Asia

News from Asia

  • Malaysia tightens border screenings to prevent hantavirus entry
    by The Star (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 10, 2026 at 7:45 am

    Malaysia has ramped up health screenings at all international entry points, particularly in the maritime sector, to prevent hantavirus from entering the country, according to Health Minister Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad. Dzulkefly assured the public that as of Sunday, there have been zero hantavirus cases reported in Malaysia or involving Malaysians, noting that the six lab-confirmed cases recently highlighted were all reported abroad. However, he stressed that the country must remain vigilant against the...

  • Vietnam joins rush for India’s battle-tested BrahMos missiles
    by Junaid Kathju (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 10, 2026 at 5:30 am

    Vietnam has become the latest country to enter talks to buy India’s supersonic BrahMos missile – and at least 15 more are reportedly interested – as defence ministries across Asia and elsewhere increasingly look beyond Western-made systems. New Delhi and Hanoi are in advanced negotiations over a potential US$700 million deal, with talks progressing during Vietnamese President To Lam’s visit to India this week, where he met Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and other...

  • Indonesia finds bodies of 2 Singaporeans killed in Mount Dukono eruption
    by Reuters (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 10, 2026 at 2:50 am

    Two Singaporean nationals missing for ⁠days were confirmed dead on Sunday from the eruption of Mount Dukono on Indonesia’s Halmahera Island, the local rescue agency said. Rescuers found the bodies around the crater rim and evacuation was under ‌way, agency head Iwan Ramdani said. “Evacuation of the bodies is still hampered by eruptions that continue to occur and bad weather,” Iwan said, adding rain was falling in the area. Some 150 personnel with two thermal drones have been deployed since...

  • Divorced from reality? Japan’s joint custody reform divides parents
    by Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 10, 2026 at 2:00 am

    Yasuyuki Watanabe has not seen his daughter in more than 15 years. But he is not celebrating the landmark custody reform that Japan has just implemented. Until last month, Japanese law required one parent to hold sole custody of children after a divorce, leaving the other party reliant on informal goodwill or court-encouraged visitation to maintain a relationship with their child. For Watanabe, 54, the result was a system seemingly designed to exclude him, where one parent could disappear from a...

  • K-pop moved on from Goo Hara, Sulli and Jonghyun’s suicides. Fans never did
    by David D. Lee (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 10, 2026 at 12:00 am

    Every year for the past three years, Edward Sugiana has made the same pilgrimage from Vancouver to a memorial hall on the southern fringes of Seoul that has become one of K-pop’s most sacred and sorrowful sites. Inside a small private room, Post-it notes from fans cover the walls alongside flowers and photographs of the girl group Kara. Nearly seven years after her death, visitors continue to arrive to pay tribute to Goo Hara – a woman many never met, but whom thousands feel they lost. “At the...

  • Sri Lankan Buddhist monk arrested over alleged sex abuse of 11-year-old girl
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 3:27 pm

    Sri Lankan authorities arrested a senior Buddhist monk on Saturday for the alleged sexual abuse of an underage girl, police said, marking the highest-profile case involving clergy in the country. Pallegama Hemarathana, 71, was arrested at a private hospital in the capital Colombo where he had sought treatment over the weekend amid an investigation into the alleged abuse of the 11-year-old girl in 2022. The crime is alleged to have taken place at a highly venerated temple in Anuradhapura, around...

  • How Japan’s new economic model could inspire others to ‘look east’
    by Anthony Rowley (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 8:30 am

    In the 1980s, then Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad launched his “Look East” policy, urging his country and others in Southeast Asia to emulate the state-led economic development models of Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, rather than those of market-dominated Western nations. China subsequently emerged as a prime example of state-led development, but Japan is now leaning again towards a more dirigiste model under the administration of Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, not only in...

  • Vietnam adds over 2 square km of land in South China Sea, US report says
    by Bloomberg (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 6:07 am

    Vietnam has expanded its outposts in the South China Sea by hundreds of acres over the past year, according to a new report, as Hanoi and Beijing race to reinforce competing territorial claims through land reclamation. Vietnam has added about 534 acres (2.16 square km) of land in the Spratly Islands, bringing its total reclaimed area to roughly 2,771 acres (11.2 square km), according to the Washington-based Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative. While Hanoi had appeared to be narrowing the gap...

  • South Korea draws Gulf oil storage interest as Hormuz stays closed
    by Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 5:14 am

    South Korea is drawing growing interest from Middle Eastern oil producers seeking to store crude oil at the country’s petroleum reserve bases, the world’s sixth largest, amid a prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a South Korean official and an expert on the matter have said. The strait’s closure in the wake of the US-Israel war on Iran has taken a toll not only on South Korea and other nations dependent on oil imports but also oil-producing countries whose storage tanks are filling up...

  • What is ‘authentic’ Filipino identity? New Miss Universe Philippines’ win reignites debate
    by Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 5:00 am

    The Philippines has crowned its newest Miss Universe candidate, Bea Millan-Windorski, as the country – known for its penchant for beauty pageants – prepares to send its latest representative to the global competition in November. The 23-year-old, who grew up in Wisconsin in the United States and holds a degree in history and international relations from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, stood out among seven finalist last weekend with her winning answer. Asked why the Philippines was still...

  • Malaysia resorts to cloud seeding to save rice crop from drought
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 4:13 am

    Malaysia is resorting to cloud seeding to bring much-needed rain to the country’s “rice bowl” north, where a drought has delayed planting of the staple crop and raised supply fears. “This year ... has been affected by prolonged dry weather, low rainfall and reduced dam water levels,” said Malaysia’s Minister of Agriculture and Food Security Mohamad Sabu. The conditions mean farmers have missed two of the three usual planting phases for so-called “wet direct seeding” of rice, a technique that...

  • Balikatan 2026: US, Japan, Philippines flex military muscle amid China tensions
    by Jeoffrey Maitem (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 4:00 am

    It took less than six minutes for Japan’s Type 88 missile to find its mark, a decommissioned Philippine warship 75km (47 miles) off the coast of Ilocos Norte. The US-made Tomahawk took rather longer to hit its target, some 630km (390 miles) away. It was, analysts say, a pointed display of resolve: Japanese, American and Filipino troops bringing this year’s Balikatan joint exercises to a thunderous close with a volley of missiles fired from sites in the far northern Philippines. The Tomahawk...

  • Indonesian rescuers retrieve body of hiker killed in volcanic eruption
    by Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 3:18 am

    Rescuers on Saturday recovered the body of an Indonesian woman caught in a volcanic eruption at Mount Dukono on Indonesia’s remote island of Halmahera a day earlier, as search operations continued to find the bodies of two Singaporeans, officials said. The slain hikers were among 20 who set out to ascend the 1,355-metre (4,445-foot) volcano in defiance of safety restrictions and became stranded when Dukono erupted early on Friday, spewing a thick ash column that rose about 10 km (6 miles) into...

  • Why Japan’s Mogami-class warship is winning over New Zealand
    by Julian Ryall (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 2:30 am

    Japan’s Mogami-class destroyer appears to be pulling ahead in the race to become the next generation of warships for the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN), in what would be another major deal for Japan’s defence industry just weeks after Tokyo announced it was lifting its long-held ban on weapons exports. Under its 2025 Defence Capability Plan, the government in Wellington has committed to replacing its two ANZAC-class frigates – launched in the early 1990s – with more capable, modern warships. The...

  • Singapore pair test negative for hantavirus after cruise ship outbreak
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 1:39 am

    Two Singapore residents who had been on board a hantavirus-hit cruise ship have tested negative to the rare respiratory disease, according to Singapore’s Communicable Diseases Agency (CDA). The two men aged 65 and 67 had been on the MV Hondius and also the same flight as a confirmed hantavirus case from St Helena to Johannesburg on April 25, the CDA said a day earlier. The confirmed case did not travel to the city state and died in South Africa. The CDA’s National Public Health Laboratory...

  • Singapore shines as stable investment oasis amid global storms: ‘very appetising’
    by Jean Iau (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 9, 2026 at 12:00 am

    As global markets are roiled by geopolitical uncertainty and the energy fallout from war in the Middle East, a tiny speck in Southeast Asia has emerged as an oasis of stability – at least in terms of where the well-heeled can park their money. Giig Tanaporn, CEO and founder of business and wealth consultancy Unique Prime Group, has observed that high-net-worth clients, especially from the Middle East and South Korea, have been increasingly choosing Singapore for its regulatory framework,...

  • Thanks to Trump, the gloves are off. There may be no new global order
    by Andrew Sheng (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 9:30 pm

    The old order is dead. We just don’t know what will replace it. As Henry Kissinger reminded us in his 2014 book World Order, “no truly global order has ever existed”. After US President Donald Trump’s erratic actions, the gloves are off. American comedians and Iranian Lego cartoons tell us all we need to know about the demise of the old order. If the unipolar order is not viable, and America is abandoning the multilateral order and the rules of the game it created after World War II, what are...

  • Asean to step up push for South China Sea code, energy security
    by Jean Iau (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 2:22 pm

    Deeper economic cooperation between China and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations will hinge on whether a code can be laid down to govern maritime territory and activity in the South China Sea, Philippine leader Ferdinand Marcos Jnr has said. “We cannot institutionalise any of those things until the code of conduct is finalised,” he told a press conference on Friday at the close of the 48th Asean summit in Cebu, when asked about aspects that held the most potential in relations between...

  • Philippines shifts defence strategy with Japan, eyes wider security focus
    by Raissa Robles (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 12:25 pm

    The recently concluded Balikatan joint drills have marked a shift in the Philippines’ defence strategy alongside Japan, with Tokyo offering the transfer of warships to its Southeast Asian ally, while a top Filipino official for the first time voiced “serious concern” over islands claimed by Beijing and Tokyo. Philippine Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro Jnr on Wednesday said Manila now considered the uninhabited Diaoyu Islands, which Japan calls the Senkaku Islands, a security flashpoint in the...

  • Can India’s rice farmers reap from US$30 million Amazon carbon credit deal?
    by Biman Mukherji (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 11:16 am

    A US$30 million carbon credit deal by tech giant Amazon with India’s Good Rice Alliance will boost carbon markets globally, according to experts, potentially showing agriculture – as well as industry – can be at the heart of emission reductions. The organisation, primarily backed by Bayer and in collaboration with GenZero and Shell, is designed to transform emissions-heavy rice cultivation in India through scientific advances. It helps thousands of smallholder farmers adopt climate-smart growing...

  • How China’s sharper tech edge forces South Korea to rethink decades of industrial ties
    by Alice Li (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 10:30 am

    China’s rapid technological gains and aggressive pricing are making it increasingly difficult for South Korean firms to find profitable areas of industrial synergy with their Chinese counterparts, according to experts. Speakers at a recent forum in Beijing urged firms from both countries to pivot towards building more interdependent ecosystems in high-growth sectors such as batteries and artificial intelligence, while also calling for the advancement of negotiations towards an upgraded...

  • Malaysia’s EV import curbs to protect local car sector criticised for inconsistency
    by Joseph Sipalan (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 9:15 am

    Malaysia’s nascent electric vehicle market may be decimated before it gets up to speed, as business experts warn of a sharp drop in demand and delay in the renewable energy transition if the government imposes strict price curbs on imported units from July, in a move to protect the country’s vehicle makers. The ministry of investment, trade and industry (Miti) on Wednesday announced that from July 1, it will only allow the sale of imported EVs that have a cost, insurance and freight (CIF) value...

  • New database tracks shifting outcomes of Malaysia’s political corruption cases
    by Iman Muttaqin Yusof (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 8:47 am

    An AI-powered database tracking corruption cases against Malaysia’s politicians was independently launched on Friday, putting fresh scrutiny on the status and outcomes of the country’s biggest graft prosecutions across administrations. The Prosecutorial Accountability Watch (PAW), built by civil society group Projek SAMA and hosted with news outlet Malaysiakini, tracks 33 high-profile cases involving current and former elected representatives – from ex-prime minister Najib Razak’s 1MDB-linked...

  • Asia faces low hantavirus risk as Singapore isolates 2 from cruise over cases
    by Ushar Daniele (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 7:49 am

    The risk of a hantavirus outbreak in Asia remains minimal, according to health experts, despite two Singapore residents returning home from a cruise ship where three people died from the infection that triggered a regional panic. Hantaviruses are a family of rat-carried viruses that can infect humans through direct exposure, even though transmission between people is extremely rare. The virus takes its name from South Korea’s Hantan River, where an early strain was identified after outbreaks of...

  • Former SriLankan Airlines chief in US$16 million Airbus corruption case found dead
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 7:11 am

    The former chief of Sri Lanka’s state-owned airline, who was charged with corruption over the purchase of 10 Airbus aircraft, was found dead on Friday, police said. Kapila Chandrasena, the former chief executive of SriLankan Airlines, was found at the Colombo home of a relative, said police. “We are investigating the cause of death and circumstances,” a police officer said. Chandrasena was remanded in March on charges of conspiring to accept a US$16 million bribe from Airbus in connection with a...

  • Japanese bus driver admits he ‘misjudged speed’ before crash that killed teenaged student
    by Kyodo (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 6:25 am

    Japanese police have arrested a bus driver on suspicion of negligent driving after a crash on a Fukushima expressway killed a high school student on Wednesday, as investigators look into whether he was speeding and driving without the proper license required to carry passengers for hire. On Friday morning, Fukushima prefectural police searched bus operator Kanbara Tetsudo in Gosen, Niigata prefecture. The arrested driver, Tetsuo Wakayama, 68, told investigators after his arrest on Thursday that...

  • Mount Dukono eruption in Indonesia kills 3 hikers, including 2 Singaporeans
    by Agence France-Presse (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 5:32 am

    Three hikers – two Singaporeans and a local – died in an eruption on Friday of Indonesia’s Mount Dukono volcano where they found themselves in a no-go zone, officials said. The eruption on Halmahera island sent an ash cloud about 10km (6.2 miles) into the air, with no towns or villages near enough to face any immediate threat. Twenty hikers were on the slopes when disaster struck, North Halmahera police chief Erlichson Pasaribu told reporters at a volcano monitoring station in Mamuya...

  • Energy crisis dominates Asean summit, forcing long-standing issues to back burner
    by Sam Beltran (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 5:17 am

    The spectre of the global energy crisis loomed over the three-day Asean summit in the Philippines as regional leaders converge for a final day of talks in Cebu on Friday. Analysts say that while some major flashpoints were addressed – with Thailand and Cambodia’s joint statement of solidarity being a bright spot – surging fuel costs as a result of the Iran war weighed heaviest on the minds of Southeast Asian leaders. The fuel crisis was the “defining issue”, said Vu Lam, an Asean observer and...

  • North Korea to move artillery capable of striking Seoul to border with South
    by Associated Press (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 3:19 am

    North Korea said on Friday it would deploy new long-range artillery systems this year that were capable of striking South Korea’s capital region and would commission its first naval destroyer in coming weeks. The announcement comes days after South Korea said the North’s newly revised constitution drops all references to Korean unification, in line with leader Kim Jong-un’s vows to terminate ties with South Korea and establish a two-state system on the Korean peninsula. Kim visited a munitions...

  • Chinese J-35 stealth jets set to give Pakistan edge over India in fifth-generation tech
    by Tom Hussain (Asia - South China Morning Post) on May 8, 2026 at 3:00 am

    A year after fending off a massive Indian air assault with the help of Chinese warplanes and missiles, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) on Thursday unveiled plans to upgrade its fleet through further acquisitions of Chengdu J-10C fighters and substantial upgrades to the JF-17s co-produced by the two allies. The PAF further confirmed that it has signed an “initial collaborative agreement” for the acquisition of fifth-generation Shenyang J-35 stealth fighter, without disclosing any details about the...