News from Asia
- North Korea launches ballistic missiles as UN warns of nuclear advancesby Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 1:54 pm
North Korea launched multiple short-range ballistic missiles towards the sea on Sunday, its neighbours said, days after the UN’s nuclear watchdog warned that North Korea was making “very serious” advances in efforts to build nuclear weapons. The missiles fired from the North’s Sinpo area flew about 140 kilometres (87 miles) each towards the country’s eastern waters, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. It said South Korea maintains a readiness to repel any provocations by North Korea and is...
- Can Iran fiasco help China edge out US in key arena of Southeast Asia?by Nikola Mikovic (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 12:30 pm
Since America launched its “major combat operation” against Iran, several Nato allies have distanced themselves from Washington. Now America also risks losing ground in strategically important Southeast Asia to China. Could it face an erosion of influence similar to that suffered by Russia in Central Asia as a result of its “special military operation” in Ukraine? Soon after US President Donald Trump launched massive air and missile strikes on Iran on February 28, it became clear Washington...
- Blaze in Malaysia’s Sabah destroys 1,000 homes, displaces over 9,000by Reuters (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 10:59 am
Thousands of people have been displaced after a fire destroyed around 1,000 homes in a coastal village in Malaysia’s Sabah state on Borneo island on Sunday, the fire department said. Authorities were notified of the fire in Sandakan district at around 1.32am, the district’s fire and rescue chief Jimmy Lagung said in a statement. “Strong winds and the close proximity of the houses caused the fire to spread rapidly, while low tide conditions also made it difficult to obtain an open water...
- Meet the Filipino vloggers finding financial freedom and defying stereotypes abroadby Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 7:00 am
Lea Albritton’s mornings belong to the repair shop. Her afternoons belong to the camera. The 40-year-old from Leyte in the central Philippines has lived in the US state of Georgia since 2019 with her 62-year-old American husband, Timothy, running a recreational vehicle repair shop in the mornings. After lunch, she produces videos about Filipino food, migration advice for couples stuck in the fiancée visa queue and glimpses of domestic life for the 250,000 followers of her page, Pinay sa America...
- Asia’s supply chain strengths could give it edge over US in AI race: Granite Asia’s Fooby Yulu Ao (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 6:00 am
As the artificial intelligence race moves beyond language models into the physical world, Asia’s manufacturing and supply chain strengths could give it an edge over the US, says Granite Asia’s Jixun Foo. The veteran venture capitalist said the current wave of AI development, sparked by breakthroughs in foundation models over the past two years, had entered a new phase where physical applications – from robotics to industrial automation – were becoming increasingly important, playing to Asia’s...
- Stranded single dad and kind bike mechanic inspire Malaysia’s generosityby The Star (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 4:53 am
A single father has refused to accept any more donations from Malaysians following a viral video that appeared to show him having difficulty finding money to pay a mechanic after his motorcycle broke down in Kuala Lumpur. According to Sinar Harian, the man known as Dicky Yau was touched by the concern shown by social media users who had offered to extend financial help to him after seeing the situation he was in. “I would like to thank everyone who sent private messages to offer help. However, I...
- BINI made history at Coachella. Can the Philippines build on it?by Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 4:00 am
The flags arrived before BINI did. They were already rippling across the Mojave Tent at Coachella in a sea of blue, red and white when the eight-member group took the stage on a recent Friday afternoon, carried by fans who had travelled across oceans and time zones for a moment that had never been seen before. The 45-minute set that followed made BINI the first P-pop act from the Philippines – and the first Southeast Asian girl group – to perform at one of the world’s most influential music...
- Southeast Asia wants children off social media. Will it work?by Kolette Lim,Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 2:00 am
Malaysian comedian Rizal van Geyzel keeps his three children – aged six, 14 and 15 – off social media. He calls it a “gateway drug” to fake news, pornography, stalkers and doom-scrolling. “Do I risk them resenting me? Sure, but these are the sacrifices of parents for their children’s mental health and physical safety,” the 43-year-old said. Across Southeast Asia, governments are increasingly siding with parents like him. Indonesia last month became the first country in the region to bar...
- Singapore ranks No 1 for cyber defences but boardrooms are the weak linkby Jean Iau (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 12:00 am
Singapore has earned top marks for digital resilience in the Asia-Pacific, but a new study reveals a disconnect at the heart of its corporate world: its executives ranked 10th out of 11 for leadership on the issue. The findings, published on Wednesday by Economist Impact and Australian telecoms company Telstra International, drew on responses from 1,420 senior executives across 11 Asia-Pacific markets, including Australia, mainland China, Hong Kong and Thailand. Singapore ranked first overall –...
- China begins building US$1 billion hydropower station in Cambodia amid energy crisisby Ralph Jennings (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 19, 2026 at 12:00 am
Construction of a US$1 billion Chinese-invested hydropower station has begun in Cambodia to facilitate the Southeast Asian country’s use of renewable energy as the fallout from the Iran war constricts developing countries’ access to traditional fuel supplies. Work on the Upper Tatay pumped-storage hydropower project in the hilly southwestern province of Koh Kong started on April 10, Xinhua reported, describing it as a future “green power bank” for Cambodia’s national grid. It said the project...
- How Hong Kong can beat Singapore as the launch pad for Chinese firmsby Ryan Ip,Jason Leung Yeuk-ho,Wenhui Jia (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 9:30 pm
For a Chinese enterprise venturing overseas, the first decision is often not which market to enter, but which city to launch from. And that choice increasingly narrows to Hong Kong or Singapore. Both offer deep capital markets, common law systems and Chinese-speaking talent. Both want to be the trusted first stop. But a gap has emerged – not in what the two cities offer on paper, but in how they treat the enterprises they both want. What does a “launch pad” deliver? It is where a Chinese...
- Japan, Australia finalise contracts to deliver first 3 of planned frigatesby Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 10:08 am
Japan and Australia said on Saturday they have finalised contracts to jointly deliver the first three of 11 ships for the Australian navy based on the upgraded Japanese Mogami-class frigate, as the two countries deepen their defence cooperation amid China’s growing assertiveness. The deal, announced by Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi and his Australian counterpart Richard Marles in Melbourne, comes ahead of Japan’s planned easing of its rules on defence equipment exports, which place...
- Why Japan’s bond moves could see shift in East Asia’s financing modelby Anthony Rowley (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 8:30 am
East Asia’s “economic miracle” in the post-World War II period was predicated upon a number of factors, such as the region’s export-led growth model, but critically it also depended on an assured supply of capital to finance business investment. One source of such finance was bank loans, the supply and direction of which can be officially influenced by various means rather than being chiefly market-determined. Even today, bank loans account for most of the business financing in Japan, the...
- In Bangkok, Malaysia’s first Mr Bear winner finds spotlight queer life rarely gets at homeby Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 7:00 am
On Monday afternoon, amid the heat and chaos of Thailand’s Songkran festival, Gavin Chow was crowned Mr Bear International 2026 – the first Malaysian to win the title at a pageant that has quickly become part of Thailand’s growing queer festival circuit. Back in Chow’s home country, the climate is very different. Malaysia criminalises same-sex intimacy under federal law, LGBTQ gatherings have faced police raids and the 34-year-old activist’s own national qualifier earlier this year struggled to...
- Magnitude 5 quakes hit Japan’s Nagano prefectureby Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 5:14 am
Two strong earthquakes jolted Nagano Prefecture in central Japan on Saturday, with the first measuring a preliminary magnitude of 5.0 followed by another registering magnitude 5.1, the country’s weather agency said. The Japan Meteorological Agency warned of aftershocks on a similar scale over the next week or so. No tsunami warnings were issued. The first major quake occurred at 1.20pm in Omachi and registered upper 5 on the Japanese seismic intensity scale of 7, according to the agency. At...
- South Korea’s AI shamans foretell a future in old traditionby Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 4:20 am
The sound of tinkling bells drifts through an alley in central Seoul, an unmistakable sign that a shaman is near – although in this case the mystic is a robot powered by artificial intelligence. Many South Koreans still place great value in shamanic traditions, which purport to divine a person’s future based on the day and time they were born. Practitioners, known as mudang, wear long, colourful robes and perform dances and chants to commune with the gods – sometimes even walking on sharp blades...
- Hospitals face glove shortage as Malaysian makers hike prices by 40%by Reuters (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 3:47 am
Rubber glove makers have raised prices and warned of production cuts as the Iran war chokes supplies of key inputs, raising concerns for the healthcare sector. Glove makers have already hiked the average price of synthetic rubber gloves by around 40 per cent to as high as US$29 for a box of 1,000, according to Oong Chun Sung, an equity research analyst at CIMB Securities. Sustained disruption to supply chains from the conflict could lead to glove shortages by late May, analysts at Malaysia’s...
- Japan warned of ‘hellish summer’ as energy fears mountby Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 2:30 am
Japan is hoping further US-Iran talks will ease tensions in the Middle East and help reopen the Strait of Hormuz permanently, but there is also mounting anxiety over what a failure could mean for the country as summer approaches. On Friday, Iran said it would reopen the strait for commercial shipping following a ceasefire agreement in Lebanon, while US President Donald Trump added that a US naval blockade of Iran’s ports would remain until a deal with Tehran was struck. The fear in Japan,...
- Air New Zealand invites economy passengers to join mile-high sleep club in world firstby Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 2:23 am
Sleep on a long-haul flight in economy class has always been a fantasy for many travellers. Air New Zealand will soon offer a solution that involves climbing into a triple-tier bunk bed wearing special socks. The airline will soon open bookings for four-hour stints in the Skynest sleep pods and says they will be the first lie-flat beds for budget air travellers. Fliers will get cosy with their fellow passengers, however, so crumbs, strong perfumes and bed-sharing are forbidden. The curtained...
- In Malaysia, unlicensed street photography becomes focus of crackdownby dpa (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 1:39 am
While many Europeans are considering putting long-haul flying on the back burner as jet fuel costs and airfares climb, those with a trip already booked for Malaysia may need to watch out if ambling around with a camera slung across a shoulder. Following an early April warning about unlicensed street photography, city authorities in Kuala Lumpur, the country’s capital, have confiscated equipment from six people, five of them non-Malaysians, pending payment of fines levied under street hawking...
- Japan ditches decades of arm export curbs as US reliability waversby Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 1:00 am
Japan is set to take another step away from its long-standing limits on arms exports, a move analysts say will strengthen the domestic defence industry, spur innovation, deepen security ties and reduce Tokyo’s reliance on the US at a time when Washington is increasingly seen as a less reliable partner. The Yomiuri newspaper reported on Thursday that revisions to the Three Principles on the Transfer of Defence Equipment and Technology would be approved at a cabinet meeting next week. The changes...
- Shock therapy: war forces oil-addicted Asia to finally go greenby Aidan Jones,Biman Mukherji (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 18, 2026 at 12:00 am
The age of cheap oil is over and Thailand’s rooftops are reflecting that fact. Across homes, garages and warehouses in the sun-drenched kingdom, the blue-black sheen of solar panels is spreading, as the Iran war has done what years of climate summits could not: turn solar power into a necessity. Demand for solar panels has swamped companies like Wayso, whose managing director is colouring in Thailand’s rooftops as fast as he can find technicians to do it. “We can’t hire quickly enough,” Suwat...
- Iran war energy shock threatens Southeast Asia’s supply chains. A win for China?by He Huifeng (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 1:30 pm
Some exporters at the Canton Fair in Guangzhou report a modest return of orders to China from Southeast Asia, as energy-market volatility linked to the US-Israeli war in Iran prompts some Western buyers to prioritise supply chain stability. The shift is visible in buyer patterns on the exhibition floor, where the number from Europe and the United States appears to have recovered from last year’s levels, according to Chinese exporters, with more inquiries for home appliances, new energy products...
- Arrest of Philippine ex-lawmaker Zaldy Co ‘missing puzzle piece’ in flood-control probeby Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 12:30 pm
The arrest of fugitive former congressman Zaldy Co has revived a long-stalled Philippine corruption investigation and sharpened political pressure on President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr, whom the wanted lawmaker has accused of personally benefiting from a multibillion-peso kickback scheme tied to flood control projects. Observers called Co’s arrest a “notable step towards accountability” in a case that had stalled after the collapse of the commission set up to investigate it. Co resigned from the...
- Vietnam and China are now perfectly alignedby Alex Lo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 12:30 pm
Even before Donald Trump returned to the White House, Vietnam’s military planners were already busy preparing for a possible second invasion by the United States and its allies. In the “Second US Invasion Plan”, secretly issued in August 2024, the Vietnamese military rejected playing any part in America’s China containment strategy in the Asia-Pacific. Rather, it sees the US promotion of “freedom and democracy” as a cynical ploy to maintain hegemony in the region. The document, released in...
- UN reforms can’t wait any longer, Kazakhstan’s Tokayev says amid fragile Iran truceby Biman Mukherji (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 11:43 am
Kazakhstan’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said on Friday that the war in Iran had laid bare the urgency of long-delayed UN reforms, arguing that the world body must be strengthened if multilateral diplomacy is to help restore global peace and security. “We have been talking about that for a long time, but only talking happens,” Tokayev told the fifth Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Turkey. “Everybody is feeling the impact of the Iran war and everybody is suffering.” At the three-day summit ending...
- Malaysia’s Anwar chats with US Muslim streamer – is it a populist move?by Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 11:21 am
Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is usually seen in carefully choreographed meetings with presidents, kings and regional leaders in Putrajaya. So it was striking to see him instead riding through the city on a casual live stream with Sneako, the controversial 27-year-old American streamer and Muslim convert whose appeal to mainly young male audiences has made him an unlikely cultural figure. For more than an hour on Friday, the live stream gave Anwar a rare chance to sell Malaysia, his...
- Asian airlines face ‘major headwind’ from jet fuel costs, forcing flight changesby Biman Mukherji (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 10:49 am
Asian airlines are cutting flights, raising fares and reshuffling networks as the Iran war sends jet fuel prices soaring, leaving carriers across the region scrambling to protect their margins and preserve key routes. The shock has hit Asia especially hard because many economies depend heavily on fuel flows from the Middle East, according to aviation analysts, and some regional carriers are less protected from sudden price spikes than their counterparts in Europe or the US. “The impact has been...
- Pakistan oil tanker becomes first to exit through Hormuz since US blockade beganby Bloomberg (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 7:38 am
A Pakistan-flagged tanker that entered the Persian Gulf over the weekend has become the first carrier to exit through the Strait of Hormuz with a crude cargo since a US blockade began on Monday, underscoring just how limited traffic through the vital chokepoint remains. The Shalamar sailed just south of Iran’s Larak Island and out into the Gulf of Oman late Thursday with around 450,000 barrels of crude loaded at Das Island in the United Arab Emirates, according to ship-tracking data. The Aframax...
- Indonesia’s Surabaya bans absentee fathers from public services for dodging child supportby Aisyah Llewellyn (Asia - South China Morning Post) on April 17, 2026 at 7:30 am
As divorce rates continue to rise in Indonesia, more single mothers are bearing the brunt of financial hardship and struggling to collect court-ordered child support from former spouses. For some women, help comes from an initiative unique in the country: the East Java city of Surabaya bars men from accessing public services if they fail to pay court-ordered child support. First introduced in 2023, the scheme has been used to block administrative access to more than 8,000 men, according to Irvan...






























