Asia

News from Asia

  • Don’t count the Russia-India-China triangle out just yet
    by Hao Nan (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 9:30 pm

    The Russia-India-China (RIC) dialogue is back in the diplomatic conversation. It has not formally restarted, and no summit is on the horizon. But the signals are here. In 2025, Moscow again pushed for reviving the RIC format. India said any meeting would have to be arranged in a “mutually convenient manner”, a cautious but open formula. China said it was willing to maintain communication with Russia and India on trilateral cooperation. This month, Russian President Vladimir Putin again spoke...

  • Iran war ‘stark wake-up call’ for fossil fuel-dependent Southeast Asia: IEA report
    by Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 2:28 pm

    The Iran war has exposed major risks for Southeast Asia that could cost the region billions of dollars, if it does not diversify sources of energy more quickly, according to an International Energy Agency (IEA) report released on Tuesday. An overreliance on oil and gas transported through the Strait of Hormuz left the region particularly vulnerable to shocks from the Iran war, a “stark wake-up call” for its energy security, the report says. It notes that rising sales of electric vehicles, a...

  • Philippines vows to block structures at Scarborough Shoal amid fears of Chinese expansion
    by Raissa Robles (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 1:33 pm

    A floating Chinese platform at Scarborough Shoal has revived fears in the Philippines that Beijing could be taking another incremental step towards turning one of the South China Sea’s most sensitive disputed features into a permanent outpost. The Armed Forces of the Philippines said on Tuesday it would not allow any structure to be built at the shoal, nearly three weeks after satellite images first showed a possible floating platform there. “We are not allowing that to happen. We’re not...

  • Najib’s 1MDB plunder made Attila the Hun ‘look like a choirboy’: Malaysian judge
    by Bloomberg (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 12:23 pm

    The judge who convicted former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak over the 1MDB scandal said the plunder of the sovereign wealth fund was so vast that it eclipsed the exploits of Attila the Hun, one of history’s most notorious conquerors. “The scale of the plunder that took place (financially speaking, of course) made Attila the Hun look like a choirboy in comparison,” Collin Lawrence Sequerah said in the introduction to his 809-page grounds of judgment. The written judgment was issued on...

  • US military plans permanent war-ready weapons stockpile in Australia
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 10:46 am

    The US military is planning a permanent war-ready weapons stockpile for its Marine Corps on Australia’s southeast coast beyond the range of most Chinese missiles, according to tender documents and officials. The development of the stockpile, a first for the Marine Corps in Australia, came as the US was keen to leverage the continent’s strategic location in the South Pacific to counter China’s rapid military build-up, analysts said. The US Marine Corps began global pre-positioning of military...

  • Why Indonesia cannot afford to scrap Prabowo’s free meals programme
    by Resty Woro Yuniar (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 10:00 am

    Indonesia has vowed to overhaul the country’s ambitious free nutritious meals programme following public pressure and recent allegations of corruption – a move analysts described as a “moderate” concession in lieu of an “embarrassing” discontinuation of President Prabowo Subianto’s flagship initiative. The US$15 billion initiative aims to reach 83 million schoolchildren, pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, and toddlers to prevent malnutrition and stunted growth. However, it has been dogged by...

  • Philippines ‘still not ready’ for ‘Big One’ even after latest quake
    by Jeoffrey Maitem (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 9:00 am

    When the ground tore open beneath the Philippines last week, Roldan Dante was working in a nearby town. By the time he could return, his home in Glan, Sarangani province, had collapsed. His wife and two young children were gone. “If only I had known this was going to happen, I would have picked them up,” he told This Week in Asia, as social workers pressed government cash aid into his hands. “I feel traumatised. I’m in shock and I still can’t accept what happened.” Dante’s loss speaks to the...

  • Panicked residents flee as ‘extremely strong’ earthquake hits Indonesia’s Sulawesi
    by Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 8:30 am

    A 6.7-magnitude earthquake shook part of central Indonesia’s Sulawesi island on Tuesday, causing scattered damage and rattling residents of a city devastated by a quake and tsunami eight years ago. The initial quake was centred inland about 43km (30 miles) east-southeast of Palu, and the US Geological Survey said it was about 10km deep. The strong shaking sent people fleeing into open areas in and around Palu, a city of about 400,000 people and the capital of Central Sulawesi province. Several...

  • In Malaysia, school bullying K-drama Teach You a Lesson hits home
    by Ushar Daniele,Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 6:55 am

    Nisa Mohd did not send her daughter to boarding school unprepared. Before the now 17-year-old left for Melaka, her mother enrolled her in silat, the Malay martial art, and made one instruction clear: report any trouble immediately. She still watches for shifts in her daughter’s mood each time they speak. Millions of parents across Malaysia recognise her vigilance, with the country still following the inquest into the death last year of 13-year-old Zara Qairina Mahathir and a steady succession of...

  • Korean’s racist World Cup experience, India’s military revamp: 7 Asia highlights
    by SCMP (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 4:30 am

    We have selected seven stories from the SCMP’s coverage of Asia over the past week that resonated with our readers and shed light on topical issues. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. Singapore PM Lawrence Wong to visit Russia, first since Ukraine war sanctions Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong is set to visit the Russian city of Kazan in a trip that would mark the first high-level talks between leaders from both sides since the city state...

  • Sanae Takaichi’s G7 mission: bridge Trump-bloc divides, polish ‘Iron Lady’ image
    by Maria Siow (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 4:25 am

    Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s debut at this week’s G7 summit is an opportunity to turn her rapport with Donald Trump into a bridge between the US president and the bloc’s leaders, analysts say, as she seeks to cement her image as Japan’s “Iron Lady”. At a working dinner on Monday – the opening night of the three-day meeting in Evian, eastern France – Takaichi also proposed a joint strategic stockpile partnership to bolster critical mineral supply chains and reduce China’s dominance in the...

  • Singapore will run Dear You film mostly in Mandarin, not Teochew. What’s lost in translation?
    by Kolette Lim,Jean Iau (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 3:12 am

    When Singaporean Kristen Chng watched Chinese indie film Dear You with his father in Suzhou last month, he was reminded of his grandfather’s journey of sweat and hardship after leaving his ancestral village in Guangdong province with little to his name. There wasn’t a dry eye in the room, he said, as cinema-goers followed the story of a man uncovering his family’s past by tracing remittance letters sent home from Thailand. “My grandfather moved to Singapore in his teens and had a habit of...

  • North Korea plays US-China rivalry card to justify ‘irreversible’ nuclear status
    by Park Chan-kyong (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 16, 2026 at 12:00 am

    North Korea’s latest spirited defence of its nuclear arsenal signals a strategy that goes beyond rejecting international calls to disarm and instead leans into mounting global superpower rivalry to legitimise its weapons build-up. The verbal offensive comes as North Korea could soon face renewed pressure to return to the negotiating table. Analysts say the winding down of the Iran conflict may allow Washington and its allies to refocus attention on the Korean peninsula. Pyongyang has also seized...

  • UK charges Indian captain of suspected Russian shadow tanker seized in Channel
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 9:41 pm

    British prosecutors have charged with sanctions contravention offences the Indian captain of an interdicted alleged Russian shadow fleet vessel seized in the Channel, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said on Monday. It follows British armed forces on Sunday intercepting the sanctioned oil tanker Smyrtos – said to belong to Russia’s shadow fleet – in a dramatic operation hailed by Kyiv and London as a blow to Moscow’s war machine. British commandos boarded the ship off the southern English coast...

  • Japan’s property sector looks strong. So why are investors going abroad?
    by Nicholas Spiro (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 9:30 pm

    When it comes to the performance of real estate markets in the Asia-Pacific, Japan reigns supreme. Asia’s second largest economy is the deepest, most widely traded, and the safest market in the region. Last year, Japan accounted for 28 per cent of direct investment in Asia-Pacific commercial real estate, data from MSCI shows. The average vacancy rate for grade A offices in Tokyo was 0.7 per cent in the first quarter of this year. Rents have risen for nine straight quarters, increasing 13.2 per...

  • Relief and wariness: Asia watches US-Iran deal for real impact
    by Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:35 pm

    The US-Iran peace deal is likely to bring immediate relief but not yet reassurance for Asia, as leaders across the region watch whether the Strait of Hormuz reopens, oil prices ease and the agreement can withstand the nuclear talks and geopolitical distrust still ahead, analysts say. The agreement, mediated by Pakistan and scheduled to be signed on Friday in Switzerland, is intended to end more than three months of war in the Gulf, halt the US blockade of Iran and reopen one of the world’s most...

  • Japan, Italy to boost tech, critical minerals cooperation
    by Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:03 pm

    Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and her Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni agreed on Monday to deepen cooperation in advanced technologies such as semiconductors and strengthen supply chains for critical minerals to bolster economic security while advancing defence ties. The two leaders also welcomed a preliminary agreement between the United States and Iran intended to end their war that triggered global oil supply disruptions, before their planned participation in a Group of Seven...

  • Wave of Philippine government website hacks raises alarms over security, investor trust
    by Alan Robles,Raissa Robles (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 12:50 pm

    The defacement of the National Bureau of Investigation’s website over the weekend marked an escalation in a wave of attacks on Philippine government pages, with the country’s main investigative agency becoming the third major state body in less than a week to have its site compromised. The incident followed similar attacks on the Senate’s website on Wednesday and the House of Representatives’ page on Saturday, raising questions about the government’s ability to protect even its own law...

  • Thailand’s Thaksin is out of jail, but can he ‘leave politics behind’?
    by Aidan Jones (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 12:36 pm

    In Thaksin Shinawatra’s hometown outside Chiang Mai, neighbours say they hope the royal pardon gifted to the tycoon offers Thailand’s most loved – and quite possibly, most loathed – politician a chance to exit the kingdom’s bear-pit politics ahead of his 77th birthday. But after eight months in jail, a coup against his government, a battery of legal cases, threats to his family, assets – and even his life – those hitched to the Shinawatra bandwagon since Thaksin won his first election in 2001...

  • As short-sellers circle the yen, a repeat of 1997 Asian crisis looms
    by Andy Xie (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 12:30 pm

    Japan is falling into a trap in defending its currency against the US dollar, like Thailand in 1996. Japan’s large forex reserves make the yen a juicy target, rather than deterring currency predators. Its fundamentals are weak and deteriorating, making the yen’s further decline inevitable. Japan can’t raise interest rates aggressively to defend its currency due to its high national debt. It could fall into an inflation-devaluation spiral, greatly profiting yen short-sellers. The yen is trading...

  • Philippines unpicks Asean’s South China Sea ‘sovereignty deadlock’
    by Jeoffrey Maitem (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 9:00 am

    Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr did not dwell on warships or water cannons when he rose to speak at the country’s Independence Day celebrations on Friday. Instead, he signalled a new strategy in broaching the topic of the South China Sea: recasting the waterway not as an arena of territorial disputes, but rather as a shared vulnerability. In doing so, analysts say he may have found a way to keep China’s behaviour in the regional conversation without triggering direct confrontation...

  • South Korean music festival plays out against discord in reunification hopes
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 7:42 am

    A stone’s throw from the barbed wire and minefields that separate the two Koreas, thousands gathered for a music festival this weekend to sing about peace in a place synonymous with conflict. The DMZ Peace Train Music Festival, named after the demilitarised zone that has separated the neighbours for seven decades, gathered artists and fans from around the world. It was the seventh instalment since the inaugural festival was held in 2018 under the slogan: “Let’s dance for a world without...

  • Racist gesture at Korean World Cup fan costs Mexican engineering guild chief his post
    by SCMP’s Asia desk (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 7:08 am

    A Mexican man who led an engineering guild has apologised after losing his position over a video showing him making a racist gesture at a South Korean fan during a World Cup match in Guadalajara. Ulises Fernando Bernal Miramontes came under fire after he was seen pulling at the corners of his eyes – a gesture derogatory towards people of Asian descent – in a video posted by South Korean influencer Yoon Su-jin. Yoon, a YouTuber whose creator handle is InoCat, captured Bernal, who was wearing...

  • Malaysia’s fight for Malay votes becomes a multiparty scrum
    by Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 6:42 am

    For much of Malaysia’s post-independence history, Malay voters largely faced a binary choice: Umno, the oldest Malay nationalist political party that governed the country for more than six decades until 2018, or the Islamist Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS). But with two state elections fast approaching, a bevy of breakaway parties flying variations of the same nationalist flag are all chasing those same 13 million or so Malay votes. The newest entrant arrived on Saturday, when former home...

  • Australian girl dies after Pakistani police ‘mistakenly’ shoots family, officer arrested
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 6:30 am

    Police shot and killed an Australian child in eastern Pakistan, authorities said, with Canberra calling on Monday for an investigation into the incident that also wounded two of the girl’s family members. Police in Pakistan’s most populous eastern province, Punjab, said that officers responding to a robbery exchanged fire with the suspects who were holding the passengers of a family’s car at gunpoint on Wednesday. “In the ensuing chaos, the officer involved mistakenly assessed that the suspects...

  • Starbucks’ South Korean staff to receive history lesson after ‘Tank Day’ blunder
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:59 am

    Starbucks stores across South Korea will close for half a day next week for staff to attend a history lesson following a promotional campaign gone awry, the coffee giant said on Monday. Starbucks Korea, with more than 2,000 stores nationwide, found itself embroiled in public uproar last month when it ran a “Tank Day” promotion evoking a deadly military crackdown on a 1980 pro-democracy uprising. The day of the reusable cup promotion – May 18 – coincided with the 46th anniversary of the Gwangju...

  • Viral video of Indonesian helper being beaten in Malaysia prompts calls to act
    by Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:44 am

    Four people have been arrested in Malaysia’s southern state of Johor after videos circulating online appeared to show an Indonesian domestic worker being slapped, punched and verbally abused inside a private home. The footage has renewed concerns about the treatment of Indonesian helpers in Malaysia – where about 60,000 are registered to work in private homes – and prompted calls for Jakarta to intervene. Two sisters and their husbands, aged 30 to 34, were arrested at a house in Taman Johor,...

  • Thousands evacuate in Philippines as Mount Pinatubo erupts in 1991 – from the SCMP archive
    by SCMP (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:30 am

    This article was published on June 13, 1991. Thousands evacuated after massive explosion in Philippines Volcano’s plume soars 25km by Michael Bociurkiw in San Narciso Theresita Santiago and her neighbours dealt with the volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines yesterday (June 12, 1991) the only way they could: they grabbed their children and a few belongings and walked 20 kilometres to sanctuary in Olongapo City. “I’m feeling very nervous right now,” Mrs Santiago said, as her...

  • ‘It’s our way’: Japan fans win hearts by cleaning up after World Cup match
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 3:26 am

    Japan fans left the stands spotless after their World Cup opener against the Netherlands in Texas on Sunday, saying it was “Japanese culture” to tidy up after themselves. Spectators stayed behind after the 2-2 draw to make sure they left the stadium as they found it, meticulously picking up litter and stuffing it into blue plastic bags. It was a habit first learned at primary school, Japan fan Eita Tanaka said. “We have to think about everyone. Japanese people think that when we use a certain...

  • Japan’s train gropers still prowl as women-only carriages turn 25
    by Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on June 15, 2026 at 12:00 am

    Mariko was a teenager the day she found herself alone in a near-empty carriage with a man who sat across from her, exposed himself and began to masturbate. Terrified that fleeing or crying out might provoke something worse, she fixed her gaze elsewhere and waited for the next station. “There was nothing I could do,” said Mariko, now 33, who asked that her family name not be published. “I was terrified that he might attack me, so I kept quiet.” The memory has never entirely left her. It still...