Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
Advertisement

Latest

Britain’s new COVID wave is hitting younger people and their parents.

New COVID wave builds in Europe’s unvaxxed regions

Wherever jab rates are low, the virus is on the march again - leading to overcrowded hospitals, new restrictions and more deaths.

  • 22 mins ago
  • Hans van Leeuwen
Akash Kunjumon and A. Aishwarya sail to their wedding in a giant cooking pot in Kerala, India.

Couple sail to their wedding in giant cooking pot after floods

Front line workers Akash and Aishwarya were determined not to let flash floods and landslides in India stop their wedding.

  • Jennifer Hassan

N Korea test fires submarine-launched ballistic missile

The launch came as the intelligence chiefs of the United States, South Korea and Japan were to meet in Seoul to discuss the stand-off with North Korea.

  • Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin

Neighbourhood spies help police Uighurs in Xinjiang, report finds

A new report focuses on the role of village volunteers who it says are deployed to gather intelligence and granted police-like powers in China’s Xinjiang province.

  • Michael Smith

New Zealand hits virus high, pushes vaccination as way out

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said lockdown rule-breakers were contributing to the spread of infections, and noted that many of the new cases were in younger people.

  • Updated
  • Nick Perry

Johnson calls on nations to harden climate goals

While the UK expects to welcome about 120 world leaders to Glasgow, it’s contending with some key no-shows.

  • Updated
  • Emily Ashton

Opinion & Analysis

Honeymoon is over for China’s post-pandemic recovery

Growth in China’s industrial and real estate sectors is cooling, meaning long-term pain for Australia’s most valuable exports.

Michael Smith

China correspondent

Michael Smith

PNG is back on the brink of a delta variant disaster

Complacency and vaccine hesitancy at all levels of society have left PNG wide open to delta infection. The country needs outside help – and very quickly.

Jonathan Pryke and Brendan Crabb

Contributor

Supply chain lessons from Long Beach

One of the best things that we could do to avoid port pile-ups in the future is to ensure that no more than 25 per cent of any crucial supply be sourced from one place, or come into one port.

Rana Foroohar

Contributor

Rana Foroohar

Bond geopolitics cut China from the picture

Hollywood’s attitude toward Chinese power is a useful window into the US’s larger failure to see its great 21st-century rival clearly.

Ross Douthat

Contributor

From the Financial Times

Powell, a statesman who influenced the course of the Iraq war

Colin Powell, 84, who died COVID-19 complications, rose from humble origins in Harlem to become the US Secretary of State during tumultuous times marked by war.

  • Jurek Martin and James Politi

Is the army of lockdown traders here to stay?

As lockdowns hit, a wave of people turned to day trading. But as the world enters post-lockdown life, the question confronting trading platforms is whether any of the surge in trading can outlast the coronavirus crisis.

  • Updated
  • Joshua Oliver and Madison Darbyshire

US TV network ratings dive after prime years of Trump and trauma

After years of skyrocketing ratings, networks face a breathtaking fall back down to earth as the news cycle calms due to the end of Trump’s presidency and an easing pandemic.

  • Anna Nicolaou and Caitlin Gilbert
Advertisement

Yesterday

Powell, a statesman who influenced the course of the Iraq war

Colin Powell, 84, who died COVID-19 complications, rose from humble origins in Harlem to become the US Secretary of State during tumultuous times marked by war.

  • Jurek Martin and James Politi

Is the army of lockdown traders here to stay?

As lockdowns hit, a wave of people turned to day trading. But as the world enters post-lockdown life, the question confronting trading platforms is whether any of the surge in trading can outlast the coronavirus crisis.

  • Updated
  • Joshua Oliver and Madison Darbyshire

US TV network ratings dive after prime years of Trump and trauma

After years of skyrocketing ratings, networks face a breathtaking fall back down to earth as the news cycle calms due to the end of Trump’s presidency and an easing pandemic.

  • Anna Nicolaou and Caitlin Gilbert

Britain logs ‘concerning’ number of COVID-19 cases

Experts call on the government to ramp up booster jabs and vaccination of children, as hospitalisations also start to climb.

  • Hans van Leeuwen

Russia breaks off ties with NATO in retaliation for spy row

Russia has closed the NATO office in Moscow as it reacts to the expulsion of Russian diplomats in Brussels.

  • Jim Heintz
Advertisement

Colin Powell dies from COVID-19 complications

The US Army general rose to become his country’s first black secretary of state and styled himself a ‘reluctant warrior’.

  • Patrick Oster

This Month

Auckland lockdown extended for at least two weeks

PM Jacinda Ardern said a vaccination target would provide the city, which has already been locked down for two months, a pathway out of restrictions.

  • Ainsley Thomson

Honeymoon is over for China’s post-pandemic recovery

Growth in China’s industrial and real estate sectors is cooling, meaning long-term pain for Australia’s most valuable exports.

  • Updated
  • Michael Smith

Japan’s Kishida woos voters with Abenomics critique

Borrowing from the opposition’s policy playbook is a tactic the long-ruling LDP has often used with success.

  • Linda Sieg

China yields jump as easing bets fade

The yield on China’s 10-year bond rose as high as 3.02 per cent, crossing the 3 per cent level for the first time since early July.

  • Tania Chen

China’s rise prompts NATO to adjust its focus

Secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg reveals significant broadening of the Western alliance’s strategic objectives in response to the perceived threat from Beijing.

  • Roula Khalaf and Henry Foy

China growth slows as property, energy crises bite

China’s post-pandemic economic recovery has slowed sharply as concern about the Evergrande debt crisis and power shortages grow.

  • Updated
  • Michael Smith

PNG is back on the brink of a delta variant disaster

Complacency and vaccine hesitancy at all levels of society have left PNG wide open to delta infection. The country needs outside help – and very quickly.

  • Jonathan Pryke and Brendan Crabb

Britain faces ‘wave of terror attacks plotted by bedroom radicals’

Officials believe the country is facing a new threat from ‘lone wolf’ terrorists who were radicalised online while spending months at home.

  • Martin Evans and Ben Riley-Smith

Supply chain lessons from Long Beach

One of the best things that we could do to avoid port pile-ups in the future is to ensure that no more than 25 per cent of any crucial supply be sourced from one place, or come into one port.

  • Rana Foroohar
Advertisement

Man sues Canon for $6m over printers that won’t scan when ink runs low

His class-action lawsuit filed in New York said it expected the full list of plaintiffs to be more than 100 consumers.

  • Kevin Shalvey

China’s Earth-circling hypersonic missile test surprises the US

‘The test showed that China had made astounding progress on hypersonic weapons and was far more advanced than US officials realised,’ the Financial Times says.

  • Todd Shields

British MP’s murder suspect was flagged to counter-extremism officials

London’s Metropolitan Police said they had been granted a warrant under the Terrorism Act to keep the suspect in detention for six extra days.

  • Edward Malnick, Izzy Lyons and Robert Mendick

Democrats weigh carbon tax after Biden climate initiative snubbed

The almost certain demise of the clean electricity program at the heart of Joe Biden’s agenda has outraged many Democrats who say now is the time for a carbon tax.

  • Coral Davenport and Luke Broadwater