Asian Politics Headlines at 2:44 a.m. GMT
North Korea shows new drone attacking a target as Seoul and US hold large military exercises
North Korea shows new drone attacking a target as Seoul and US hold large military exercises
Angela Rayner, the Housing Secretary, has struck a £150m deal with Britain’s biggest housebuilder to build a string of new garden towns and villages across the country as ministers seek to ramp up their ambitious housing plans.
Rachel Reeves says pensioners are on course for a £1,700 boost under Labour as she tries to counter a rebellion over winter fuel payment cuts.
Labour want to reduce winter fuel payments for pensioners to plug the gap in government finances.
Hilarity ensued over the former president's latest stumble.
Former Rep. David Jolly said Trump "has no ground to gain," leaving him with just one strategy.
A government minister has failed to rule out means testing free bus passes for pensioners.
"They are choices! They are decisions! This is a decision your government is making," Sally Nugent pointed out, repeatedly.
Donald Trump’s ear that was injured in July’s assassination attempt appears to be just fine after all—at least according to a reporter who had an unusually intimate encounter with it.New York Magazine reported Monday that, in a sit-down interview at Mar-a-Lago, the journalist Olivia Nuzzi got a very detailed look at Trump’s right ear—the one he infamously bandaged up for the RNC—and declared that it appeared to be “normal” and “fine.” “An ear had never appeared to have gone through less,” wrote
Mark Saxby, 56, says he is in limbo because of Spanish authorities’ ‘petty’ concern about his medical insurance
As once-prolific nicknamer Trump fails to land a hit, Democrats set good manners aside in favour of ridicule
David Knowles, the Telegraph journalist behind the award-winning Ukraine: The Latest podcast, has died.
MPs will get their say on the cut in the allowance for pensioners in a Commons vote
When Starmer was in the shadow cabinet, the party called the idea "single biggest attack on pensioners in a generation in our country".
A spokesman for Meta said that Zuckerberg has "not communicated to anybody how he intends to vote" and will not endorse either candidate.
A growing army of Russian expats want to take back Russia. Can they succeed?
The former president has begun offering "convoluted explanations" during his speeches for a reason, Tim O'Brien said.
Melania Trump sort of teased her upcoming memoir again Sunday in a text-based video with voiceover, in which she bemoans the cost of living in America and attempts to “silence” her husband, former President Donald Trump, before a cut to an image of the cover of Melania."The 2020 election results changed our lives forever,” said Melania in the video, posted to her X account Sunday, with each word illustrated in an italicized serif font. “It impacted our quality of life, cost of food, gasoline, sa
Former Disney Channel actor Caroline Sunshine's comment gave off a particular vibe.
Polish security services have neutralised a sabotage operation orchestrated by Russia and Belarus that aimed to destabilise Poland, Deputy Prime Minister Krzysztof Gawkowski said on Monday. Warsaw has repeatedly accused Moscow of attempting to destabilise Poland because of its role in supplying military aid to its neighbour Ukraine, allegations Russia has dismissed. Saboteurs, operating from Belarus in cooperation with Russia, penetrated local and central government institutions, including state-owned companies implementing military contracts, he said.
STORY: A thousand miles from Moscow is the Serbian capital of Belgrade, a place a vibrant community of Russians now call home - part of a wave of tens of thousands who left their motherland after its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.Vadim Morus is one of them.The ice skater was able to settle in easily, thanks to his professional skills."My first day at the skating rink, when I started working, people immediately approached me asking me to help their children with training, and I said 'of course'. Therefore, right from the very beginning, I started meeting Serbs and establishing some interaction"But not everyone is integrating with the locals, as a mini Russia springs up in Belgrade - a city with ancient cultural and religious ties to Moscow.After the war began up till mid-2023, more than 30,000 Russians registered for temporary residence in Serbia, according to the latest government data. It's a sharp increase compared with before, officials said.Many of the emigres - fleeing conflict, conscription, or the politics of President Vladimir Putin - were seen queuing to vote at the embassy earlier this year in Russia's election.Fewer Russians are moving to Serbia than to countries like Germany, but their presence is acutely felt in Belgrade, a city of under two million people.A whole range of Russian-owned businesses have sprung up. And many Russians shop at Russian stores, and eat at Russian restaurants.Psychologist Mishell Dia, who also left because of the war, said many of her fellow Russians don't feel the need to go outside their community."As it appears, all their social needs have been fulfilled. You walk through the center, and you always hear Russian people, four or five times in an hour of walking. And you can choose a restaurant with Russians, sit in a place with Russians, so many of them immediately organized themselves into a small Russian settlement." But she added that the stresses of fleeing their homeland meant it has been difficult for many others to settle in."I see Russians that are not even interacting with other Russians," she said.Ties between Serbia and Russia date back centuries and remain cordial today, although Serbia is also trying to join the European Union, which condemns Russia's invasion of Ukraine.Serbian political scientist Aleksandar Djokic was teaching in Russia until the war broke out.He said the new arrivals, many of whom are experts in fields such as IT, could be a boost to Serbia's economy even if they did not choose to integrate with wider society.But, Djokic added, this wave of emigres won't have the same cultural impact compared to a century ago, when artists and architects arrived as part of the anti-Communist, so-called White Russians fleeing the civil war.