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🇳🇵 Nepal Ex-PM Oli Released After 12 Days

Former Nepali prime minister K.P. Sharma Oli and former interior minister Ramesh Lekhak were released from police custody on April 9, after 12 days of detention. Kathmandu police spokesman Pawan Kumar Bhattarai confirmed both men were handed to their relatives on condition they present themselves to police when required.

Oli and Lekhak were arrested on March 28 in connection with a deadly crackdown on protesters during the September 2025 uprising that brought down Oli's government. An inquiry commission had recommended prosecuting Oli and other officials, concluding their claims of ignorance about the violence amounted to criminal negligence.

Neither man has been formally charged, and both deny responsibility for the deaths. Nepal's Supreme Court dismissed habeas corpus petitions filed by their wives but ordered authorities to complete the investigation without additional extensions of detention.

#Nepal

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🇮🇷🇵🇰 Iran Delegation Arrives for Islamabad Talks

An Iranian delegation arrived in Islamabad on Thursday ahead of Pakistan-brokered talks with the United States scheduled for the weekend. Iran's ambassador to Pakistan, Reza Amiri Moghadam, confirmed the delegation's arrival and said discussions would be based on ten points proposed by Iran.

The White House stated that US Vice President JD Vance would lead the American side in negotiations in Islamabad. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif extended the invitation to Iran despite what Moghadam described as repeated ceasefire violations by Israel.

Islamabad authorities declared local holidays across the capital for several days beginning Wednesday, citing no specific reason. Essential services including police, hospitals, and utilities were ordered to remain operational during the period.

#Iran #Pakistan #USA

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🇨🇳🇹🇼 China Naval Presence Doubles Near Taiwan

Two Taiwanese security officials told Reuters that China has deployed nearly 100 vessels — naval and coast guard — in and around the South and East China Seas this week, up from a typical deployment of 50–60 ships. Intelligence reports reviewed by Reuters corroborated the figures, showing the increase progressed from roughly 70 vessels at the end of March.

Taiwan's Defence Minister Wellington Koo told lawmakers that China is continuously expanding its military capabilities and that the threat to Taiwan is becoming increasingly severe. Koo also stated that Taiwan must demonstrate its resolve to defend itself to the United States and other partners, citing risks if that resolve were doubted.

China also declared reserved airspace off its eastern coast from March 27 to May 5, roughly a week before a planned Trump-Xi meeting. Taiwan's National Security Bureau head Tsai Ming-yen said the measure may be intended to test the frequency of US aircraft operations in the Indo-Pacific ahead of that summit.

#China #Taiwan

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🇲🇲 Min Aung Hlaing Sworn In as Myanmar President

Former military chief Min Aung Hlaing was sworn in as president of Myanmar on April 10, completing a transition from junta rule to a military-led civilian government more than five years after he seized power in a 2021 coup. He received 429 of 586 parliamentary votes on April 3, with the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party and military appointees holding roughly 86 percent of seats.

Min Aung Hlaing stepped down as commander-in-chief on March 30 to comply with the 2008 Constitution, which bars serving military officers from the presidency. He handed command of the armed forces to Gen. Ye Win Oo, the former military intelligence chief who organized the arrests during the February 2021 coup. A 30-member Cabinet, composed predominantly of active or former senior military officers, was formed and approved by parliament on inauguration day.

China, Russia, Cambodia, and Thailand offered congratulations following Min Aung Hlaing's election. Western nations and Myanmar's opposition forces dismissed the transition as a means of legitimizing permanent military rule. Aung San Suu Kyi remains in detention and her National League for Democracy party has been dissolved.

#Myanmar

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🇨🇳 China Plans South China Sea Rocket Launch

China's Jielong-3 rocket is scheduled to lift off at 7:30pm Saturday from the Dong Fang Hang Tian Gang, a converted barge operating in international waters of the South China Sea. The 31-metre solid-fuelled rocket was developed by the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology for commercial missions.

The launch marks the Jielong-3's first long-distance, cross-sea deployment, having travelled from Haiyang in Shandong province to the South China Sea. Since its maiden flight in 2022, the rocket has conducted 10 sea launches from near-coastal waters in the Yellow Sea and South China Sea.

Launching from the South China Sea offers lower-latitude advantages, including an additional velocity boost from Earth's rotation and a wider debris drop zone away from populated areas. A US aerospace analyst noted that sea launches are gaining broader attention as land-based spaceports face capacity constraints from increasing flight rates.

#China

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🇰🇵🇨🇳 Wang Yi Visits Pyongyang, Bilateral Ties Pledged

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi held talks in Pyongyang with North Korean Foreign Minister Choe Son-hui on Thursday during a two-day visit to the country — his first in more than six years. Choe told Wang that bilateral ties had advanced to a higher level following a summit between Kim Jong-un and Xi Jinping in Beijing last year.

The two ministers agreed to increase exchanges and cooperation to mark the 65th anniversary of the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, and to strengthen coordination between their foreign policy bodies. Wang stated that China's intention to safeguard and develop the bilateral relationship would remain firm regardless of changes in the international situation.

At a banquet later on Thursday, Wang referred to what he described as a plot of isolation and pressure by the United States and other Western forces, noting North Korea had made new achievements in that context. China's Xinhua News Agency separately reported that Wang paid tribute to graves of Chinese soldiers in Pyongyang who died during the 1950–53 Korean War.

#NorthKorea #China

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🇰🇷🇯🇵 Seoul Summons Japanese Diplomat Over Dokdo Claim

South Korea's foreign ministry summoned Hirotaka Matsuo, deputy chief of mission at the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, to lodge a formal complaint after Japan renewed its territorial claim to the Dokdo islets in its annual Diplomatic Bluebook. Kim Sang-hoon, director general for Asia-Pacific affairs, delivered the protest in person.

Japan's Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi submitted the bluebook to a Cabinet meeting on Friday. The document claimed Dokdo as Japanese territory and accused South Korea of continuing illegal occupation of the islets by stationing security forces there.

Seoul's foreign ministry issued a statement strongly protesting the claim and urging its immediate withdrawal, asserting that Dokdo is South Korea's territory under international law, history, and geography. South Korea maintains a small police detachment on the islets and exercises effective control over them.

#SouthKorea #Japan

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🇰🇷🇮🇷 Korea Adviser: Hormuz Transit Still Disrupted

South Korea's National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac stated at a press briefing in Seoul that vessel crossings through the Strait of Hormuz have not increased significantly since a US-Iran ceasefire was agreed on Tuesday. Wi said supply chain uncertainty is likely to persist for the time being.

Wi noted that approximately 2,000 vessels remain trapped in the strait, and a simultaneous departure could take considerable time and create difficulties in securing safe routes. The South Korean government is communicating with relevant countries to ensure the safety of ships and crew.

Twenty-six Korean-flagged vessels remain stranded in the strait. Seoul pledged to continue efforts to secure alternative supplies of crude oil and naphtha and to identify alternative shipping lanes.

#SouthKorea #Iran

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🇨🇳🇯🇵 China-Japan Flight Cancellations Rise in March

According to flight tracking data cited by Yicai on April 10, 53 China-Japan routes saw all scheduled flights cancelled in March, an increase from the number of routes affected in February. The overall cancellation rate for mainland China-bound flights to Japan reached 49.6% across the month.

A total of 2,691 flights from mainland China to Japan were cancelled in March, with the cancellation rate rising 1.1 percentage points compared to February. Beijing Daxing International Airport recorded the highest number of cancelled Japan-bound flights of any Chinese airport during the period.

Daxing Airport cancelled all 125 scheduled flights to Osaka Kansai Airport, resulting in a 100% cancellation rate on that route. The figures cover the period when Japan entered its cherry blossom season.

#China #Japan

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🇯🇵🇨🇳 Japan Downgrades China in Diplomatic Bluebook

Japan's 2026 diplomatic bluebook, presented to cabinet by Foreign Minister Motegi Toshimitsu on April 10, reclassified China from "most important bilateral relationship" to "important neighboring country." The diplomatic bluebook covers Japan's foreign policy and international situation for 2025.

China's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning attributed the current state of bilateral relations to remarks on Taiwan made by Japanese Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae, stating those remarks undermined the political foundation of China-Japan relations and challenged the postwar international order.

Mao Ning called on Japan to uphold the four China-Japan political documents and its own commitments, and to take concrete action to preserve the political basis of the relationship.

#Japan #China

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🇰🇿 Asian States Eye Kazakhstan Oil Amid Constraints

South Korea, Japan, and Bangladesh are among the Asian importers seeking Kazakh oil supplies as Middle East conflict disrupts traditional energy routes. Kazakhstan has drawn renewed interest from buyers looking to diversify away from affected sources.

Despite the demand, analysts indicate that capacity limitations, geography, and infrastructure bottlenecks are restricting Kazakhstan's ability to expand exports. The country's landlocked position and reliance on existing transit corridors present structural barriers to scaling up delivery volumes.

The gap between interest from Asian buyers and Kazakhstan's actual export potential reflects the physical constraints facing Central Asian energy producers. No timeline or specific supply agreements have been announced.

#Kazakhstan #SouthKorea #Japan

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🇰🇷🇰🇵 South Korea Reopens Border Rail Station

South Korea resumed tourist rail service to Dorasan Station in the border city of Paju on April 10, for the first time in over six years. The station, the northernmost point of South Korea's rail network, had been closed since late 2019 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dorasan Station was established following a 2000 inter-Korean summit and once served freight trains carrying goods to and from the Kaesong Industrial Complex, a jointly operated factory park in North Korea shut down in 2016. Unification Minister Chung Dong-young described the resumption as a starting point toward establishing everyday peace on the Korean Peninsula.

The train, named "DMZ Peace Link," departs from Seoul Station and runs to Dorasan Station twice a month through May, expanding to every Friday from June. South Korea's unification ministry, municipalities, and the rail agency plan to add further tourist destinations near the station.

#SouthKorea #NorthKorea

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🇨🇳🇮🇷 Intel: China to Supply Iran Air Defense

US intelligence indicates China is preparing to deliver Man-Portable Air Defense Systems to Iran within weeks, according to CNN reporting cited by Bloomberg. MANPADS are shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles operable by a single person and designed for easy transport and concealment.

China's embassy spokesperson in Washington rejected the claim, telling CNN that China had not supplied weapons to any party in the conflict and that the information was false.

The reported transfer would raise questions about China's role given that China had previously been reported to have helped broker a two-week ceasefire between the US and Iran. China neither confirmed nor denied its role in that mediation.

#China #Iran

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🇨🇳🇹🇼 PLA Flies 17 Sorties During Xi-KMT Talks

Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense reported 17 sorties of People's Liberation Army aircraft and eight naval and government vessels operating near the Taiwan Strait in the 24-hour period ending April 12. Of those sorties, 15 crossed the median line, entering northern and southwestern airspace.

The bulk of the activity occurred on April 11, when 12 combat aircraft crossed into northern airspace between 08:35 and 13:15, followed by four additional sorties in the strait itself, two of which also crossed the median line. Taiwan's military responded by deploying mission aircraft, vessels, and shore-based missile systems to monitor and manage the situation.

The activity coincided with Xi Jinping's meeting in Beijing with Kuomintang chairperson Cheng Li-wun, during which both sides aligned closely on the 1992 Consensus and opposition to Taiwan independence. Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council deputy minister Shen Yu-chung told media that using military pressure alongside political outreach had long been Beijing's standard approach.

#China #Taiwan

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🇯🇵 Japan Approves $4bn More for Rapidus

Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry approved an additional 631.5 billion yen in development funding for state-backed chipmaker Rapidus on April 11. The disbursement brings total government support for Rapidus to 2.35 trillion yen.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has underlined the need for greater investment in areas critical to national security, citing risks including recent Sino-Japanese tensions. Rapidus, established in 2022, is targeting mass production of 2-nanometer chips in the second half of fiscal 2027.

The industry ministry also extended financial support to Fujitsu and IBM Japan, with the intention of having them outsource production of energy-efficient AI chips to Rapidus.

#Japan

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🇮🇩🇷🇺 Prabowo to Visit Russia, Meet Putin

Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto is set to depart for Russia within days, with a meeting with President Vladimir Putin expected during the upcoming visit, Indonesia's Foreign Minister Sugiono said on Saturday.

Sugiono said the talks would cover the potential for Indonesia to purchase Russian oil as an alternative supply source amid a global crunch linked to the Iran war.

The Kremlin previously confirmed that contacts between the two leaders were being prepared, without specifying a timeline.

#Indonesia #Russia

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🇰🇷🇨🇳 Samsung Weighs Retreat From China Markets

Samsung Electronics is considering a broad China business restructuring, potentially exiting home appliances and displays while retaining smartphones and semiconductor storage as core units, according to Chinese outlet Yicai citing industry sources. One source told the South China Morning Post that Samsung could transfer home appliance distribution to local partners while keeping manufacturing operations in place.

The company has already begun job cuts in some underperforming divisions. Samsung invested 465.4 billion won in its Xi'an chip plant in 2025, up 67.5 percent year on year, indicating continued commitment to semiconductor operations in China even as other segments contract.

A Carnegie Mellon Institute for Strategy and Technology fellow described Samsung's position as a choice between defending market share in China or directing resources toward global competition with Chinese firms. A former Samsung executive vice-president and visiting research fellow at the Sejong Institute said the contraction reflects the competitive environment in China rather than a deliberate pivot toward semiconductors.

#SouthKorea #China

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🇰🇷🇹🇼 Seoul Removes "China (Taiwan)" Entry Card Label

South Korea completed an update to its electronic entry card system on April 10, removing the "previous departure point" and "next destination" fields that had listed Taiwan under the label "CHINA (TAIWAN)". The "country/region" field was retained and continues to list "TAIWAN" as a selectable option.

Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs had lodged multiple protests over the labeling and announced in late March that it would relabel South Korea as "South Korea" in its own entry forms — covering birthplace and residence fields — if Seoul did not respond by March 31. Taiwan had described the measure as upholding Taiwan's dignity and applying a reciprocity principle.

Taiwan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated it had noted the system update and described the change as beneficial to travel and exchange between the two sides. A South Korean Foreign Ministry official, cited by Yonhap, had earlier characterized the removal of the two fields as a technical adjustment to streamline the system and align the electronic format with the paper entry card, which had never included those fields.

#SouthKorea #Taiwan

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🇨🇳 China Warns Students on Foreign Spy Jobs

China's Ministry of State Security issued a notice warning university students to avoid job postings that may serve as covers for foreign espionage. The ministry identified offers such as 800 yuan (US$117) a day for remote data processing work as potential traps designed to recruit students into illegally collecting sensitive information.

The ministry advised students to treat any salary far exceeding industry standards as a warning sign. It also flagged recruitment schemes that solicit résumé details about internships in military units or experience in classified research projects.

The notice was published as China enters its spring recruitment period ahead of a record 12.7 million university graduates expected this summer. Youth unemployment among urban residents aged 16 to 24 stood at 16.1 per cent in February, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

#China

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🇨🇳 China Tightens Oversight of Red-Chip IPO Structures

China's Securities Regulatory Commission is requiring companies that retain offshore holding structures to justify their necessity before proceeding with Hong Kong listings. Approval data shows only one red-chip company using a variable interest entity structure received listing approval between January 1 and March 18 this year, compared with 21 in the same period last year.

Regulators have advised some red-chip firms to restructure and pursue listings through their mainland entities instead. One concern driving the shift is that funds raised through overseas listings — including dividends and share sale proceeds — were often held outside China and difficult for authorities to track, according to lawyers at Allbright Law Offices.

Dismantling a red-chip structure typically takes one to two years and can involve share buy-backs, deregistration of offshore entities, and significant tax liabilities. Companies with variable interest entity structures have already faced delays, while those that have restructured are being asked to provide detailed compliance documentation covering foreign exchange, tax, and overseas investment approvals.

#China

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🇵🇭🇹🇭 Iran War Squeezes Southeast Asia's Rice Farmers

The near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which remains largely blocked despite a temporary ceasefire, has choked fertiliser and fuel deliveries to South-east Asia. Tens of millions of smallholders across the region are struggling to afford diesel for tractors and irrigation pumps, as well as crop nutrients whose costs have doubled or tripled. In Thailand, some farmers have left harvest-ready crops in the ground because collection costs are prohibitive.

In the Philippines, the world's top rice importer, the Federation of Free Farmers Cooperatives projects paddy-rice output could fall by at least 10 per cent in 2026, equivalent to roughly 2 million tons. In Cambodia, around a tenth of the approximately 2,000 farmers working with integrated rice firm BRM Agro have said they will not plant unless they can secure a fixed price for the new crop. Vietnam's Mekong Delta growers are barely breaking even, with some considering reducing from three crops a year to two.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization's chief economist Maximo Torero stated that a further 20 to 30-day Hormuz closure would affect food availability as early as the second half of 2026. Thailand's dry-season crop in March–April could fall around 19 per cent from the same period in 2025, according to the Kasikorn Research Center. The International Rice Research Institute's senior scientist Alisher Mirzabaev noted that existing stocks provide a buffer but cautioned against complacency.

#Philippines #Thailand

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