read…

Chinese premier holds symposium with foreign experts in China: Xinhuanet
January 27, 2022

Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday afternoon held a symposium in Beijing with representatives of foreign experts working in China before the Spring Festival or the Chinese Lunar New Year. Li extended Lunar New Year greetings to the foreign experts and thanked them for their contributions to China’s reform, opening-up, and modernization. Click here to read…

China issues 5-year plan to modernize market regulation: Xinhuanet
January 27, 2022

China’s State Council has issued a plan to advance the modernization of the country’s market regulation over the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025). The plan calls for continuously optimizing the business environment in China to fully stimulate the vitality of market entities. Click here to read…

Tibet leads the country in resident income growth: Xinhuanet
January 27, 2022

The per capita disposable income for residents in southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region expanded 14.7 percent year on year to 24,950 yuan (around 3,936 U.S. dollars) in 2021, leading the country in income growth. The average annual increase of the past two years was 13.1 percent, the regional government announced at a press conference on Thursday. Click here to read…

China vigorously boosts development of outstanding SMEs: Quishi
January 28, 2022

Hubei Kofon intelligent transmission equipment Co., Ltd., an innovative small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) specializing in the research and development (R&D) as well as production of reduction gear, provides more than 85 percent of the reduction gears in pipe jacking machines used in the construction of underground pipe galleries and over 80 percent of the speed reducers in the railings for electronic toll collection (ETC) at expressway toll stations in China. Click here to read…

Strong link between Party and religious work stressed: China Daily
January 28, 2022

China’s top political adviser Wang Yang extended Spring Festival greetings on Thursday to religious figures and believers nationwide and called for efforts to encourage religions in China to better adapt to socialist society. Click here to read…

Floods spark reshuffle in Zhengzhou: China Daily
January 28, 2022

The leadership of Zhengzhou, capital of Henan province, which was ravaged by catastrophic flooding last year, has been reshuffled as central authorities sum up lessons from the city’s inadequate emergency response to extreme rainfall, a phenomenon likely to become more frequent amid global warming. Click here to read…

China’s Space Program: A 2021 Perspective: China Daily
January 28, 2022

The State Council Information Office of the People’s Republic of China published a white paper titled “China’s Space Program: A 2021 Perspective” on Friday.

Following is the full text of the white paper:

China’s Space Program: A 2021 PerspectiveClick here to read…

NGO of Muslims fooled by anti-China WUC to call for ‘boycott’ of Beijing Games: Global Times
January 28, 2022

The Global Imam Council, which claims to be the world’s first and largest transitional nongovernmental body of Muslim religious leaders, was fooled by the World Uyghur Congress (WUC), a US-backed separatist group which seeks the fall of the Chinese government, to issue a statement calling for a boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics under the instigation of the WUC’s head, arabiaanews.com.iq reported on Thursday. Click here to read…

Tencent’s employee challenging overtime work triggers hot discussion online: Global Times
January 27, 2022

A new employee at Shenzhen-based Tencent challenging overtime work triggered a hot discussion online on Wednesday with some netizens even saying the move hopes to be the beginning of the end of the “Neijuan” or “internal competition” in the hyper-competitive culture in China’s internet industry. The employee, surnamed Zhang, criticized the fact that managers, only pay attention to the progress of work and ignore the continuous overtime work of developers, according to China’s Twitter-like social media platform Sina Weibo. Click here to read…

China regulator talks to foreign banks to soothe economic concerns: Reuters
January 28, 2022

The China Securities and Regulatory Commission (CSRC) met this week with the executives of top western banks and asset managers to reassure them about the country’s economic prospects after regulatory crackdowns in 2021, three sources said on Friday. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: January 28, 2022

Afghanistan
UN Launches Engagement Framework to Help Afghans: Tolo News

The United Nation has launched a Transitional Engagement Framework (TEF) for Afghanistan to save lives and help the people of Afghanistan in 2022 through sustaining essential services and preserving essential community systems. Click here to read…

Intl Community Yet to Define ‘Inclusive Govt’: Islamic Emirate: Tolo News

The international community has yet to define ‘”inclusive government,” the Foreign Ministry said, saying that efforts are underway to form a government which is acceptable for the nation. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
PM Hasina: BNP hiring lobbyists ahead of polls- Dhaka Tribune

BNP wants to destroy Bangladesh and mislead the people giving false information, she says. Click here to read…

Bangladesh on track to reach global Covid vaccine targets- Dhaka Tribune

DGHS hopes to complete the target by March of 2022. Click here to read…

EC bill passed, snubbing all concerns- Daily Star

Opposition MPs protest the bill, say it’s to form the EC as per govt’s will; PM says it’s a law by the opposition parties. Click here to read…

Dipu Moni refutes graft charges, seeks probe- Asian Age

Education Minister Dipu Moni has refuted allegations of corruption against members of her family in the planned land acquisition for the Chandpur University of Science and Technology. Click here to read…

Bhutan
ECB collecting postal ballots from door to door for upcoming bye-elections- Kuensel

Upon approval from the national taskforce, officials of the Election Commission of Bhutan (ECB) are working in containment mode for the upcoming Khamdang-Ramjar bye-election. Click here to read…

(Editorial) The rule of law must dictate justice not the social media- Kensel

While there may be some genuine reasons, there can also be unfounded facts and wrong information adversely affecting people’s confidence in the justice system. Click here to read…

Bhutan is reopening a sacred ancient route for tourism after 60 years- Daily Bhutan

Following 2 years of extensive restoration, Bhutan is set to open its sacred Trans Bhutan Trail to travellers and trekkers after 60 years. Click here to read…

The enormous role of hydropower in Bhutan- Daily Bhutan

Bhutan uses hydropower to conserve the environment, produce electricity, and achieve economic self-reliance. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Oil companies’ Myanmar exit must include immediate commitment to stop bankrolling junta, activists say- Myanmar Now

As Woodside, Total and Chevron announce their departure, campaigners warn that remaining revenue must be deposited in protected accounts, or risk funding the military’s crimes. Click here to read…

Displaced Kayah Civilians Going Hungry as Myanmar Junta Blocks Supplies- Irrawaddy

Villagers in Hpruso Township in Kayah State are facing serious food shortages due to ongoing clashes between resistance groups and Myanmar’s junta and are surviving on corn mixed with rice. Click here to read…

Maldives
Maldives records ninth COVID-19 fatality this month, death toll at 274- Sun

Maldives has recorded the ninth COVID-19 fatality this month. Health Protection Agency (HPA) stated tonight that a COVID-19 patient admitted at Hulhumale’ Medical Facility has passed away today. Click here to read…

Development of two regional ports handed over to MTCC- AVASOnline

The development of HDh. Kulhdhuffushi Regional Port and GDh. Thinadhoo Regional Port has been handed over to Maldives Transport and Contracting Company (MTCC). Click here to read…

Nepal
15 more Covid-19 fatalities reported in Nepal in 24-hrs, 8,017 fresh infections surface- Himalaya

The national active Covid-19 caseload of Nepal climbed to 90,576 on Thursday as 8,017 people tested positive for the infection in past 24 hours. Click here to read…

(EDITORIAL) Corruption flourishing- Himalaya

It surprises no one that Nepal has failed to improve its global standing in the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), retaining its 117th position in 2021 as in the previous year. Click here to read…

(Opinion) Nepal’s coalition government: How long will it last?- Himalaya

The political arena of Nepal is resonating with the concern regarding the longevity of the present coalition government. Click here to read…

Oli’s couldn’t-care-less attitude about the coronavirus continues- Kathmandu Post

A Covid denier while he was prime minister, the UML chair attends a public function when he is supposed to isolate. Click here to read…

Nepali Congress is forming committee to discuss local level election and its date- Kathmandu Post

Ruling party is finally taking up the matter for discussion as it has become a hotly debated national political issue. Click here to read…

(Opinion) No country for young men- Nepali Times

Remittances fuel Nepal’s economy, but country’s migration policies still do not favour workers. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Opposition to fencing not Taliban’s policy: NSA: Dawn

National Security Adviser (NSA) Dr Moeed Yusuf on Thursday said Afghanistan’s Taliban government was maintaining cordial ties with Pakistan and recent border fencing troubles were not part of their policy. Click here to read…

Ministry sees further hike in inflation: The Express Tribune

The Ministry of Finance released its Monthly Economic Outlook report for January 2022 but remained shy of giving an inflation number. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka seeks to integrate economy with India, focuses on 8 sectors: The Economic Times

Sri Lanka has initiated a country strategy for India with an eye on integrating its ‘fragile’ economy with the Indian economy with focus on eight sectors to boost fortunes. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka to pay $200m compensation for failed organic farm drive: AlJazeera

Sri Lanka has announced compensation for more than a million rice farmers whose crops failed under a botched scheme to establish the world’s first 100-percent organic farming nation. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, January 27, 2022

Chinese vice premier stresses need to advance coordinated development of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region: Xinhuanet
January 25, 2022

Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng on Tuesday called for new progress in the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region by emphasizing major areas and key sections. Han, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, made the remarks while presiding over a meeting of a leading group for the coordinated development of the region. Click here to read…

Former senior official of Zhejiang expelled from CPC, office: Xinhuanet
January 26, 2022

Zhou Jiangyong, a former senior official in east China’s Zhejiang Province, has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) and dismissed from public office over serious violations of Party discipline and laws, the country’s top anti-graft body announced Wednesday. Click here to read…

Chinese premier stresses prioritizing stability in economic development: Xinhuanet
January 25, 2022

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has stressed prioritizing stability in economic development as the Chinese economy continues to face downward pressure and complex domestic and international environments. Click here to read…

Remarks by Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Virtual Summit to Commemorate the 30th Anniversary of Diplomatic Relations Between China and Central Asian Countries: Xinhuanet
January 25, 2022

Chinese President Xi Jinping chaired a summit held on Tuesday via video link to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and five Central Asian countries, namely Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, and delivered an important speech.

Following is the full text of the speech:

Click here to read…

Chinese envoy calls for more humanitarian, economic assistance to Afghanistan: Xinhuanet
January 27, 2022

China’s permanent representative to the United Nations on Wednesday calls for more humanitarian and economic assistance to Afghanistan. “China calls for a stronger sense of urgency from the international community and more humanitarian and economic assistance to Afghanistan, so as to bring warmth and hope to the Afghan people,” Zhang Jun told a Security Council meeting on the situation in Afghanistan. Click here to read…

Senior Heilongjiang provincial legislator under investigation: Xinhuanet
January 26, 2022

Song Xibin, vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the Heilongjiang Provincial People’s Congress, is being investigated for suspected severe violations of Party disciplines and laws. Song is under investigation by the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission, according to a statement released on Wednesday. Click here to read…

Former Hebei provincial legislator under investigation: Xinhuanet
January 26, 2022

Xie Jilai, a former vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the Hebei Provincial People’s Congress, is being investigated for suspected serious violations of Party discipline and law, according to the country’s top anti-graft body on Wednesday. Xie is under investigation by the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission. Click here to read…

China publishes five-year plan for construction industry: Quishi
January 27, 2022

China unveiled a development plan on Tuesday for its construction industry over the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025) to push the pillar sector of the country’s economy onto a greener, smarter and safer path. The industry will maintain a 6-percent share of the country’s GDP into 2025, according to the document from the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development. Click here to read…

China, Saudi Arabia vow to boost military cooperation: China Military
January 26, 2022

Chinese State Councilor and Minister of National Defense Wei Fenghe held talks via video link with Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Defense Minister Khalid bin Salman on January 26, 2022.
Under the strategic guidance of the heads of state of the two countries, China and Saudi Arabia have been deepening their political mutual trust and expanding cooperation in various fields, and the two countries are good friends and partners that trust each other, share mutual benefits, and develop together, Wei said. Click here to read…

China’s spending on R&D reaches new high in 2021: China Daily
January 26, 2022

China’s spending on research and development (R&D) hit a new high of 2.44 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) in 2021, up 0.03 percentage points from the previous year, official data showed Wednesday.Click here to read…

Senior banking official removed over corruption: China Daily
January 26, 2022

He Xingxiang, former vice president of the China Development Bank, has been expelled from the Party and dismissed from his post, the country’s top anti-graft watchdogs said on Wednesday. A statement issued by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission said He was punished for serious violations of discipline and law. Click here to read…

Top TV regulator asks anchors, TV hosts to raise political awareness, clean ‘friend circle’: Global Times
January 26, 2022

China’s top television regulator on Wednesday released an opinion piece asking news organizations and lower-level television bureaus to enhance management of anchors’ and TV hosts’ professional and social activities. The opinion, released by the National Radio and Television Administration on its website, stated that anchors and TV hosts should have firm political stance, high morality, rich knowledge, professional skills and be dedicated to work. Click here to read…

China’s Xi says country’s low carbon push must guarantee energy, food security: Reuters
January 26, 2022

China’s ambitious low-carbon goals should not come at the expense of energy and food security or the “normal life” of ordinary people, President Xi Jinping said, signalling a more cautious approach to climate change as the economy slows. Click here to read…

China has right to impose tariffs on US$645 million of US products, says WTO: South China Morning Post
January 27, 2022

The World Trade Organization (WTO) authorised China on Wednesday to impose US$645 million of compensatory tariffs against the United States in a ruling likely to receive a cool reception in Washington. China went to the WTO in 2012 to challenge anti-subsidy tariffs the United States imposed between 2008 and 2012, mainly during the term of US President Barack Obama, on 22 Chinese products ranging from solar panels to steel wire. Click here to read…

China, Russia take another step closer, agreeing to strengthen coordination on Asian affairs: South China Morning Post
January 26, 2022

Senior Chinese and Russian diplomats have agreed to step up coordination on Asian affairs, the latest sign the neighbouring countries are moving closer amid growing pressure from the West. The agreement was reached on Tuesday during a virtual meeting between Liu Jinsong, head of the Asian affairs unit at China’s foreign ministry, and Ovchinnikov Alexey Mikhailovich, who heads the Russian foreign ministry’s Asia-Pacific department. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: January 27, 2022

Afghanistan
UN Calls for Afghan Reconciliation Dialogue: Tolo News

Speaking at a UN conference held to assess the Afghan situation, UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan Deborah Lyons called on the Islamic Emirate to initiate an intra-Afghan dialogue for national reconciliation. Click here to read…

Afghan women protest for release of Afghanistan’s frozen funds: The Khaama Press

Hundreds of women took to the streets in Kabul and demanded the release of Afghanistan’s frozen funds in the western banks. Click here to read…

IMF review put off to allow passage of SBP bill: Shaukat Tarin: Dawn

“The IMF board was kind enough to accept our request and postpone the review until February 2,” he said at a news conference. He said the government was required to get the SBP bill passed by the Senate on Wednesday so that the IMF board could consider completion of the sixth review at its meeting slated for Jan 28, but this could not be done. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
PM Hasina: Bangladesh marching forward belying pessimists- Dhaka Tribune

The development of Bangladesh is advancing at an irresistible pace, the PM said. Click here to read…

Dhaka air pollution: Tejgaon industrial area tops the list- Daily Star

The air quality of 10 significant areas in the capital scored below standard throughout 2021, according to a study of the Centre for Atmospheric Pollution Studies of the Department of Environmental Science at Stamford University. Click here to read…

Businesses weighed down by graft, inefficient bureaucracy- Daily Star

Corruption, inefficient bureaucracy and limited access to finance are among the dominant problematic factors affecting businesses in Bangladesh, according to a new survey of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD). Click here to read…

BD to work with India for prosperous region- Asian Age

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said Bangladesh looks forward to working together with India in the next 50 years and beyond towards realizing the shared vision of building a peaceful and prosperous region. Click here to read…

Bhutan
Tsirang reports first Covid-19 case- Kuensel

The Tsirang Dzongkhag Covid-19 Taskforce has imposed a 72-hour lockdown in the dzongkhag after a driver and his daughter tested positive for the virus at a flu clinic yesterday. Click here to read…

How COVID positive foreign workers, a more infectious variant and laxity caused the Wangdue outbreak- Daily Bhutan

There is no official explanation for the outbreak yet, but it was caused due to a combination of pressure factors, like getting on with hydro project works, and situational issues, like laxity and the entry of Omicron positive labourers in large numbers. Click here to read…

Govt. orders vaccine for children below 12 years- Bhutan Times

The rollout program of the booster dose for the general population scheduled for 24 January has been deferred until the restrictions are relaxed. Click here to read…

Maldives
“55th anniversary of Maldives-Japan diplomatic ties is an opportunity to boost relations to greater heights” – Raajje

The 55th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Maldives and Japan in 2022, is an opportunity to further boost the relations to greater heights, says Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Ahmed Khaleel. Click here to read…

The Maldives is taking steps to eliminate plastic waste – Sustainability Times

The damage chemical pollution wreaks on the environment has been well documented and it is bound to get worse before it gets better. The production of chemicals, which has increased 50-fold since the middle of the last century, could triple by the middle of this century with much of it ending up as waste in the environment. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Resistance to the Myanmar regime in Chin state – a photo essay – The Guardian

Myanmar’s states are not merely geographical divisions, they also demarcate the distinct ethnic differences found across the country. As somebody from Chin state, it means that Mawi is also ethnically Chin. Click here to read…

ARSA After the Myanmar Coup: Between a Rock and a Hard Place – The diplomat

In Rakhine State, in the country’s west, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) continues to engage in sporadic skirmishes with security forces. Recent clashes involving ARSA are, however, more indicative of the group’s current weakness than its strength.Click here to read…

Myanmar’s military junta seeks ban on VPNs and digital currency – The Register

Myanmar’s military junta has floated a cyber security law that would ban the use of virtual private networks, under penalty of imprisonment and/or fines, leaving digital rights organisations concerned about the effects of further closing the country off digitally to the outside world. Click here to read…

Burma Army Planning Large Scale Offensive Against Combined Karen Forces – Displaced People Fear Forced Return from Thailand – Karen News

Despite Thailand’s reassurances to the United Nations that it would not force villagers displaced by fighting to return to Burma, recent meetings between local border officials from both countries has raised concerns among displaced villagers seeking temporary safety in Thailand.Click here to read…

Myanmar Resistance Raids Two Sagaing Police Outposts – The Irrawaddy

Two Myanmar junta police outposts were seized and burned down and at least eight police officers, including a captain, were captured by the People’s Defense Force in Paungbyin Township, Sagaing Region, on Saturday, according to the civilian National Unity Government (NUG). Click here to read…

ICG includes Myanmar to its list of 10 world hotspots- Mizzima

The International Crisis Group has included Myanmar in its list of 10 crisis areas in the world to watch in 2022. Their list of 10 includes the tensions over Ukraine, US-China relations, Yemen, Ethiopia and the Israel-Iran standoff. Click here to read…

Twin blasts bring number of bombings to 121 in Yangon since Myanmar coup – RFA

Two bombs detonated in Myanmar’s commercial capital Yangon on Saturday, bringing the total number of explosions set by prodemocracy militias in the city since the February 2021 coup to 121, according to an investigation by RFA’s Myanmar Service. Click here to read…

Nepal
CIAA books dept of mines DG for graft- Himalaya

The Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority has filed a corruption case against 18 persons, including Director General of the Department of Mines and Geology Ram Prasad Ghimire and directors of nine companies for their alleged involvement in corruption. Click here to read…

Five-party ruling alliance wins 18 of 19 National Assembly seats- Himalaya

The five-party ruling alliance led by the Nepali Congress has won 18 out of 19 National Assembly seats. Click here to read…

UML the main sufferer yet a winner in National Assembly elections- Kathmandu Pots

The main opposition continues to be the largest party in the upper house despite losing seven seats. The ruling alliance wins in all provinces except Province 1. Click here to read…

Nepal struggles to balance nature and industry- Nepali Times

Companies exploit natural resources for profit, but the environment and people lose out. Click here to read…

Madhesh Province issues order to book violent Janamat Party cadres- Republica

Madhesh Province has issued an order to book the unruly cadres of the Janamat Party who resorted to vandalizing the vehicles of the people’s representatives in the province headquarters, Janakpurdham. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Editorial: Corruption index: Dawn

The report punches a hole in the self-righteous façade of a party that has long beaten the drum of accountability, whose leader — the country’s chief executive — will not deign to meet senior opposition leaders on the pretext of their alleged corruption. Click here to read…

Civil-military huddle finalises agenda for PM’s China visit: The Express Tribune

This will be the fourth visit of the prime minister to China but the latest trip comes against the backdrop of multiple developments including dip in Pak-US ties and reports of the Chinese unhappiness over the slow or no progress on China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) projects. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
SL addresses drug shortage despite forex crisis: Daily Mirror

Despite speculations that Sri Lanka would plunge into a drug shortage in about two months, the Treasury has released adequate funds enabling commercial banks to open Letters of Credit (LCs) in a bid to overcome the impending drug shortage. Click here to read…

’Nurdles are everywhere’: how plastic pellets ravaged a Sri Lankan paradise: Guardian

When Adnan Sheikh took his family on holiday to Sri Lanka last October, he booked them into a hotel for two weeks in Sarakkuwa beach, just off the coast from where the X-Press Pearl cargo ship caught fire and sank five months previously. Click here to read…

China: Daily Scan, January 25, 2022

Xu Kunlin elected governor of China’s Jiangsu: Xinhuanet
January 23, 2022

Xu Kunlin was elected governor of east China’s Jiangsu Province by the provincial legislature on Sunday. The 13th Jiangsu Provincial People’s Congress elected the governor at its fifth session. Click here to read…

Former supreme court official expelled from CPC, office: Xinhuanet
January 24, 2022

Meng Xiang, former chief of the enforcement bureau of the Supreme People’s Court, has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) and dismissed from public office over serious violations of Party discipline and laws, the country’s top anti-graft body announced Monday. Click here to read…

Former senior banking regulatory official expelled from CPC for power abuse: Xinhuanet
January 24, 2022

Cai Esheng, former vice chairman of China’s top banking regulatory body, has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) for grave violations of Party discipline and laws, the country’s top anti-graft body said in an announcement Monday. Click here to read…

Former deputy head of State Administration of Grain expelled from CPC: Xinhuanet
January 25, 2022

Xu Ming, former deputy head of the State Administration of Grain, has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) over severe violations of Party discipline and laws, China’s top anti-graft body announced Monday. Click here to read…

Xi chairs CPC leadership meeting to review report, regulations: Xinhuanet
January 24, 2022

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, on Monday chaired a meeting of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee. The meeting reviewed a report from the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau after the Standing Committee heard and discussed the work reports of the leading Party members groups of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the State Council, the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, the Supreme People’s Court, and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, as well as the work report of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee. Click here to read…

China to leverage SMEs in enhancing industrial chains: Xinhuanet
January 24, 2022

China will improve support for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and help them play better roles in reinforcing the industrial chains, said the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT). In 2022, the country will incubate 3,000 “little giant” firms, which refer to promising small enterprises in their early stage of development, and focusing on high-end technologies, said the ministry. Click here to read…

China maps five-year plan for building modern distribution system: Xinhuanet
January 24, 2022

China’s top economic planner on Monday unveiled plans for a modern distribution system over the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-2025). By 2025, China expects distribution costs to decrease and for the modern distribution system to become more efficient, meaning the sector will play a significantly larger role in the economy, according to the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC). Click here to read…

Green, smart transportation sector seen as key objective: Quishi
January 24, 2022

China is looking to gain a competitive edge in the transportation sector during the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-25) amid a larger drive to foster green, smart and high-quality development over the long run, officials said on Wednesday. Luo Guosan, director of the Department of Infrastructure Development of the National Development and Reform Commission, highlighted the imbalances and inadequacies in the development of comprehensive transportation, saying it is urgent to promote high-quality transportation development. Click here to read…

Officials urge action to address declining birthrate: China Daily
January 25, 2022

China’s birthrate will remain low, and negative population growth is likely in the coming years, but there is no need for excessive stress about the phenomenon, officials said recently. In 2020, the birthrate fell below 10 per 1,000 people (to 8.52) for the first time since records began in 1978, according to the statistical yearbook released by the National Bureau of Statistics in November. Click here to read…

China tests new engine,‘likely to power hypersonic aircraft’: Global Times
January 24, 2022

China on Monday conducted a test flight for a new engine that experts said could power China’s future hypersonic aircraft and near-space plane. The engine, developed by the Laboratory of Spray Combustion and Propulsion under School of Aerospace Engineering at Tsinghua University, successfully conducted a flight test on Monday morning, China Central Television (CCTV) reported. Click here to read…

Chinese auto maker BYD intensifies crackdown on corruption in 2021: Global Times
January 25, 2022

Chinese domestic auto maker BYD intensified a crackdown on corruption in 2021, with 28 suppliers and 94 employees being flagged for violating company regulations while another 22 people involved in seven cases were referred to public security authorities for investigation. Click here to read…

China intellectual voices opposition to Taiwan reunification by force: Kyodo
January 24, 2022

A former professor of Peking University in Beijing has issued a statement against a reunification of Taiwan with the mainland by force, in a rare move by a Chinese intellectual to openly challenge the government’s policy on the island. Zheng Yefu, a 71-year-old sociologist, warned that a military threat to Taiwan would prevent peaceful unification and could even lead to a war among nuclear powers including the United States, while emphasizing the importance of fostering anti-war public sentiment. Click here to read…

China ‘flexes muscles’ at US, Japan: Taipei Times
January 25, 2022

China on Sunday sent 39 warplanes — mostly fighter jets — into Taiwan’s air defense identification zone (ADIZ), in its second-largest single-day incursion, the Ministry of National Defense said. Thirteen warplanes entered the zone yesterday, it added. Click here to read…

China’s Tencent fires 70 staff, blacklists 13 firms in anti-graft campaign: Reuters
January 25, 2022

Tencent Holdings, China’s biggest social media and video games company, on Tuesday said it fired nearly 70 staff over bribery and embezzlement incidents last year and named 13 companies it had blacklisted from future contracts. Tencent said in a social media post that it had also reported more than 10 people to authorities over their actions. Click here to read…

VIF Neighbourhood News Digest: January 25, 2022

Afghanistan
Islamic Emirate Meets With Envoys of 7 Nations, EU in Oslo: Tolo News

Acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi and his delegation met with the envoys of the European Union and seven countries on Monday in Oslo, according to the Foreign Ministry. Click here to read…

3.5 million Doses of COVID-19 vaccine administered in Afghanistan since Taliban takeover: The Khaama Press

Ministry of Public Health of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan announced that they have administered 3.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines since the Taliban regained power. Click here to read…

Govt flayed in Senate for appeasing terrorists, letting Taliban speak on its behalf: Dawn

Speaking on an adjournment motion on the rising tide of terrorism, opposition senators also voiced concern over talks with the outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which were being held through a government that was not recognised by any country of the world. Click here to read…

Bangladesh
BNP-Jamaat nexus plots to brand Bangladesh as ‘another Afghanistan’ – Weekly Blit

While lobbyists appointed by BNP-Jamaat nexus and several influential individuals are making frantic bids in getting Bangladesh banned from the United Nations Peace Keeping Force (UNPKF), the same nexus has been sending dossiers to selected members of Pentagon, Central Intelligence Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation and few advisors in the Biden administration with the nefarious goal of portraying Bangladesh as the “next jihadist breeding ground” and a “threat to the regional and international security”. Click here to read…

India is a Close Friend in the Process of Building Digital Bangladesh – ICT State Minister – DD News

India is a close friend in the process of building digital Bangladesh, said the ICT State Minister Zunaid Ahmed Palak in Dhaka on Monday. Speaking on the occasion of the award of the tender to set up 6 Bangladesh Bharat digital service employment and training centers in 6 districts of Bangladesh, the Minister outlined several areas of cooperation between the two countries. Click here to read…

Bangladesh Finance and Nagad sign deal facilitation pact – Bolly Inside

The agreement was signed at a function held at the head office of Bangladesh Finance Limited in Dilkusha on Monday (24 January) afternoon. Under the agreement, Bangladesh Finance Limited will be able to provide various digital transaction-related services including opening of savings account and deposit collection, SME loan disbursement and repayable loan instalment collection, factoring loan disbursement through Nagad from now on, reads a press release. Click here to read…

Bhutan
Tata Motors launches its updated range of passenger vehicles in Bhutan – The Bharat Expressc

Samden Vehicles Pvt. Ltd., which is the authorized distributor of Tata Motors in Bhutan, will retail the vehicles, which include – the facelifted Tiago and Tigor, the Altroz, the facelifted Nexon, the Harrier and the company’s new flagship SUV, the Safari .
Click here to read…

Maldives
Maldives confirms 2,349 new Covid-19 cases; 1,325 from capital – Raajje

According to the latest figures publicized by the Health Protection Agency (HPA), 2,349 new Covid-19 cases and 849 additional recoveries were confirmed between 6pm Friday and 6pm Saturday. Click here to read…

Majlis to reconvene for first session of the year in February – Raajje

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih will be delivering is presidential address at the sitting at 9am, February 3. The sitting will be inaugurated by Speaker of Parliament and Former President Mohamed Nasheed after which the presidential address will be delivered. Click here to read…

Myanmar
Burmese Junta Continues To Apprehend Scribes, PEC Condemns Military Atrocities – North East Today

As the military rulers of Myanmar (also known as Burma and Brahmadesh) continue to arrest scribes in the south-east Asian country, the global media safety & rights body Press Emblem Campaign (PEC) condemns the Burmese junta (also known as Tatmadaw) and demands the unconditional release of all 45 journalists still behind the bars since 1 February 2021 coup
Click here to read…

As Myanmar Military Escalates Crackdown, Mizoram Sees Influx of Refugees – The Wire

With the escalation of the Myanmar military’s attacks on several civilian areas in Chin state, there have been reports of a rise in the number of refugees fleeing into the Indian border state of Mizoram, aside from news about transportation of “war-like stores” from across the border to the northeastern state. Click here to read…

Myanmar army laid landmines along oil, gas pipelines in northern Shan State, rights group says – Myanmar Now

The junta recently placed landmines around oil and gas pipelines running through Hsipaw Township in northern Shan State to China, according to the Shan Human Rights Foundation (SHRF). Click here to read…

Myanmar sentences lawmaker from Aung San Suu Kyi’s party to death – Aljazeera

A closed military court in Myanmar has sentenced a lawmaker from Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party and a prominent democracy activist to death. Click here to read…

Focused COVID-19 Media Monitoring, Nepal (January 25, 2022) – Relief Web

Nepal reported 8 054 new COVID-19 infections, 4 deaths on 24 January; large number of youths infected with COVID-19; infection rate has reached 60% in Lumbini Province, many households have members showing COVID-19-like symptoms; risk of virus spreading high in Baitadi as people refuse to follow preventive regulations put in place. Click here to read…

Chinese investors pledge more capital inflow to Nepal – Global China Daily

Nepali government data suggest Chinese investors committed more direct investment in Nepal during the first half of the local fiscal year to July 15 than the entire previous fiscal year (July 16,2020 to July 15, 2021). Click here to read…

Nepal struggles to balance nature and industry – Nepali Times

Nepal’s economic planners are proud of the fact that Nepal is now self-sufficient in cement. Indeed, domestic production has expanded greatly to meet demand that has sky-rocketed since the 2015 earthquake. Click here to read…

Pakistan
Pakistan calls for enhancing multisectoral relations with Sri Lanka: The Express Tribune

In a meeting with Sri Lankan Minister of Trade Dr Bandula Gunawardhana and State Minister for Regional Cooperation Tharaka Balasuriya, who called on him with a delegation at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Qureshi highlighted the importance of strengthening existing fraternal relations between the two countries through high-level exchanges.
Click here to read…

Pakistan launches $1 billion Sukuk Bond after four years: The News

Pakistan entered the Islamic-denominated Sukuk Bond market on Monday after a pause of four years for raising $1 billion at an offered yield of 7.95 percent against the initial price targeting range of 8.25 to 8.37 percent. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka
Pandora Papers probe awaits statement from Ranjan: Daily Mirror

The final report over the investigation launched by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) into the Pandora Papers will be finalised after a statement which is due by imprisoned former MP Ranjan Ramanayake is given, the Bribery Commission said. Click here to read…

Sri Lanka hopeful of obtaining further Indian aid of USD 1.5 billion: Foreign Minister: The Economic Times

The Sri Lankan government has said that there is a possibility of it obtaining a further USD 1.5 billion in aid from India, weeks after New Delhi announced a billion-dollar assistance package and a balance of payment support to the island nation which is facing a severe foreign exchange crisis. Click here to read…

Global Developments and Analysis: Weekly Monitor, 17 January 2022 – 23 January 2022

Economic
Pandemic causing ‘nearly insurmountable’ education losses globally: UNICEF

School closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic have caused “nearly insurmountable” losses in education among children around the world, UNICEF said on Jan 24. More than 616 million students are still being affected by full or partial school closures, the United Nations children’s agency said. In many countries, in addition to depriving millions of children of the chance to acquire basic skills, these disruptions have affected students’ mental health, put them at greater risk of abuse and prevented many from having access to “a regular source of nutrition”, UNICEF added. “Quite simply, we are looking at a nearly insurmountable scale of loss to children’s schooling,” said UNICEF chief of education Robert Jenkins in a statement, almost two years into the pandemic. And “just reopening schools is not enough” he added, calling for “intensive support to recover lost education”. UNICEF reported that “learning losses to school closures have left up to 70 per cent of 10-year-olds unable to read or understand a simple text, up from 53 per cent pre-pandemic” in countries with low and middle income. Rich countries are far from being spared. In the United States, learning losses have been observed in several states, including Texas, California and Maryland, said UNICEF. Click here to read…

China’s Xi opposes global monetary policy U-turn in Davos talk

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Jan 17 urged major countries to work together to mitigate persistent economic risks from COVID-19, the same day fresh data showed waning momentum in the world’s No. 2 economy.Addressing the World Economic Forum virtually, Xi also reiterated his warning against a “Cold War mentality” that he said would undermine efforts to solve shared problems — a thinly veiled jab at the U.S. and its allies. A key segment of his remarks focused on macroeconomic policy and a shift toward monetary tightening. “The pandemic is proving a protracted one, resurging with more variants and spreading faster than before,” Xi told the Davos Agenda meetings via video link. “If major economies slam on the brakes or take a U-turn in their monetary policies, there would be serious negative spill-over. They would present challenges to global economic and financial stability and developing countries would bear the brunt of it.”Amid the pandemic, now in its third year, countries around the world loosened monetary policy to ensure market liquidity and help sustain livelihoods. But this has contributed to rising inflation brought about by supply disruptions and an energy crunch. This poses headwinds for China, which is confronting sporadic COVID-19 outbreaks and a real estate downturn. Click here to read…

US-Japan alliance restricting vital tech exports to China risks ‘major impact’ on trade, supply chains

An alliance between the United States and Japan to ban exports of sensitive technology to China risks upending trade ties between Beijing and Tokyo and would be “complex” to implement, analysts say, as the global battle for tech supremacy intensifies. Japan and the US are mulling the establishment of a multilateral framework to regulate the trade of advanced technology, which includes semiconductor manufacturing equipment, quantum cryptography and artificial intelligence, according to a report by Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper earlier this month, citing unidentified sources. The two countries are also planning to work with allies in Europe on the issue amid heightened concern about Beijing’s military-civil fusion strategy. The Japanese embassy in Beijing declined to comment on the report. Lu Xiang, a research fellow in US studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said it was difficult to know what form the restrictions might take, but discussions between the US, Europe and Japan would be a certainty this year. Professor Tomoo Marukawa, an expert on China’s economy at the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Social Science, said Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida would tread carefully on the issue of export controls. Click here to read…

Winter Olympics Sponsors Caught Between Beijing, U.S.

With less than two weeks to go before the start of the Winter Games in Beijing, several Olympics sponsors are skipping what is usually an Olympics-themed advertising blitz. Sponsors of the 2022 Winter Games are caught in a billion-dollar bind this year: U.S. officials, along with some lawmakers from other Western countries and some human-rights activists, have said Beijing’s treatment of mostly Muslim minorities in Xinjiang amounts to a form of genocide. Beijing denies the allegations and has protested what it calls attempts to politicize the Games. It has also increasingly punished companies it feels have waded into the issue—through public criticism, regulatory scrutiny and the encouragement of consumer boycotts in what has become a crucial market for many brands. “Sponsors are trying to weather the storm,” said Rick Burton, who was chief marketing officer for the U.S. Olympic Committee at the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics. The companies have made huge investments in the sponsorship deals and risk missing the global marketing opportunities that money bought them, he said, but “they have businesses to operate in China.” The relatively quiet marketing ahead of the games is especially noticeable for the 13 top-tier Olympic sponsors, including Visa, P&G and Coca-Cola. Click here to read…

China’s duty-free market poised to grow fourfold to US$40 billion by 2025, but travel restrictions could stand in the way

China’s duty-free market is forecast to grow fourfold to 258 billion Yuan (US$40 billion) in 2025, a new report says, as the government looks to boost domestic consumption to shore up the economy. The duty-free market in China was estimated to be worth 66-billion-yuan last year, according to a report by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) published on Jan 22. But it is poised to quadruple in value in three years’ time, provided Beijing clears strict quarantine mandates for international travel by late this year. The report added the island province of Hainan, which has been declared a free-trade port and a duty-free hub, will account for half of the domestic duty-free market by 2025. Chinese consumers spent more than 180 billion Yuan overseas on duty-free products in 2019, accounting for 40 per cent of total global duty-free sales. But China’s duty-free market only accounted for 8 per cent of total global duty-free sales, showing the limitations of its offerings compared to the massive spending power of its consumers. Beijing is seeking to address this and turn the focus of economic growth in the future to domestic consumption through its so-called dual circulation strategy. Click here to read…

China’s Guangdong GDP for 2021 set to top that of South Korea and most other countries

The economy of China’s southern manufacturing powerhouse of Guangdong likely surpassed that of South Korea for the first time in 2021, and if the provincial economy were that of a country, it would rank in the top 10 globally, according to official local data. China’s largest regional economy has also doubled down on the nation’s “common prosperity” strategy, which calls for a more even distribution of wealth. Guangdong’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 8 per cent from a year earlier to 12.4 trillion Yuan last year, or US$1.92 trillion based on the official annual average exchange rate, according to the local government’s annual work report, which was released in full on the province’s official website on Monday. That means Guangdong’s annual economic size could be larger than the expected US$1.82 trillion of South Korea, and only moderately lower than the estimated US$2 trillion of Canada, according to forecasts by the International Monetary Fund. However, the province has long faced criticism about its uneven distribution of wealth, as most of its economic output stems from the Pearl River Delta region. The megacities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen have long contributed to nearly half of the province’s GDP. Click here to read…

Agile Group becomes latest debt-ridden Chinese developer to be rescued by state-owned company

State-backed companies are coming to the rescue of embattled Chinese developers pushed to the edge of financial ruin by Beijing’s “three red lines” borrowing restrictions. Agile Group, one of the country’s top 20 home sellers, said it will sell its 26.7 per cent stake in a Guangzhou property joint venture for 1.84 billion Yuan (US$300 million) to a unit of China Overseas Land & Investment (Coli). Hong Kong-listed Coli is a property arm of China State Construction Engineering, which is directly owned by the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council. The Guangzhou-based developer said the deal “would [help] the group to meet its working capital requirements and future business development.” It comes after Shimao Group announced on Jan 21 it had sold land in Shanghai to a company owned by the Shanghai municipal government. Agile is facing a growing pile of debts including US$1.1 billion in offshore notes due this year. The three red lines, outlined by the central government in August 2020, define strict thresholds on borrowing. They are a liability-to-asset ratio excluding advance receipts of less than 70 per cent, a net debt-to-equity ratio of less than 100 per cent and cash to short-term debt ratio of one. Click here to read…

Space powers take aim at moon in quest for resources and glory

The U.S., China, Russia, India, Japan and South Korea are all planning lunar missions in 2022 and beyond. These moon-shots lay bare a growing cosmic competition for resources, technological superiority and national glory, with the potential to amplify rising international political tensions on Earth. The missions also require huge investments that look even more onerous as COVID-19 exacts its economic toll. The defining rivalry, as on Earth, looks to be between Washington and Beijing. Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst and outer space specialist at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), stressed the U.S. and China “are not yet in a space race” on current timetables. But he suggested that could change if America’s plans slip further behind schedule and China accelerates its own, seeing “a window of opportunity to steal the U.S. thunder.” “There would be huge prestige for China if it beats the U.S. back to the moon,” Davis said, referring to Washington’s success in planting its flag on the lunar surface back in 1969.For now, the U.S. remains ahead. NASA’s Artemis program is set for its maiden liftoff this year, with a giant Space Launch System rocket due to hoist an uncrewed Orion spacecraft into lunar orbit. Click here to read…

Meta Unveils New AI Supercomputer

Meta Platforms Inc. said Jan 24 that its research team built a new artificial intelligence supercomputer that the company maintains will soon be the fastest in the world. The supercomputer, the AI Research Super Cluster, was the result of nearly two years of work, often conducted remotely during the height of the pandemic, and led by the Facebook parent’s AI and infrastructure teams. Several hundred people, including researchers from partners Nvidia Inc., Penguin Computing Inc. and Pure Storage Inc., were involved in the project, the company said. Meta, which announced the news in a blog post Jan 24, said its research team currently is using the supercomputer to train AI models in natural-language processing and computer vision for research. The aim is to boost capabilities to one day train models with more than a trillion parameters on data sets as large as an exabyte, which is roughly equivalent to 36,000 years of high-quality video. Meta’s AI supercomputer houses 6,080 Nvidia graphics-processing units, putting it fifth among the fastest supercomputers in the world, according to Meta. By mid-summer, when the AI Research Super Cluster is fully built, it will house some 16,000 GPUs, becoming the fastest AI supercomputer in the world, Meta said. Click here to read…

Microsoft bets US$75 billion that gaming will be the new social media

Microsoft was positioning itself as one of the pioneers of the metaverse even before its US$75 billion deal to buy online gaming giant Activision Blizzard. In the days after Mark Zuckerberg rebranded Facebook last October as Meta with his near movie-length promotional film about the potential for virtual worlds, Microsoft announced that users of its Teams online meetings app would be able to turn themselves into avatars – in a first step towards getting users used to virtual interaction. If that was an incremental move, the Activision deal is something very different. Assuming it is permitted by the US competition authorities, it will mean that the Xbox giant controls many of the best known virtual worlds that already exist online, including Call of Duty, World of Warcraft and Starcraft – adding to the two it has already, Minecraft and Altspace VR. It is the latest example of a land grab for space by some of the world’s biggest companies in the coming 3D version of the internet. Although Zuckerberg talks about how we will be able to use virtual reality (VR) headsets and augmented reality (AR) glasses to work, entertain and educate in this new immersive online space, defining the metaverse is difficult. It’s difficult to define something that is neither full nor will ever be finished. Click here to read…

India woos global chipmakers again, this time with $10bn package

India has rolled out the red carpet for global chipmakers with 760 billion rupees ($10.2 billion) in incentives as Prime Minister Narendra Modi makes a push to establish the country as a high-tech production hub. The program was approved by Modi’s cabinet Dec. 15 and began accepting applicants on Jan. 1 as India, like many other countries, intensifies efforts to bolster domestic supplies of the critical industrial component. The new package covers up to half the initial costs of setting up chip making hubs in the country, including those for front-end processes involving wafer fabrication. The Indian government will cooperate with state authorities to build high-tech industrial parks equipped with clean water, abundant power and logistics infrastructure. In addition, India will provide assistance for back-end chip facilities, which handle assembly and testing. It also will support chip-design startups and nurture more talent to build a comprehensive semiconductor industry in the country. This is not India’s first attempt at attracting top chipmakers, but few players expressed strong interest in the past. One option for the country this time may be to focus first on back-end processes, so it can build a rapport with industry leaders before diving into the more technologically sophisticated front-end processes. Click here to read…

South Korea inks deal to lend Egypt $1bn for infrastructure

Seoul has signed a deal to lend Egypt up to $1 billion for infrastructure development, paving the way for South Korean companies to join railway, subway and marine desalination projects in the African nation. The money will go toward not only large-scale infrastructure but also renewable energy as well as science and technology education. Under the terms, Egypt can borrow $1 billion from Seoul’s Economic Development Cooperation Fund with almost zero interest. It would have decades to make repayments. In a meeting with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Moon said his government wanted to support the entry of South Korean plant and construction companies into Egypt’s transportation and water projects, saying they bring “world-class technology and excellent reputations.” The Egyptian leader said his country aims to learn from South Korea’s experience in rising from an underdeveloped country into an advanced one. Moon is on the last leg of a three-country trip that also took him to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. Executives from Hanwha Defense, Hyundai Rotem, Samsung Electronics, Myoungshin Industry and Doosan Heavy Industries & Construction are travelling with him. Click here to read…

Turky’s key oil pipeline restarts after explosion: BOTAS

Turkiye’s state pipeline operator BOTAS announced on Jan 19 that crude oil flow through the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline has resumed after an explosion in the country’s south-eastern Kahramanmaras province. The 1,876-kilometer-long key pipeline, which carries crude oil from northern Iraq for export from Turkey’s southern port of Ceyhan, was knocked offline by an explosion late on Jan 18 for “unknown” reasons. The fire which erupted at the 511th kilometre of the pipeline caused a halt in oil flow. The traffic between Kahramanmaras and neighbouring Gaziantep province was also stopped for a few hours. Soon after the explosion, BOTAS said the reason for the explosion was unknown and the valves closest to the incident had been turned off for security reasons. In a statement on Jan 19, BOTAS said the pipeline was reopened after “all necessary measures were taken” and the fire was extinguished. The Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline is Iraq’s largest crude oil export line which had been exposed to intensive attacks by the Daesh terror group. An attack in 2014 caused a pipeline closure on the Iraqi side. Jan 18’s explosion at the key pipeline between Turkey and Iraq comes at a time when global oil markets are already struggling with supply disruptions over geopolitical tensions in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Russia. Click here to read…

China puts 4 million barrels of Iranian oil into state reserves–source, Vortexa

China has offloaded nearly four million barrels of Iranian crude oil into state reserve tanks in the southern port city of Zhanjiang over the past few weeks, a trade source and ship tracking specialist Vortexa Analytics said on Jan 20. The move comes as world powers are locked in tough negotiations with Iran to revive a 2015 nuclear deal that will include the lifting of U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil. The former Trump administration pulled out of the deal and re-imposed sanctions. Iran, which sits on the world’s fourth-largest oil reserves, relies heavily on oil revenue, but sanctions have prevented it from pumping at anywhere near capacity since 2018. The refilling of China’s strategic petroleum reserves also comes ahead of a plan to release oil from its emergency stockpile in a rare coordination with the United States to help cool global oil prices which hit a seven-year high this week. China has previously been importing Iranian oil under the radar, with the shipments not reflected in official customs data as buyers fear invoking U.S. sanctions. “There were reports of importing Iranian crude earlier – but hush-hush somewhat. Now I think the Chinese are testing openly to see U.S. response,” said Tilak Doshi, managing director of Doshi Consulting in Singapore. Click here to read…

Strategic
Pentagon Places Hundreds of Troops on Standby for Deployment to Eastern Europe in Standoff With Russia

The U.S. military has ordered several hundred U.S. troops on standby to potentially deploy to Eastern Europe amid heightened tensions over Russia’s presence near Ukraine’s border, in what amounts to an escalation towards U.S. military involvement, U.S. officials said. The “prepare to deploy orders” were issued to troops stationed at several U.S.-based installations, the officials said. The Pentagon hasn’t said under which circumstances the U.S. would deploy the troops, but officials said it could send a signal to Russia that the U.S. would quickly bolster the defences of NATO allies in the event of a Russian incursion into Ukraine. The troops could also be on standby should the U.S. decide they are needed to evacuate tens of thousands of Americans now residing in Ukraine, the officials said. The forces won’t be authorized to enter Ukraine, U.S. officials said, but they could be used to support any such contingency. Many of the forces must be prepared to move within 18 to 36 hours, U.S. officials said. Click here to read…

U.S., Russia Agree to Keep Negotiating to Defuse Ukraine Crisis

Washington and Moscow on Jan 21 agreed to continue talks triggered by Russia’s military buildup near the Ukrainian border, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying the U.S. would formally address the Kremlin’s concerns that Western powers threaten Russian security and its demands regarding the future of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Mr. Blinken, after meeting his Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, said that the U.S. would also submit its own security proposals and that the two sides planned to meet again. In Washington later, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki indicated the U.S. wouldn’t concede to the Kremlin’s key demand that Ukraine be forbidden to join the NATO alliance. “We’ve been very clear about what we are not negotiating on, which is the sovereignty of Ukraine, which is this question that is continuously raised about Ukraine’s right to pursue joining NATO,” she said. “That’s up to NATO countries to make that decision.” Mr. Blinken said after meeting Mr. Lavrov, “There is no trade space there—none.” President Biden will meet with his national-security team this weekend at Camp David, Ms. Psaki said, adding that he was open to another summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Click here to read…

Houthi missiles target Saudi Arabia and UAE as escalation grows

The United Arab Emirates says it intercepted and destroyed two ballistic missiles over Abu Dhabi that were fired by Yemen’s Houthi rebels, the latest escalation in Yemen’s long-running war. Jan 24’s attack came a week after another Houthi drone-and-missile attack on Abu Dhabi killed three civilians.“The remnants of the intercepted ballistic missiles fell in separate areas around Abu Dhabi,” the UAE defence ministry said in a statement in state-run WAM news agency on Jan 24, adding that it “is ready to deal with any threats and … takes all necessary measures to protect the state”. In Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, state media said late on Jan 23 that a Houthi ballistic missile had fallen in the kingdom’s south, injuring two residents – a Bangladeshi and a Sudanese citizen – and damaging workshops and vehicles in an industrial area. Another missile was intercepted and destroyed over Dhahram al-Janub, according to a coalition statement. The Houthis said they targeted Abu Dhabi’s Dhafra airbase as well as “vital and important” locations in the Dubai area, with military spokesperson Yahya Saree saying in a televised statement that the attack had “achieved its objectives with high accuracy”. UAE authorities did not report an attack on Dubai. Click here to read…

Nuclear deal unlikely unless Iran releases US prisoners: Report

The United States is unlikely to strike a deal with Iran to save the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement unless Tehran releases four US citizens Washington says it is holding hostage, the lead US nuclear negotiator told the Reuters news agency on Jan 23.US Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley repeated the long-held US position that the issue of the four people held in Iran is separate from the nuclear negotiations. He moved a step closer, however, to saying that their release was a precondition for a nuclear agreement. “They’re separate and we’re pursuing both of them. But I will say it is very hard for us to imagine getting back into the nuclear deal while four innocent Americans are being held hostage by Iran,” Malley told Reuters in an interview. “So even as we’re conducting talks with Iran indirectly on the nuclear file we are conducting, again indirectly, discussions with them to ensure the release of our hostages,” he said in Vienna, where talks are taking place on bringing Washington and Tehran back into full compliance with the deal. In recent years, Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards have arrested dozens of dual nationals and foreigners, mostly on espionage and security-related charges. Click here to read…

Remember the Soviet Union, top Chinese policy adviser says in warning against blind pursuit of absolute security

The pursuit of “absolute national security” can extract a heavy price, a Chinese foreign policy adviser has warned, citing the collapse of the Soviet Union as proof of the pitfalls of putting military expansion over long-term security. The unfettered pursuit of security “will see the costs go up drastically and the benefits go drastically down, until the costs outweigh the benefits”, according to Jia Qingguo, a former dean of Peking University’s international relations school. “To ignore the comparative nature of security, and blindly pursue [it] absolutely will result in making the country less secure, as it inflicts unbearable costs and fails to achieve absolute security,” Jia, who sits on the Standing Committee of China’s top political advisory body – the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference – wrote in the latest issue of the bimonthly Journal of International Security Studies. In his 22-page article, Jia seeks to present a comprehensive and balanced view of China’s national security strategy. While he opens with paying homage to President Xi Jinping’s general views on national security, the piece is full of thinly veiled criticisms against hawkish outlooks. He then cites the Soviet Union’s decades of massive defence spending as a typical example of the drawbacks of ignoring long-term security, which led to the federation’s ultimate disintegration in 1991. Click here to read…

Biden, Kishida agree to boost security, economic cooperation

President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Jan 21 used their first formal meeting to discuss concerns about China’s growing military assertiveness that’s causing increasing disquiet in the Pacific and agreed to boost cooperation on pressing economic and security issues. Kishida said the two leaders spent a “significant amount” of their 80-minute call on issues surrounding China, including shared concerns about China’s increasing aggression toward Taiwan. Biden and Kishida also discussed the situations in Hong Kong and China’s Xinjiang province. Biden has repeatedly called out Beijing over its crackdown on democracy activists in Hong Kong and forced labor practices targeting China’s Uyghur Muslims and other ethnic minorities in Xinjiang. The White House said the leaders also spoke about opportunities to enhance economic ties between the two nations, launching a new “2 plus 2” dialogue focused on addressing economic issues, ranging from supply chain challenges and investment in key technologies to further cooperation on trade issues. Japan also expressed support for the Biden administration’s proposed Indo-Pacific Economic Framework and pledged to work to build support for the initiative in the region. Click here to read…

EU back in Afghanistan after Taliban takeover

The European Union (EU) has become the first Western institution to “re-establish” its presence in Afghanistan after the EU member states and other nations abandoned the country ahead of the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul in August. “The EU has started to re-establish a minimal presence of international EU Delegation staff to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid and monitor the humanitarian situation,” European Commission Foreign Affairs Spokesman Peter Stano confirmed. The Taliban tweeted ahead of the EU’s statement that the EU had “officially opened its embassy with a permanent presence in Kabul & practically commenced operations” after “reaching an understanding” between the bloc and militant group. Despite returning to the Middle Eastern country, the EU refused to recognize the Taliban-led administration as the official government of Afghanistan, calling them the “de facto authorities.” The move from the European Commission comes as the Norwegian Foreign Ministry has invited Taliban representatives to Oslo to hold talks with the international community and Afghan civil society members. “These meetings do not represent a legitimization or recognition of the Taliban. But we must talk to the de facto authorities in the country. We cannot allow the political situation to lead to an even worse humanitarian disaster,” Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt said. Click here to read…

Thailand’s ‘Blue Diamond Affair’ jinxed its Saudi Arabia ties for decades. Can Prayuth’s visit lift the curse?

Thailand and Saudi Arabia will hold their first high-level talks in decades on Jan 25 when Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha travels to Riyadh, more than 30 years after a diplomatic row over a US$20 million jewel theft soured relations. The “Blue Diamond Affair”, as it became known, began with Thai cleaner Kriangkrai Techamong, who in 1989 stole a hoard of precious gems from the palace of his employer, Prince Faisal bin Fahd: the eldest son of King Fahd of Saudi Arabia. Thai police later returned some of the jewels but Saudi officials claimed most were fakes, while the whereabouts of the most precious gem – a rare 50-carat blue diamond said to be the size of an egg – remains unknown. Riyadh downgraded diplomatic relations with Bangkok following the incident and the spate of murders, abductions and mystery that followed were said to have been caused by a curse. In superstitious Thailand, precious stones are believed to carry with them certain powers that can bode good or evil. Now, there is talk of the curse being lifted after Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman invited Prayuth for Jan 25’s state visit – the first by a Thai leader to the Middle Eastern kingdom in more than three decades. Click here to read…

China warns Olympic athletes to keep quiet on politics

With the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics fast approaching, the authorities are cautioning participants against political speech, with discipline on the table for those who cross the line.”Any behaviour or speeches that are against the Olympic spirit, especially against Chinese laws and regulations, are also subject to certain punishment,” said Yang Shu, deputy director general of Beijing 2022’s International Relations Department, in a recent online briefing for the Beijing Games by the Chinese Embassy in Washington. A possible punishment could be cancellation of athletes’ accreditation, Yang suggested. Last July, ahead of the Summer Games in Tokyo, the International Olympic Committee approved an easing of the Olympic Charter’s Rule 50, which bars political, religious or racial propaganda at Olympic sites and venues. Although athletes still cannot target countries, groups or people, they can express political views in news conferences, for example. The rule change opened the door to a string of athletes protesting against racism and other issues during the Summer Olympics in Tokyo last year. Now the focus has shifted to how organizers of Beijing 2022 will respond to outspoken participants. Yang’s warning implies that athletes will be punished for statements deemed to not be in China’s interest, even if they toe the IOC’s line. Click here to read…

China-led upgrade of Cambodian base advances as dredgers appear

Dredging work appears set to start in the waters surrounding Cambodia’s Ream naval base, where a Chinese-led expansion has become a growing source of geopolitical tension. Work to deepen the bay will mark a milestone in upgrades to the site, where the shallow waters can currently only accommodate small patrol vessels. The Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative on Jan 22 released a Jan. 16 satellite image showing two clamshell dredgers just off the coast of Ream accompanied by barges for collecting dredged sand. “The extent of the planned dredging is unclear but could mark a significant upgrade in the base’s capabilities,” CSIS wrote in a briefing on Jan 22. China is funding upgrades at Ream including an expansion of the port and the development of a ship repair facility. The U.S. has raised concerns that China is planning to host military assets at the base. In 2019, The Wall Street Journal reported the U.S. had seen a draft agreement between Cambodia and China that allowed Beijing to use Ream for 30 years. Last June, U.S. senior diplomat Wendy Sherman visited Phnom Penh and told Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen that Washington had “serious concerns” about China’s “military presence” at the site. Click here to read…

Japan’s got the 2+2 bug, engaging with France, Germany and Indonesia

Japan held its seventh foreign and defence ministers’ meeting in a year with France on Jan 20, the most ever, as the format regains favour under a U.S. president who promotes a multilateral approach to countering China’s rising influence. President Joe Biden values the unique opportunity these “two-plus-two” meetings offer for two nations to discuss foreign policy and defence issues. Within six months of Biden taking office in January 2021, Japan held “two-plus-two” talks with the U.K. the U.S., Indonesia, Germany and Australia. Domestic priorities got in the way in the second half of 2021, from the Tokyo Olympics to the launch of a new government under Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and a lower house election. But Japan held another two-plus-two with the U.S. on Jan. 7. The unprecedented pace contrasts sharply with the final 12 months of the Trump presidency, when Japan held zero two-plus-twos. Jan 20’s meeting with France was attended virtually by Japanese Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi, Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi, and French counterparts Jean-Yves Le Drian and Florence Parly. In a joint statement afterward, the ministers said they will start discussions to ease administrative and legal requirements for joint drills between the Japanese Self-Defense Forces and the French military. Click here to read…

North Korea Considers Restarting Long-Range and Nuclear-Weapons Tests

North Korea suggested it might consider restarting long-range and nuclear-weapons tests, promising to take “practical action” as it says the U.S. threat to the country can no longer be ignored. The Kim Jong Un regime for more than four years hasn’t launched an intercontinental ballistic missile or conducted a nuclear test—major provocations that have previously drawn recrimination even from close allies in Beijing and Moscow. At a Jan 19 Politburo meeting, North Korea blasted the U.S. for maintaining hostilities against the cloistered regime, from sanctions enforcement to combined Washington-Seoul military exercises to America’s own strategic-weapons testing, according to North Korea’s state media. Mr. Kim presided over the meeting. Pyongyang would reconsider at “an overall scale the trust-building measures that we took on our own initiative” after the 2018 Singapore summit and would “promptly examine the issue of restarting all temporarily suspended activities,” the report said. That is probably a reference to the multiyear pause in major weapons tests, given that Pyongyang has recently unleashed a barrage of shorter-range missile launches. Click here to read…

Burkina Faso army says it has deposed President Kabore

Burkina Faso’s army has announced it has deposed President Roch Kabore, dissolved the government and the national assembly, and suspended the constitution, seizing control of the country after two days of unrest at army camps in the capital. The announcement, signed on Jan 24 by Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba and read by another officer on state television, said the takeover had been carried out without violence and those detained were in a secure location. The country’s borders have also been closed, it added. The statement was made in the name of a previously unheard-of entity, the Patriotic Movement for Safeguard and Restoration or MPSR, according to its French language acronym. “MPSR, which includes all sections of the army, has decided to end President Kabore’s post today,” it said. It cited the deterioration of the security situation and what it described as Kabore’s inability to unite the nation and effectively respond to the challenges it faces. The statement said the MPSR would re-establish “constitutional order” within a “reasonable time”, adding that a nationwide nightly curfew would be enforced. President Kabore’s whereabouts was not immediately known. Click here to read…

Taiwan VP to make sensitive US stopovers in visit to Honduras

Vice President William Lai will transit through the United States on his way to Honduras next week, the presidential office said on Jan 20, a travel plan that drew a complaint from China. Beijing considers democratic Taiwan its own territory, ineligible for state-to-state relations, despite strong objections by Taipei, which has been complaining about rising Chinese pressure to force it into accepting Chinese sovereignty. China regularly calls Taiwan the most sensitive and important issue between it and the United States, which does not have formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan but is the island’s strongest ally and main weapons supplier. Lai will travel to and from Taiwanese diplomatic ally Honduras via the US cities of Los Angeles and San Francisco, in what is generally standard procedure for visits by Taiwanese leaders to Latin America. The US government will give “courteous reception of a high standard” to the Taiwan delegation and Lai will hold virtual meetings with unspecified US politicians during his stops, the presidential office said.”Since the inauguration, the Biden administration has repeatedly demonstrated its firm support for Taiwan with concrete actions,” the office said. “We believe the two sides will continue to stably deepen Taiwan-US relations on all fronts.” Click here to read…

Medical
End of Covid pandemic ‘plausible,’ WHO claims

The World Health Organization (WHO) claimed on Jan 23 that there might finally be an end to the Covid pandemic in Europe, after the rapid spread of the Omicron variant. “It is plausible that the region is approaching an end to the pandemic,” Regional Director Hans Kluge told the AFP news agency. He cautioned that people should still take precautions, due to the coronavirus’ ability to mutate, but predicted a “period of quiet” following Omicron. “We anticipate there will be a level of quiet before Covid-19 may come back towards the end of the year, but not necessarily the pandemic,” he said. Kluge said a level of “global immunity” could be reached for a period of weeks or months because of a combination of the relatively high number of current infections, continued vaccination uptake, and the “lowering seasonality” aspect of the forthcoming Northern Hemisphere spring. The WHO’s Europe region, which covers 53 countries and territories, has seen a spike in Omicron cases, like much of the world. In the week ending January 18, the percentage of new infections from Omicron more than doubled, from 6.3% to 15%, according to health officials. Click here to read…

Swiss researchers launch trial for COVID-19 ‘patch’ vaccine

Swiss medical researchers said on Jan 19 they have launched an early-stage study to test a next-generation COVID-19 vaccine candidate which would be administered via an arm patch, the latest to look at alternative methods of giving injections. Unlike conventional vaccines that stimulate antibody production, the new PepGNP-Covid19 vaccine candidate focuses on T-cells, which are responsible for cellular immunity, to eliminate cells infected by the virus and prevent it from replicating. British company Emergex Vaccines Holding developed the potential vaccine, while Unisanté medical research centre in Lausanne in collaboration with the city’s CHUV hospital will run the trial, which started on Jan 10. Professor Blaise Genton, head of the study, said this cellular immunity generates so-called “memory cells”, which could make the vaccine more durable and could be better than others at protecting against potential variants of the virus. The possible vaccine will be administered via micro-needles in the patch that are less than 1mm deep that they hope will provide long-term immunity from COVID-19 and do away with the need for seasonal booster shots. Click here to read…

Betting Omicron has peaked, Johnson drops COVID-19 rules in England

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the end of COVID-19 measures introduced to curb the rapid spread of the Omicron variant in England as he looks to live with the virus after a peak in cases. Britain was the first country to limit international travel over the Omicron variant, raising alarm bells about its mutations, and in December introduced work-at-home advice, more mask-wearing and vaccine passes to slow its spread. But while cases soared to record highs, hospitalisations and deaths have not risen by the same extent, in part due to Britain’s booster rollout and the variant’s lesser severity. Johnson’s approach to avoid lockdowns and live with the virus contrasts with a zero tolerance approach to COVID-19 in China and Hong Kong, and tougher restrictions in many other European countries. “Many nations across Europe have endured further winter lockdowns … but this government took a different path,” Johnson told lawmakers, saying the government had got the toughest decisions right and that numbers going into intensive care were falling. “Our scientists believe it is likely that the Omicron wave has now peaked nationally … because of the extraordinary booster campaign, together with the way the public have responded to the Plan B measures, we can return to Plan A.” Click here to read…