| Titre | Asia Sentinel |
|---|---|
| Langue | anglais |
| Pays, continent | Hong Kong SAR Chine, Asie |
| Editeur | Asia Sentinel, Hong Kong |
| Périodicité | journalière |
| Editions | électronique |
| Site web | http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php |
A tiny political organization supports the Rohingya The Democracy and Human Rights Party, one of the smallest registered ones in Myanmar’s Nov. 8 general elections, is the only party willing to represent Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslims, (...)
Ethnic strife, communal violence, drive refuges from Bangladesh, Pakistan While Europe faces a massive human refugee flow from civil strife and wars in Syria, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan, India’s northeastern region, particularly the state of (...)
The junta writes a document tailored to its own interests and little else Thailand’s new proposed constitution, released last week by the junta’s Constitution Drafting Committee, is pretty much as expected. The 20th since 1932, it is a clear (...)
What causes adherents of a purportedly peaceful belief system to explode into savagery ? Some of the most horrific news to have come out of Asia lately has been the plight of the Rohingya, Muslims in Myanmar’s Rakhine province who have been (...)
India’s prime minister Narendra Modi is today suffering the biggest defeat of his political career with his Bharatiya Janata Party being routed in elections for the Delhi state-level assembly. The Aam Aadmi or common man party has swept the (...)
Opinion : monarchists are out of touch and one self-exiled Thai woman says, ‘Enough !’ I have often asked myself why Thai royalists are so blindsided, so irrational and so acrimonious whenever anyone with a free-spirit questions the high-flying (...)
Prayuth consolidates power, settles in for a long reign With the dust now settling from Thailand’s 13th coup, unless outraged citizens take to the streets again to oust the military, as they have in the past, it is quite likely that Gen. Prayuth (...)
The general ain’t goin’ nowhere More than a week into the military’s takeover of Thailand, during which martial law soon became a full-blown coup, it seems that Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the army commander, believes that only his forces can run the (...)
Court orders embattled premier to step down, ratcheting up tensions yet again The court-ordered ouster of Thailand’s caretaker Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra on Wednesday opens a new and dangerous chapter in the implacable eight-year (...)
How did Thailand’s progressive middle class end up calling for an end to democracy ? It would be hard to imagine another country anywhere that would see thousands of well-educated and seemingly middle-class people march to the streets demanding (...)