Brunei and China have a bright future of cooperation in vocational education, senior officials from both countries said here on Wednesday (Aug 19).
Clearing Al-Jazeera’s Smokescreen—and Qatar’s | Opinion
Their spokesman previously denounced Koduvayur’s suggestion that TRT’s precedent demands Al Jazeera register as “erroneous claims and tired, false narratives [that] are part of the aggressive lobbying …
Suspected bubonic plague case in Mongolia tests negative
A suspected case of bubonic plague in Mongolia’ Khovd province was declared negative, authorities said on Thursday. The samples were taken from a 37-year-old resident of Tsetseg soum, who was taken to …
Another unity government won’t solve Lebanon’s crisis
Lebanon’s government resigned on Aug. 10, days after a massive explosion at the Port of Beirut left hundreds dead and hundreds of thousands displaced from their homes. The blast appears to have …
Analysis: UAE-Israel ties may get Abu Dhabi advanced weapons
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — A U.S.-brokered deal that saw Israel and the United Arab Emirates begin to open diplomatic ties may end up with Abu Dhabi purchasing advanced American …
Southend United: Barnsley winger Jordan Green joins on six-month loan
Southend have signed Barnsley winger Jordan Green on loan for six months. Green, 25, is new manager Mark Molesley’s first signing since he took charge earlier this month. Ex-Bournemouth trainee Green …
There’s no covid-19 in Syria’s worst refugee camp. That may be about to change.
It protected them from the added calamity of a covid-19 outbreak. Now, however, Jordan is deporting its Syrian refugees directly into Rukban, some of whom could be bringing the virus back to their …
UNICEF: Conflict in Syria forces children into child labour
Nearly five million children have been born in Syria since the civil war began, nine years ago. The conflict has had a devastating effect on their lives, with many forced to drop out of school to …
North Korea sets rare party meeting after economic shortfall
With unusual candor, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un admitted that U.S.-led sanctions, the pandemic and devastating floods have hurt his country’s dismal economy as his ruling party scheduled a rare …
North Korea’s Leader Had Big Economic Plans. He Admits They’ve Failed.
Kim Jong-un’s blunt assessment led his country to plan a rare Workers’ Party congress for January to chart a new course after the country was hammered by sanctions, floods and the pandemic.