Latest update: 05/12/2011 

- espionage - Fukushima - Japan - NATO - Pakistan - South Korea - USA


Pakistan/US: heading for a break-up?

Anger reaches fever pitch on the streets of Pakistan after a NATO attack killed two dozen of its soldiers. How will Washington salvage ties? Meanwhile, the operator of Japan's damaged Fukushima plant says the meltdown may be worse than it first thought - an eyewitness report takes us to the heart of the damage. Finally, we head to South Korea where the state offers substantial rewards to people who grass up law-breakers.

Row over Dalai Lama-Obama meeting
21/02/2010 - THE WEEK IN ASIA

Row over Dalai Lama-Obama meeting

In this edition: the Dalai Lama's visit to the United States sparks controversy in China, but mixed emotions among the US Tibetan community; tension in Thailand as the country awaits a court ruling on its fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra; and as millions celebrate the start of the Year of the Tiger, there are claims a Thai sanctuary set up to protect the species is doing more harm than good.
Cold kills livestock in Mongolia, hunger expected
14/02/2010 - THE WEEK IN ASIA

Cold kills livestock in Mongolia, hunger expected

In this edition: five years on, survivors of a deadly earthquake in Pakistan are still living in squalor; freezing temperatures in Mongolia have killed hundreds of thousands of livestock, pushing many people to the brink of starvation; and it's been a turbulent few weeks for the world's biggest carmaker, nowhere more keenly felt than in Toyota city.
Beijing's anger with Washington
07/02/2010 - THE WEEK IN ASIA

Beijing's anger with Washington

In this edition: as a chill descends on relations between Beijing and Washington, an imminent visit to the United States by the Dalai Lama is unlikely to help; five years after a tsunami which killed tens of thousands, we ask if foreign aid has helped rebuild lives in Sri Lanka; and we meet a counterfeit expert who builds fake Ferraris out of a shed in Bangkok.
Taliban strike at the heart of Kabul
24/01/2010 - THE WEEK IN ASIA

Taliban strike at the heart of Kabul

In this edition of the Week in Asia: Stolen UN cargo turns up at a marketplace in Pakistan, a special report from our correspondent in Peshawar. China's hidden homosexuals, the wives of men still in the closet share their pain online, and why Indian women have been getting a rough ride on the country's public transport system.
Land seizures in China push farmers into despair
17/01/2010 - THE WEEK IN ASIA

Land seizures in China push farmers into despair

This week: Sri Lanka gears up for an early election with the president and an army general battling it out to take credit for defeating the tamil tiger rebels, in China, people fear for their homes amid a mass land seizure programme dogged by corruption, and in India why no one wants to climb palm trees and collect the coconuts.

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