OP ED EDITORIALS & CARTOONS: …. Flood control funds

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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…
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 7.3. MANILA STANDARD –  Symbolic unity in Epiphany

7.4  The Manila Times – ….INFLATION DOWN TO 5.1%

 7.5.  The Philippine Daily Inquirer –
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7.7.  Pilipino STAR Ngayon –  Landslide-prone areas, tukuyin

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7.8   The Straits Times

The Straits Times says:

Walking the talk on Korean peace deal

The world has come to look expectantly each time there is a New Year’s Day address by North Korea’s leader, Mr Kim Jong Un. Two years ago, his speech indicated the imminent test of an intercontinental ballistic missile. Last year, it was about the diplomatic opening that followed back-channel conversations with Washington and Seoul. This year, aside from the fact that the Kim dynast surprised many by appearing in a lounge suit and speaking in the informal setting of his library, there was not much by way of hard news in what was a long and rambling speech. Had US President Donald Trump readied his Twitter handle to prepare a sturdy response to any possible Kim threats, he would have been disappointed.

The speech nevertheless merits careful reading. First, it indicates how much of a worry the North Korean economy is for Mr Kim. Reams of socialist-language prose were dedicated to exhortations on improving coal and electricity production, supporting farm workers, and promoting metallurgy and chemicals for realising the Juche state ideology that drives the country. Along with this came a surprising renewed commitment to nuclear energy and signals, in classic Kim fashion, that he was willing to reopen the Kaesong industrial complex – not because the North desperately needed the jobs and the money, but “in consideration of the hard condition of business persons from the southern side”.

TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE:
https://www.straitstimes.com/opinion/st-editorial/walking-the-talk-on-korean-peace-deal

9.0  Bangkok Post –  Populism casts shadow over Thai politics – By Soonruth Bunyamnee, Deputy Editor
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