Asia
Suspect who bought a new face to evade justice is held captured
Man accused of Lindsay Hawker's murder is caught, despite plastic surgery
Inside Asia
US 'wants to guard Pakistan's nuclear arsenal'
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
Concern that weapons could fall into enemy hands prompted drastic plan, claims 'New Yorker' report
North and South Korea clash on the high seas
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
US envoy to visit Pyongyang for rare one-on-one talks with reclusive communist regime
Thai fury as Thaksin starts Cambodian job
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
The Former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, wanted at home for a conviction on corruption charges, arrived in Cambodia yesterday to take up a government job offer that has set off a diplomatic row with Bangkok.
Murdered teacher's father hails Japanese arrest
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
The main suspect in the murder of British teacher Lindsay Hawker has been arrested by Japanese police.
Korean navies clash ahead of Obama visit
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
North and South Korea's navies clashed briefly in the Yellow Sea today, just ahead of a visit to Asia this week by US President Barack Obama, in an incident that left a northern vessel damaged.
Couture, Karachi-style
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Forget the Taliban, think tailoring. Andrew Buncombe and Omar Waraich discover a silkier side to Pakistan
North Korea's reclusive dictator 'has six luxurious armoured trains'
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il – known for shunning air travel – has six luxurious trains equipped with reception halls, conference rooms and hi-tech communication facilities, a South Korean newspaper reported yesterday.
Fertility crisis in Japan: let the state find you a mate
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
A fertility crisis has forced local authorities in Japan to go into the lonely hearts business
China executes nine people over riots that left 200 dead
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Nine men have been executed for participating in violent ethnic riots in China's mainly Muslim north-west that left nearly 200 people dead.
Obama likely to send only 30,000 more troops
Monday, 9 November 2009
The US administration is likely to announce the dispatch of at least 30,000 troops to Afghanistan, amid increasing calls in Britain for a withdrawal from the war in the face of a rising death toll. The announcement that the 200th and 201st members of the British forces have been killed in combat in the conflict – the eighth in five days – came on Remembrance Sunday, with public figures in the UK questioning further involvement and yet another opinion poll showing a majority want our troops pulled out.
EDITOR'S CHOICE
Most popular in World News
Read
1 Youth trapped on ice floe forced to shoot polar bear
3 Fertility crisis in Japan: let the state find you a mate
4 The Fall of the Wall: 20 Years On
5 Tensions grow as Chavez masses troops on border
6 Oxford-based 'guru' accused of torturing French aristocrats
7 Murdered teacher's father hails Japanese arrest
8 Mark Hughes in Baltimore: The trials of 'Baltimore's Boris'
9 Korean navies clash ahead of Obama visit
10 Exclusive: The unseen photographs that throw new light on the First World War
Emailed
1 Youth trapped on ice floe forced to shoot polar bear
2 Oxford-based 'guru' accused of torturing French aristocrats
3 UN attempts to slow the new scramble for Africa
4
5 Fertility crisis in Japan: let the state find you a mate
6 Dictator's wife defiant over forced adoptions
7 Korean navies clash ahead of Obama visit
8 Terror from the skies: Manhattan's nightmare revisited
Commented
1'Big Brother' database cancelled by ministers
2Labour forces secret inquests Bill through the Commons
3Last Night's Television - Collision, ITV1; The Execution of Gary Glitter, Channel 4
4Dominic Lawson: The only options are to double up in Afghanistan or leave
5Demands grow for 'weapon dogs' to be brought to heel
6Youth trapped on ice floe forced to shoot polar bear
7Dead soldier's mother confronts PM over lack of equipment
8Tensions grow as Chavez masses troops on border
Columnist Comments
• Mary Dejevsky: Cool realism is a political virtue, too
No ideological vision could have replaced sound judgement in 1989
• Terence Blacker: Reality TV police shows are criminal
For half an hour, the real world is presented in black-and-white terms
• Dominic Lawson: The only options are to double up in Afghanistan or leave
At a risk of sounding callous, the number of casualties is actually small for a war
