All Asia Pacific
- How do you say Taj Mahal in Chinese? India seeks touristsNearly six times more Indian tourists travel to China than vice versa. The Indian government is rolling out a tourism campaign in Chinese cities, but faces public skepticism.
- Tiananmen 25 years later: 'People loved the students because the students loved China'The killing of 900 to 2,000 people mostly happened on side streets and was a shock to supporters who rallied behind the students.
- On Tiananmen anniversary, students sent on mandatory 'free trip' to Inner MongoliaOfficial efforts to scrub the Tiananmen Square massacre from memory – and keep foreigners away from the site – has led to some bizarre incidents.
- Tiananmen protests: Could they happen again?Harsh security on the anniversary of the pro-democracy protest suggests deep official concern about any potential unrest. But many Chinese don't know what happened – and may not care.
- A Tiananmen democracy museum on Chinese soil? Only in Hong KongA museum in Hong Kong marks the 1989 student-led protests in Beijing that ended with a military crackdown on June 3-4. The events remain taboo elsewhere in China.
- Shangri-la Dialogue no paradise as China and US trade barbsChinese Army Gen. Wang Guanzhong returned fire at US and Japanese criticisms over his country's provocative actions in the South China Sea at a conference in Singapore today.
- FocusWant to unwind Thailand's coup? Look to palace politicsUnderlying political gridlock is concern over who will replace King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the world’s longest reigning monarch.
- FocusProperty rights + middle class = democracy? Not in ThailandFor many Thais, the military coup last week was a familiar scene. Although Thailand has had 12 successful coups, this one is a sharper turn, with a stronger ideological element.
- Why is North Korea offering to investigate the fate of abducted Japanese?The North has never accounted for all the Japanese citizens it kidnapped in the 1970s and '80s to help train spies. It wants Japan to lift sanctions and provide humanitarian aid.
- In jab at China, Japan's Abe promises stronger security role in AsiaPrime Minister Abe vowed to support southeast Asian countries embroiled in territory disputes with China. Japan will send Coast Guard ships to Vietnam, the Philippines, and Indonesia.Â
- Orwell's '1984' suddenly fashionable on Bangkok streetsInstead of raucous street protests, demonstrators in Thailand silently read '1984' and other dystopian novels, taking a dig at the junta that seized power last week.
- Indonesia smear campaign nips at election frontrunner Joko WidodoA social media campaign is circulating rumors that the popular Jakarta governor is an ethnic Chinese º£½Ç´óÉñ. The majority Muslim country holds presidential elections in July.
- Wedding tourism in Taiwan: lots of flash, little cashThousands of couples from Hong Kong to Australia are staging cheaper and more elaborate weddings in Taiwan. Photo shoots are especially popular.
- Nice monster! New 'Godzilla' fuses American and Japanese beastsHow a monster spawned by a nuclear blast in the depths came to enthrall a nation.
- China vows to crackdown on 'dead-end terrorists.' Will it work?Four attacks on Chinese citizens in recent months have been traced to China's restive Xinjiang region. Beijing wants international recognition that the threat is terrorism.
- S. Korea president cuts coast guard as pressure on government mountsPresident Park Geun-hye apologized on national television Monday. There are questions over how the coast guard, which is still running a search mission at the ferry, will be dismantled.Â
- The ExplainerSea turtles, cannons, and arrests: What's going on in the South China Sea?China is embroiled in territorial disputes over an oil rig close to Vietnam and the arrest of Chinese fishermen in the Philippines, alarming its Southeast Asian neighbors.
- Interfaith couple tests limits of Buddhist tolerance in MyanmarFive years ago, a Buddhist converted to marry a Muslim in Myanmar's conflict-torn Rakhine State. He now hides his prior identity due to the threat of retribution by majority Buddhists.
- Amid controversy, Japan weighs reinterpreting its pacifist ConstitutionJapan's postwar Constitution renounced war as a right. An advisory group to Prime Minister Abe will suggest amendments Tuesday to enable Japan to militarily defend its interests and those of allies.
- Thai PM faces impeachment, a day after being forced to quitThailand's anticorruption agency indicted Yingluck Shinawatra, a day after her court-ordered resignation. The rulings narrow the already slim space for political compromise.