OP ED EDITORIALS & CARTOONS: Time for justice

ASEANEWS EDITORIAL & CARTOONS:

7.1.DAILY TRIBUNE-  Hot potato- DAILY TRIBUNE / – CONCEPT
– Manila’s lost glory

7.2.  Manila Bulletin – Japan needs foreign workers in many fields

e-cartoon-nov-7-2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has called on Japan’s parliament to enact a law, supported by the country’s business leaders, aimed at getting more foreign…
.
ADS by Cloud 9:
.
– SPACE RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –
.

.

 7.3. MANILA STANDARD – Time for justice

7.4  The Manila Times – NEWS: AIR POLLUTION SHORTENS LIVES BY 2 YEARS

 7.5.  The Philippine Daily Inquirer – Science and tech ‘para sa bayan’
.
7.7.  Pilipino STAR Ngayon – Maguindanao massacre
 .
7.8   The Straits Times

The Straits Times says:
Working together is the better option

Speeches aboard a cruise liner anchored off Port Moresby at the weekend have left many in the region a bit seasick. At the end of a week of Asean and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) meetings, the world’s top leaders could not summon enough common ground in their huddles to clear the fog of uncertainty generated by the increasing rivalry and competition for influence between the United States and China. It was hard to infer, at least from the speeches of US and Chinese leaders, that common ground was even being sought. Against that backdrop of escalating Sino-US tensions, US Vice-President Mike Pence made a call for Asia-Pacific nations to take sides. At the Apec CEO summit in Papua New Guinea, Mr Pence said the US offered nations a better option: It did not drown partners in a “sea of debt” or “compromise your independence”. Pouring out two years of Washington’s growing impatience with China’s trade policies and Beijing’s massive infrastructure programme – blamed for pushing unsustainable loans on recipient nations – he said: “We do not offer a constricting belt or a one-way road.”

The US argument of having provided the world with indispensable leadership over the past seven decades has come up hard against China’s declarations that it has at last stood up, and that its development experience is just as universal. President Xi Jinping, in much milder tones at the same event, defended his signature Belt and Road Initiative, saying it is not a trap designed to serve any hidden geopolitical agenda. In a tilt at US tariff policies, he branded protectionism and unilateralism as “short-sighted” and “doomed to failure”, and presented instances of China’s opening up. But the fact is that barriers do remain, and Beijing has done itself no favour by ignoring Washington’s complaint that it is coercing US companies into parting with copyrighted technology.

TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE: https://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/st-editorial/working-together-is-the-better-option

ADS by Cloud 9:
.
– SPACE RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –
.

.

All photographs, news, editorials, opinions, information, data, others have been taken from the Internet ..aseanews.net | [email protected] |.For comments, Email to :D’Equalizer | [email protected] | Contributor

It's only fair to share...Share on FacebookShare on Google+Tweet about this on TwitterEmail this to someonePrint this page