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  • Hantavirus scare exposes US-China mRNA gap

    Hantavirus scare exposes US-China mRNA gap

    In late May 2026, a dramatic incident unfolded at sea that has reframed global conversations about pandemic preparedness and biotech investment: the Dutch expedition cruise ship MV Hondius, which had been adrift for weeks amid a growing public health emergency, finally docked in Tenerife. By the time the vessel reached port, three people had died from the outbreak, and eight passengers and crew had tested positive for Andes virus, a strain of hantavirus. Critically, this is the only known hantavirus variant that can spread between people. While the World Health Organization has labeled the outbreak a serious cluster, the organization has assessed the overall global risk of widespread transmission as low.

    This small but deadly scare offers more than just a reminder of emerging pathogens; it holds a valuable lesson for global health strategy that extends far beyond hantavirus itself. When any new or little-known pathogen surfaces, public discourse too often swings to unhelpful extremes: either widespread panic or outright dismissal. Hantavirus deserves neither. While it can be lethal in symptomatic cases, it does not spread at the same rate as influenza or SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic. It is precisely this low but persistent risk that makes it a perfect case study for how countries should approach future health threats.

    The core takeaway from this incident is not that the world needs to rush a hantavirus vaccine into mass distribution immediately. Instead, it highlights that modern vaccine development platforms represent a critical form of strategic health insurance – and countries around the world are now valuing this insurance in dramatically different ways.

    Hantavirus vaccine research is still in its early stages. Biotech firm Moderna has already disclosed preclinical and early-stage work on a candidate, developed in partnership with the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases and Korea University. Still, public health experts uniformly caution that a fully approved, widely available hantavirus vaccine is likely years away without an extraordinary coordinated global push. This combination – low immediate outbreak risk, high potential catastrophic consequence, and limited commercial market incentive – is exactly the space where intentional public policy becomes indispensable.

    Against this backdrop, the growing divergence in mRNA technology strategy between China and the United States has become impossible to ignore. China has framed mRNA not merely as a short-term technology for the COVID-19 pandemic, but as a flexible, general-purpose platform that can advance everything from infectious disease control to oncology, while also supporting Beijing’s goal of biomedical sovereignty.

    Today, China’s domestic mRNA development pipeline spans multiple high-priority areas: cancer immunotherapy, influenza vaccines, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) preventives, and countermeasures for emerging pathogens. The country has steadily expanded investment in core enabling technologies, including lipid nanoparticle delivery systems and AI-assisted antigen sequence design. In 2023, China approved its first domestically developed mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, establishing a critical domestic manufacturing baseline even though the approval came after the first major global wave of the pandemic.

    The United States, by contrast, is moving in the opposite direction. In August 2025, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced it would wind down mRNA vaccine development projects administered by the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), terminating 22 separate projects that represented nearly $500 million in public investment.

    Administration officials framed the decision as a strategic redirection, arguing that public funds would be better allocated to platforms with more proven track records against upper respiratory viruses. But many leading vaccine scientists have criticized the move as a damaging strategic retreat from a transformative technology that the United States itself originally pioneered.

    This trend is not a simple narrative of China rising and America retreating. The U.S. still retains unmatched global advantages in biomedical innovation: world-leading research universities, a rigorous regulatory system, deep capital markets, and decades of advanced manufacturing expertise. It also has legitimate policy reasons to scrutinize public spending, require rigorous evidence of efficacy, and avoid framing any single technology as a cure-all.

    For its part, China still faces significant structural challenges in expanding its mRNA ecosystem: questions around regulatory credibility, transparency of clinical data, uneven global public trust, and the ongoing difficulty of translating pipeline projects into safe, effective products that gain widespread international acceptance. Still, the divergence in long-term strategic framing between the two powers is clear and consequential.

    China’s policy approach centers on a core question: how can mRNA be embedded into a sustained long-term strategy for industrial development and national health security? The U.S. approach, by contrast, centers on a different question: how much public support for mRNA remains politically and fiscally justifiable in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic? These different starting questions lead to vastly different long-term outcomes for global health.

    The deeper misstep in global discussions of mRNA is that the technology is almost always framed too narrowly. mRNA is not just a new type of vaccine. It is a programmable manufacturing platform for biological products. Once a country has established core infrastructure – reliable delivery platforms, accumulated safety data, scalable production lines, standardized quality controls, and established regulatory pathways – developing a new product for a new target can be accomplished far faster than with most traditional vaccine development approaches.

    This inherent speed does not eliminate the hard work of rigorous science. Any vaccine candidate still needs to identify the correct antigen, generate long-lasting durable immunity, prove safety through large-scale trials, and navigate clinical testing challenges that are particularly acute for rare, sporadic outbreaks. But a country that maintains a standing, robust mRNA ecosystem starts the race to counter a new threat several laps ahead of nations that treat the platform as an emergency tool to be built from scratch only after a crisis hits.

    The most productive way to frame the global mRNA conversation is to stop treating it as a narrow debate about vaccines. Instead, it is more accurately compared to the global race for semiconductor leadership. Nations do not invest billions in semiconductor design and manufacturing capacity because they know exactly which specific chips they will need a decade from now. They invest because having domestic design capacity, fabrication infrastructure, skilled talent, and resilient supply chains creates critical strategic options that can be adapted to whatever demand emerges.

    mRNA offers exactly the same kind of option value for global health. It enables faster responses to newly emerging viruses, more adaptable annual influenza vaccines, individualized cancer immunotherapies, and targeted countermeasures for threats that are too small to attract commercial investment but too dangerous to leave unaddressed.

    This is why the comparison between Chinese and U.S. strategy should not be framed as a simplistic ideological competition. Instead, it should be viewed as a lesson in institutional learning. China can learn from the U.S. model that breakthrough biomedical science depends on open inquiry, rigorous peer review, strictly controlled clinical trials, and building global public trust in data. The U.S., in turn, can learn from China that transformative platform technologies require sustained investment in long-term infrastructure, not just episodic emergency funding during acute crises.

    Both nations can benefit from the shared lesson that global biomedical leadership is not won through slogans and political posturing. It is secured through unglamorous, durable systems: a well-trained workforce, reliable public procurement pathways, transparent clinical data, flexible scalable manufacturing, and sustained public trust in health institutions.

    A balanced, effective policy approach avoids two dangerous extremes. The first is undisciplined blanket funding for every mRNA candidate, assuming all projects deserve public backing regardless of evidence. The second is a full retreat from the platform, driven by post-COVID political fatigue, unmet early expectations, or narrow metrics that obscure the broader long-term value of the ecosystem. Even the most common critique of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines – that vaccinated people could still contract and transmit the virus – misses the core point: the primary benefit of those shots was always their ability to prevent severe disease, hospitalization, and death, a goal they achieved with remarkable success.

    For countries across Asia, the implications of this divergence are immediate and actionable. Nations do not need to choose between aligning with the U.S. or Chinese model. Instead, they can pursue a middle path of building regional mRNA manufacturing capacity, participating in multinational clinical trials, requiring transparent public data from all developers, and negotiating technology partnerships that reduce dependence on any single global power. The end goal should not be divisive vaccine nationalism. It should be widespread vaccine optionality: the ability to respond rapidly to whatever threat emerges.

    It is unlikely that hantavirus will ever become the next global pandemic. In fact, the world should hope it never does. But the next unexpected pathogen, the next breakthrough cancer therapy, or the next major respiratory virus threat will test whether countries used the post-COVID years to build durable adaptive platforms – or merely spent that time re-litigating the last crisis.

    China is investing heavily as if mRNA is a core part of the world’s long-term health future. The United States would be wise to avoid treating one of its own most transformative scientific breakthroughs as nothing more than a temporary tool for wartime emergency. The real question at stake is not which country will win an mRNA race. It is whether the world will have enough trusted, distributed, and adaptable biomedical capacity when biology surprises us again. This article was written by Y. Tony Yang, an Endowed Professor at the George Washington University in Washington, DC.

  • Trump-Xi meet more about US uncertainty than China ambition

    Trump-Xi meet more about US uncertainty than China ambition

    As U.S. President Donald Trump prepares to touch down in Beijing this week for high-stakes talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the choreographed opening moments of the summit are already predictable: firm, photographed handshakes, sweeping rhetorical claims, carefully staged symbolic gestures, and mutual declarations of unlocking new “historic” economic cooperation. But behind this carefully curated diplomatic spectacle lies a far more consequential shift reshaping the geopolitical future of the Indo-Pacific.

    Donald Trump’s second term in office has not delivered a cohesive new U.S. doctrine for the Indo-Pacific. Instead, it has amplified longstanding American strategic anxieties into a louder, purely transactional approach that departs sharply from the frameworks built by his two immediate predecessors. For more than a decade, successive U.S. administrations have framed the Indo-Pacific as the global center of geopolitical gravity. Barack Obama’s “pivot to Asia” was designed to reassure regional allies that Washington recognized the region’s growing strategic weight. Joe Biden built on that foundation, expanding the framework through minilateral security pacts, technology alliances, and targeted diplomatic engagement crafted to balance China’s rise without triggering open conflict.

    Trump’s second term marks a clear break from this trajectory. While the current administration has retained most of Washington’s hard-line rhetoric toward Beijing, it has abandoned the broader diplomatic and institutional architecture that once sustained U.S. credibility across the region. Instead, the Trump 2.0 approach relies heavily on economic nationalism, repeated tariff threats, and demands for increased defense burden-sharing from allies already navigating mounting geopolitical and financial volatility. Despite the administration’s claims of strategic renewal, this strategy largely repackages long-running U.S. anxieties about China into a more confrontational doctrine centered on trade escalation, economic coercion, and increasingly inflammatory rhetoric around global great-power competition.

    This shift has left regional governments viewing Washington through an increasingly transactional lens. U.S. allies and partners face repeated calls to decouple their supply chains from China, even as they confront new American tariffs, industrial policy disputes, and growing uncertainty about the durability of long-term U.S. commitments to the region.

    This ambiguity matters deeply, because most middle powers in Asia have no interest in being forced to choose between Washington and Beijing. The vast majority of regional governments seek to retain strategic flexibility, diversified trade relationships, and stable security arrangements that avoid dividing the region into rigid, opposing blocs. Vietnam offers a clear illustration of this common regional dilemma. Over the past decade, Hanoi emerged as one of the biggest beneficiaries of global supply chain diversification, as manufacturers shifted production out of China amid escalating U.S.-China tensions. American firms were major drivers of this shift. Yet today, Washington increasingly frames Vietnam’s export growth through a narrative of “overcapacity” and industrial imbalance, even though most of Vietnam’s manufacturing sector is powered by multinational investment, not state-directed dumping. This contradiction has not been lost on regional capitals, nor has the growing gap between Washington’s military posture and its diplomatic messaging.

    The U.S. continues to carry out freedom of navigation operations in the South China Sea, deepen defense ties with regional allies, and strengthen deterrence frameworks around Taiwan. But military posturing alone does not add up to a cohesive regional strategy. Diplomatic engagement, economic integration, and institutional trust remain equally critical pillars of influence in Asia. That power vacuum is an opening Beijing has been quick to exploit. China’s leadership understands that regional influence today depends not just on naval power, but on infrastructure financing, deep trade relationships, development assistance, and increasingly, environmental diplomacy and ocean governance.

    Beijing’s bid to host the secretariat for the new UN High Seas Treaty is a perfect example of this broader strategy. China has positioned itself as a responsible steward of the global maritime commons, pledging financial support for marine conservation projects while expanding its diplomatic footprint across developing coastal states. To be sure, many regional governments remain deeply cautious of China’s strategic intentions, particularly in the South China Sea, where gray zone tactics, maritime coercion, and unresolved territorial disputes continue to erode trust. But Beijing does not need to be fully consistent in its own policies to displace American influence; it only needs to capitalize on growing perceptions of inconsistency in U.S. policy. Trump’s return to the White House has only amplified these perceptions. The administration’s focus on tariffs and economic confrontation risks undermining the very partnerships Washington needs to sustain long-term strategic competition with China.

    Regional leaders hear constant demands to align with Washington against Beijing, even as they watch the U.S. withdraw from many of the multilateral trade frameworks and regional agreements that once anchored American economic leadership in Asia. At the same time, Xi Jinping enters the upcoming summit with key advantages that extend far beyond diplomatic positioning. While China’s economy is experiencing slower growth, Beijing retains enormous leverage across regional supply chains, manufacturing networks, and infrastructure financing. It can restrict exports of critical rare earth minerals, which are essential for defense systems, electric vehicles, and a wide range of everyday modern products. It continues to invest heavily in advanced technologies, maritime capabilities, and strategic industries that will define future great-power competition.

    Xi has projected consistent policy continuity in Asia, anchored by long-term planning and institutional discipline – qualities that many regional governments value greatly, even when they remain wary of Beijing’s long-term ambitions. For instance, the Belt and Road Initiative, for all the criticism it has drawn, projects permanence through ports, railways, energy projects, and long-term financing commitments that unfold over decades. Chinese diplomacy also prioritizes patience and gradualism. Even when Beijing acts assertively in the South China Sea or the Taiwan Strait, it typically frames those actions within a broader narrative of historical continuity and national rejuvenation. This consistency holds unique weight in Asia, where political stability and policy predictability are often valued as much as ideological alignment. While many regional governments still do not fully trust Beijing, a growing number are questioning whether U.S. policy can remain durable beyond U.S. electoral cycles and the shifting priorities of individual political leaders.

    Against this backdrop, Trump’s Beijing visit carries significance that stretches far beyond bilateral U.S.-China relations. The summit will serve as a critical test of whether Washington can still articulate a broad, cohesive Indo-Pacific vision that goes beyond tariffs, confrontation, and occasional displays of military strength. It will also reveal whether the U.S. still understands that regional influence depends not just on containing China, but on offering regional partners a credible, stable, and economically attractive alternative to Beijing’s model. The core risk for Washington is not that Asia will suddenly align fully with China. It is that the region will gradually adapt to a new order where U.S. policy appears unpredictable, excessively transactional, and increasingly disconnected from the long-term economic and political realities shaping the Indo-Pacific. This kind of strategic drift would benefit Beijing far more than any joint summit communique or carefully staged diplomatic performance.

    Trump will arrive in Beijing seeking to project American strength. But most regional observers will be watching for a far more critical marker: whether the U.S. still possesses the strategic patience and political coherence required to sustain leadership in the Indo-Pacific. Right now, the answer to that question remains deeply uncertain. This analysis is contributed by James Borton, editor-in-chief of the South China Sea NewsWire, co-author of the recently released SCSNW Indo-Pacific Report, with contributions from managing editor David Hessen.

  • Police find body believed to be of fugitive Australian shooter

    Police find body believed to be of fugitive Australian shooter

    Four months after a horrific triple shooting that left three people dead — including a seven-month pregnant woman — in the small Australian outback town of Lake Cargelligo, authorities have confirmed the discovery of a body believed to be that of the prime suspect, Julian Ingram.

    The tragedy dates back to January 22, when Ingram, a local council worker who had been granted bail on prior domestic violence offences, allegedly opened fire on his ex-partner Sophie Quinn, who was expecting a child due in March, Quinn’s close friend, and Quinn’s aunt. All three died at the scene. A 19-year-old man who was also attacked in the shooting survived with serious injuries and has since been discharged from hospital, police confirmed.

    In the immediate aftermath of the killings, law enforcement launched a massive manhunt, deploying roughly 100 officers to scour the remote region surrounding Lake Cargelligo, a community of just 1,500 residents located around 450 kilometres west of Sydney. Assistant Commissioner Andrew Holland noted at the time that Ingram’s long-term work in the area had given him intimate local knowledge, allowing him to stay off the grid for an extended period. He was not spotted after the day of the shootings.

    The breakthrough came when wildlife officers conducting routine feral pest eradication operations stumbled across the remains 50 kilometres northwest of the murder site, next to an abandoned utility vehicle. On Monday, Holland told reporters that forensic and on-site checks have already linked the vehicle to Ingram. “Based on the identification evidence from the scene and the clothing the deceased was wearing, we are confident this is Julian Ingram,” Holland told reporters, according to Australian public broadcaster ABC.

    Investigators added that the body appeared to have been left at the remote location for a significant amount of time, consistent with Ingram having disappeared shortly after the January attacks. For the tight-knit community of Lake Cargelligo that has lived under the shadow of the unsolved case for months, the discovery marks a pivotal turning point. Holland said the finding brings a formal close to the active investigation, and can offer some measure of comfort to a shaken town, allowing residents to finally move forward after the tragedy.

  • Philippine VP Sara Duterte impeached for a second time

    Philippine VP Sara Duterte impeached for a second time

    In a major development reshaping Philippine politics, the House of Representatives has approved a second impeachment vote against Vice President Sara Duterte, clearing the way for a Senate trial that could permanently end her presidential ambitions for the 2028 election.

    Monday’s vote crossed the required one-third threshold easily, with 255 out of 290 attending lawmakers backing the impeachment move. The case centers on two core allegations: unauthorized misuse of public funds during Duterte’s tenure as vice president, and public threats she made against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., First Lady Liza Araneta Marcos, and former House Speaker Martin Romualdez.

    This is not the first time impeachment proceedings have been brought against Duterte on identical grounds. The first attempt in 2025 was derailed by the Philippine Supreme Court, which blocked the process on a technicality before it could reach the Senate for trial. The case was revived earlier this year, and last week a House investigative committee concluded there was enough credible evidence to support moving forward with impeachment.

    Duterte has repeatedly dismissed the proceedings as a politically motivated sham. In a formal written statement responding to the committee’s ruling, she called the case “nothing more than a scrap of paper,” and refused to participate in the committee hearings, citing what she claims is a biased, partisan process.

    The lopsided House vote is widely seen as a clear demonstration of Marcos’ retained influence over the lower chamber of Congress. Unlike House members, who are elected by individual legislative districts and typically align with the sitting president to secure patronage and resources for their constituencies, the 24-member Senate is elected nationally and has long served as a launching pad for future presidential and vice presidential candidates.

    The path to a conviction remains far from certain, however. Half of the Senate seats were up for grabs in the 2025 midterm elections, and candidates aligned with Duterte outperformed those running under Marcos’ ruling coalition. In a political system defined by shifting dynastic alliances and flexible multi-party loyalties, forecasting the outcome of an impeachment trial is exceptionally difficult.

    For Duterte, a conviction would result in immediate permanent disqualification from holding any public office, scrapping her well-publicized plan to run for president in 2028. The 47-year-old politician, daughter of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, currently holds a commanding lead in early presidential polling. A March 2026 survey by Manila-based pollster WR Numero placed her 17 percentage points ahead of her closest competitor.

    The current rift between Duterte and Marcos marks a dramatic reversal of fortune for the once-powerful political alliance that swept both into office in the 2022 national election. Duterte was originally the frontrunner to succeed her father as president in 2022, but agreed to run for vice president alongside Marcos to unify their support bases and block a rising reformist opposition. The ticket won election by a landslide, but the partnership quickly fractured as the two leaders pursued conflicting political agendas.

    Tensions boiled over after Marcos allies led by Romualdez launched an investigation into allegations of misappropriated funds in Duterte’s vice presidential office. During a fiery late-night online address at the height of the probe, Duterte openly stated she had instructed an associate that if she were killed, the associates should target Marcos, the first lady, and Romualdez.

    The relationship deteriorated further last March, when Marcos granted authority to the International Criminal Court to arrest former President Rodrigo Duterte, who is currently detained at The Hague awaiting trial on crimes against humanity charges linked to thousands of deaths during his controversial war on drugs.

  • Philippine House votes to impeach Vice President Sara Duterte

    Philippine House votes to impeach Vice President Sara Duterte

    In a major political shakeup that has sent shockwaves through the Philippines, the country’s House of Representatives delivered a historic vote on Monday, approving the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte by an overwhelming margin over a trio of serious allegations. The accusations leveled against Duterte include undeclared unexplained assets, the improper use of public government funds, and even threats to arrange the assassination of sitting President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

    Dominance of Marcos Jr.’s political allies in the lower chamber shaped the final outcome, which landed at 255 votes in favor of impeachment to just 26 votes against, with nine lawmakers choosing to abstain from the historic ballot. Two separate impeachment complaints brought against the vice president will now advance to the Philippine Senate, where the upper legislative chamber will be convened as a formal impeachment tribunal to conduct Duterte’s trial.

    Duterte, who is the daughter of former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, one of the country’s most polarizing and influential modern political figures, has issued a general denial of all wrongdoing connected to the allegations. She has not, however, addressed the specific criminal claims brought against her in any public detailed response.

    This is not the first time the vice president has faced an impeachment vote: in 2023, the House similarly advanced impeachment proceedings against her, but Duterte avoided a Senate trial after the Supreme Court ordered the attempt halted on a constitutional technicality. It remains unclear whether the new impeachment attempt will face similar legal challenges, or if the Senate tribunal will move forward to weigh the merits of the accusations against the country’s second-highest elected official.

  • France woos Anglophone Africa at a summit in Kenya

    France woos Anglophone Africa at a summit in Kenya

    As France finalizes its full military withdrawal from West African nations, a move widely interpreted as a signal of its waning traditional influence across the African continent, Paris is launching a revised model of engagement with African nations at the two-day Africa Forward Summit kicking off Monday in Nairobi, Kenya. Co-hosted by France and Kenya, this gathering marks the first time France has held such a major Africa-focused summit in an English-speaking African nation, representing a deliberate strategic shift toward expanding ties with non-Francophone countries under a new framework billed as a ‘partnership of equals’.

    For decades, France maintained a system of economic, political, and military dominance over its former African colonies, a network of influence widely known as Françafrique that included stationing thousands of French troops across the region. Growing criticism from African leaders and opposition movements, who decried the approach as condescending and overly interventionist, eventually forced Paris to pull back the bulk of its deployed forces from West Africa and the Sahel. Today, Paris is seeking to reframe its role on the continent through this new policy direction, with the recently ratified Kenya-France Defense Cooperation Agreement laying out the roadmap for its future engagement.

    More than 30 heads of state and government from across Africa, including delegations from longstanding Francophone nations, are in attendance for the summit. Arriving in Kenya a day ahead of the summit’s official opening Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron sought to soften tensions with West African leaders who pushed for France’s military exit, noting that while Paris may hold policy disagreements with some West African governments, ‘never disagrees with the people.’

    The new bilateral defense pact with Kenya, signed in October 2024 by Kenyan Defense Minister Soipan Tuya and French Ambassador to Kenya Arnaud Suquet, was ratified by Kenya’s national parliament on April 8 this year. That same month, Kenya also moved to ratify similar defense cooperation agreements with the Czech Republic, China, and Italy, part of the East African nation’s broader strategy of expanding multilateral security ties at a moment when many Sahel nations are expelling foreign military presences to reclaim full national sovereignty.

    The defense agreement has not been without controversy, however. Kenyan civil society organizations have raised sharp criticism of provisions that grant French troops broad immunity from domestic Kenyan law for on-duty offenses, a provision that echoes controversial terms in a decades-long defense pact with the United Kingdom that has left multiple serious crimes committed by British personnel against Kenyan civilians difficult to prosecute. Most notably, the 2012 murder of 21-year-old Kenyan woman Agnes Wanjiru, who was last seen in the company of a British soldier near a UK training base in central Kenya’s Nanyuki, and the 2021 deadly Lolldaiga ranch fire linked to British military training activities, have become high-profile examples of the harms caused by these broad immunity clauses. It took more than a decade for Kenyan courts to order the extradition of the British soldier charged in Wanjiru’s killing, a process delayed for years by the legal protections in the UK-Kenya defense pact.

    Defending the new agreement and Kenya’s broader strategy of security partnerships, Nelson Koech, chair of Kenya’s parliamentary defense committee, emphasized that the pacts with advanced militaries deliver tangible benefits: access to specialized military training and critical intelligence-sharing opportunities that will strengthen Kenya’s own national defense capabilities. Koech rejected claims that the agreements amount to a ‘surrender of sovereignty’, noting that updated provisions in the new pacts require foreign personnel to face Kenyan prosecution for serious violent offenses including murder. Even so, the immunity provision for most on-duty offenses remains unchanged, mirroring the controversial structure of the UK agreement. Roughly 800 French military personnel arrived in Kenya aboard a French navy ship one month ahead of the summit, the first deployment under the new defense cooperation framework.

  • Thailand’s ex-PM Thaksin released from prison

    Thailand’s ex-PM Thaksin released from prison

    Bangkok, Thailand – Thailand’s divisive and long-dominant political figure Thaksin Shinawatra walked free from Bangkok’s Klong Prem Central Prison on Monday, eight months into a one-year sentence, opening a new chapter of uncertainty for the country’s already turbulent political landscape.

    The 76-year-old former telecommunications tycoon and two-time prime minute was granted parole as part of a national early release program for elderly inmates, a decision announced by Thailand’s Department of Corrections last month. Following his release, Thaksin was fitted with a court-mandated electronic monitoring device at a local probation office, and will remain on probation until September. Under the terms of his release, he is barred from leaving Bangkok without official government approval.

    Outside the prison walls, hundreds of Thaksin’s most loyal supporters gathered in the signature red shirts that have become a symbol of his populist political movement, waiting to catch a glimpse of the leader they have backed for more than two decades. As he exited the facility, Thaksin embraced his daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra – herself a former Thai prime minister – and other family members, with supporters breaking into chants of “we love Thaksin” to welcome his release. Speaking to reporters from the back window of his car after arriving at his Bangkok residence, Thaksin said he felt “relief” after what he described as an eight-month “hibernation” behind bars.

    Thaksin’s political influence has shaped Thai politics for 20 years, positioning his populist political bloc – which evolved into the current Pheu Thai party – as the most consistent electoral force in 21st-century Thailand. Members of the Shinawatra political dynasty have held the office of prime minister four times, drawing unwavering support from working-class and rural voters across the country. For the entirety of his political career, however, Thaksin has been locked in a bitter power struggle with Thailand’s pro-military, pro-royalty conservative elite, who have long viewed his populist appeal as a direct threat to the country’s traditional social and political order.

    This long-running rivalry remains a defining factor of Thaksin’s post-prison future. Analysts note that the former prime minister still faces multiple outstanding criminal cases, a reality that may deter him from jumping back into high-profile political activism that could trigger new legal prosecution. Despite this, his release has already reshaped the dynamics of Thailand’s current ruling government, which includes Pheu Thai as a key coalition partner alongside conservative Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul.

    The road to Thaksin’s early release has been marked by controversy and public suspicion. He first returned to Thailand from 15 years of self-imposed exile in August 2023, shortly after Pheu Thai concluded negotiations to form a new ruling coalition. Upon his return, he was convicted on corruption and abuse of power charges and sentenced to eight years in prison, but was immediately transferred to a private hospital suite on purported medical grounds rather than being held in a standard prison cell. A royal pardon later reduced his sentence to one year, but the Supreme Court ruled in September 2024 that Thaksin had not suffered from a life-threatening health condition, meaning his time in the hospital could not count toward his sentence, ordering him to serve the remainder of his term behind bars.

    That unusual path to prison stoked widespread allegations of backroom deals and special treatment for Thaksin, accusations that have continued to shadow Thai politics as he re-enters public life. In February 2025, Pheu Thai turned in its worst electoral performance in the party’s modern history, sliding to third place in national voting and casting doubt on the long-term viability of the Shinawatra political dynasty. But the party’s role in Anutin’s ruling coalition has kept open the door for a potential Thaksin comeback.

    Political observers are split on what Thaksin’s release means for Thai politics moving forward. Wanwichit Boonprong, a political science lecturer, noted that for die-hard Thaksin supporters, the former prime minister’s freedom will likely give a short-term boost to Pheu Thai, as supporters see the party’s de facto leader back in public life. At the same time, he argued, Thaksin’s long-time conservative rivals will rally around Prime Minister Anutin, who holds the trust of the traditional elite that Thaksin has long challenged. Those conservatives, Wanwichit said, will push aggressively to ensure Thaksin stays on the political sidelines.

    Anutin struck a conciliatory tone with the former prime minister following his release, telling reporters he was happy for Thaksin and his family. “He returns home with a smile,” Anutin said, adding that he would not rule out a future meeting between the two leaders, noting “Bangkok is not that big. Meeting with people we know and respect is not strange.”

    Members of Thaksin’s family have pushed back against speculation that he will immediately re-enter political competition. Paetongtarn Shinawatra told reporters earlier this week that the family had not discussed political matters during their recent prison visits. Thaksin’s nephew Yodchanan Wongsawat, who led Pheu Thai’s electoral ticket in February’s vote, currently holds a cabinet position as minister of higher education in Anutin’s administration.

    Thaksin is one of more than 850 Thai inmates approved for early release under the government’s program for elderly and low-sentence prisoners, but his release is by far the most politically consequential, leaving political analysts and voters across Thailand waiting to see what the polarizing former leader will do next.

  • US national on repatriation flight tests positive for hantavirus

    US national on repatriation flight tests positive for hantavirus

    A deadly hantavirus outbreak aboard the expedition cruise ship MV Hondius has triggered a coordinated global repatriation operation, with multiple nations arranging emergency evacuations after three passengers died and new positive cases were detected among returnees. The vessel, which completed a voyage through South America, is currently anchored off the coast of Tenerife in Spain’s Canary Islands, where authorities have overseen the gradual disembarkation of more than 90 international passengers since Sunday.

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services confirmed Monday that one American national returning on a government-chartered repatriation flight tested positive for hantavirus, while a second passenger is experiencing mild symptoms consistent with the infection. Out of an abundance of caution, both patients were transported in specialized biocontainment units during the flight. All 17 U.S. citizens on the charter, plus one British national residing in the U.S. who joined the evacuation, are now undergoing comprehensive clinical assessment and further screening at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Seven additional U.S. passengers returned to the country earlier and are currently under active monitoring by public health officials in their home states. Officials from the U.S. have emphasized that the risk of a large-scale community outbreak remains extremely low.

    Three passengers have already died from complications linked to the outbreak: a Dutch couple and a German woman, two of whom have been officially confirmed to have contracted hantavirus. The Andes strain of hantavirus, which the World Health Organization (WHO) suspects infected passengers during a stop in South America, is most commonly carried by rodents, but limited human-to-human transmission is possible. Typical symptoms of infection include high fever, extreme muscle fatigue, body aches, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea and progressive shortness of breath.

    The outbreak has sparked public disagreement between global health leaders and U.S. public health officials over safety protocols. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has warned that the U.S. decision to deviate from WHO-recommended guidelines carries potential public health risks. The global health body has mandated a 42-day isolation period for all passengers disembarking the MV Hondius. However, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, acting head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), pushed back against the strict measures, saying he sought to avoid unnecessary public panic. He noted that human-to-human transmission of the virus is rare, and it should not be managed using the same strict protocols implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Photographs captured Sunday showed disembarking passengers donning full personal protective equipment, including blue medical gowns, bouffant caps and surgical face masks, as they entered the port of Granadilla de Abona in Tenerife. Multiple countries have launched their own repatriation and quarantine operations for their citizens:
    – French health authorities confirmed a French passenger who returned to Paris tested positive for hantavirus, and is currently in isolation as her health condition deteriorates. She was one of five French nationals on board the ship, and contact tracers have already identified 22 close contacts who are being monitored.
    – A charter flight carrying 20 British nationals landed at Manchester Airport on Sunday, with all passengers transported to Arrowe Park Hospital in Merseyside for a 72-hour precautionary isolation period. No passengers have reported symptoms so far, though two other British citizens with confirmed hantavirus are receiving treatment in the Netherlands and South Africa respectively.
    – Fourteen Spanish nationals repatriated to Madrid are currently undergoing mandatory quarantine at a military hospital, with two additional evacuation flights scheduled for Monday afternoon.
    – A separate flight carrying 26 passengers and crew, including eight Dutch nationals, landed in the Netherlands on Sunday. Six passengers are scheduled to travel to Australia, while another 18 will be repatriated to the Netherlands on additional flights. Both of these final flights will also carry passengers from other nations that did not arrange their own independent repatriation missions.

  • BBC tours England and Argentina’s World Cup training grounds

    BBC tours England and Argentina’s World Cup training grounds

    As the 2022 FIFA World Cup approaches, British Broadcasting Corporation has launched an exclusive on-the-ground reporting series that takes football fans behind the scenes of competing nations’ pre-tournament preparation, with a focus on the training facilities built for two leading contenders: England and Argentina.

    In the first installment of the series, BBC sport correspondent Will Grant traveled to Kansas City to inspect and test the playing surface that will serve as England’s primary training base when the Three Lions enter camp ahead of their World Cup campaign. England, captained by star striker Harry Kane who is chasing his first major international trophy following the team’s 2018 World Cup semi-final finish and 2020 European Championship runner-up finish, is widely regarded as one of the top contenders to lift the trophy in Qatar.

    The on-site report from Kansas City gives fans an early look at the conditions the team will experience as they build match fitness and tactical cohesion ahead of their opening group stage match. The BBC also confirmed that additional reporting from Argentina’s secluded training grounds will follow in coming days, giving supporters of both global football powerhouses unprecedented access to their pre-tournament preparations that are typically closed off to the general public.

    For football fans around the world, this behind-the-scenes access builds anticipation for the start of the tournament, offering unique insight into the work that goes into preparing a top national side for the biggest stage in global football.

  • Healthcare heavyweight CSL plunges to nine-year low, dragging down the ASX

    Healthcare heavyweight CSL plunges to nine-year low, dragging down the ASX

    On a volatile trading session for Australia’s equity markets, two separate events combined to push benchmark indexes lower: a sharp selloff in the healthcare sector driven by a major biotech firm’s impairment announcement, and a sudden jump in global oil prices triggered by a social media post from former US President Donald Trump derailing hopes of a Middle East peace breakthrough.

    The benchmark ASX 200 closed 42.60 points, or 0.49%, lower at 8701.80, while the broader All Ordinaries index retreated 38.10 points, or 0.42%, to settle at 8942.40. Eight of the 11 tracked market sectors finished the day in negative territory, with only the energy and mining sectors bucking the downward trend. The Australian dollar edged slightly higher, gaining 0.08% to trade at 72.38 US cents by market close.

    The single biggest drag on the market came from the healthcare sector, which plummeted 6.47% overall following a major announcement from CSL, the sector’s largest Australian-listed heavyweight. The global biotech firm revealed in a 90-day operational review that it would record an additional $US5 billion ($A6.9 billion) in non-cash impairment, on top of the $US1.5 billion impairment it already recognized during its first-half financial results. The news sent CSL shares tumbling 15.96% to $100.75, marking one of the worst single-day trading performances in the company’s history and pushing the stock to a near nine-year low. Other healthcare stocks also felt the spillover: Sigma Healthcare slid 0.35% to $2.84, and New Zealand-based medical device manufacturer Fisher & Paykel dropped 0.21% to $28.94.

    Adding further downward pressure on Australian equities was a sudden surge in global crude oil prices, sparked by a post on Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform that rejected a proposed peace framework with Iran. In the post, Trump wrote, “I have just read the response from Iran’s so-called ‘Representatives.’ I don’t like it – TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE.” The blunt dismissal of progress in negotiations immediately roiled energy markets, where pricing has long been highly sensitive to geopolitical instability in major oil-producing Middle Eastern regions. By the close of global trading, Brent Crude surged 3.9% to settle at $US105 ($A145) per barrel, while U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate climbed 4.6% to hit $US99.78 ($A138) per barrel.

    Josh Gilbert, lead APAC analyst for global investment platform eToro, explained that oil volatility will remain tied directly to diplomatic developments in the region for the foreseeable future. “The core issue is still firmly on the table, which is that the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed, and every failed negotiation is a reminder that there is no quick fix to the biggest supply disruption in history,” Gilbert noted. “We continue to see strong swings in the oil price, and that’s unlikely to change in the near term.”

    Against the broader market downturn, a handful of sectors posted solid gains. Australia’s largest iron ore miners outperformed, even amid the oil price shock: BHP closed 0.66% higher at $58.33, Rio Tinto gained 0.60% to $179.79, and Fortescue Metals rose 0.71% to $21.42. The energy sector also closed in positive territory, led by a rally among Australian uranium producers: Paladin Energy jumped 5.76% to $13.21, Deep Yellow gained 4.62% to $1.81, and Boss Energy climbed 6.47% to $1.48.

    Several individual companies posted strong gains on the back of positive corporate announcements. Metcash, a leading Australian wholesaler of food, liquor and hardware, surged 6.57% to $2.92 after it upgraded its full-year underlying net profit after tax guidance to a range of $268 million to $270 million. Out-of-home advertising firm oOh!media also rallied 7.1% to $1.35 after confirming it had received an unsolicited takeover proposal from U.S.-based infrastructure investment firm I Squared Capital. Among banking stocks, ANZ fell 0.17% to $35.90 as the lender went ex-dividend for its partially franked interim dividend of 83 cents per share, which will be paid out to registered shareholders in the coming weeks.