News from Asia
- Melbourne-US Qantas flight diverted after man bites crew memberby Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 17, 2026 at 4:02 am
Australia’s Qantas was forced to divert a flight bound for the United States over a disruptive passenger, with local media reporting the man bit a flight attendant. The flight from Melbourne was headed to Dallas on Friday when it was forced to make a stop-off in Papeete, the capital of French Polynesia, due to the disruptive passenger. The man was restrained by fellow passengers, with local media including national broadcaster ABC reporting he bit a member of Qantas staff. The man was met by...
- China offers Southeast Asia clear nuclear power advantagesby Zha Daojiong (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 17, 2026 at 4:00 am
Southeast Asia stands at the threshold of a nuclear renaissance. Vietnam and Russia signed an agreement in March for the Ninh Thuan 1 Nuclear Power Plant. The Philippines and Indonesia aim to have operational reactors by the early 2030s. Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore are studying small modular reactors. Given heightened energy insecurity, climate commitments and the imperative to meet surging electricity demand from industrial growth, data centres and AI development, nuclear energy is...
- Reality deficit: how South Korea lost the plot on AIby David D. Lee (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 17, 2026 at 3:00 am
The young woman in the stands simply sighed, turned her head and sat there, looking impossibly composed, while 15 million strangers fell briefly in love with someone who had never existed. She was, according to the caption accompanying one of many posts, “the average Korean woman”. Her admirers quickly crowned her a “baseball goddess”, analysing her every feature with the forensic enthusiasm reserved for internet obsessions, as the five-second clip went viral across South Korea’s online...
- Indonesia pushes back after Chinese business group complains tougher rules hurt investorsby Aisyah Llewellyn (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 17, 2026 at 2:00 am
Chinese businesses in Indonesia have issued an unusually blunt warning to President Prabowo Subianto that a wave of tougher rules is hurting investor confidence, exposing growing tension between Jakarta’s push for control of the resources sector and foreign capital that has helped power the country’s nickel boom. Several ministers in Jakarta have pushed back, saying Indonesia must prioritise sovereignty over its natural resources, while stressing the government remains open to dialogue and has...
- Vietnam’s US$5 billion Apec island is running out of timeby Minh Tran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 17, 2026 at 12:00 am
Ahead of next year’s Apec summit, Vietnam has a grand plan to transform Phu Quoc, its largest island, into Southeast Asia’s leading conference and exhibition hub. The 137 trillion dong (US$5.2 billion) blueprint includes an airport overhaul, a light-rail line, clusters of luxury hotels and a brand-new sewerage system – much of it paid for by one of the country’s largest conglomerates, in return for tracts of land, operating concessions and the cachet of building national landmarks. But problems...
- Maldivian military diver dies in search of bodies of 4 Italian diversby Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 1:31 pm
A Maldivian military diver died Saturday while searching for the bodies of four Italian divers believed to be deep inside an underwater cave. The group of five Italian divers is believed to have died while exploring a cave at a depth of about 50 meters (160 feet) in Vaavu Atoll on Thursday, according to Italy’s Foreign Ministry. The recreational diving limit in the Maldives is 30 meters (98 feet). Maldives presidential spokesman Mohammed Hussain Shareef said that Mohamed Mahudhee, a member of...
- Bangkok train-bus crash kills 8, Thai PM orders investigationby Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 12:20 pm
A collision between a goods train and a bus killed at least eight people and injured 35 in the Thai capital Bangkok on Saturday, police said. Firefighters and rescuers cordoned off the collision site, with investigators seen peering into the burnt-out shell of the bus. Pedestrians were ushered away from the busy downtown intersection, which is used by tens of thousands of vehicles each day. “Eight people have died and 35 others were injured,” Bangkok police chief Urumporn Koondejsumrit...
- Singapore minister reveals why human touch still important in AI eraby Kolette Lim (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 7:04 am
Even as Singapore positions itself at the frontier of AI technology, human intelligence still remains critical, according to the city state’s foreign minister Vivian Balakrishnan. “We should beware of just trying to throw every problem, and every step in a solution, at a large-language model (LLM),” he said on Saturday at the AI Engineer conference, referring to deep-learning technology behind generative AI services such as ChatGPT. Balakrishnan warned against discarding traditional AI models...
- Bangladesh tests its India ties by seeking China’s aid for Teesta Riverby Maria Siow (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 5:30 am
Every dry season, the Teesta River shrinks a little more – and with it, the livelihoods of millions of Bangladeshis who depend on its waters to survive. Dhaka has been asking India to help for years. Now, it is asking Beijing instead. Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, who took office in February, formally asked China earlier this month to help with its Teesta River restoration project, Bangladeshi state media reported. The US$1 billion scheme aims to dredge and rehabilitate more than...
- Malaysian police probe claims that Jho Low returned to Kuala Lumpur for secret 1MDB talksby The Star (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 4:31 am
Malaysian police will investigate claims that fugitive financier Jho Low returned to the country for secret meetings. Inspector-General of Police Mohd Khalid Ismail said the claims that Low, whose full name is Low Taek Jho, had come to Malaysia for meetings had not been verified. “We have not verified whether the claims are true or otherwise,” he told reporters on Saturday. “We will take appropriate action to investigate the matter further.” He was commenting on an article by Sarawak Report...
- Japan’s ‘ibasho’ sense of belonging helps disaster survivors heal, study findsby Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 4:00 am
As the ground shook beneath her feet and the powerful tsunami rolled in from the Pacific Ocean on March 11, 2011, Masako Saito feared for her coastal community. Saito’s entire family escaped from Soma City in Japan, where massive waves caused utter devastation, and she could not return to witness the chaos for herself until the following month. It was “beyond recognition”, according to Saito. The once-thriving community had been largely flattened, replaced by mounds of debris and fishing boats....
- AI helps South Korea stop 99% of suicide attempts on Han River bridges in Seoulby The Korea Times (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 2:56 am
For most residents of South Korea’s capital, the Han River is a place for evening strolls, picnics and a brief respite from city life. But for Kim Jun-young, chief of the Hangang Bridge CCTV Integrated Control Centre in Seoul’s Gwangjin district, it is where his team pulls people back from the edge every day. Established in 2021, the centre uses AI for comprehensive emergency response, monitoring 900 CCTV cameras across 17 of the 21 pedestrian-accessible Han River bridges. Beyond suicide...
- The West was never the whole world. It’s time to move onby Kishore Mahbubani (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 2:00 am
Western social science has made three metaphysical mistakes. The first was to assume that its laws and lessons were, like the physical sciences, universally applicable to all societies. Harvard Professor Theodore Levitt captured the prevailing zeitgeist well when he wrote in 1983: “The world’s needs and desires have been irrevocably homogenised.” That may have been true 40 years ago. It is no longer. One indirect consequence of this assumption – that the whole world was converging towards a...
- Japan’s restaurant sector left hungry for talent after visa suspensionby Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 1:51 am
Restaurant operators in Japan have been forced to review their approach to hiring foreign workers since the government suspended the issuance of special visas needed to work in the sector, as the number of holders nears its preset quota. The sudden suspension by Japan’s immigration authorities has raised the spectre of fierce competition for foreign talent. Long known for its strict immigration policy, the country has been increasingly counting on foreign workers amid labour shortages. The...
- Iran war fallout triggers massive biofuel shift across Asiaby Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 12:59 am
Taxi driver Ravi Ranjan, who lives with his wife and child in New Delhi, said shipping disruptions caused by the Iran war had forced him to pay higher prices for cooking fuel at a time when India’s prime minister was also urging residents to reduce driving and travel. It was all hitting his bottom line, Ranjan said, as he was paying three times as much for liquid petroleum gas after facing delays on delivery of the cooking fuel. “I used to get a cylinder of LPG for 1,000 rupees (US$10), now I...
- Beyond bamboo: Vietnam’s To Lam mounts a diplomacy offensiveby Aidan Jones (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 16, 2026 at 12:00 am
Vietnam’s To Lam is a man in a hurry. Since claiming the nation’s top job, its most powerful leader in decades has been in near-constant motion, pressing flesh and signing deals in Beijing, Washington, Pyongyang and Moscow. His itinerary, which also included stops in New Delhi, Helsinki, Paris, London and several Southeast Asian capitals, reads less like a diplomatic calendar than a world tour – and analysts say that is precisely the point. “Where previous leaders practised a restrained,...
- Trump and his CEOs want China’s business – but has Asia moved on?by Mia Nurmamat,Ralph Jennings (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 10:00 pm
US President Donald Trump’s landmark visit to China comes as the US-Iran war disrupts global energy supplies, fuels economic uncertainty and adds fresh strain to Washington-Beijing ties. In the latest instalment of a series examining how rivalry, interdependence and geopolitical crises are reshaping the relationship between the two powers, we explore the massive upswing in capital expenditures across Asia that is driving a broad shift in economic power. When US President Donald Trump made his...
- How to deal with this ‘very Chinese time’ in Western livesby Cyril Ip (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 9:30 pm
What comes to mind when you think of China, Japan and South Korea? This was a question posed in a second-year sociology seminar during my time at Bristol, and it has stayed with me ever since. We were split into three groups and given 10 minutes to create posters capturing our immediate associations. Japan came first. Sketches of anime, sushi platters and temples appeared. My classmates spoke with enthusiasm, drawing on travel memories or aspirations to visit. A country that, less than a century...
- Ukraine war: 36 nations approve tribunal creation to prosecute Russia over invasionby Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 1:44 pm
Thirty-four European states plus Australia, Costa Rica and the EU said on Friday they would join a future special tribunal for Ukraine to prosecute Russia over its invasion of the country. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signed an accord with the Council of Europe last year to create a legal body to prosecute the “crime of aggression” in the invasion Russia launched in February 2022. The Council of Ministers, comprising foreign ministers from the organisation’s 46-member states, in a...
- Maldives rescuers search for missing Italian divers in underwater caveby Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 12:28 pm
Rescue teams in the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Maldives searched for a second day Friday for the bodies of four missing Italians following the country’s deadliest diving accident, officials said. Italy’s foreign ministry said on Thursday night that five citizens had died while diving, with Maldivian authorities recovering one body. Maldives Minister of Tourism Mohamed Ameen said coastguard officers and security forces were scouring remote seas around where the divers were reported missing...
- Western powers ramp up support for Philippines’ Luzon economic hubby Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 11:07 am
A widely touted economic hub in the Philippines will involve eight more countries, signalling greater international confidence in the long-term viability of the ambitious project to boost connectivity and trade in a key region. The Luzon Economic Corridor (LEC), a trilateral infrastructure initiative led by the US, Japan, and the Philippines, is set to receive additional support from Canada, Australia, Denmark, France, Italy, South Korea, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Initially envisioned as a...
- Chinese tourist banned from Thailand for life after kicking, damaging US$15,000 auto-gatesby SCMP’s Asia desk (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 9:45 am
A Chinese tourist has been barred from returning to Thailand for life after he allegedly kicked and damaged automated passport control gates at Bangkok’s main airport, in a case that comes amid a wider Thai crackdown on foreign visitors accused of disorderly behaviour. The 30-year-old man, identified by Thai media as Zheng Liwei, was accused of damaging two automatic gates at Suvarnabhumi Airport on Wednesday afternoon while trying to pass through passport control for a flight to China. The...
- Gunfire, farce and fugitive Philippine Senator Bato dela Rosaby Raissa Robles (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 9:00 am
The Philippine Senate has witnessed political coups, scandals and the occasional shouting match. It had never, until this week, seen a sitting senator sprint down its corridors in a muddy olive shirt, knocking aside female investigators like bowling pins, to avoid an international arrest warrant for crimes against humanity. That was Monday. By Wednesday night, gunshots were ringing out in the building that houses the upper chamber of the country’s Congress. “I worked in the Senate for 15 years...
- Xi-Trump summit aside, 2 meetings in Asia matter for global tradeby David Dodwell (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 8:30 am
Most readers of foreign news pages this weekend will be assuming that US President Donald Trump’s summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing has been dominating everyone’s attention. But across Asia, Trump, with his massive business entourage, was not the only act in town this week. At least two other major sets of meetings should not be overlooked. First, in New Delhi, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was hosting foreign ministers from the 10 Brics economies and a growing community...
- Thailand unearths Southeast Asia’s largest dinosaur, the mighty Nagatitanby SCMP’s Asia desk (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 8:25 am
A new giant dinosaur weighing about 27 tonnes has been unearthed by researchers in Thailand, making it the largest ever found in Southeast Asia. According to a study published in the journal Scientific Reports on Thursday, the 27 metre (88 foot) long plant-eating beast is believed to have meandered through what is now Thailand between 100 and 120 million years ago. It likely weighed at least 10 tonnes more than Dippy the Diplodocus Thitiwoot Sethapanichsakul, lead researcher “Our dinosaur is big...
- Malaysia’s Anwar Ibrahim wants to project strength. His former ministers won’t let himby Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 7:51 am
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s ruling alliance will doubtless try to project a united front this weekend, but two former ministers from his own party are threatening to pull attention back to the fractures inside the reformist camp. Pakatan Harapan (PH), the reformist coalition led by Anwar, holds its first convention in four years in the southern state of Johor on Sunday. That same day, former economy minister Rafizi Ramli and former natural resources and environmental sustainability...
- Australian trade minister to visit China to secure fuel during Iran war crunchby Ralph Jennings (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 7:30 am
Australia’s trade minister will visit China in an effort to shore up fuel supplies that have run short this year because of bottlenecks in the Strait of Hormuz during the US–Israeli war in Iran. Australian Trade and Tourism Minister Don Farrell told a press conference that he would travel to China to meet Commerce Minister Wang Wentao after a stop in Japan on Monday. “Very much the topic of the day will be how do we continue to ensure reliable fuel supplies into this country,” Farrell said,...
- Greening of UK politics could mean big business for Asian renewable exportersby Biman Mukherji (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 6:45 am
South and Southeast Asian nations may emerge as unexpected clean energy beneficiaries after the Green Party of England and Wales made record-breaking gains in recent UK local council elections, according to analysts. The Greens expanded their footprint in the May 7 council elections, capitalising on widespread voter disillusionment with Britain’s two major parties, Labour and Conservative. It was the party’s best-ever performance in a local election. While Nigel Farage’s right-wing populist...
- 1MDB scandal: Anwar says Malaysia won’t support Jho Low’s Trump pardon bidby The Star (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 6:10 am
Malaysia will not support any pardon for fugitive businessman Low Taek Jho, better known as Jho Low, says Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, who described the matter as a “non-issue” for Putrajaya. The prime minister said any decision on a possible pardon application rested entirely with US authorities and was not something Malaysia intended to pursue. “There is no issue. We are not going to consider that. No issue,” he told reporters in Negri Sembilan yesterday when asked about reports surrounding...
- Japan eyes dedicated ship to lead deep-sea rare earths race, cut reliance on Chinaby Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 15, 2026 at 5:59 am
Japan’s quest for rare earth self-sufficiency and its drive to decouple from Chinese supply chains have prompted the government to consider building a dedicated deep-sea mining vessel to recover minerals from the Pacific Ocean floor. Local media reported that the ruling Liberal Democratic Party’s special committee on ocean development will soon present a draft proposal to the Takaichi administration, calling for unspecified project funding. While the initiative will face technological and...






























