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Ricevuto oggi — 20 Gennaio 2026 Stampa Internazionale

Scientists plan deep-sea expedition to probe ‘dark oxygen’

A team of scientists announced on Tuesday that they had developed new deep-sea landers specifically to test their contentious discovery that metallic rocks at the bottom of the ocean are producing “dark oxygen”. If a previously unknown source of oxygen has always been lurking in Earth’s depths, it would represent a remarkable revelation that would call into question long-held assumptions about the origins of life on our planet. But the deep-sea mining industry – which is keen to extract precious...

Scientists plan deep-sea expedition to probe ‘dark oxygen’

A team of scientists announced on Tuesday that they had developed new deep-sea landers specifically to test their contentious discovery that metallic rocks at the bottom of the ocean are producing “dark oxygen”. If a previously unknown source of oxygen has always been lurking in Earth’s depths, it would represent a remarkable revelation that would call into question long-held assumptions about the origins of life on our planet. But the deep-sea mining industry – which is keen to extract precious...

Spain’s royals visit deadly train crash site as country mourns

Spain’s king and queen visited the site of the collision of two high-speed trains that killed at least 42 people on Tuesday, as the country began three days of national mourning. The country’s deadliest rail accident in more than a decade took place late on Sunday when a train operated by rail company Iryo, travelling from Malaga to Madrid, derailed near Adamuz in the southern Andalusia region. It crossed onto the other track, where it crashed into an oncoming train heading to Huelva, which also...

Spain’s royals visit deadly train crash site as country mourns

Spain’s king and queen visited the site of the collision of two high-speed trains that killed at least 42 people on Tuesday, as the country began three days of national mourning. The country’s deadliest rail accident in more than a decade took place late on Sunday when a train operated by rail company Iryo, travelling from Malaga to Madrid, derailed near Adamuz in the southern Andalusia region. It crossed onto the other track, where it crashed into an oncoming train heading to Huelva, which also...

Syria gives Kurds 4 days to accept integration, as US signals end of support

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:49
Syria on Tuesday announced a ceasefire with Kurdish forces it ‌has seized swathes of territory from in the northeast and gave them four days to agree on integrating into the central state, which their main ally, the US, urged them to accept. The lightning government advances in recent days and the apparent withdrawal of US support for the continued holding of territory by the Syrian Democratic Forces represent the biggest change of control in the country since rebels ousted Bashar al-Assad 13...

Syria gives Kurds 4 days to accept integration, as US signals end of support

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:49
Syria on Tuesday announced a ceasefire with Kurdish forces it ‌has seized swathes of territory from in the northeast and gave them four days to agree on integrating into the central state, which their main ally, the US, urged them to accept. The lightning government advances in recent days and the apparent withdrawal of US support for the continued holding of territory by the Syrian Democratic Forces represent the biggest change of control in the country since rebels ousted Bashar al-Assad 13...

Macron urges EU to hit back against Trump’s threats: ‘brutalisation of the world’

Europe must respond to US threats over Greenland and China’s industrial excesses, or else “passively accept … vassalisation and bloc politics”, French President Emmanuel Macron warned in a speech at Davos on Tuesday. Macron warned of the “brutalisation of the world”, as he urged the use of the EU’s most powerful trade weapon in response to US President Donald Trump’s threat to slap tariffs on European countries who last week sent troops to Greenland. Trump has pledged to make the giant Arctic...

Greenland PM warns islanders to prepare for possible US invasion

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:19
Greenland’s prime minister said the Arctic island’s population and its authorities need to start preparing for a possible military invasion, even as it remains an unlikely scenario, as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten taking over the territory. “It’s not likely there will be a military conflict, but it can’t be ruled out,” Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said at a press conference in capital Nuuk on Tuesday. Greenland’s government will form a task force consisting of...

Macron urges EU to hit back against Trump’s threats: ‘brutalisation of the world’

Europe must respond to US threats over Greenland and China’s industrial excesses, or else “passively accept … vassalisation and bloc politics”, French President Emmanuel Macron warned in a speech at Davos on Tuesday. Macron warned of the “brutalisation of the world”, as he urged the use of the EU’s most powerful trade weapon in response to US President Donald Trump’s threat to slap tariffs on European countries who last week sent troops to Greenland. Trump has pledged to make the giant Arctic...

Greenland PM warns islanders to prepare for possible US invasion

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:19
Greenland’s prime minister said the Arctic island’s population and its authorities need to start preparing for a possible military invasion, even as it remains an unlikely scenario, as US President Donald Trump continues to threaten taking over the territory. “It’s not likely there will be a military conflict, but it can’t be ruled out,” Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said at a press conference in capital Nuuk on Tuesday. Greenland’s government will form a task force consisting of...

Macron urges EU to hit back against Trump’s threats: ‘brutalisation of the world’

Europe must respond to US threats over Greenland and China’s industrial excesses, or else “passively accept … vassalisation and bloc politics”, French President Emmanuel Macron warned in a speech at Davos on Tuesday. Macron warned of the “brutalisation of the world”, as he urged the use of the EU’s most powerful trade weapon in response to US President Donald Trump’s threat to slap tariffs on European countries who last week sent troops to Greenland. Trump has pledged to make the giant Arctic...

Macron urges EU to hit back against Trump’s threats: ‘brutalisation of the world’

Europe must respond to US threats over Greenland and China’s industrial excesses, or else “passively accept … vassalisation and bloc politics”, French President Emmanuel Macron warned in a speech at Davos on Tuesday. Macron warned of the “brutalisation of the world”, as he urged the use of the EU’s most powerful trade weapon in response to US President Donald Trump’s threat to slap tariffs on European countries who last week sent troops to Greenland. Trump has pledged to make the giant Arctic...

Canada plans for US invasion scenario as Trump posts ‘takeover’ map: report

The Canadian military has developed a model response to a US invasion, the Globe and Mail reported on Tuesday, as US President Donald Trump again muses online about a takeover of Canada. Citing two unnamed senior government officials, the paper said the Canadian response model centres on insurgency-style tactics, like those used in Afghanistan by fighters who resisted Soviet and later US forces. The Globe reported that the officials believe it is unlikely that Trump would order an invasion of...

EU moves to force Huawei out of networks, opening door to wider Chinese tech bans

The European Commission wants to force EU member states to remove Chinese companies Huawei Technologies and ZTE from its mobile networks, as part of a sweeping new cybersecurity act unveiled on Tuesday. While the bloc’s executive arm has recommended that capitals weed equipment from those providers from their 5G networks since 2020, citing cybersecurity risks, only 13 of 27 have so far acted on it, commission sources said. This marks the first time Brussels has attempted to make their removal...

Bessent cites trade progress after meeting China’s He Lifeng in Davos

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that he met with Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng a day earlier on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in advance of US President Donald Trump’s much-anticipated speech to the global body on Wednesday. Bessent’s account of the sit-down between the main interlocutors over the past tumultuous year between Beijing and Washington suggests the pieces are in place to go ahead with a summit in Beijing between Trump and...

Canada plans for US invasion scenario as Trump posts ‘takeover’ map: report

The Canadian military has developed a model response to a US invasion, the Globe and Mail reported on Tuesday, as US President Donald Trump again muses online about a takeover of Canada. Citing two unnamed senior government officials, the paper said the Canadian response model centres on insurgency-style tactics, like those used in Afghanistan by fighters who resisted Soviet and later US forces. The Globe reported that the officials believe it is unlikely that Trump would order an invasion of...

Hong Kong motor trade sees red over tightened vehicle inspection rules

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 17:04
Hong Kong’s car trade has reacted with frustration to a sudden tightening of annual vehicle inspection rules, with leaders warning that owners of failed vehicles could face thousands of dollars in extra costs and significant delays. The backlash on Tuesday follows what they described as a “rushed” roll-out by the Transport Department, with the measures announced just days before they went into effect on Monday. The new rules impose much stricter requirements for private cars and light goods...

EU moves to force Huawei out of networks, opening door to wider Chinese tech bans

The European Commission wants to force EU member states to remove Chinese companies Huawei Technologies and ZTE from its mobile networks, as part of a sweeping new cybersecurity act unveiled on Tuesday. While the bloc’s executive arm has recommended that capitals weed equipment from those providers from their 5G networks since 2020, citing cybersecurity risks, only 13 of 27 have so far acted on it, commission sources said. This marks the first time Brussels has attempted to make their removal...

Hong Kong police arrest 2 women as child abuse allegation goes viral online

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 16:51
Hong Kong police have arrested two women on suspicion of child abuse, as a father took to social media to accuse a domestic helper of shaking his four-month-old son, causing a brain haemorrhage and bodily harm. The force on Tuesday night confirmed that it had arrested two women, aged 28 and 45, suspected of ill-treating a baby boy at a flat in Sheung Shui on Sunday. The suspects were being held in police custody. On Monday, a post from the father of a four-month-old boy went viral on social...

Bessent cites trade progress after meeting China’s He Lifeng in Davos

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that he met with Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng a day earlier on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in advance of US President Donald Trump’s much-anticipated speech to the global body on Wednesday. Bessent’s account of the sit-down between the main interlocutors over the past tumultuous year between Beijing and Washington suggests the pieces are in place to go ahead with a summit in Beijing between Trump and...

EU moves to force Huawei out of networks, opening door to wider Chinese tech bans

The European Commission wants to force EU member states to remove Chinese companies Huawei Technologies and ZTE from its mobile networks, as part of a sweeping new cybersecurity act unveiled on Tuesday. While the bloc’s executive arm has recommended that capitals weed equipment from those providers from their 5G networks since 2020, citing cybersecurity risks, only 13 of 27 have so far acted on it, commission sources said. This marks the first time Brussels has attempted to make their removal...

Bessent cites trade progress after meeting China’s He Lifeng in Davos

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that he met with Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng a day earlier on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in advance of US President Donald Trump’s much-anticipated speech to the global body on Wednesday. Bessent’s account of the sit-down between the main interlocutors over the past tumultuous year between Beijing and Washington suggests the pieces are in place to go ahead with a summit in Beijing between Trump and...

China sends emergency food aid to Cuba as US sanctions worsen shortages

A new Chinese emergency aid programme has delivered its first shipment of rice to Cuba, which faces worsening food and fuel shortages amid a tightened US blockade that has halted Venezuelan oil shipments. Under the programme, China will send 30,000 tonnes of rice to the island nation, according to the state-run Xinhua News Agency. The first shipment was handed over on Monday, while a second batch has arrived at the Port of Santiago de Cuba. Additional deliveries are expected to leave China...

China sends emergency food aid to Cuba as US sanctions worsen shortages

A new Chinese emergency aid programme has delivered its first shipment of rice to Cuba, which faces worsening food and fuel shortages amid a tightened US blockade that has halted Venezuelan oil shipments. Under the programme, China will send 30,000 tonnes of rice to the island nation, according to the state-run Xinhua News Agency. The first shipment was handed over on Monday, while a second batch has arrived at the Port of Santiago de Cuba. Additional deliveries are expected to leave China...

As Trump threatens more tariff rises, China uses low duties to secure resources

As US President Donald Trump’s tariff increases have roiled global markets and strained America’s alliances in recent months, China has been pursuing the opposite strategy: keeping import duties low and pledging further cuts as a way to secure strategic resources and build ties across the developing world. China’s average effective tariff rate – calculated by dividing total duties raised by the value of imports – has fallen steadily over the past decade and came to just 1.3 per cent in 2025,...

China sends emergency food aid to Cuba as US sanctions worsen shortages

A new Chinese emergency aid programme has delivered its first shipment of rice to Cuba, which faces worsening food and fuel shortages amid a tightened US blockade that has halted Venezuelan oil shipments. Under the programme, China will send 30,000 tonnes of rice to the island nation, according to the state-run Xinhua News Agency. The first shipment was handed over on Monday, while a second batch has arrived at the Port of Santiago de Cuba. Additional deliveries are expected to leave China...

As Trump threatens more tariff rises, China uses low duties to secure resources

As US President Donald Trump’s tariff increases have roiled global markets and strained America’s alliances in recent months, China has been pursuing the opposite strategy: keeping import duties low and pledging further cuts as a way to secure strategic resources and build ties across the developing world. China’s average effective tariff rate – calculated by dividing total duties raised by the value of imports – has fallen steadily over the past decade and came to just 1.3 per cent in 2025,...

China urges Taliban to tighten security after suicide attack on restaurant in Kabul

China has condemned Monday’s suicide attack on a Chinese restaurant in Kabul, urging the Taliban to take further measures to protect the safety of its citizens in Afghanistan. Foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Beijing had made “urgent representations” following the attack in a heavily guarded part of the capital that killed at least seven people – one Chinese national and six Afghans – and injured several others. Guo added that China had asked the authorities to “further adopt effective...

Elderly Hongkongers facing eviction over subdivided flat revamp fear losing jobs

Some elderly residents facing eviction from a block of subdivided flats in Hong Kong have expressed concerns that they could lose their jobs if forced to relocate to enable their landlords to upgrade the homes to comply with new regulations. Residents of Sham Shui Po’s Yee Wa Building were previously told they would need to leave sometime between March and December. The renovations were prompted by a clampdown on substandard housing that is set to take effect in March. Landlords who immediately...

China’s Xi pushes ‘holistic’ execution by local cadres for 5-year plan, warns of disparity

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 15:18
President Xi Jinping has ordered a thorough implementation of central government strategies and policies at local levels, as the world’s second-largest economy rallies efforts to achieve a strong start to its five-year plan amid formidable external challenges and domestic headwinds. The instruction on Tuesday arrived at a delicate time, as Beijing enforces some overriding strategies, such as a whole-of-nation approach to break technological bottlenecks, a campaign to fight vicious price...

China Telecom develops country’s first MoE models trained entirely on Huawei’s AI chips

State-owned China Telecom has developed the country’s first artificial intelligence models with the innovative Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architecture that are trained entirely on advanced chips from Huawei Technologies. This marked the first time a Chinese developer publicly validated the feasibility of using only Huawei chips to train AI models with MoE architecture, which has become widely adopted because of its ability to deliver high performance with fewer computational resources. The...

China urges Taliban to tighten security after suicide attack on restaurant in Kabul

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 15:00
China has condemned Monday’s suicide attack on a Chinese restaurant in Kabul, urging the Taliban to take further measures to protect the safety of its citizens in Afghanistan. Foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Beijing had made “urgent representations” following the attack in a heavily guarded part of the capital that killed at least seven people – one Chinese national and six Afghans – and injured several others. Guo added that China had asked the authorities to “further adopt effective...

Australia stiffens hate crime, gun laws after Bondi Jewish festival shooting

Australia passed tougher hate crime and gun laws on Tuesday, weeks after gunmen targeting a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach killed 15 people. Lawmakers in both houses of parliament voted in favour of the legislation in response to the December 14 shooting at Sydney’s most famous beach. Sajid Akram and his son Naveed allegedly attacked a Jewish Hanukkah celebration in the nation’s worst mass shooting in nearly three decades. The shooting has sparked national soul-searching about antisemitism,...

Hong Kong parents of special needs children fear abuse claims under new law

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 14:30
Hong Kong mother Amy Chan* often feels overwhelmed caring for her nine-year-old son, who has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The 39-year-old said her son, diagnosed with the condition two years ago, seldom listened to her and lost his temper easily, putting tremendous pressure on her and taking a toll on her mental health. Chan, who works as a part-time clerk, said her frustration with her son’s uncooperative behaviour and her own stress sometimes became so intense that she was...

China’s Xi pushes ‘holistic’ execution by local cadres for 5-year plan, warns of disparity

President Xi Jinping has ordered a thorough implementation of central government strategies and policies at local levels, as the world’s second-largest economy rallies efforts to achieve a strong start to its five-year plan amid formidable external challenges and domestic headwinds. The instruction on Tuesday arrived at a delicate time, as Beijing enforces some overriding strategies, such as a whole-of-nation approach to break technological bottlenecks, a campaign to fight vicious price...

China urges Taliban to tighten security after suicide attack on restaurant in Kabul

China has condemned Monday’s suicide attack on a Chinese restaurant in Kabul, urging the Taliban to take further measures to protect the safety of its citizens in Afghanistan. Foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said Beijing had made “urgent representations” following the attack in a heavily guarded part of the capital that killed at least seven people – one Chinese national and six Afghans – and injured several others. Guo added that China had asked the authorities to “further adopt effective...

Netflix wins Warner Bros board support over Paramount with amended all-cash offer

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 14:07
Netflix switched to an all-cash offer for Warner Bros Discovery’s studio and streaming businesses with unanimous support from the HBO owner’s board ‍without increasing the US$82.7 billion price, in an effort to close the door on rival Paramount’s efforts. Both Netflix and studio operator Paramount covet Warner Bros for its leading film and television studios, extensive content library and major franchises such as Game of Thrones, Harry Potter and DC Comics’ superheroes Batman and...

Trump’s blunt interventions risk undermining US interests

For all his bombast, few could have imagined the sound and fury with which Donald Trump has taken to foreign policymaking in his second presidential term. Over the past 12 months, the US president has laid bare American ambitions to lay claim to territories within its near periphery deemed to be of strategic significance. From Greenland – a mineral-rich autonomous territory of Denmark – to Panama, a critical maritime trade choke point, the White House has made its geopolitical appetite...

Death toll rises to 9 after explosion at north China rare earth steel plant

The death toll from an explosion at a rare earth steel plant in north China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region has risen to nine. The explosion occurred at 3pm on Sunday at the Baotou Steel Group’s rare earth steel plant in Baotou, according to the city government. As of Tuesday, the accident has injured 84 people, killed nine and left one person missing, according to state broadcaster CCTV. The Ministry of Emergency Management sent a working group led by Vice-Minister Song Yuanming to the scene...

China’s commercial space sector soars with 50 launches in 2025

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 14:14
China’s commercial space sector logged 50 launches last year – more than half of the country’s total – underscoring the growing role of private players alongside the state-led space programme, with Beijing highlighting aerospace as a strategic industry. Commercial launches accounted for 54 per cent of the country’s total in 2025, according to data released on Tuesday by the China National Space Administration (CNSA). Of the total, 25 launches were carried out by commercial launch vehicles....

Netflix wins Warner Bros board support over Paramount with amended all-cash offer

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 14:07
Netflix switched to an all-cash offer for Warner Bros Discovery’s studio and streaming businesses with unanimous support from the HBO owner’s board ‍without increasing the US$82.7 billion price, in an effort to close the door on rival Paramount’s efforts. Both Netflix and studio operator Paramount covet Warner Bros for its leading film and television studios, extensive content library and major franchises such as Game of Thrones, Harry Potter and DC Comics’ superheroes Batman and...

Hong Kong promotes ‘responsible and sustainable’ digital asset regime at Davos

Hong Kong’s finance chief has promoted the city’s regulatory regime for digital assets as “responsible and sustainable” at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos. Delivering opening remarks at a closed-door workshop on Tuesday, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said finance and technology were “mutually reinforcing”, but a balanced approach was needed to support their development. Speaking about Hong Kong’s experience, Chan said digital assets could enhance transparency, strengthen risk...

Death toll rises to 9 after explosion at north China rare earth steel plant

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 13:40
The death toll from an explosion at a rare earth steel plant in north China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region has risen to nine. The explosion occurred at 3pm on Sunday at the Baotou Steel Group’s rare earth steel plant in Baotou, according to the city government. As of Tuesday, the accident has injured 84 people, killed nine and left one person missing, according to state broadcaster CCTV. The Ministry of Emergency Management sent a working group led by Vice-Minister Song Yuanming to the scene...

Trump’s blunt interventions risk undermining US interests

For all his bombast, few could have imagined the sound and fury with which Donald Trump has taken to foreign policymaking in his second presidential term. Over the past 12 months, the US president has laid bare American ambitions to lay claim to territories within its near periphery deemed to be of strategic significance. From Greenland – a mineral-rich autonomous territory of Denmark – to Panama, a critical maritime trade choke point, the White House has made its geopolitical appetite...

China’s commercial space sector soars with 50 launches in 2025

China’s commercial space sector logged 50 launches last year – more than half of the country’s total – underscoring the growing role of private players alongside the state-led space programme, with Beijing highlighting aerospace as a strategic industry. Commercial launches accounted for 54 per cent of the country’s total in 2025, according to data released on Tuesday by the China National Space Administration (CNSA). Of the total, 25 launches were carried out by commercial launch vehicles....

Death toll rises to 9 after explosion at north China rare earth steel plant

The death toll from an explosion at a rare earth steel plant in north China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region has risen to nine. The explosion occurred at 3pm on Sunday at the Baotou Steel Group’s rare earth steel plant in Baotou, according to the city government. As of Tuesday, the accident has injured 84 people, killed nine and left one person missing, according to state broadcaster CCTV. The Ministry of Emergency Management sent a working group led by Vice-Minister Song Yuanming to the scene...

Japan’s last 2 giant pandas set for early trip home to China as tensions spiral

The last two giant pandas in Japan are set to leave for China on January 27, one month ahead of schedule as bilateral tensions continue to worsen. The return of the twins, Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei, marks the first time in about half a century that Japan will be without any pandas. Beijing first sent two of the animals to Tokyo to mark the normalisation of diplomatic relations in 1972. The four-year-olds were born at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo but technically all giant pandas and their offspring in overseas...

Almost half of Kyiv without heat and power after massive Russian drone strike

An overnight Russian bombardment left thousands of residential buildings in Kyiv without heating and water in -14 degrees Celsius (6.8 Fahrenheit) temperatures on Tuesday, when the Ukrainian capital was already scrambling to restore vital utilities destroyed in earlier attacks. The barrage of hundreds of drones and missiles, which targeted energy facilities across Ukraine, killed at least one 50-year-old man near Kyiv. Air raid sirens and explosions were heard in the capital as Ukrainian air...

In Taiwan, pressure builds over US deal as critics question true cost of tariff cut

Taiwan’s opposition parties are stepping up criticism of the island’s government over a controversial economic deal with the United States, warning that what officials portray as a tariff win could carry heavy long-term costs for the island’s economy and industrial base. The cabinet on Tuesday released further details of the agreement, which allows Taiwan to secure a 15 per cent reciprocal tariff rate. The rate is down from a previously proposed 20 per cent and broadly in line with Japan, South...

Almost half of Kyiv without heat and power after massive Russian drone strike

An overnight Russian bombardment left thousands of residential buildings in Kyiv without heating and water in -14 degrees Celsius (6.8 Fahrenheit) temperatures on Tuesday, when the Ukrainian capital was already scrambling to restore vital utilities destroyed in earlier attacks. The barrage of hundreds of drones and missiles, which targeted energy facilities across Ukraine, killed at least one 50-year-old man near Kyiv. Air raid sirens and explosions were heard in the capital as Ukrainian air...

Chinese EV makers’ overseas outlook improves as Europe levels the playing field

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 13:12
Western countries’ positive stance on electric vehicles (EVs) has given Chinese carmakers from BYD to Leapmotor renewed vigour to step up their global expansion and counter a slowing domestic market, industry observers said. Europe’s buoyant EV market last year lifted Chinese assemblers’ hopes to boost their exports to shore up their profits and hone their international image, they added. “A welcoming attitude towards electrification is good news for Chinese EV makers because they enjoy...

In Taiwan, pressure builds over US deal as critics question true cost of tariff cut

Taiwan’s opposition parties are stepping up criticism of the island’s government over a controversial economic deal with the United States, warning that what officials portray as a tariff win could carry heavy long-term costs for the island’s economy and industrial base. The cabinet on Tuesday released further details of the agreement, which allows Taiwan to secure a 15 per cent reciprocal tariff rate. The rate is down from a previously proposed 20 per cent and broadly in line with Japan, South...

Hongkonger arrested in Japan for second time over molesting teens

Japanese police have arrested a 42-year-old man who identified himself as a Hong Kong resident for allegedly molesting a teenage girl on a street in Sapporo, with reports indicating he is suspected of multiple similar offences in the country. The man was arrested on Monday for allegedly hugging and touching the teenager’s lower body just after 9pm on September 4 last year, according to Hokkaido Broadcasting. He was said to hold both British and Chinese nationality. Police told the outlet that...

Hong Kong earmarks Kai Tak site among 3 plots for private student hostel projects

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:49
A prime site in the newly developed Kai Tak area, along with two other plots, have been earmarked for the development of tertiary student hostels, Hong Kong authorities have announced. A spokesman for the Development Bureau said on Tuesday that three commercial sites – in Kai Tak, Siu Lek Yuen in Sha Tin and Tung Chung East – would be open for expressions of interest from the market and could go on sale as early as the next financial year. “Subject to the response received from this expression...

China’s He Lifeng warns against ‘law of the jungle’, blasts protectionism, at Davos

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:44
China delivered a message of free trade, multilateralism, cooperation and dialogue at the World Economic Forum on Tuesday as the world, including the host continent Europe, grapples with increasingly aggressive moves from Washington. “Everyone should be equal before the rules; a very small number of countries should not enjoy the privilege of pursuing their own selfish interests. The world must not return to the law of the jungle, where the strong prey on the weak,” Vice-Premier He Lifeng...

Japan’s last 2 giant pandas set for early trip home to China as tensions spiral

The last two giant pandas in Japan are set to leave for China on January 27, one month ahead of schedule as bilateral tensions continue to worsen. The return of the twins, Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei, marks the first time in about half a century that Japan will be without any pandas. Beijing first sent two of the animals to Tokyo to mark the normalisation of diplomatic relations in 1972. The four-year-olds were born at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo but technically all giant pandas and their offspring in overseas...

In Taiwan, pressure builds over US deal as critics question true cost of tariff cut

Taiwan’s opposition parties are stepping up criticism of the island’s government over a controversial economic deal with the United States, warning that what officials portray as a tariff win could carry heavy long-term costs for the island’s economy and industrial base. The cabinet on Tuesday released further details of the agreement, which allows Taiwan to secure a 15 per cent reciprocal tariff rate. The rate is down from a previously proposed 20 per cent and broadly in line with Japan, South...

China’s He Lifeng warns against ‘law of the jungle’, blasts protectionism, at Davos

China delivered a message of free trade, multilateralism, cooperation and dialogue at the World Economic Forum on Tuesday as the world, including the host continent Europe, grapples with increasingly aggressive moves from Washington. “Everyone should be equal before the rules; a very small number of countries should not enjoy the privilege of pursuing their own selfish interests. The world must not return to the law of the jungle, where the strong prey on the weak,” Vice-Premier He Lifeng...

Japan’s last 2 giant pandas set for early trip home to China as tensions spiral

The last two giant pandas in Japan are set to leave for China on January 27, one month ahead of schedule as bilateral tensions continue to worsen. The return of the twins, Xiao Xiao and Lei Lei, marks the first time in about half a century that Japan will be without any pandas. Beijing first sent two of the animals to Tokyo to mark the normalisation of diplomatic relations in 1972. The four-year-olds were born at Tokyo’s Ueno Zoo but technically all giant pandas and their offspring in overseas...

China’s mega embassy in London gets the green light, clears way for Keir Starmer visit

Britain on Tuesday approved China’s plan to build a massive new embassy in London, removing a major barrier to Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to China later this month. The roughly 65,000 square metre (700,000 sq ft) embassy will be built at the site of the former Royal Mint, near the Tower of London. It will replace the Chinese embassy in central London. British media reports have said that Starmer would visit Beijing and Shanghai between January 29 and 31. Neither London nor Beijing has...

China’s mega embassy in London gets the green light, clears way for Keir Starmer visit

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:23
Britain on Tuesday approved China’s plan to build a massive new embassy in London, removing a major barrier to Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to China later this month. The roughly 65,000 square metre (700,000 sq ft) embassy will be built at the site of the former Royal Mint, near the Tower of London. It will replace the Chinese embassy in central London. British media reports have said that Starmer would visit Beijing and Shanghai between January 29 and 31. Neither London nor Beijing has...

New energy, AI, EV and biotech to drive Hong Kong IPO growth: HKEX

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:15
New energy, artificial intelligence, electric vehicle (EV) and biotechnology companies will remain the driving force behind Hong Kong’s initial public offering (IPO) market in the coming years, according to the head of bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX). “In the past year, dozens of new companies in green energy, automation and other sectors have listed in Hong Kong, enabling them to scale their research and global impact,” wrote Bonnie Chan Yiting, CEO of HKEX, in an...

Japan arrests man for selling AI-generated celebrity porn

Japanese police have arrested a man suspected of using generative AI to create more than 500,000 obscene images resembling women celebrities and selling them online, a police spokesman and media reports said on Tuesday. Concern is growing worldwide over the use of artificial intelligence tools for malicious purposes including through deepfakes, which turn genuine photos, videos or audio of people into false likenesses. Between December 2024 and May 2025, Japanese man Tetsuro Chiba allegedly...

Hongkongers allowed to observe first open meeting of committee probing Tai Po fire

The public will be allowed to observe the first open meeting of an independent committee investigating the cause of Hong Kong’s deadliest fire in decades, which will set the framework for subsequent hearings. The independent committee, which was set up in the aftermath of the fire at Wang Fuk Court, announced on Tuesday that it would hold a “direction conference” on February 5. During the conference, committee chairman Justice David Lok Kai-hong would provide instructions on the arrangements for...

China targets hi-tech industries, domestic demand in 2026 with new policy package

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:00
Chinese authorities have signalled a new wave of measures to bolster domestic demand and hi-tech industries in the coming year, as Beijing seeks to rebalance growth and shore up momentum during its next five-year plan. On Tuesday, China’s top economic planner announced initiatives to boost consumption and technology investments, while the finance ministry unveiled programmes offering financial support to individuals and small businesses, following mixed economic data for 2025 released the day...

Why Trump’s Mexico military plan is a blow to Asian exporters to Americas

US President Donald Trump’s threats of military action against drug cartels in Mexico and Colombia are adding a new layer of uncertainty for Asian exporters shipping to the Americas, analysts have said, compounding the strain from higher import tariffs and already fragile supply chains. Trump has issued explicit warnings about possible strikes in both countries following a major US operation in Venezuela earlier this month, as part of an escalated regional strategy to counter drug trafficking...

China confirms invite to join Trump’s Gaza ‘peace board’ but won’t say if it will accept

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:30
China has confirmed that it received an invitation from the United States to join Donald Trump’s “board of peace for Gaza”. When asked about China’s position on the US president’s proposal on Tuesday, foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said the invitation had been received but he did not say whether Beijing would accept. Trump has invited dozens of world leaders to join the initiative as part of his efforts to push forward his 20-point plan to resolve the conflict in Gaza. The board was...

China’s mega embassy in London gets the green light, clears way for Keir Starmer visit

Britain on Tuesday approved China’s plan to build a massive new embassy in London, removing a major barrier to Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to China later this month. The roughly 65,000 square metre (700,000 sq ft) embassy will be built at the site of the former Royal Mint, near the Tower of London. It will replace the Chinese embassy in central London. British media reports have said that Starmer would visit Beijing and Shanghai between January 29 and 31. Neither London nor Beijing has...

New energy, AI, EV and biotech to drive Hong Kong IPO growth: HKEX

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:15
New energy, artificial intelligence, electric vehicle (EV) and biotechnology companies will remain the driving force behind Hong Kong’s initial public offering (IPO) market in the coming years, according to the head of bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX). “In the past year, dozens of new companies in green energy, automation and other sectors have listed in Hong Kong, enabling them to scale their research and global impact,” wrote Bonnie Chan Yiting, CEO of HKEX, in an...

China targets hi-tech industries, domestic demand in 2026 with new policy package

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:00
Chinese authorities have signalled a new wave of measures to bolster domestic demand and hi-tech industries in the coming year, as Beijing seeks to rebalance growth and shore up momentum during its next five-year plan. On Tuesday, China’s top economic planner announced initiatives to boost consumption and technology investments, while the finance ministry unveiled programmes offering financial support to individuals and small businesses, following mixed economic data for 2025 released the day...

China confirms invite to join Trump’s Gaza ‘peace board’ but won’t say if it will accept

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:30
China has confirmed that it received an invitation from the United States to join Donald Trump’s “board of peace for Gaza”. When asked about China’s position on the US president’s proposal on Tuesday, foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said the invitation had been received but he did not say whether Beijing would accept. Trump has invited dozens of world leaders to join the initiative as part of his efforts to push forward his 20-point plan to resolve the conflict in Gaza. The board was...

China confirms invite to join Trump’s Gaza ‘peace board’ but won’t say if it will accept

China has confirmed that it received an invitation from the United States to join Donald Trump’s “board of peace for Gaza”. When asked about China’s position on the US president’s proposal on Tuesday, foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said the invitation had been received but he did not say whether Beijing would accept. Trump has invited dozens of world leaders to join the initiative as part of his efforts to push forward his 20-point plan to resolve the conflict in Gaza. The board was...

Solidarietà, Speculazione, Proiezione: UE-Ucraina alle porte del 2026

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:00

Con l’anno nuovo, l’Unione Europea interroga l’utilità strategica della resistenza a oltranza in Ucraina. Per Bruxelles, il conflitto è diventato un catalizzatore a doppio taglio: un’occasione per aggiornare i sistemi di difesa comuni e, al contempo, una premessa indispensabile per guidare la futura ricostruzione economica del Paese.

Con l’ingresso nel quinto anno di conflitto, il fronte russo-ucraino assume sempre più i tratti di una guerra di logoramento. In questo quadro, l’Unione Europea sta attraversando il proprio mutamento strategico più rilevante del XXI secolo: Bruxelles ha superato il ruolo di sostenitore esterno per affermarsi come partner attivo di Kiev, trasformando la minaccia alla propria sicurezza in un motore di consolidamento federale interno e di proiezione economica verso est. L’azione dell’UE si sviluppa oggi entro una logica marcatamente realista: da un lato, il sostegno a Kiev permette di esercitare una deterrenza attiva sul fianco orientale, favorendo l’erosione delle risorse strategiche dell’asse CRINK (Cina, Russia, Iran, Corea del Nord). Questo blocco rappresenta oggi la principale sfida al paradigma statale euro-atlantico e ai suoi equilibri di sicurezza; dall’altro, offre il tempo politico e industriale necessario per pianificare il posizionamento europeo nella futura fase di ricostruzione post-bellica. In questo scenario, Bruxelles ha progressivamente abbandonato il framing solidaristico e liberale, orientando le proprie scelte future, a partire dal 2026, al rafforzamento del blocco industriale continentale, tanto nella dimensione militare quanto in quella civile, attraverso l’integrazione dell’Ucraina come polo di crescita europeo. Questo slittamento strategico riflette anche la crescente fatica bellica delle opinioni pubbliche europee e l’emergere, in diversi Stati membri, di pressioni elettorali sempre meno disposte a sostenere un impegno indefinito privo di ritorni tangibili per la società civile.

L’Italia si inserisce in primo piano come uno degli attori predominanti del campo civile: Ferrovie dello Stato (FS) lavora nel progetto del “porto secco” di Horonda per i flussi logistici verso Trieste e Venezia; Fincantieri punta ad un polo navale ad Odessa, mentre Enel ed Eni iniziano ad ottenere i propri stakes ucraini nei progetti di resilienza energetica. In questo paradigma, il supporto militare ha iniziato a superare una grammatica di necessità, aprendo la strada ad esperimenti industriali e tecnologici senza precedenti, con una possibile integrazione nell’algoritmo economico europeo assoluta data l’eccezionalità del caso Ucraina, ossia uno Stato da ricostruire oltre le spoglie post-sovietiche. Per Roma, l’impegno in Ucraina rappresenta uno strumento di riposizionamento politico-industriale all’interno dell’Unione, funzionale a compensare una storica marginalità nelle grandi filiere della difesa e della ricostruzione continentale

Il “Laboratorio Ucraino”: L’Utilità del Supporto Militare Oltre la Difesa

Il prolungarsi del conflitto ha trasformato il territorio ucraino in un “laboratorio” a cielo aperto per l’innovazione bellica euroatlantica, offrendo all’industria della difesa occidentale un’opportunità senza precedenti di testare, adattare e scalare nuove tecnologie in condizioni operative reali. Questa dinamica trascende il concetto di semplice assistenza militare, fungendo da catalizzatore per l’ammodernamento e il consolidamento di un settore della difesa continentale storicamente ridondante fra gli Stati Membri.

La strategia di Bruxelles si è evoluta verso una forma di “deterrenza attiva” nei confronti della Federazione Russa. L’obiettivo non è solo contenere il conflitto entro i confini ucraini per limitare le azioni contro i Paesi Baltici e la Polonia, ma degradare le capacità dell’avversario su un campo di battaglia terzo, massimizzando i costi per l’aggressore lontano dai confini NATO. Questo imperativo ha accelerato il superamento delle barriere nazionali attraverso iniziative come l’Act in Support of Ammunition Production (ASAP), che nel marzo 2024 ha finalizzato 500 milioni di euro per potenziare la produzione di munizioni in 15 Paesi membri.

Parallelamente, l’Unione promuove la nascita di “campioni europei” per standardizzare le capacità militari. Il progetto congiunto dell’ Eurodrone e la joint venture tra Leonardo e Rheinmetall (Leonardo-Rheinmetall Military Vehicles, LRMV) per i sistemi terrestri italiani incarnano questa visione: unificare la produzione per ridurre le dipendenze esterne e aumentare l’interoperabilità tra le forze armate del blocco. L’esperienza ucraina inoltre sta ridefinendo i cicli di innovazione tecnologica. Il Paese è diventato il leader globale nella moderna guerra dei droni e della guerra elettronica, grazie a un ecosistema capace di accorciare i tempi di sviluppo da anni a poche settimane. Le aziende europee stanno capitalizzando questa agilità attraverso la localizzazione produttiva: Thales ha già trasferito linee di assemblaggio finale di munizioni da 70 mm dal Belgio all’Ucraina. KNDS ha inaugurato nell’ottobre 2024 la sussidiaria KNDS Ukraine LLC a Kiev per la manutenzione pesante e la produzione in loco. Rheinmetall prevede di completare entro il 2026 stabilimenti la cui capacità produttiva di proiettili supererà di gran lunga le 150.000 unità annue inizialmente stimate. Saab sta valutando la costruzione di impianti per i caccia Gripen e sistemi di difesa aerea avanzata.

Questa “marcia forzata” verso l’integrazione della base industriale ucraina nell’ecosistema europeo non risponde solo a un’urgenza bellica, ma mira a creare un hub tecnologico avanzato che garantirà all’Europa un vantaggio competitivo e strategico nel lungo periodo. Mentre il supporto militare affina le capacità tecnologiche, si pongono contemporaneamente le basi per un controllo post-bellico del capitale industriale continentale.

L’Industria della Ricostruzione: Integrare Kiev per l’Espansione Economica Europea

L’industria della ricostruzione ucraina non rappresenta soltanto una delle più imponenti sfide umanitarie dei nostri tempi, ma si delinea come una delle maggiori opportunità economiche e geopolitiche del XXI secolo. Secondo la valutazione RDNA4 del febbraio 2025, il fabbisogno stimato ammonta a 524 miliardi di dollari (circa 506 miliardi di euro): una scala di intervento che, per ambizione e volume finanziario, supera persino il Piano Marshall. Per l’Unione Europea, questo processo costituisce un’occasione irripetibile per integrare stabilmente l’Ucraina nel proprio sistema economico e normativo, trasformando il supporto in un volano per la crescita del mercato unico.

Il baricentro della strategia UE è la Ukraine Facility, un programma di sostegno da 50 miliardi di euro per il quadriennio 2024-2027. Lo strumento è concepito con una logica realista: non si limita a garantire la stabilità macro-finanziaria di Kiev, ma vincola l’erogazione dei fondi a un percorso di riforme strutturali. L’obiettivo è l’allineamento totale all’acquis comunitario, legando il futuro legislativo ed economico dell’Ucraina agli standard europei. 

La Facility opera attraverso tre pilastri complementari. Il primo, Sostegno Diretto, mobilizza circa 38,27 miliardi di euro — di cui 33 miliardi in prestiti e 5,27 in sovvenzioni — destinati al bilancio statale ucraino e condizionati al raggiungimento di benchmark trimestrali di riforma. Il secondo pilastro, il Quadro di Investimento, consiste in un fondo da 9,5 miliardi di euro dedicato a garanzie e strumenti di finanziamento misto (blending), con una funzione di de-risking esplicita: l’impiego di risorse pubbliche europee per proteggere il capitale privato e mobilitare fino a 40 miliardi di euro in investimenti diretti. Un terzo meccanismo di assistenza tecnica sostiene un fondo da 4,76 miliardi di euro volto al rafforzamento delle capacità amministrative e al supporto delle municipalità, assicurando che la ricostruzione assuma una dimensione capillare e territorialmente radicata.

Per dissipare i timori degli investitori internazionali legati alla corruzione, l’Ucraina ha intrapreso una vera “rivoluzione digitale” della governance attraverso l’ecosistema DREAM (Digital Restoration EcoSystem for Accountable Management). Questa piattaforma integrata rappresenta la spina dorsale della trasparenza per l’intera industria della ricostruzione. DREAM offre una banca dati nazionale dove ogni progetto è tracciabile dalla fase di pianificazione all’implementazione finale. Attraverso strumenti di coordinamento per la Piattaforma Multi-donor (MDCP) e profili di investimento dettagliati, la piattaforma consente a donatori e privati di monitorare l’uso dei fondi in tempo reale. Questo sistema non solo riduce drasticamente i rischi di malversazione, ma modernizza il rapporto tra Stato e mercato, rendendo l’integrazione di Kiev un processo irreversibile e fondato sulla responsabilità digitale.

L’enorme sforzo finanziario della ricostruzione si intreccia così con la visione di lungo periodo di Bruxelles: un’Ucraina che non è più solo una zona di confine, ma un componente integrante e moderno dell’architettura europea.

Nonostante la visione di un’Ucraina come “polo di crescita orientale” , l’integrazione del cosiddetto “Granaio d’Europa” all’interno del Mercato Unico non è priva di rischi sistemici. La forza produttiva agricola di Kiev rappresenta una sfida diretta per gli equilibri della Politica Agricola Comune (PAC), rischiando di innescare frizioni politiche con i Paesi membri del fianco orientale, storicamente protettivi verso i propri mercati interni. La gestione di questo squilibrio non sarà tecnica ma eminentemente politica, con il rischio di alimentare mobilitazioni settoriali e convergenze euroscettiche capaci di trasformare l’integrazione ucraina in un tema divisivo per la tenuta del consenso europeo. Per Bruxelles, il pragmatismo geopolitico implica dunque un delicato esercizio di equilibrismo: garantire che l’allineamento all’ acquis comunitario e il percorso di riforme strutturali vincolato dalla Ukraine Facility fungano da stabilizzatori, evitando che l’espansione economica si trasformi in una fonte di destabilizzazione per la coesione federale interna. Il successo del “Laboratorio Ucraino” dipenderà, in ultima istanza, dalla capacità dell’Unione di assorbire l’eccezionalità del caso ucraino senza alienare i settori produttivi tradizionali del blocco continentale

Il Pragmatismo di Bruxelles e il Ritorno sull’Investimento Geopolitico

La duplice strategia adottata dall’Unione Europea verso l’Ucraina rappresenta un esemplare manifestazione di pragmatismo geopolitico. Bruxelles ha dimostrato di saper trasformare una minaccia esistenziale in una duplice opportunità volta al consolidamento federale interno e all’espansione dell’influenza dell’Unione.  Il conflitto sta agendo da acceleratore per il consolidamento della difesa, permettendo di superare le croniche frammentazioni nazionali dell’industria bellica europea. Attraverso iniziative come l’ASAP e lo sviluppo di campioni industriali transnazionali come KNDS, l’Europa sta compiendo i primi passi verso una vera Unione della Difesa e un’ autonomia strategica reale. Parallelamente, sul fronte dell’espansione economica e normativa, la Ukraine Facility consente all’Unione di procedere a una vera e propria integrazione sistemica che va oltre il semplice finanziamento della ricostruzione.
Allineando Kiev agli standard normativi del mercato unico, Bruxelles prepara il terreno affinché l’Ucraina diventi il nuovo pilastro orientale del continente, garantendo sbocchi commerciali e industriali vitali per le imprese europee. In questa prospettiva, il raggiungimento di una pace stabile o di una vittoria militare non rappresentano più soltanto obiettivi umanitari, ma la condizione necessaria affinché l’Europa possa ottenere un ritorno sul capitale politico e finanziario investito. Il successo di questo esperimento di nation-building trasformerà la crisi in un rafforzamento strategico duraturo, consolidando possibilmente la posizione dell’Unione come attore globale di primo piano

La rivolta della Generazione Z in Nepal: giovani, élite e il dilemma sino-indiano

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:00

La mobilitazione della Generazione Z del settembre 2025 ha messo in crisi l’ordine repubblicano nepalese, ma ha finito per rivelare la resilienza delle élite tradizionali e i limiti strutturali della sovranità di uno Stato dipendente dall’India e attratto dall’influenza cinese. Le elezioni del 2026 rappresenteranno il momento decisivo in cui il Paese sarà chiamato a scegliere il proprio futuro.

Il Nepal è un piccolo Stato asiatico adagiato lungo le pendici meridionali dell’Himalaya, privo di accesso al mare e stretto tra India e Cina, due potenze nucleari con ambizioni regionali e globali. Questa collocazione ha storicamente condizionato non solo la sua politica estera, ma anche le dinamiche interne, rendendo il Nepal un fragile laboratorio di equilibrio e adattamento.

Il Nepal è anche il più antico Stato sovrano dell’Asia meridionale e ha attraversato, nel corso del XXI secolo, una delle transizioni politiche più radicali della regione. Dopo un’insurrezione maoista durata dieci anni, il 2008 segnò la fine della monarchia con l’abdicazione del re Gyanendra e la proclamazione della repubblica. L’evento fu presentato come l’inizio di una nuova era democratica, capace di superare le rigidità del passato monarchico e di includere una società profondamente eterogenea su fronti etnici, linguistici e religiosi. Tuttavia, a quasi due decenni di distanza, quella promessa appare ancora incompiuta e il futuro rimane in bilico fra la forte influenza indiana e l’ascesa della Cina. 

Il Nepal repubblicano

Dal 2008 il Nepal si è formalmente evoluto in una repubblica federale con poteri parlamentari, esecutivi e giudiziari separati, regolati dalla Costituzione del 2015. Secondo Freedom House, che nel 2024 ha classificato il Paese come “parzialmente libero”, il Nepal presenta elezioni competitive, processi politici credibili e un coinvolgimento civico relativamente elevato, con punteggi quasi perfetti per la libertà elettorale e per il diritto di riunione. Anche gli indicatori di sviluppo umano mostrano progressi significativi: tra il 1990 e il 2023 l’Indice di Sviluppo Umano è cresciuto di oltre il 50 per cento. Eppure, questi dati positivi convivono con un senso diffuso di stagnazione politica e di esclusione strutturale, che si è espresso nelle ricorrenti ondate di protesta.

La transizione post-monarchica si è infatti cristallizzata attorno a un compromesso tra due blocchi dominanti: le élite tradizionali delle colline, i Khas-Pahadi, e i maoisti, un tempo avversari nella guerra civile. Questo accordo ha garantito una certa stabilità istituzionale, ma non ha prodotto una reale inclusione delle molteplici identità che compongono la società nepalese.

L’élite Khas-Pahadi, prevalentemente indù, continua a dominare la politica nazionale, guidando partiti centristi come il Nepali Congress e l’UML e mantenendo un controllo sostanziale sulle istituzioni statali e sull’esercito. La loro egemonia culturale, rafforzata dall’uso del nepalese come lingua ufficiale, si accompagna a un orientamento storicamente filo-indiano, radicato in affinità religiose, culturali, economiche e strategiche di lunga data.

I maoisti, pur provenienti in larga parte dallo stesso gruppo etnico Khas-Pahadi, hanno cercato di distinguersi attraverso un discorso ideologico e una base sociale più ampia. Durante e dopo il conflitto, la loro leadership ha promosso una visione laica e rivoluzionaria che mirava a includere contadini, minoranze etniche, comunità buddiste delle regioni montane e gruppi religiosi sincretici o animisti. Questa apertura ha reso la loro base sociale più diversificata rispetto a quella dei partiti tradizionali. Sul piano geopolitico, i maoisti hanno guardato con maggiore favore alla Cina, sia per affinità ideologiche sia per la ricerca di un contrappeso all’influenza indiana.

Il risultato è stato un equilibrio interno ed esterno fondato sulla coesistenza di due orientamenti: uno prevalentemente moderato, filo-indiano, incarnato dalle élite Khas-Pahadi, e uno più aperto alla Cina, rappresentato dalla “sinistra”. Questo bilanciamento ha contribuito alla stabilità, ma ha anche congelato le possibilità di una riforma più profonda. Nonostante le promesse di una governance inclusiva, il periodo repubblicano ha consolidato il predominio delle élite Khas-Pahadi, che rappresentano tra il 30 e il 39 per cento della popolazione. Altre comunità numericamente rilevanti, come i Madhesi della pianura del Terai e le minoranze religiose buddhiste, restano sottorappresentate nelle istituzioni politiche, amministrative e militari, perpetuando uno squilibrio demografico e simbolico.

La rivolta del settembre 2025

È in questo contesto che va letta la rivolta del settembre 2025, che ha improvvisamente portato il Nepal al centro dell’attenzione dei media occidentali. Definita da molti come una “rivoluzione della Generazione Z”, la mobilitazione giovanile ha messo in discussione l’intera élite repubblicana con violenza e radicalità inedite. Le immagini di ministri aggrediti, umiliati e cacciati dalle proprie abitazioni hanno scioccato l’opinione pubblica internazionale. 

L’evento scatenante immediato è stato l’incidente del 6 settembre 2025, quando un SUV guidato da un ministro provinciale investì e uccise una bambina di undici anni a Lalitpur, senza fermarsi. La reazione del primo ministro KP Sharma Oli, che definì l’accaduto un “normale incidente”, fu percepita come il simbolo dell’impunità delle élite. Pochi giorni prima, il governo aveva inoltre vietato l’accesso a 26 piattaforme di social media, aggravando il senso di isolamento e di repressione. Nel giro di due giorni le proteste si estesero a tutto il Paese, provocando decine di morti e portando alle dimissioni di Oli, alla distruzione di edifici istituzionali e al collasso temporaneo dell’autorità civile.

Secondo Reuters, i disordini hanno causato perdite economiche superiori ai 586 milioni di dollari in un’economia da 42 miliardi, con 77 morti e oltre 2.000 feriti. Infrastrutture pubbliche e private sono state devastate, dimostrando quanto rapidamente l’instabilità politica possa tradursi in vulnerabilità economica per uno Stato piccolo e dipendente come il Nepal.

Le cause profonde della rivolta restano oggetto di dibattito. Corruzione sistemica, disuguaglianze e mancanza di opportunità per i giovani sono spesso citate, ma molte delle accuse emerse durante la rivolta sono risultate sommarie o simboliche. Anche la disoccupazione giovanile, sebbene elevata, non spiega da sola l’intensità della mobilitazione, soprattutto alla luce di tassi complessivi paragonabili a quelli europei post-crisi.

Il Paese tra India e Cina

Un’analisi più ampia richiede di considerare il contesto regionale e geopolitico. Su Foreign Affairs, Muhib Rahman, nell’articolo intitolato “The Folly of India’s Illiberal Hegemony”, ricostruisce gli eventi di settembre come parte di una dinamica regionale più ampia. Secondo Rahman, il Nepal non è un’eccezione. Bangladesh, Sri Lanka e Maldive hanno conosciuto negli ultimi anni mobilitazioni simili, tutte segnate da un forte protagonismo giovanile e da un rifiuto delle élite politiche percepite come corrotte e autoreferenziali. Il punto centrale dell’analisi, però, riguarda il ruolo dell’India. Per anni Nuova Delhi si è presentata come la più grande democrazia del mondo, ma nei rapporti con i Paesi vicini si è spesso comportata come un egemone illiberale, sostenendo regimi autoritari e interferendo negli affari interni di Stati sovrani più piccoli. Questo ha alimentato un risentimento diffuso verso l’India e, indirettamente, verso gli Stati Uniti, percepiti come garanti di tale ordine regionale. Durante le proteste di settembre in Nepal, questo risentimento si è manifestato apertamente. I manifestanti hanno affrontato con rabbia le troupe televisive indiane, considerate parte del problema. Secondo Rahman, questa dinamica crea spazi crescenti per l’influenza cinese, con conseguenze dirette anche per Washington.

In un articolo su The Spectator dal titolo “Why Nepal’s Gen Z overthrew its government”,  firmato da Kunwar Khuldune corrispondente in Pakistan per The Diplomat, si evidenzia però che il governo rovesciato in Nepal fosse già orientato ad aperture verso Pechino. Negli ultimi dieci anni, Pechino ha aumentato i propri investimenti e incrementato la quota cinese nelle importazioni nepalesi. La Cina ha anche cercato di includere il Nepal nella sua tanto celebrata Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), con il presidente Xi Jinping che ha firmato un memorandum d’intesa con il governo deposto nel dicembre 2024. Secondo The Spectator, proprio questa apertura aveva creato tensioni all’interno della coalizione di governo, divisa tra le aperture verso la Cina e i progetti con l’India sostenuti dagli Stati Uniti.

Per restare ai fatti, l’economia del Nepal dipende principalmente dal commercio con l’India, il suo principale partner commerciale. Nel 2023, le esportazioni del Nepal sono state dirette principalmente verso l’India (811 milioni di dollari), seguita dagli Stati Uniti (140 milioni di dollari), con la Cina ferma a 28,2 milioni di dollari. L’India ha dominato anche le importazioni, con un contributo di 7,25 miliardi di dollari rispetto ai 1,76 miliardi della Cina. Questi dati mostrano che l’economia del Nepal rimane strettamente legata all’India, mentre la Cina è un partner in crescita ma ancora secondario.

Sfide per il futuro

Dopo le rivolte di settembre 2025, in accordo con i manifestanti, il presidente Ram Chandra Paudel ha nominato Primo Ministro ad interim Sushila Karki, ex presidente della Corte Suprema nota per le sue posizioni anticorruzione, ma non parlamentare, in violazione della Costituzione del 2015. Nonostante il suo profilo atipico, Karki appartiene alla stessa élite Khas-Pahadi. L’esercito, anch’esso dominato dalle élite Khas-Pahadi, ha svolto un ruolo centrale nel ristabilire l’ordine e nel plasmare le nomine chiave, rafforzando ulteriormente il profilo filo-indiano dello Stato. Le elezioni parlamentari indette per marzo 2026 rappresenteranno il primo vero test della capacità della rivolta di tradursi in un cambiamento politico strutturale.

Nel frattempo, guardando alle conseguenze, a quattro mesi dalla rivolta, la struttura di potere del Paese, gli equilibri etnici e le dinamiche internazionali tra India e Cina rimangono sostanzialmente intatti. La Generazione Z ha dimostrato il suo potenziale, ma senza alterare le strutture fondamentali dello Stato nepalese, il Paese rimane in un fragile equilibrio interno ed esterno. 

Guardando al futuro, il Nepal dovrà compiere sforzi concertati sia per diventare un Paese autenticamente inclusivo, garantendo una rappresentanza significativa di tutte le comunità etniche, linguistiche e religiose, sia per tracciare un percorso verso una vera sovranità politica e culturale. Questo compito richiederà di affermare l’indipendenza dall’influenza indiana senza cadere sotto il dominio cinese.

Israel demolishes UN’s East Jerusalem site in ‘unprecedented attack’ defying international law

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:09
Israel demolished structures inside the UN ‍Palestinian refugee agency’s East Jerusalem compound on Tuesday after seizing the site last year, in an act condemned by the agency as a violation of international law. Surrounded by Israeli forces, bulldozers razed several large buildings and other smaller structures inside the United Nations Relief and Works Agency’s (UNRWA) compound, where ⁠dozens of agency staff once worked. UNRWA, which has been accused of bias by Israel, has not used the building...

US ambassador to Singapore’s ‘substantially larger gifts’ call to mark July 4 rankles

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:12
The US ambassador to Singapore, Anjani Sinha, has come under fire in the city state for asking businesses to make “substantially larger” financial contributions as his embassy plans for its July 4 celebrations, despite such fundraising being a standard annual practice of Washington’s diplomats. Observers told This Week in Asia that while soliciting businesses for contributions was not new, it was the language used by the ambassador that drew disbelief amid Washington’s more transactional foreign...

Israel demolishes UN’s East Jerusalem site in ‘unprecedented attack’ defying international law

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:09
Israel demolished structures inside the UN ‍Palestinian refugee agency’s East Jerusalem compound on Tuesday after seizing the site last year, in an act condemned by the agency as a violation of international law. Surrounded by Israeli forces, bulldozers razed several large buildings and other smaller structures inside the United Nations Relief and Works Agency’s (UNRWA) compound, where ⁠dozens of agency staff once worked. UNRWA, which has been accused of bias by Israel, has not used the building...

China’s next generation of warships will be propelled by a powerful 50MW gas turbine

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:00
China is working on a powerful 50-megawatt gas turbine to propel its next generation of warships and key facilities, according to state media. The gas turbine – an advanced power generation unit – is being developed by state-owned China State Shipbuilding Corporation, Economic Daily reported on Monday. It is part of a push by Beijing to establish a self-reliant supply chain for sectors it sees as crucial to national security and China’s industrial base. Advanced gas turbine engines are on...

‘Mad to boost birth rate’: China allows retirees to claim prenatal exam costs, sparks mockery

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:00
China’s national health authorities have announced a new policy in Beijing that allows retired people to be reimbursed the cost of a prenatal examination, sparking widespread mockery online. On January 12, the online topic “Beijing pensioners’ prenatal check-up can be reimbursed” made a mainland social media platform’s trending list, attracting seven million views. According to a public announcement by the National Healthcare Security Administration, Beijing has begun allowing prenatal check-up...

US drone demand puts Indonesia’s strategic balance to the test

Indonesia’s efforts to deepen trade with the United States while maintaining close economic ties with China are being tested after a report revealed Washington had linked lower tariffs to the purchase of US-made maritime surveillance drones for use near the South China Sea. The development has highlighted the balancing act facing Jakarta, which analysts say is seeking to preserve strategic flexibility as trade negotiations with Washington increasingly intersect with security and geopolitical...

Russia cheers Trump-Greenland rift while fearing Arctic risks

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 10:30
Russia is watching with glee as US ‌President Donald Trump’s drive to acquire Greenland widens splits with Europe even though his moves could have serious security ramifications for Moscow, which covets its ‍own presence in the Arctic. The Kremlin said Trump would go down in history if he took control of Greenland, an autonomous Danish territory. President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy Kirill Dmitriev hailed the “collapse of the transatlantic union”. Former President Dmitry Medvedev joked about...

China’s next generation of warships will be propelled by a powerful 50MW gas turbine

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:00
China is working on a powerful 50-megawatt gas turbine to propel its next generation of warships and key facilities, according to state media. The gas turbine – an advanced power generation unit – is being developed by state-owned China State Shipbuilding Corporation, Economic Daily reported on Monday. It is part of a push by Beijing to establish a self-reliant supply chain for sectors it sees as crucial to national security and China’s industrial base. Advanced gas turbine engines are on...

Russia cheers Trump-Greenland rift while fearing Arctic risks

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 10:30
Russia is watching with glee as US ‌President Donald Trump’s drive to acquire Greenland widens splits with Europe even though his moves could have serious security ramifications for Moscow, which covets its ‍own presence in the Arctic. The Kremlin said Trump would go down in history if he took control of Greenland, an autonomous Danish territory. President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy Kirill Dmitriev hailed the “collapse of the transatlantic union”. Former President Dmitry Medvedev joked about...

Korean-Americans face ‘pure fear’ under Trump’s immigration policies, activist says

For the Korean American community, the first year of US President Donald Trump’s return to power has been defined by a sense of “pure fear”. According to Kim Dong-seok, head of the non-profit Korean American Grassroots Conference (KAGC), the institutional tolerance that once protected immigrants has vanished, replaced by a political environment that views non-citizens with a presumption of criminality. “Even though the US government says it distinguishes between lawful and unlawful immigrants,...

China expels former intelligence official Gao Yichen from Communist Party for corruption

Former top Chinese intelligence official Gao Yichen has been expelled from the Communist Party for corruption after being accused of receiving bribes and interfering with judicial matters. Gao, 75, former vice-minister of the Ministry of State Security, was found to have “seriously violated party discipline”, according to an official announcement by top anti-corruption watchdog Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Tuesday. He also served as deputy director of the party’s...

Indonesia strips ex-police officer of citizenship for joining Russian forces

A former Indonesian police officer from an elite paramilitary unit who deserted his post and later claimed he had joined a Russian mercenary force fighting in Ukraine has been stripped of his citizenship, according to authorities. Muhammad Rio, a former member of the Aceh Police’s Mobile Brigade Corps (Brimob), a paramilitary arm of Indonesia’s national police, lost his citizenship after joining a foreign armed force without authorisation, Law Minister Supratman Andi Agtas said. “Anyone –...

Hong Kong’s jobless rate holds steady at 3.8% amid growth outlook

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 09:58
Hong Kong’s unemployment rate held steady at 3.8 per cent over the past three months, with authorities expecting that stronger economic growth and local consumption will continue to support the labour market. Preliminary data released by the Census and Statistics Department on Tuesday showed that movements in the unemployment rate in different industry sectors varied for the October to December period, but the magnitudes were generally small. The underemployment rate rose slightly by 0.1...

Korean-Americans face ‘pure fear’ under Trump’s immigration policies, activist says

For the Korean American community, the first year of US President Donald Trump’s return to power has been defined by a sense of “pure fear”. According to Kim Dong-seok, head of the non-profit Korean American Grassroots Conference (KAGC), the institutional tolerance that once protected immigrants has vanished, replaced by a political environment that views non-citizens with a presumption of criminality. “Even though the US government says it distinguishes between lawful and unlawful immigrants,...

China expels former intelligence official Gao Yichen from Communist Party for corruption

Former top Chinese intelligence official Gao Yichen has been expelled from the Communist Party for corruption after being accused of receiving bribes and interfering with judicial matters. Gao, 75, former vice-minister of the Ministry of State Security, was found to have “seriously violated party discipline”, according to an official announcement by top anti-corruption watchdog Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Tuesday. He also served as deputy director of the party’s...

China expels former intelligence official Gao Yichen from Communist Party for corruption

Former top Chinese intelligence official Gao Yichen has been expelled from the Communist Party for corruption after being accused of receiving bribes and interfering with judicial matters. Gao, 75, former vice-minister of the Ministry of State Security, was found to have “seriously violated party discipline”, according to an official announcement by top anti-corruption watchdog Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Tuesday. He also served as deputy director of the party’s...

Seoul airport ‘suicide flight’ threat sparks police manhunt in South Korea

Police in South Korea are hunting a person claiming to be a commercial pilot who threatened to carry out a “suicide flight” over Seoul’s Gimpo International Airport, voicing resentment over the merger between the country’s two largest airlines. The alarming message – posted on an anonymous online forum popular with office workers – also mentioned a stabbing, prompting authorities to increase security around the airport and verify the poster’s identity, police and aviation officials said on...

Dead porpoise with suspected stillborn calf found in Hong Kong waters

A dead porpoise, suspected to have been carrying a stillborn calf, was discovered in Hong Kong waters on Tuesday. The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department said it had retrieved the carcass, which was identified as a finless porpoise, in the waters near Ap Chau, one of the city’s outlying islands, on Tuesday evening. It added that a necropsy would be conducted by veterinarians, with the Ocean Park Conservation Foundation to also investigate. The park confirmed it would assist with...

Families of Hong Kong ferry crash victims say verdict won’t bring closure

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:29
Alice Leung Shuk-ling has spent more than a decade seeking the truth behind a ferry crash in 2012 that killed her younger brother and 38 others, and she expects a Coroner’s Court verdict due on Wednesday to be merely an ellipsis – not a full stop – in her quest. Leung, 40, said she never expected that last year’s 44-day inquest on the Lamma IV crash would unearth all the answers the families of the deceased had demanded for years. But she believed the inquest held a “symbolic meaning” for those...

South Korea probes if spies funded drones flown into North by student

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on Tuesday ordered an investigation into claims that the country’s military intelligence command supported a civilian accused of sending drones into North Korea. The civilian at the centre of the allegations, a graduate student in his thirties identified only by his surname Oh, claims he flew drones into North Korea three times since September last year. He previously worked in ex-president Yoon Suk-yeol’s office and allegedly received – according to local...

China’s consumers refuse to open their wallets. Is ‘luxury-phobia’ the problem?

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:00
As China struggles to boost consumer spending, a professor at one of the country’s top universities has argued that authorities first need to overcome a psychological barrier: a deep-seated “luxury-phobia” that has taken hold among the Chinese public. The suggestion by Su Jian, a professor at Peking University, comes amid a debate in Chinese policy circles about how to revive the country’s sluggish demand, with retail sales slowing despite government efforts to rebalance the economy towards a...

China’s consumers refuse to open their wallets. Is ‘luxury-phobia’ the problem?

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:00
As China struggles to boost consumer spending, a professor at one of the country’s top universities has argued that authorities first need to overcome a psychological barrier: a deep-seated “luxury-phobia” that has taken hold among the Chinese public. The suggestion by Su Jian, a professor at Peking University, comes amid a debate in Chinese policy circles about how to revive the country’s sluggish demand, with retail sales slowing despite government efforts to rebalance the economy towards a...

Trump threatens 200% wine tariff to push France to join ‘Board of Peace’

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:21
US President Donald Trump threatened to hit French wines and champagnes with 200 per cent tariffs in an apparent effort to cajole French President Emmanuel ‍Macron into joining his Board of Peace initiative aimed at resolving global conflicts. Trump’s initiative, which would start by addressing Gaza and then expand to deal with other conflicts, raises questions about the role of the United Nations and a source close to Macron said the French president intended to decline the invitation to...

In Cina e Asia –

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:56
In Cina e Asia – cina belt and road

I titoli di oggi: Cina, più fondi per la Belt and Road Initiative Afghanistan, lo Stato Islamico rivendica attacco contro ristorante cinese Cina-Corea del Nord, commercio aumentato del 26% nel 2025 Filippine, prima richiesta di impeachment contro Marcos Jr. Vietnam, al via il congresso del Partito comunista nel segno della massima sicurezza Trump accelera la leadership globale della Cina, l’analisi ...

L'articolo In Cina e Asia – proviene da China Files.

Hong Kong strives to be ‘fortress’ that safeguards digital security: I&T chief

Hong Kong is striving to become a “fortress” that safeguards digital security, the city’s innovation and technology (I&T) minister has said, stressing that cyber warfare is not just a confrontation of technologies but a “full-spectrum contest” that transcends geographical boundaries and integrates artificial intelligence. Secretary for Innovation, Technology and Industry Sun Dong made the remarks at a conference organised by the Digital Policy Office at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition...

Trump threatens 200% wine tariff to push France to join ‘Board of Peace’

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:21
US President Donald Trump threatened to hit French wines and champagnes with 200 per cent tariffs in an apparent effort to cajole French President Emmanuel ‍Macron into joining his Board of Peace initiative aimed at resolving global conflicts. Trump’s initiative, which would start by addressing Gaza and then expand to deal with other conflicts, raises questions about the role of the United Nations and a source close to Macron said the French president intended to decline the invitation to...

Chinese man flaunts cash online; envious ex-colleague disguises as woman, steals US$10,500

A Chinese man who flaunted his cash savings online triggered envy in a former colleague who disguised himself as a woman, then broke into his home to steal the entire amount. The case recently drew public attention after the Huli District People’s Procuratorate in Xiamen, Fujian province, southern China, handled a residential theft case. In April 2024, a man surnamed Xu was scrolling through social media when a video posted by his former colleague, surnamed Yang, caught his eye. The details of...

First contact: in quest for water on the moon, Chinese team flags risk in touching ice

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:59
China’s Chang’e-7 mission this year will be the world’s first to attempt to sample and directly measure water on the moon, but just touching lunar ice could mean losing it, a team of scientists has warned in a new paper. The spacecraft is expected to touch down near the rim of Shackleton crater at the lunar south pole, where it will deploy a rover and hopper to search for ice. While water could support long-term human activity on the moon, from providing drinking water and oxygen to producing...

First contact: in quest for water on the moon, Chinese team flags risk in touching ice

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:59
China’s Chang’e-7 mission this year will be the world’s first to attempt to sample and directly measure water on the moon, but just touching lunar ice could mean losing it, a team of scientists has warned in a new paper. The spacecraft is expected to touch down near the rim of Shackleton crater at the lunar south pole, where it will deploy a rover and hopper to search for ice. While water could support long-term human activity on the moon, from providing drinking water and oxygen to producing...

7 years’ jail for Singaporean who sexually assaulted jobseeker after dinner

di:CNA · CNA
20 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:01
A man reached out to a 21-year-old woman who had declined a job offer from his employer and arranged to meet her for dinner in Singapore. After dinner, they went to a park where the man went into the woman’s toilet cubicle and sexually assaulted her and attempted to get her to perform sex acts on him. The assault was stopped only when the man heard footsteps outside and left in a hurry. The sex offender, 34-year-old Singaporean Choy Zisheng, was sentenced on Monday to seven years’ jail and four...

Academic innovation can help budding entrepreneurs overcome future challenges

As globalisation and technological advancements continue to reshape the way we live and work, educational institutions must also evolve to help equip students with the right mindset and skills to tackle the challenges in our rapidly changing world. Academic innovation has been the guiding principle at Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University (XJTLU), in the city of Suzhou, in eastern China’s Jiangsu province, which is an international, research-focused joint venture between Xi’an Jiaotong University...

Malaysians’ foreign-policy satire, Japan’s fighter jet project boost: 7 Asia highlights

di:SCMP · SCMP
20 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:45
We have selected seven stories from the SCMP’s coverage of Asia over the past week that resonated with our readers and shed light on topical issues. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. ‘No oil here’: Malaysians turn US embassy space post into foreign-policy satire A well-intentioned US embassy post featuring a satellite image of Malaysia has sparked a distinctly local burst of self-deprecating humour, with social media users quipping in response to the...

Viral Zumba video triggers police probe in Malaysia over revealing attire

A “back to school”-themed Zumba session in Malaysia is being investigated by police and Islamic authorities after viral footage showing headscarf-wearing instructors dressed in revealing attire piqued conservatives’ anger. The aerobics session, live-streamed on Saturday morning, quickly triggered a social media pile-on, with critics accusing the organisers of violating religious and public decency norms in the Muslim-majority country. On Sunday, Selangor’s Islamic Religious Department (JAIS)...

Don’t expect Greenland crisis to realign EU with China, former US diplomat says

While there may be hopes in Beijing that Washington’s attempt to acquire Greenland has strained transatlantic ties and might draw European countries closer to China, a veteran US diplomat said such a fundamental realignment was unlikely. The core task of the European Union’s foreign policy will remain navigating intensifying US-China rivalry while seeking a workable balance between the two, according to William Klein, a former charge d’affaires at the US embassy in China. Addressing a seminar at...

Don’t expect Greenland crisis to realign EU with China, former US diplomat says

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:14
While there may be hopes in Beijing that Washington’s attempt to acquire Greenland has strained transatlantic ties and might draw European countries closer to China, a veteran US diplomat said such a fundamental realignment was unlikely. The core task of the European Union’s foreign policy will remain navigating intensifying US-China rivalry while seeking a workable balance between the two, according to William Klein, a former charge d’affaires at the US embassy in China. Addressing a seminar at...

Ex-Hong Kong logistics head denied award as 3 staff face action in water scandal

Hong Kong authorities will hold three officers from the logistics department accountable over their roles in a bottled water procurement scandal, while its former head had his Silver Bauhinia Star nomination rescinded despite being cleared of direct oversight. Civil service chief Ingrid Yeung Ho Poi-yan said on Tuesday that an investigation into the scandal involving the HK$166 million (US$21.3 million) bottled water procurement contract last year found that two staff members from the Government...

Labubu maker Pop Mart surges after first buy-back in 2 years in show of confidence

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:05
Shares of Chinese toymaker Pop Mart rallied nearly 10 per cent on Tuesday morning before closing more than 9 per cent higher after the company announced its first share buy-back in nearly two years, following a decline from last year’s peak. Pop Mart’s Hong Kong-listed shares rose to HK$198.70 at the open as investors welcomed the move. Shares closed 9.1 per cent higher at HK$197.20. The stock remains below last year’s closing level of HK$200.20, and more than 40 per cent off its August peak,...

Bangladesh’s student leaders ‘sidelined’ by Islamist allies in poll pact

Bangladesh’s student leaders, one of the main driving forces behind the mass protests that brought down former prime minister Sheikh Hasina in 2024, now face an uncertain political future. Despite their central role in the uprising, the youth movement has been granted only a small share of parliamentary seats under a new electoral alliance led by Jamaat-e-Islami – an Islamist party that was long politically marginalised but has re-emerged as a central player. Under the agreement, the student-led...

Don’t expect Greenland crisis to realign EU with China, former US diplomat says

While there may be hopes in Beijing that Washington’s attempt to acquire Greenland has strained transatlantic ties and might draw European countries closer to China, a veteran US diplomat said such a fundamental realignment was unlikely. The core task of the European Union’s foreign policy will remain navigating intensifying US-China rivalry while seeking a workable balance between the two, according to William Klein, a former charge d’affaires at the US embassy in China. Addressing a seminar at...

Labubu maker Pop Mart surges after first buy-back in 2 years in show of confidence

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:05
Shares of Chinese toymaker Pop Mart rallied nearly 10 per cent on Tuesday morning before closing more than 9 per cent higher after the company announced its first share buy-back in nearly two years, following a decline from last year’s peak. Pop Mart’s Hong Kong-listed shares rose to HK$198.70 at the open as investors welcomed the move. Shares closed 9.1 per cent higher at HK$197.20. The stock remains below last year’s closing level of HK$200.20, and more than 40 per cent off its August peak,...

Hong Kong cold spell to hit 11-degree low, feel chillier due to higher humidity

This story has been made freely available as a public service to our readers. Please consider supporting SCMP’s journalism by subscribing. Get faster notifications on the latest updates by downloading our app. Temperatures in Hong Kong are expected to drop to a low of 11 degrees Celsius (51.8 Fahrenheit) on Thursday under the influence of an intense winter monsoon, but the weather will feel colder than recorded levels due to rising humidity across the city. The Hong Kong Observatory said on...

Shanghai maps global financial hub plan to 2035, for world-class and socialist metropolis

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 04:00
Shanghai has laid out a full spectrum of goals on finance for the next five years and beyond, following an unequivocal push by China’s central leadership to grow the city into an international financial centre. China’s largest city-level economy aims to evolve into a world-class, socialist metropolis by 2035, with an intensified focus on innovation and manufacturing, according to a local document released on Monday. Shanghai unveiled its proposals for the drafting of its own 15th five-year plan,...

Shanghai maps global financial hub plan to 2035, for world-class and socialist metropolis

Shanghai has laid out a full spectrum of goals on finance for the next five years and beyond, following an unequivocal push by China’s central leadership to grow the city into an international financial centre. China’s largest city-level economy aims to evolve into a world-class, socialist metropolis by 2035, with an intensified focus on innovation and manufacturing, according to a local document released on Monday. Shanghai unveiled its proposals for the drafting of its own 15th five-year plan,...

Record snow in Russia’s far east blocks building entrances, buries cars

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 03:18
The biggest snowfall in 60 years ‌on Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula created ‍vast drifts several metres tall that blocked building entrances and buried cars, according to Reuters visuals and weather monitoring ⁠stations. In some areas more than 2 metres (6.5 feet) of snow has fallen in the first half of January after 3.7 metres in December, ‍according to weather monitoring stations. Heavy snow is not uncommon in Kamchatka - a peninsula which stretches down towards Japan. Reuters...

Hong Kong set to receive long-awaited inquest verdict on 2012 Lamma ferry crash

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 03:31
The Coroner’s Court is expected to deliver a long-awaited verdict on Wednesday for an inquest into one of Hong Kong’s deadliest maritime disasters, in which 39 residents died after a collision between two ferries near Lamma Island in 2012. After the government commissioned an inquiry into the cause of the tragedy later that year, families of victims decided not to take part in the proceedings, citing difficulties in securing legal representation and the expectation that an inquest would occur in...

Record snow in Russia’s far east blocks building entrances, buries cars

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 03:18
The biggest snowfall in 60 years ‌on Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula created ‍vast drifts several metres tall that blocked building entrances and buried cars, according to Reuters visuals and weather monitoring ⁠stations. In some areas more than 2 metres (6.5 feet) of snow has fallen in the first half of January after 3.7 metres in December, ‍according to weather monitoring stations. Heavy snow is not uncommon in Kamchatka - a peninsula which stretches down towards Japan. Reuters...

Operation Santa Claus: Hong Kong charity to train ethnic minority teens as coaches

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 03:15
A charity founded in 1979 to support Vietnamese war refugee children in Hong Kong will launch a programme this year to train teenagers from ethnic minority groups as sports coaches for mainstream youngsters. Treats’ “EM-SPARK” project will train 30 ethnic minority youngsters aged 15 to 18 to coach 3,504 mainstream primary school students and community members in kin-ball, a team game where players work together to keep a giant ball in the air, and taspony, a tennis-like sport played with a...

Singapore’s retail ownership data sparks debate about foreign chains’ influence

When Singapore’s trade minister Gan Kim Yong revealed that locals owned nearly 90 per cent of registered retail businesses in the city state while Chinese nationals came in second at a distant 3 per cent, the figures drew mixed reactions from the public and analysts. The discourse online centred on what the statistics implied – critics felt that though the proportion of foreign-owned entities, especially from China, might be minuscule, most could actually be big brands with multiple outlets,...

Why security, not growth, is likely to command China’s attention in 2026

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 02:30
China achieved its twin goals of tech advancement and macro stability in 2025. Its goals for 2026 remain the same. However, a rapidly deteriorating global security environment is likely to shift national priorities towards preparation for worst-case scenarios. Oil supplies and sea lanes are becoming insecure. The US-China trade war could reignite at any time. China will have to accelerate its goals of energy and technology self-sufficiency to enhance national resilience. Fighting for sea lane...

Brooklyn Peltz Beckham says ‘I do not want to reconcile with my family’ in explosive post

Brooklyn Peltz Beckham, son of the British celebrity couple David and Victoria Beckham, said he did not want to reconcile with his parents after a family rift he described in a lengthy post on social media on Monday. The 26-year-old said that his parents have been controlling narratives in the press about his family and tried to “ruin” his relationship with his wife Nicola Peltz Beckham. “I do not want to reconcile with my family,” he wrote in a post to his 16.2 million Instagram followers. “I’m...

2 Chinese nationals in Malaysia face US$392,000 tax bills after employer fraud

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 02:44
Two Chinese nationals working in Malaysia are facing income tax bills amounting to 748,073.84 ringgit (US$184,595) and 842,118.84 ringgit, respectively, after their employer allegedly used their identities to submit false salary information to the Inland Revenue Board (LHDN). Li Juan, 42, discovered the issue when she tried to extend her work permit, while the other victim, Chen Bi Ling, 40, who was married to a Malaysian, found out about it when she was extending her spouse’s visa. Speaking at...

Why security, not growth, is likely to command China’s attention in 2026

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 02:30
China achieved its twin goals of tech advancement and macro stability in 2025. Its goals for 2026 remain the same. However, a rapidly deteriorating global security environment is likely to shift national priorities towards preparation for worst-case scenarios. Oil supplies and sea lanes are becoming insecure. The US-China trade war could reignite at any time. China will have to accelerate its goals of energy and technology self-sufficiency to enhance national resilience. Fighting for sea lane...

Brooklyn Peltz Beckham says ‘I do not want to reconcile with my family’ in explosive post

Brooklyn Peltz Beckham, son of the British celebrity couple David and Victoria Beckham, said he did not want to reconcile with his parents after a family rift he described in a lengthy post on social media on Monday. The 26-year-old said that his parents have been controlling narratives in the press about his family and tried to “ruin” his relationship with his wife Nicola Peltz Beckham. “I do not want to reconcile with my family,” he wrote in a post to his 16.2 million Instagram followers. “I’m...

Taiwanese military’s closed-door meeting draws ‘black box’ criticism

Taiwan’s military held a closed-door briefing on Monday to break an opposition blockade of a controversial NT$1.25 trillion (US$39.5 billion) special defence budget that has prompted accusations of “black box” decision-making from rival parties. Taiwanese Defence Minister Wellington Koo Li-hsiung delivered a classified briefing to the legislature’s foreign affairs and defence committee, seeking to persuade lawmakers to allow the long-stalled bill to be referred for committee review. The package...

China wedding goes viral as twin brothers marry twin sisters and both sides have twin uncles

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 02:00
A highly unlikely set of nuptials has taken place in China with a pair of twin brothers marrying twin sisters. Not only that, both sides have a pair of twin uncles. A wedding photo featuring four sets of twins went viral online recently, racking up more than 10 million views. According to the mainland media outlet Jiupai News, the two couples only discovered on the wedding day that their uncles were also twins. The wedding host called it a “miracle”, and the guests were equally astonished and...

Why security, not growth, is likely to command China’s attention in 2026

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 02:30
China achieved its twin goals of tech advancement and macro stability in 2025. Its goals for 2026 remain the same. However, a rapidly deteriorating global security environment is likely to shift national priorities towards preparation for worst-case scenarios. Oil supplies and sea lanes are becoming insecure. The US-China trade war could reignite at any time. China will have to accelerate its goals of energy and technology self-sufficiency to enhance national resilience. Fighting for sea lane...

Taiwanese military’s closed-door meeting draws ‘black box’ criticism

Taiwan’s military held a closed-door briefing on Monday to break an opposition blockade of a controversial NT$1.25 trillion (US$39.5 billion) special defence budget that has prompted accusations of “black box” decision-making from rival parties. Taiwanese Defence Minister Wellington Koo Li-hsiung delivered a classified briefing to the legislature’s foreign affairs and defence committee, seeking to persuade lawmakers to allow the long-stalled bill to be referred for committee review. The package...

‘No room for refusal’: Hong Kong professionals brace for tough calls under child abuse law

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 01:30
Hong Kong professionals mandated to report suspected child abuse cases under a new law taking effect on Tuesday are largely ready, but some have said challenges remain in working with parents from different cultural backgrounds and detecting online crimes targeting youngsters. Under the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance, more than 100,000 people across 25 professions in the social welfare, education and medical sectors are required to report suspected maltreatment of those aged under...

China challenges US in AI drug race, but rivals still reliant on each other

China has emerged as a credible challenger to the US in artificial intelligence-driven drug discovery, where advantage depends not only on computing prowess but also on the ability to effectively mine data, from genomes to clinical trial results, according to Leung Chuen-yan, a private equity investor and life sciences scientist. “Globally, the way companies develop and use AI to discover drugs is similar, from finding the drug target and designing the molecule to planning clinical trials,” said...

Japan weighs disturbing grave of over 700 children to recover Tsushima Maru relics

More than eight decades after her mother narrowly survived the sinking of the steamer Tsushima Maru, Tsugiko Taira says the wreck still speaks to her. She believes artefacts lying on the seabed could give new voice to one of the worst civilian maritime tragedies of World War II. Taira’s reflections come as Japan’s government considers whether to retrieve items from the wreck for public display. Officials have conducted a survey and, according to Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara, will...

China challenges US in AI drug race, but rivals still reliant on each other

China has emerged as a credible challenger to the US in artificial intelligence-driven drug discovery, where advantage depends not only on computing prowess but also on the ability to effectively mine data, from genomes to clinical trial results, according to Leung Chuen-yan, a private equity investor and life sciences scientist. “Globally, the way companies develop and use AI to discover drugs is similar, from finding the drug target and designing the molecule to planning clinical trials,” said...

Italy uncovers ancient basilica designed by the ‘father of architecture’ Vitruvius

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 00:46
Italian officials ‍on Monday hailed the discovery of a more than 2,000-year-old public building attributed to Vitruvius, the ancient Roman architect and engineer known as the “father of architecture”. “It is a sensational finding … something that our grandchildren will ⁠be talking about,” Italian Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli told a press conference. Vitruvius, who lived in the 1st century BC, is celebrated for having written De architectura, or The Ten Books on Architecture, the oldest...

Syrian deal unravels as sides clash and Isis prisoners escape

A day after a sweeping deal was announced between the Syrian government and the country’s main Kurdish-led force, the agreement appeared to be falling apart on Monday. After new outbreaks of clashes Monday, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces issued a statement calling for “all of our youth” to “join the ranks of the resistance”. “Just as our comrades in 2014 forged a historic resistance in Kobani and turned it into a graveyard for (the Islamic State group) ... today we affirm with the same...

Italy uncovers ancient basilica designed by the ‘father of architecture’ Vitruvius

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 00:46
Italian officials ‍on Monday hailed the discovery of a more than 2,000-year-old public building attributed to Vitruvius, the ancient Roman architect and engineer known as the “father of architecture”. “It is a sensational finding … something that our grandchildren will ⁠be talking about,” Italian Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli told a press conference. Vitruvius, who lived in the 1st century BC, is celebrated for having written De architectura, or The Ten Books on Architecture, the oldest...

Chinese automotive suppliers speed up localisation to increase global market share

20 Gennaio 2026 ore 00:30
Chinese electric vehicle (EV) supply chain vendors are adding another dimension to their go-global drive: designing batteries and lidar sensors for models by international marques that cater to overseas drivers. As leading players like BYD secure mega deals with major carmakers like Ford, Chinese automotive suppliers that once trailed their global peers are now stamping their authority on the EV sector. Chinese vendors were enjoying an overwhelming advantage over their international rivals in...

Syrian deal unravels as sides clash and Isis prisoners escape

A day after a sweeping deal was announced between the Syrian government and the country’s main Kurdish-led force, the agreement appeared to be falling apart on Monday. After new outbreaks of clashes Monday, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces issued a statement calling for “all of our youth” to “join the ranks of the resistance”. “Just as our comrades in 2014 forged a historic resistance in Kobani and turned it into a graveyard for (the Islamic State group) ... today we affirm with the same...

Allies tepid on joining Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ as countries study invitations

Key allies reacted coolly on Monday to US President Donald Trump’s invite to pay US$1 billion for a permanent spot on his “Board of Peace” for resolving international conflicts, with analysts likening it to a pay-to-play version of the UN Security Council. The White House has asked various world leaders to sit on the board, chaired by Trump himself, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Hungarian premier Viktor Orban and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. The board’s charter, seen by...

Allies tepid on joining Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ as countries study invitations

Key allies reacted coolly on Monday to US President Donald Trump’s invite to pay US$1 billion for a permanent spot on his “Board of Peace” for resolving international conflicts, with analysts likening it to a pay-to-play version of the UN Security Council. The White House has asked various world leaders to sit on the board, chaired by Trump himself, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Hungarian premier Viktor Orban and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. The board’s charter, seen by...

Mainland China’s art grads sculpt career ‘passports’ in Hong Kong

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 23:00
For years, many of mainland China’s art students dreamed of working or studying in Europe. After hours spent poring over the works of the continent’s masters as part of their degree requirements, living where their pieces are preserved, displayed and appreciated would seem a natural fit. But with funding and hiring freezes striking numerous overseas art programmes and museums, that path grows less appealing by the day. Now, rather than relocate to a new continent to further their studies, more...

Mainland China’s art grads sculpt career ‘passports’ in Hong Kong

For years, many of mainland China’s art students dreamed of working or studying in Europe. After hours spent poring over the works of the continent’s masters as part of their degree requirements, living where their pieces are preserved, displayed and appreciated would seem a natural fit. But with funding and hiring freezes striking numerous overseas art programmes and museums, that path grows less appealing by the day. Now, rather than relocate to a new continent to further their studies, more...

Ricevuto ieri — 19 Gennaio 2026 Stampa Internazionale

Poverty rates have plunged, but can we all live like the Swiss by 2100?

In 1900, most people lived without electricity, antibiotics or universal education. Today, life expectancy is decades longer, literacy and access to medicine are near universal in many regions, and hundreds of millions have entered the global middle class. This progress was built through science, industry, public health, education and the hard work of ordinary people who believed tomorrow could be better. The question now is whether humanity can achieve a still more audacious goal: a world in...

Poverty rates have plunged, but can we all live like the Swiss by 2100?

In 1900, most people lived without electricity, antibiotics or universal education. Today, life expectancy is decades longer, literacy and access to medicine are near universal in many regions, and hundreds of millions have entered the global middle class. This progress was built through science, industry, public health, education and the hard work of ordinary people who believed tomorrow could be better. The question now is whether humanity can achieve a still more audacious goal: a world in...

Spain mourns as country seeks answers to deadly high-speed train collision

Spain woke to flags at half-staff on Tuesday as the nation began three days of mourning for the victims of the deadly train accident in the country’s south, while emergency crews continued to pull bodies from the wreckage. The official death toll of Sunday’s accident rose to 41 by Tuesday morning, after Spanish Transport Minister Oscar Puente Santiago said that another corpse had been discovered when a crane lifted a damaged carriage. Officials have repeatedly warned that the death count may...

Spain seeks answers to deadly high-speed train collision

The death toll from a high-speed train collision in southern Spain rose to 40 on Monday as the government vowed a full investigation into its causes. The crash late on Sunday is Spain’s deadliest train accident since 2013, when 80 people died after a train veered off a curved section of track outside the northwestern city of Santiago de Compostela. The latest happened when a train operated by rail company Iryo travelling from Malaga to Madrid derailed near Adamuz in Andalusia. It crossed onto...

Il 2026 segna la svolta dell’IA sul lavoro, a rischio i neolaureati

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 20:21

Il 2026 potrebbe segnare un punto di svolta negativo nell’impatto dell’intelligenza artificiale sui mercati del lavoro. Secondo numerosi economisti, gli effetti finora rimasti poco visibili inizieranno a emergere in modo più chiaro, colpendo soprattutto chi sta entrando ora nel mondo del lavoro. I più esposti sarebbero i laureati, formati per professioni considerate fino a poco tempo fa stabili e sicure.

Come si legge sul Financial Times, secondo Molly Kinder, ricercatrice presso la Brookings Institution: “C’è il rischio di sottovalutare quello che sta arrivando”. L’intenzione di molte aziende e investitori di usare l’intelligenza artificiale per aumentare l’efficienza e ridurre il costo del lavoro è dichiarata e diffusa. Il fatto che gli effetti non siano ancora pienamente visibili non implica che non si manifesteranno, ma indica piuttosto che il processo è ancora in una fase iniziale.

L’aumento della disoccupazione tra i laureati osservato negli ultimi mesi negli Stati Uniti e in Europa viene spiegato prevalentemente con fattori macroeconomici. Tra questi figurano il rallentamento generale delle assunzioni, l’incertezza politica, l’aumento delle imposte sul lavoro nel Regno Unito e l’eccesso di offerta di neolaureati in alcune aree dell’Eurozona. Secondo Ben May, direttore della ricerca macroeconomica globale di Oxford Economics : “Non abbiamo ancora visto segnali convincenti che si tratti di un fenomeno strutturale”. May osserva inoltre che alcune aziende tendono a collegare i licenziamenti all’adozione dell’IA perché questa spiegazione risulta più rassicurante per gli investitori rispetto a motivazioni come la debolezza della domanda o le assunzioni eccessive del passato.

Alcuni indicatori iniziali, però, iniziano a delinearsi. Studi recenti mostrano un indebolimento delle assunzioni nei settori in cui l’adozione dell’intelligenza artificiale è più avanzata, come tecnologia e finanza, oltre ai ruoli di supporto e assistenza clienti, già da tempo soggetti all’automazione. Nel Regno Unito, un’analisi delle offerte di lavoro citata da Tera Allas evidenzia cali più marcati proprio nelle professioni più esposte all’IA. Secondo Allas, questo non significa che le aziende abbiano già realizzato risparmi significativi o completato l’integrazione tecnologica, ma indica una scelta prudenziale, con un rallentamento delle nuove assunzioni.

In molti casi, l’intelligenza artificiale non elimina direttamente un posto di lavoro, ma riduce la necessità di nuove assunzioni. Parte delle mansioni viene automatizzata, consentendo ai team esistenti di gestire lo stesso volume di attività con meno persone. Questo meccanismo tende a penalizzare soprattutto le posizioni di ingresso nel mercato del lavoro. Per i lavoratori già occupati, l’impatto appare diverso. Secondo Christopher Pissarides, professore alla London School of Economics: “Se si chiede ai lavoratori come utilizzano l’intelligenza artificiale generativa, in generale ne sono molto soddisfatti: svolge la parte ripetiviva del loro lavoro”. Lo stesso Pissarides segnala però forti preoccupazioni per le prospettive dei neolaureati, in particolare nelle economie fortemente basate sui servizi professionali.

Secondo Stefano Scarpetta, direttore della direzione per l’occupazione dell’Ocse, le evidenze disponibili suggeriscono che l’intelligenza artificiale tenda a integrare le competenze dei lavoratori più che a sostituirli. Nelle piccole imprese che hanno adottato strumenti di IA generativa non si osservano riduzioni occupazionali, ma una maggiore capacità di crescita, una riduzione del carico di lavoro e una minore dipendenza da consulenze esterne. Rimane però limitato, sottolinea Scarpetta, l’investimento nella formazione di competenze complementari, come il pensiero critico necessario per usare questi strumenti in modo efficace.

Finora, governi e aziende hanno concentrato l’attenzione soprattutto sulla promozione dello sviluppo e dell’adozione dell’intelligenza artificiale, dedicando meno spazio alla gestione delle ricadute sul lavoro. Se nel 2026 le difficoltà dei laureati dovessero accentuarsi, il tema potrebbe rapidamente salire al centro del dibattito politico.

A differenza delle precedenti trasformazioni tecnologiche, che hanno colpito soprattutto l’industria manifatturiera, questa fase riguarda professioni ad alta visibilità sociale. Percorsi di carriera considerati per decenni canali di accesso sicuri rischiano di perdere la loro funzione. Per molti giovani che hanno investito in istruzione seguendo indicazioni consolidate, il cambiamento si traduce in una crescente incertezza. Secondo diversi economisti, senza una revisione profonda dei percorsi di ingresso nelle professioni, il divario tra formazione e lavoro è destinato ad ampliarsi.

L'articolo Il 2026 segna la svolta dell’IA sul lavoro, a rischio i neolaureati proviene da Il Blog di Beppe Grillo.

Brazil beef exports seen as stable in 2026 as industry pivots beyond China

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:46
Brazilian beef exports will remain stable ‌in 2026 compared with last year, beef lobby Abiec said on ‍Monday, projecting shipments between 3.3 million and 3.5 million tonnes this year. That compares with 3.5 million tonnes of beef exported in 2025, including fresh and processed products, when Brazil’s ⁠beef shipments had their best year on record both in volumes and revenue, according to trade data. Roberto Perosa, Abiec president, said exports would remain broadly unchanged after top importer...

Valentino, fashion designer to the jet set, stars and royalty, dead at 93

Valentino Garavani, the jet-set Italian designer whose high-glamour gowns – often in his trademark shade of “Valentino red” – were fashion show staples for nearly half a century, has died at home in Rome, his foundation announced on Monday. He was 93. “Valentino Garavani was not only a constant guide and inspiration for all of us, but a true source of light, creativity and vision,” the foundation said in a statement posted on social media. His body will repose at the foundation’s headquarters in...

Brazil beef exports seen as stable in 2026 as industry pivots beyond China

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:46
Brazilian beef exports will remain stable ‌in 2026 compared with last year, beef lobby Abiec said on ‍Monday, projecting shipments between 3.3 million and 3.5 million tonnes this year. That compares with 3.5 million tonnes of beef exported in 2025, including fresh and processed products, when Brazil’s ⁠beef shipments had their best year on record both in volumes and revenue, according to trade data. Roberto Perosa, Abiec president, said exports would remain broadly unchanged after top importer...

Valentino, fashion designer to the jet set, stars and royalty, dead at 93

Valentino Garavani, the jet-set Italian designer whose high-glamour gowns – often in his trademark shade of “Valentino red” – were fashion show staples for nearly half a century, has died at home in Rome, his foundation announced on Monday. He was 93. “Valentino Garavani was not only a constant guide and inspiration for all of us, but a true source of light, creativity and vision,” the foundation said in a statement posted on social media. His body will repose at the foundation’s headquarters in...

Brazil beef exports seen as stable in 2026 as industry pivots beyond China

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 19:46
Brazilian beef exports will remain stable ‌in 2026 compared with last year, beef lobby Abiec said on ‍Monday, projecting shipments between 3.3 million and 3.5 million tonnes this year. That compares with 3.5 million tonnes of beef exported in 2025, including fresh and processed products, when Brazil’s ⁠beef shipments had their best year on record both in volumes and revenue, according to trade data. Roberto Perosa, Abiec president, said exports would remain broadly unchanged after top importer...

Canada considers sending small contingent of troops to Greenland

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 18:38
Canada is considering whether to send a ‌small contingent of troops to Greenland to ‍take part in Nato military exercises, a source directly familiar with the matter said on Monday. The news was first reported by CBC News and the Globe and Mail newspaper. Military officials have presented plans for the operation to the government and are awaiting a decision from ‍Prime Minister Mark Carney, said the source, who requested anonymity ‍given the sensitivity of the matter. Carney’s office declined to...

Canada considers sending small contingent of troops to Greenland

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 18:38
Canada is considering whether to send a ‌small contingent of troops to Greenland to ‍take part in Nato military exercises, a source directly familiar with the matter said on Monday. The news was first reported by CBC News and the Globe and Mail newspaper. Military officials have presented plans for the operation to the government and are awaiting a decision from ‍Prime Minister Mark Carney, said the source, who requested anonymity ‍given the sensitivity of the matter. Carney’s office declined to...

‘It’s like asking us to die’: Hong Kong subdivided flat tenants seek aid as eviction looms

Hong Kong authorities are “very concerned” about the tenants facing eviction from a Cheung Sha Wan building in March, as the landlords’ plans to upgrade the premises to comply with new rules left dozens living in subdivided flats in need of temporary housing. The Housing Bureau said on Monday that it was in contact with 109 households in Yee Wa Building on Un Chau Street, with 72 expressing a need for transitional housing. The remaining 37 households said they were considering applying for such...

Explosion at Chinese restaurant in Afghan capital Kabul kills 7

A blast at a Chinese restaurant in central Kabul on Monday killed at least seven people and wounded more than a dozen others, emergency services said. An Agence France-Presse journalist saw police vehicles and an ambulance at the scene following the explosion on a street known for its flower sellers in the Shahr-e-Naw area. Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said the explosion occurred at the Chinese Noodle restaurant, which he said mainly served Chinese Muslims. “A Chinese Muslim, Ayub, and...

Explosion at Chinese restaurant in Afghan capital Kabul kills 7

A blast at a Chinese restaurant in central Kabul on Monday killed at least seven people and wounded more than a dozen others, emergency services said. An Agence France-Presse journalist saw police vehicles and an ambulance at the scene following the explosion on a street known for its flower sellers in the Shahr-e-Naw area. Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said the explosion occurred at the Chinese Noodle restaurant, which he said mainly served Chinese Muslims. “A Chinese Muslim, Ayub, and...

Explosion at Chinese restaurant in Afghan capital Kabul kills 7

A blast at a Chinese restaurant in central Kabul on Monday killed at least seven people and wounded more than a dozen others, emergency services said. An Agence France-Presse journalist saw police vehicles and an ambulance at the scene following the explosion on a street known for its flower sellers in the Shahr-e-Naw area. Kabul police spokesman Khalid Zadran said the explosion occurred at the Chinese Noodle restaurant, which he said mainly served Chinese Muslims. “A Chinese Muslim, Ayub, and...

Hong Kong justice minister slams sanctions threat, accusations against judges

Hong Kong’s justice minister has refuted “unfounded” accusations against the judiciary regarding several highly charged national security cases, stating that none of the judges had failed to fulfil their duties and that their independence remains strong. In his address at a ceremony on Monday to mark the start of the legal year, Secretary for Justice Paul Lam Ting-kwok also slammed the threat of sanctions against the city’s judges and “illegitimate pressures” placed on overseas judges to...

China signs record US$213 billion of new ‘belt and road’ deals in 2025: report

China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative gained further traction in 2025, with a record US$213.5 billion of new deals signed as projects in metals, mining, fossil fuels and new technologies surged, a report by the Griffith Asia Institute has found. The value of new deals confirmed under China’s global infrastructure strategy rose 75 per cent last year compared with 2024, with a notable pivot towards investment in Africa and Central Asia, according to the report released on Sunday. China has...

China signs record US$213 billion of new ‘belt and road’ deals in 2025: report

China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative gained further traction in 2025, with a record US$213.5 billion of new deals signed as projects in metals, mining, fossil fuels and new technologies surged, a report by the Griffith Asia Institute has found. The value of new deals confirmed under China’s global infrastructure strategy rose 75 per cent last year compared with 2024, with a notable pivot towards investment in Africa and Central Asia, according to the report released on Sunday. China has...

China signs record US$213 billion of new ‘belt and road’ deals in 2025: report

China’s ambitious Belt and Road Initiative gained further traction in 2025, with a record US$213.5 billion of new deals signed as projects in metals, mining, fossil fuels and new technologies surged, a report by the Griffith Asia Institute has found. The value of new deals confirmed under China’s global infrastructure strategy rose 75 per cent last year compared with 2024, with a notable pivot towards investment in Africa and Central Asia, according to the report released on Sunday. China has...

How narrowing China-US gap could reshape global power play by 2035

The United States is likely to lose its clear edge over China in strategic relations with major nations by 2035, a prominent Chinese political scientist has predicted. Yan Xuetong, honorary dean of Tsinghua University’s Institute of International Relations, said strategic competition between Beijing and Washington was likely to remain intense in the coming decade and could escalate into a crisis during US President Donald Trump’s second term, but the risk of direct war could decline under...

How narrowing China-US gap could reshape global power play by 2035

The United States is likely to lose its clear edge over China in strategic relations with major nations by 2035, a prominent Chinese political scientist has predicted. Yan Xuetong, honorary dean of Tsinghua University’s Institute of International Relations, said strategic competition between Beijing and Washington was likely to remain intense in the coming decade and could escalate into a crisis during US President Donald Trump’s second term, but the risk of direct war could decline under...

China suffers unprecedented double rocket launch failures in a single day

In a historic blow to its space programme, China suffered two rocket launch failures in a single day for the first time over the weekend. While Saturday’s failed launches gained immediate attention on social media, with some describing the day as “Black Saturday”, space observers said the setbacks were part of the growing pains the country’s rapidly developing aerospace industry would inevitably experience. They also drew parallels with similar problems Elon Musk’s firm SpaceX had experienced,...

DeepSeek a year on: how a little-known Chinese start-up sparked a global AI arms race

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 15:00
One year ago, a little-known Chinese start-up called DeepSeek burst onto the scene with a new artificial intelligence model that challenged assumptions about China’s ability to innovate under US technology curbs. In what became known as the “DeepSeek moment”, the Hangzhou-based firm kicked off what some likened as a modern-day “Sputnik moment” for China’s AI ambitions. Just as the Soviet Union’s 1957 launch of Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite, shocked the US and triggered the...

How narrowing China-US gap could reshape global power play by 2035

The United States is likely to lose its clear edge over China in strategic relations with major nations by 2035, a prominent Chinese political scientist has predicted. Yan Xuetong, honorary dean of Tsinghua University’s Institute of International Relations, said strategic competition between Beijing and Washington was likely to remain intense in the coming decade and could escalate into a crisis during US President Donald Trump’s second term, but the risk of direct war could decline under...

China suffers unprecedented double rocket launch failures in a single day

In a historic blow to its space programme, China suffered two rocket launch failures in a single day for the first time over the weekend. While Saturday’s failed launches gained immediate attention on social media, with some describing the day as “Black Saturday”, space observers said the setbacks were part of the growing pains the country’s rapidly developing aerospace industry would inevitably experience. They also drew parallels with similar problems Elon Musk’s firm SpaceX had experienced,...

13 children killed in South Africa as minibus collides with truck near Johannesburg

South Africa mourned the deaths on Monday of 13 schoolchildren who died when their minibus collided with a truck, ⁠local officials said in a statement, in an incident that put the spotlight on the country’s dismal road safety record. The private vehicle was transporting students to various primary schools and high schools in the southwest of Johannesburg when the incident occurred around 7am, according to authorities. Parents were seen weeping uncontrollably at the scene of the accident, while...

40 Hong Kong semi-private schools eye more non-local pupils in education hub push

More than half of Hong Kong’s 78 semi-private schools have applied to increase class sizes and student numbers to admit more non-locals as part of the city’s drive to become an international education hub. The Education Bureau said on Monday that it has received an “enthusiastic response” to its earlier invitation to all Direct Subsidy Scheme (DSS) schools to take in more non-local pupils. The initiative, first outlined in Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu’s policy address last year, allows DSS...

440 Indonesians freed from Cambodia’s cyberscam networks in criminal crackdown

Cyberscam networks in Cambodia have freed more than 400 Indonesians this month, Jakarta said on Monday, after Phnom Penh announced a fresh crackdown on the illicit industry. Scammers working from hubs across Southeast Asia, some willingly and others trafficked, lure internet users globally into fake romances and cryptocurrency investments, netting tens of billions of dollars each year. Some foreign nationals have left suspected scam compounds across Cambodia this month as the government pledged...

13 children killed in South Africa as minibus collides with truck near Johannesburg

South Africa mourned the deaths on Monday of 13 schoolchildren who died when their minibus collided with a truck, ⁠local officials said in a statement, in an incident that put the spotlight on the country’s dismal road safety record. The private vehicle was transporting students to various primary schools and high schools in the southwest of Johannesburg when the incident occurred around 7am, according to authorities. Parents were seen weeping uncontrollably at the scene of the accident, while...

Impeachment complaint against Philippines’ Marcos seen by some as ‘inoculation’ tactic

The first impeachment complaint against Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jnr was filed on Monday, a move observers said may be aimed as much at pre-empting stronger challenges as at holding the president to account. Filed by lawyer Andre de Jesus, the complaint accuses Marcos of constitutional violations, corruption and betrayal of public trust, citing alleged failures to veto unconstitutional budget provisions and address anomalous flood-control projects. However, several political figures...

EU weighs response to Trump’s Greenland tariff threat: punch back or punching bag?

After a weekend of US President Donald Trump threatening to slap tariffs on EU countries for opposing his drive to acquire Greenland, the question on European lips on Monday was: will the bloc finally punch back? A string of national leaders has come out against the US president’s gambit, part of a long-running campaign to make the giant autonomous Danish territory part of America, with speculation mounting that the use of duties could trigger European retaliation. To keep Trump engaged in...

China bids to host High Seas Treaty secretariat, even as US exits UN bodies

China has proposed to host the secretariat of a new treaty governing the high seas, in what observers say is the latest effort by Beijing to proactively play a bigger role in shaping international rules of order. Days after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to pull the US from 66 international organisations, including United Nations commissions and major bodies set up to tackle climate change, China has bid for Xiamen in Fujian province – a coastal hub that sits on the Taiwan...

USA-Cina: come sta andando la partita commerciale delle superpotenze

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 12:12

Fosse una partita di calcio il 2025 avrebbe visto prevalere Pechino su Washington per 5 a 2. Sono i rispettivi punti di crescita di Pil delle due superpotenze globali, con il Financial Times che ha reso noti oggi i dati definitivi cinesi. Ecco perché l’amministrazione Trump continua a sgomitare commercialmente con dazi a mazzi e iniziative geopolitiche sui generis come quelle in atto in Venezuela e Groenlandia.

Articolo pubblicato su The Watcher Post.

Cina in netto vantaggio negli scambi commerciali
Per il commercio internazionale cinese il 2025 è stato l’anno del record storico del surplus (export meno import): 1,2 trilioni di $. Il risultato fatto segnare dagli USA è di segno opposto. Il saldo commerciale 2025 è risultato negativo per 1,1 trilioni di $. Questi numeri a specchio ci aiutano a capire meglio cosa stia muovendo le scelte americane di politiche internazionale. E il dato relativo al solo export ce ne dà ulteriore conferma: Pechino ha visto crescere le sue esportazioni 2025 del 6,1%, portandole a quota 3,77 trilioni di $, mentre gli Stati Uniti si sono fermati a quota 2,1 trilioni di $.

Cosa comporta l’andamento della partita
La politica cinese di raffreddare le importazioni continua: lo scorso anno sono cresciute di appena lo 0,5%. I dati ufficiali delle Dogane cinesi mostrano come il saldo commerciale positivo sia quasi raddoppiato dal 2021 al 2025, passando da 676 miliardi di $ a 1190 miliardi di $. Il balzo è frutto della diversificazione geografica delle vendite cinesi all’estero, non più focalizzate sul mercato americano, ma dirottate verso l’Unione europea, l’ASEAN, l’Africa e l’America Latina. Se si prende in considerazione la sola relazione commerciale diretta tra Cina e USA, Pechino esporta negli USA beni per 430 miliardi di $, mentre Washington appena 150 miliardi di $ (che in termini calcistici sarebbe un 3-1). Lato saldo commerciale diretto nel confronto diretto gli USA perdono 280 miliardi di $. Oggi per il commercio cinese gli USA valgono appena l’8,8% del totale. Inforcando gli occhiali di Washington il deficit commerciale con la Cina è in rapido raffreddamento, ma resta significativo. A dicembre 2025 le importazioni USA dal Dragone sono calate di circa il 30%. Parte di questa riduzione (oltre un terzo) è però solo apparente, frutto di triangolazioni via Vietnam, Messico e Sud-Est asiatico. il deficit complessivo USA resta alto perché le importazioni si sono semplicemente spostate dalla Cina verso altri Paesi, e non perché ne sia diminuito il consumo. Ciò significa che i dazi USA hanno ridotto il peso diretto della Cina, ma non il deficit complessivo. E soprattutto che la dipendenza reciproca Washington-Pechino sia in netto calo. A discapito della necessità di dialogo e collaborazione.

I villaggi Alzheimer: un’alternativa possibile alle RSA

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 13:29
di Isaac J.P. Barrow

Chi ha avuto un familiare in una RSA conosce bene la scena: porte chiuse, spazi asettici, sedie davanti a televisori sempre accesi o… spenti. Un’organizzazione pensata prima per la gestione del rischio e dei costi, poi per la vita quotidiana delle persone. Anche dove il personale è motivato e competente, la struttura fisica e il modello organizzativo producono una forma di sospensione dell’esistenza, dove la vecchiaia è una parentesi da isolare.

Le RSA italiane nascono in gran parte da riconversioni, ex ospedali, ex conventi, grandi edifici adattati a funzioni assistenziali. Spazi concepiti per il controllo, non pensati per l’abitare, e il risultato è una medicalizzazione permanente della vita, dove l’anziano diventa soprattutto un paziente, anche quando non avrebbe bisogno di esserlo in ogni momento. Le criticità le conosciamo, sono note, carenza cronica di personale, standard edilizi minimi spesso superati solo sulla carta, rette altissime che non sempre corrispondono a una reale qualità dei servizi. E a questo si aggiunge una separazione netta dal contesto urbano e sociale. Le RSA sono spesso invisibili, perchè non affacciano sulla città, sono a contatto con il quartiere. Sono luoghi in cui l’anziano è dimenticato, dalla società e molte volte dalla stessa famiglia. 

Negli ultimi anni, soprattutto dopo la pandemia, questo modello ha mostrato tutti i suoi limiti. Ed è qui che entrano in gioco i modelli alternativi, a partire dai cosiddetti villaggi Alzheimer.

Il riferimento storico è Hogeweyk, nei Paesi Bassi. Un quartiere vero, con strade, piazze, negozi, giardini, ristorante e teatro. Un perimetro protetto, sì, ma senza la sensazione di reclusione delle RSA. Le persone si muovono liberamente, fanno la spesa, passeggiano, incontrano altri residenti. L’assistenza è presente ma non dominante. Dopo oltre dieci anni di attività, i dati mostrano una riduzione dell’uso di psicofarmaci, livelli di agitazione più bassi e una migliore qualità della vita percepita.

In Francia, il modello è stato reinterpretato con il Village Landais Alzheimer, a Dax. Un progetto pubblico, finanziato in larga parte dalle istituzioni locali, che ha fatto della sperimentazione dichiarata il suo punto di forza. Qui l’architettura è pensata per essere facile da capire e da vivere: gli spazi sono continui, senza vicoli ciechi, con percorsi circolari che aiutano a orientarsi. I colori sono uniformi per ridurre la confusione e non ci sono cartelli di divieto, che aumenterebbero ansia e inquietudine. I risultati, confermati anche da studi indipendenti, parlano di minore depressione, meno disturbi comportamentali e un carico assistenziale più sostenibile per gli operatori.

In Germania, da oltre dieci anni, esistono i cosiddetti Demenzdörfer, villaggi o quartieri dedicati a persone con demenza inseriti spesso in contesti semiurbani. Case di piccola scala, spazi verdi continui, assenza di barriere visive, percorsi circolari e forte integrazione con servizi di prossimità. L’attenzione è rivolta soprattutto alla quotidianità. Fare una passeggiata, sedersi in un bar, partecipare a un’attività senza la sensazione di essere osservati o sorvegliati. Anche qui emerge lo stesso dato, meno agitazione, meno contenimento farmacologico, maggiore continuità tra la vita precedente e quella dentro la struttura.

Fuori dall’Europa, anche la Cina ha iniziato a sperimentare modelli alternativi. A Xi’an è stato inaugurato uno dei primi villaggi dedicati alla demenza, in un Paese che si prepara a un rapido invecchiamento della popolazione dopo decenni di crescita demografica controllata. Il progetto combina spazi verdi, servizi sanitari integrati e attività quotidiane, con un forte accento sulla comunità. In un contesto culturale molto diverso da quello europeo, l’idea di fondo resta la stessa. Ridurre l’istituzionalizzazione, mantenere una parvenza di vita ordinaria, sostenere le famiglie oltre che i pazienti.

E in Italia?  Non è ferma ma purtroppo si muove con molta lentezza e in modo frammentario. Il caso più noto è Il Paese Ritrovato, a Monza, promosso dalla Cooperativa La Meridiana. Un villaggio urbano dedicato a persone con Alzheimer, con appartamenti, negozi, spazi comuni, un luogo in cui le persone con demenza sono libere di scegliere cosa fare del proprio tempo e ritrovano una dimensione di socialità che restituisce valore alla loro vita. I primi risultati mostrano un miglioramento del benessere complessivo e una riduzione della conflittualità legata al disorientamento.

Esistono poi esperienze più piccole, spesso sperimentali. Cohousing per anziani (ne abbiamo parlato qui), nuclei Alzheimer all’interno di strutture più grandi, residenze leggere integrate nel tessuto urbano. Progetti interessanti, ma ancora marginali rispetto al sistema complessivo delle RSA. Il problema principale resta la scala. Queste esperienze richiedono investimenti iniziali elevati, personale formato in modo specifico, un cambio di paradigma gestionale isomma.

I villaggi e le architetture orientate alla dignità mostrano che un ambiente pensato bene può ridurre il carico clinico, migliorare il lavoro degli operatori e restituire senso alle giornate delle persone.

Un altro elemento chiave è la visibilità. Molte strutture tradizionali nascondono la vecchiaia, come se fosse qualcosa da tenere lontano dallo sguardo pubblico. I progetti più avanzati fanno il contrario: affacciano sulla strada, “dialogano” con il quartiere, invitano la comunità a entrare.

Tutti questi esempi, anche se molto diversi tra loro per dimensioni, risorse e contesto culturale, seguono gli stessi principi di base: la persona resta al centro; la vita quotidiana mantiene una continuità con il passato; le cure mediche intervengono solo quando servono davvero; gli spazi sono chiari e rassicuranti; la libertà è accompagnata e protetta, senza chiusure preventive. Il contatto con l’esterno viene favorito, invece dell’isolamento.

Il confronto con l’Italia fa emergere subito il divario. Le RSA restano il cardine quasi unico dell’assistenza agli anziani fragili. Le alternative, ci sono, poche e spesso sperimentali, affidate a cooperative coraggiose o a amministrazioni illuminate. Quello che manca è una visione, conta riconoscere che il luogo in cui si vive l’ultima parte della vita incide sulla salute, sui costi, sul lavoro di chi assiste.

Dobbiamo pensare in modo diverso, dobbiamo smettere di pensare alla vecchiaia come un problema, nascondendola…e iniziare a progettare il futuro che prima o poi riguarda tutti noi.

L’AUTORE

Isaac J.P. Barrow – Professore sociologo specializzato in dinamiche sociali globali. Tutta la sua carriera si è concentrata su globalizzazione e tecnologie digitali. Ha svolto ricerche in vari paesi ed è autore di studi su identità culturali e disuguaglianze. Ha collaborato con organizzazioni internazionali ed è considerato un esperto di politiche sociali ed inclusione.

L'articolo I villaggi Alzheimer: un’alternativa possibile alle RSA proviene da Il Blog di Beppe Grillo.

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La crescente rilevanza strategica dell’Artico ha riportato la Groenlandia al centro della pianificazione di sicurezza statunitense. Tuttavia, quando uno stato membro della NATO esercita pressioni politiche o strategiche per ottenere il controllo di un territorio appartenente a un altro alleato, la questione trascende la dimensione geopolitica e assume una valenza sistemica. Il caso groenlandese evidenzia così un cortocircuito politico e giuridico all’interno dell’Alleanza Atlantica, sollevando interrogativi sulla tenuta dei suoi principi fondanti e sulla credibilità della sicurezza collettiva. 

Groenlandia e Artico: il nuovo interesse strategico vitale.

Per gran parte del Novecento, l’Artico ha occupato una posizione marginale nel sistema internazionale: uno spazio periferico, ostile e scarsamente popolato, rilevante soprattutto come zona di cuscinetto strategico durante la Guerra Fredda. Oggi, questa rappresentazione appare superata. Il progressivo scioglimento dei ghiacci, l’apertura di nuove rotte marittime polari, la competizione per le risorse critiche e la crescente militarizzazione del Grande Nord hanno trasformato l’Artico in uno dei principali teatri della competizione sistemica tra grandi potenze, inserendolo stabilmente nel cuore delle dinamiche di sicurezza globale. 

In questo contesto, la Groenlandia ha assunto una centralità strategica senza precedenti. La sua posizione geografica – ponte naturale tra Nord America ed Europa – la colloca lungo le principali traiettorie dei missili balistici intercontinentali e delle nuove rotte aeree e marittime artiche, rendendola un nodo cruciale per la difesa avanzata del Nord Atlantico. Non a caso, già durante la Guerra Fredda Washington aveva investito sull’isola come avamposto della propria architettura difensiva; un ruolo che oggi si rafforza ulteriormente con la presenza della Pituffik Space Base, infrastruttura chiave per il sistema di allerta missilistica, il controllo spaziale e l’integrazione della difesa nordamericana. 

La rinnovata importanza della Groenlandia si inserisce in una più ampia ridefinizione delle priorità strategiche statunitensi, che ha progressivamente incorporato l’Artico nella sfera degli interessi vitali di sicurezza nazionale. Già nel National Security Strategy and Review 2022 Implementation Report, la regione viene trattata non più come dominio periferico, ma come uno spazio critico da proteggere e controllare, all’interno di una visione estesa di difesa emisferica che connette Atlantico, Artico e Pacifico in un unico continuum strategico. Nel novembre 2025, la nuova National Security Strategy elaborata dall’amministrazione Trump ha ribadito la centralità dell’Artico nella politica di sicurezza statunitense. In questa prospettiva, deterrenza nucleare, superiorità tecnologica e controllo degli spazi globali convergono nel Grande Nord, attribuendo alla Groenlandia una funzione strutturale nella protezione del potere statunitense

Questo orientamento dottrinale riflette le profonde trasformazioni del contesto strategico artico. La Russia ha investito in modo sistematico nella militarizzazione dell’Artico, riattivando infrastrutture ereditate dall’era sovietica, dispiegando sistemi missilistici avanzati e rafforzando la Flotta del Nord, con l’obiettivo di trasformare la regione in una piattaforma di protezione militare verso l’Atlantico settentrionale e di controllo delle rotte marittime lungo il Northern Sea Route. Parallelamente, la Cina, pur non essendo uno stato artico, ha ampliato costantemente la propria presenza economica, scientifica e infrastrutturale, consolidando interessi strategici attraverso programmi di ricerca, investimenti portuali e partecipazioni a progetti logistici e tecnologici nel quadro del cosiddetto Polar Silk Road

In questo scenario, la Groenlandia emerge come un asset critico multidimensionale, non solo sul piano militare, ma anche economico e tecnologico. Il sottosuolo dell’isola ospita un potenziale significativo di terre rare e materie prime critiche, fondamentali per la transizione energetica, l’industria della difesa e le tecnologie avanzate. La crescente attenzione di Stati Uniti ed Europa verso queste risorse riflette una consapevolezza ormai diffusa: il controllo delle catene di approvvigionamento è ormai parte integrante della sicurezza nazionale e della competizione geopolitica. Tuttavia, a questa crescente centralità strategica si accompagna una fragilità strutturale evidente. La Groenlandia presenta una popolazione estremamente ridotta, capacità militari limitate e una dipendenza strutturale dal Regno di Danimarca, pur godendo di un’ampia autonomia interna. Questo squilibrio alimenta le preoccupazioni di Washington sulla reale capacità europea di garantire la sicurezza dell’isola in un contesto segnato dall’intensificarsi della competizione strategica nell’Artico, dalla postura più assertiva della Russia e dalla progressiva penetrazione cinese nella regione. Non a caso, nel dibattito strategico statunitense la Groenlandia viene sempre più descritta come un possibile “ventre molle” della sicurezza euro-atlantica nel quadrante settentrionale. È proprio all’interno di questa tensione – tra valore strategico crescente e vulnerabilità strutturale – che maturano le posizioni più assertive emerse nel dibattito politico statunitense. Le dichiarazioni e le iniziative dell’amministrazione Trump sulla Groenlandia non rappresentano un’uscita estemporanea, ma si inseriscono in una traiettoria storica e strategica più ampia, che affonda le proprie radici nei precedenti tentativi statunitensi di acquisizione dell’isola e nella percezione della Groenlandia come asset chiave per la difesa del Nord America. 

La Groenlandia diventa così un punto di convergenza di interessi geopolitici, militari ed economici che travalicano la dimensione bilaterale tra Washington e Copenaghen. È questa centralità, unita alla collocazione dell’isola all’interno dell’Alleanza Atlantica, a trasformare la questione groenlandese in qualcosa di più di una disputa diplomatica: un fattore di stress strategico capace di mettere alla prova la coesione, la credibilità e la capacità di deterrenza della NATO nel Grande Nord

Sovranità, autonomia e influenza: la frattura politica tra alleati. 

La crisi groenlandese affonda le proprie radici in un quadro giuridico peculiare, che combina ampia autonomia interna e sovranità statale incompleta. Il rapporto tra Groenlandia e Regno di Danimarca è regolato dall’Act on Greenland Self-Government del 2009, che riconosce all’isola competenze estese in ambito politico, economico e amministrativo, mantenendo tuttavia a Copenaghen il controllo su difesa, politica estera e sicurezza. All’interno di questo assetto, viene sancito un principio di rilievo strategico: il diritto del popolo groenlandese all’autodeterminazione, incluso un potenziale percorso verso l’indipendenza. Tale possibilità, tuttavia, si scontra con limiti strutturali profondi. Il dibattito interno all’isola evidenzia come l’indipendenza rappresenti un obiettivo politicamente evocato ma materialmente complesso, condizionato dalla forte dipendenza economica dai trasferimenti danesi, da capacità amministrative limitate e da una vulnerabilità strategica accentuata dalla collocazione geografica della Groenlandia nel cuore della competizione artica. In questo equilibrio instabile tra autonomia e dipendenza si apre uno spazio di manovra per attori esterni, pronti a sfruttarne le ambiguità. 

È su questo terreno che si innestano le pressioni statunitensi, progressivamente evolute da retorica politica a postura strategica esplicita. Le dichiarazioni provenienti dall’entourage di Trump,  secondo cui l’uso della forza non potrebbe essere escluso, e la conferma che l’ipotesi di acquisizione dell’isola costituisca una “discussione attiva” alla Casa Bianca, hanno segnalato un salto qualitativo nella percezione europea della crisi, trasformando una controversia diplomatica in un problema di sicurezza collettiva. 

Particolarmente destabilizzante è risultata l’emersione di ipotesi di accordi diretti tra Washington e Nuuk, aggirando il governo danese. Una dinamica che non solo mette in discussione la sovranità di uno stato membro, ma introduce un precedente problematico all’interno dell’Alleanza Atlantica: la possibilità che una grande potenza alleata eserciti pressioni politiche e negoziali su un territorio formalmente appartenente a un altro alleato. Questo approccio si inserisce in una più ampia tendenza di disimpegno selettivo americano dalla sicurezza europea, in cui il rapporto transatlantico viene sempre più subordinato a logiche di interesse nazionale immediato. In questo quadro, le affermazioni secondo cui gli Stati Uniti potrebbero essere chiamati a scegliere tra la Groenlandia e la NATO hanno contribuito ad alimentare una percezione di frattura senza precedenti. 

Accanto alla pressione politica e diplomatica, la crisi groenlandese è stata accompagnata dall’emersione di dinamiche riconducibili a operazioni di influenza. In Danimarca, inchieste giornalistiche hanno segnalato  tentativi di infiltrazione politica legati a figure vicino all’amministrazione Trump, mentre in altre ricostruzioni delineano l’esistenza di una strategia più ampia volta a indirizzare il dibattito pubblico groenlandese sull’indipendenza e sul rapporto con Washington. Pur collocate in una zona grigia tra diplomazia informale e pressione politica, tali iniziative hanno contribuito ad accrescere il livello di sfiducia tra alleati, alimentando il sospetto di un utilizzo strumentale delle fragilità istituzionali e identitarie dell’isola. 

La reazione europea è stata rapida e relativamente compatta. L’Unione Europea ha ribadito con fermezza il principio del rispetto dell’integrità territoriale della Danimarca, sottolineando come la questione groenlandese non possa essere affrontata al di fuori dei quadri giuridici e politici condivisi. Parallelamente, diversi stati membri hanno espresso un sostegno politico esplicito a Copenaghen, sottoscrivendo una dichiarazione congiunta sulla Groenlandia in cui si riafferma la necessità di gestire le sfide di sicurezza nell’Artico all’interno del perimetro della cooperazione euro-atlantica, nel rispetto della sovranità e dell’unità politica degli alleati.  In questo clima, la questione groenlandese ha cessato di essere un dossier bilaterale, trasformandosi in una frattura politica intra-alleanza

La Groenlandia diventa così il simbolo di una tensione più profonda. Quando un alleato utilizza strumenti di pressione politica, diplomatica e potenzialmente coercitiva contro un altro alleato, il principio di fiducia reciproca – fondamento implicito della NATO – viene messo in discussione. È in questo spazio di ambiguità, tra sovranità formale, autonomia incompiuta e influenza esterna, che prende forma il paradosso destinato a esplodere nella dimensione militare e giuridica dell’Alleanza.  

Il paradosso dell’Articolo 5: quando il garante diventa il predatore.

La frattura politica emersa attorno alla Groenlandia produce effetti che travalicano la dimensione diplomatica e investono direttamente la struttura giuridica e strategica dell’Alleanza Atlantica. Nel momento in cui la pressione esercitata da uno stato membro assume caratteri coercitivi nei confronti di un altro alleato, la crisi si sposta dal piano della fiducia politica a quello della funzionalità del sistema di sicurezza collettiva. È in questo passaggio che la questione groenlandese si configura come uno stress test esistenziale per la NATO, mettendone in discussione i presupposti fondativi.

 L’Articolo 5 del Trattato Atlantico è stato concepito per fronteggiare minacce esterne in un contesto bipolare, fondandosi su un presupposto implicito ma essenziale: l’assenza di conflittualità strategica all’interno dell’Alleanza. Tale architettura mostra tuttavia limiti strutturali nel momento in cui il potere egemone dell’organizzazione esercita una pressione diretta o indiretta su un territorio appartenente a un altro stato membro. In uno spazio come l’Artico, dove deterrenza, sovranità e proiezione militare si sovrappongono in modo sempre più instabile, la Groenlandia emerge come un punto di frizione strutturale capace di evolversi in un potenziale proprio punto di rottura dell’equilibrio intra-alleanza. 

L’escalation retorica degli ultimi mesi ha contribuito a rendere questo scenario meno astratto. L’idea che un’azione militare in Groenlandia rappresenterebbe la fine stessa della NATO, unita alla riaffermazione che l’uso della forza resti un’opzione praticabile, ha incrinato il principio di prevedibilità strategica su cui si fonda la deterrenza collettiva. Parallelamente, è stato ribadito che la Groenlandia appartiene al suo popolo e che qualsiasi soluzione imposta dall’esterno sarebbe priva di legittimità politica e giuridica, posizione confermata anche dalle autorità di Nuuk, che hanno escluso l’ipotesi di entrare negli Stati Uniti o nell’Unione Europea

Se si ipotizza uno scenario di coercizione o intervento diretto, il cortocircuito dell’Articolo 5 diventa evidente. In termini formali, un attacco alla Groenlandia equivarrebbe a un attacco alla Danimarca, attivando il meccanismo di difesa collettiva. Tuttavia, quando l’attore responsabile coincide con il principale fornitore di deterrenza nucleare, capacità militari e leadership dell’Alleanza, il dispositivo perde ogni operatività concreta. L’Articolo 5 cesserebbe di funzionare come garanzia di sicurezza e si trasformerebbe in una contraddizione sistemica, incapace di produrre una risposta coerente senza dissolvere l’Alleanza stessa. Anche qualora le minacce rientrassero in una logica negoziale, il danno alla credibilità della NATO risulterebbe comunque profondo. Un’alleanza in cui uno stato membro teme il garante della sicurezza collettiva non può più essere definita una comunità di sicurezza, ma assume i tratti di un sistema gerarchico fondato sui rapporti di forza asimmetrici. In questo senso, la Groenlandia non rappresenta un’eccezione contingente, bensì un precedente potenzialmente destabilizzante per l’intera architettura euro-atlantica.

Le implicazioni strategiche di una simile crisi sarebbero immediate e profonde. Una NATO delegittimata o paralizzata offrirebbe vantaggi indiretti a Russia e Cina, riducendo la capacità dell’Alleanza di esercitare deterrenza credibile nei teatri chiave. Mosca, che ha rafforzato in modo sistematico la sua postura militare nel Grande Nord, potrebbe sfruttare la perdita di coesione euro-atlantica per ampliare i propri margini di manovra nell’Artico e lungo il fianco orientale europeo, consolidando una strategia di pressione multilivello. Parallelamente, Pechino troverebbe un contesto favorevole per accelerare la propria penetrazione economica, scientifica e infrastrutturale lungo le rotte polari emergenti e nei settori strategici legati alle risorse critiche, incluse le terre rare groenlandesi, sempre più centrali nelle catene del valore globali e nella competizione tecnologica tra grandi potenze. 

La crisi groenlandese apre così una riflessione di carattere sistemico sull’ordine internazionale. Se una grande potenza potesse ottenere un territorio strategico attraverso la coercizione, invocando esigenze di sicurezza nazionali o di difesa avanzata, quale precedente verrebbe creato? La Russia non potrebbe forse rivendicare una legittimazione analoga per proseguire la guerra in Ucraina e consolidare il controllo sulle regioni del Donbass, reinterpretando il concetto di sicurezza regionale in chiave espansiva? E la Cina non potrebbe richiamarsi a una propria lettura della sicurezza emisferica per giustificare un’azione su Taiwan, presentandola come misura preventiva e difensiva? 

In questo scenario, il diritto internazionale rischierebbe di perdere la propria funzione regolativa, riducendosi a un insieme di norme applicabili in modo selettivo e subordinate ai rapporti di forza. È qui che emerge con maggiore chiarezza la responsabilità strategica dell’Europa. Opporsi a qualsiasi soluzione coercitiva sulla Groenlandia non significa soltanto difendere la sovranità danese o preservare la NATO, ma evitare la creazione di un precedente capace di innescare una crisi sistemica dell’ordine internazionale basato sulle regole, già messo sotto pressione dal ritorno della geopolitica delle sfere di influenza

La Groenlandia, da periferia artica, diventa così il luogo simbolico in cui si misura la tenuta dell’Alleanza Atlantica e, più in generale, la credibilità dell’Occidente come attore normativo e garante di stabilità. In un contesto segnato dal nuovo grande risiko dell’Artico e dalla crescente competizione sulle risorse strategiche e sulle rotte polari, se il garante della sicurezza collettiva dovesse trasformarsi in un predatore, il contratto strategico che ha sostenuto l’ordine euro-atlantico dal secondo dopoguerra rischierebbe non solo di incrinarsi, ma di dissolversi definitivamente. 

Trump abandons ‘peace’ focus after Nobel snub in message to Norway PM: ‘World is not secure’

Donald Trump no longer needs to think “purely of peace” after being snubbed for a Nobel prize, the US president said in comments published on Monday, adding the world will not be safe until Washington controls Greenland. Trump has put the transatlantic alliance to the test with threats to take over Greenland “one way or the other”, with European countries closing ranks against Washington’s designs on the vast Danish territory. German and French leaders denounced as “blackmail” weekend threats by...

Trump abandons ‘peace’ focus after Nobel snub in message to Norway PM: ‘World is not secure’

Donald Trump no longer needs to think “purely of peace” after being snubbed for a Nobel prize, the US president said in comments published on Monday, adding the world will not be safe until Washington controls Greenland. Trump has put the transatlantic alliance to the test with threats to take over Greenland “one way or the other”, with European countries closing ranks against Washington’s designs on the vast Danish territory. German and French leaders denounced as “blackmail” weekend threats by...

PLA urged to find a way to operate effectively under the gaze of US and Japan

People’s Liberation Army activities in the Taiwan Strait are being closely watched by the United States and Japan and it needs to find a way to operate effectively while being surveilled, according to analysts. A report by Beijing-based defence think tank Lande said the PLA’s most recent large-scale drills around Taiwan – dubbed Justice Mission 2025 – were launched with no warning yet the response from the US and Japan was immediate. It said that highlighted the constant presence in the region...

IMF raises China’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.5%, citing US ‘truce’ and stimulus roll-out

The International Monetary Fund has raised its 2026 economic growth forecasts for both China and the United States by 0.3 percentage points, the latest sign that the pause in their trade war has eased pressure on both economies. In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF’s flagship publication released on Monday, the Washington-based fund also upgraded its global economic growth estimate by 0.2 percentage points over its October forecast to 3.3 per cent this year. China’s economy is now...

China girl writes love messages to late grandpa, leads to calls for better grief education

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 11:00
An 11-year-old girl in China who often sends text messages to her dead grandfather has moved millions of internet users in the country. According to a report by media outlet The Cover, the girl’s mother known as Han, who lives in the southwestern Sichuan province, discovered the messages on her daughter’s phone-watch. The little girl has a careless personality and seldom talks about the grandfather’s death. As a result, Han was surprised and touched when she found the messages. She later shared...

PLA urged to find a way to operate effectively under the gaze of US and Japan

People’s Liberation Army activities in the Taiwan Strait are being closely watched by the United States and Japan and it needs to find a way to operate effectively while being surveilled, according to analysts. A report by Beijing-based defence think tank Lande said the PLA’s most recent large-scale drills around Taiwan – dubbed Justice Mission 2025 – were launched with no warning yet the response from the US and Japan was immediate. It said that highlighted the constant presence in the region...

IMF raises China’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.5%, citing US ‘truce’ and stimulus roll-out

The International Monetary Fund has raised its 2026 economic growth forecasts for both China and the United States by 0.3 percentage points, the latest sign that the pause in their trade war has eased pressure on both economies. In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF’s flagship publication released on Monday, the Washington-based fund also upgraded its global economic growth estimate by 0.2 percentage points over its October forecast to 3.3 per cent this year. China’s economy is now...

Japan’s Takaichi rolls dice on snap election, betting her popularity can save scandal-hit LDP

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has staked her political survival on a high-risk snap general election, wagering that her personal approval ratings can overcome the legacy of her scandal-plagued party. Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Takaichi confirmed she would dissolve the House of Representatives on Friday – the opening day of the parliamentary session – paving the way for a nationwide vote on February 8. “I will put my post on the line and seek the voters’ judgment on...

Hong Kong deports 113 failed asylum seekers in week-long operation

Hong Kong has deported 113 rejected non-refoulement claimants after a week-long operation, according to the Immigration Department. The operation codenamed “Shield” involved deporting a group of 68 men and 45 women, some of whom had completed prison sentences for criminal offences in the city. “A total of 113 unsubstantiated non-refoulement claimants who were illegal immigrants and overstayers were repatriated to their places of origin,” the department said on Monday. “The persons removed …...

China’s Shenzhou-20 spacecraft returns to Earth broken and unbroken

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 10:40
China’s Shenzhou-20 spacecraft returned to Earth with no astronauts inside – just metal, heat and a cracked window – touching down at the Dongfeng landing site in Inner Mongolia on Monday. The hull appeared to be darkened after enduring the intense heat and stress of re-entering the Earth’s atmosphere. But on-site inspections revealed the capsule’s exterior was generally intact and the returned items inside were in good condition, according to Chinese space authorities. In an interview with...

Rule of law in Hong Kong ‘more robust than outcome of any single case’: chief justice

Hong Kong’s rule of law is “more robust and enduring than the outcome of any single case”, the city’s chief justice has declared after former media boss Jimmy Lai Chee-ying was found guilty in a landmark national security case that drew international scrutiny and criticism. In his speech at a ceremony to mark the opening of the legal year on Monday, Chief Justice Andrew Cheung Kui-nung warned that any calls for the early release of a defendant based on his occupation or political causes were a...

China’s Shenzhou-20 spacecraft returns to Earth broken and unbroken

China’s Shenzhou-20 spacecraft returned to Earth with no astronauts inside – just metal, heat and a cracked window – touching down at the Dongfeng landing site in Inner Mongolia on Monday. The hull appeared to be darkened after enduring the intense heat and stress of re-entering the Earth’s atmosphere. But on-site inspections revealed the capsule’s exterior was generally intact and the returned items inside were in good condition, according to Chinese space authorities. In an interview with...

The energy transition’s next big challenge is systems integration

For much of the past decade, the energy transition debate has largely revolved around one question: can clean technologies work at scale? That is increasingly being answered. Solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and electric vehicles (EVs) have moved into the mainstream as key technologies become more cost-effective, efficient and faster to deploy. In many markets, these energy sources are no longer the future of energy; they are the present. The challenge is no longer simply proving that more...

Guatemala declares 30-day state of emergency after gangs kill 8 police officers

Guatemala’s president on Sunday declared a 30-day nationwide state of emergency to combat criminal gangs after authorities accused the groups of killing eight police officers and holding hostages at three prisons. The killings occurred in the Guatemalan capital and surrounding areas a day after gang-affiliated inmates took 46 people hostage in the three prisons across the country to demand incarcerated gang leaders be moved to lower security facilities. President Bernardo Arevalo said...

Malaysia’s king vows wider ‘hunt for the corrupt’ as military scandal engulfs top ranks

Malaysia’s king has issued a blunt warning to officials, saying his “hunt for the corrupt” will reach all levels as the country reels from a corruption scandal inside the armed forces that has implicated senior ranks. A former army chief and dozens of other officers and civilians have been arrested in recent weeks as the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) seized 52 million ringgit (US$12.8 million) in cash, gold, cars and luxury watches. The anti-corruption body also froze 80 bank...

The energy transition’s next big challenge is systems integration

For much of the past decade, the energy transition debate has largely revolved around one question: can clean technologies work at scale? That is increasingly being answered. Solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and electric vehicles (EVs) have moved into the mainstream as key technologies become more cost-effective, efficient and faster to deploy. In many markets, these energy sources are no longer the future of energy; they are the present. The challenge is no longer simply proving that more...

Guatemala declares 30-day state of emergency after gangs kill 8 police officers

Guatemala’s president on Sunday declared a 30-day nationwide state of emergency to combat criminal gangs after authorities accused the groups of killing eight police officers and holding hostages at three prisons. The killings occurred in the Guatemalan capital and surrounding areas a day after gang-affiliated inmates took 46 people hostage in the three prisons across the country to demand incarcerated gang leaders be moved to lower security facilities. President Bernardo Arevalo said...

Silver steps out of gold’s shadow as Southeast Asian investors chase record prices

As silver prices surged past S$100 (US$78) an ounce in recent weeks, Singaporean Faris Ghani saw a long-running bet finally begin to pay off. The 35-year-old relocation consultant has been quietly accumulating the metal since he was 21, betting that silver – long overshadowed by gold – would one day have its moment. That moment appears to have arrived. On Monday, spot silver traded near record highs of about US$94 an ounce, more than tripling from around US$30 an ounce a year earlier. The surge...

Type 075 amphibious assault ship, the PLA ‘light aircraft carrier’ key to Taiwan strategy

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 09:06
December was a record-breaking month and busier than ever for the Hainan, China’s first Type 075 amphibious assault ship and one of Beijing’s most important assets in the event of any potential military operation against Taiwan. The Yushen-class vessel, one of the world’s largest amphibious assault ships, made an appearance during the People’s Liberation Army’s large-scale military drills around the self-ruled island in late December. It was the first time a Type 075 took part in such...

The energy transition’s next big challenge is systems integration

For much of the past decade, the energy transition debate has largely revolved around one question: can clean technologies work at scale? That is increasingly being answered. Solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and electric vehicles (EVs) have moved into the mainstream as key technologies become more cost-effective, efficient and faster to deploy. In many markets, these energy sources are no longer the future of energy; they are the present. The challenge is no longer simply proving that more...

Type 075 amphibious assault ship, the PLA ‘light aircraft carrier’ key to Taiwan strategy

December was a record-breaking month and busier than ever for the Hainan, China’s first Type 075 amphibious assault ship and one of Beijing’s most important assets in the event of any potential military operation against Taiwan. The Yushen-class vessel, one of the world’s largest amphibious assault ships, made an appearance during the People’s Liberation Army’s large-scale military drills around the self-ruled island in late December. It was the first time a Type 075 took part in such...

Hackers target Iran state TV with exiled crown prince’s message to forces

Hackers disrupted Iranian state television satellite transmissions to air footage supporting the country’s exiled crown prince and calling on security forces to not “point your weapons at the people”, footage online showed early Monday, the latest disruption to follow nationwide protests in the country. The hacking came as the death toll in a crackdown by authorities that smothered the demonstrations reached at least 3,919 people killed, activists said. They fear the number will grow far higher...

Hong Kong’s Taipan bakery ordered to wind up, Ocean Empire founder declared bankrupt

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:47
A Hong Kong court has ordered the winding-up of a bakery chain and declared a co-founder of a now-closed congee restaurant group bankrupt, highlighting the plight of the local retail and catering sectors amid shifting consumer patterns. The High Court on Monday granted a petition to liquidate Vast Luck Company Limited, the parent company of Taipan Bread & Cakes, after the firm failed to repay a debt of an unspecified sum despite repeated requests. Recognised as a top Hong Kong brand for its...

Prabowo nominates nephew to Bank Indonesia board amid independence fears

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:32
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has nominated his nephew to join the central bank’s board of governors, two sources said, amid growing concern about its independence as the government seeks more support for ambitious economic targets. Investors have worried that independent monetary policymaking in Southeast Asia’s largest economy might be under pressure as Prabowo targets economic growth of 8 per cent by 2029, ⁠from about 5 per cent now. Those fears grew after Bank Indonesia (BI) unveiled...

58% more applicants per job in Hong Kong in 2025 amid AI takeover of roles

Competition in the Hong Kong labour market intensified in the past year with applications per job advertisement surging by nearly 60 per cent, even as AI eliminated some positions, according to a popular online employment marketplace. Jobsdb Hong Kong revealed on Monday that the average number of applications per advertisement on the platform rose 58 per cent year on year in 2025. Competition was even keener for frontline positions, where applications per advertisement increased 78 per cent over...

Fancl distributor couple buys Lippo Centre office, shop in US$38.3 million deal

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:20
The couple behind the Asia distributor of Japanese skincare brand Fancl has bought prime office and retail space in Hong Kong’s Admiralty district, highlighting selective bargain hunting by cash-rich local investors as commercial property prices remain under pressure. Gourmet Dining Group, owned by Christopher Chan and wife Michelle Ma-chan, agreed on January 5 to buy a shop and a unit on the first floor as well as part of the mezzanine on the second floor at Lippo Centre for HK$299 million...

Hackers target Iran state TV with exiled crown prince’s message to forces

Hackers disrupted Iranian state television satellite transmissions to air footage supporting the country’s exiled crown prince and calling on security forces to not “point your weapons at the people”, footage online showed early Monday, the latest disruption to follow nationwide protests in the country. The hacking came as the death toll in a crackdown by authorities that smothered the demonstrations reached at least 3,919 people killed, activists said. They fear the number will grow far higher...

China’s demographic alarms blare as births hit historic low and population shrinks again

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:09
China’s birth count plummeted to a record low last year, falling by about 10 million from its 2016 peak and slashing the total by more than half in less than a decade, as the country’s population shrank for a fourth consecutive year. Only 7.92 million babies were born in 2025, down 17 per cent from 9.54 million in 2024, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday. This marked the lowest birth figure since records began in 1949 and broke the previous record low set...

China’s demographic alarms blare as births hit historic low and population shrinks again

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 08:09
China’s birth count plummeted to a record low last year, falling by about 10 million from its 2016 peak and slashing the total by more than half in less than a decade, as the country’s population shrank for a fourth consecutive year. Only 7.92 million babies were born in 2025, down 17 per cent from 9.54 million in 2024, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday. This marked the lowest birth figure since records began in 1949 and broke the previous record low set...

In Cina e Asia – Pil cinese: centrato l’obiettivo del 5,5%, ma l’economia rallenta

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:42
In Cina e Asia – Pil cinese: centrato l’obiettivo del 5,5%, ma l’economia rallenta pil cina

I titoli di oggi:

Pil cinese: centrato l'obiettivo del 5,5%, ma l'economia rallenta
Drone cinese attraversa per la prima volta lo spazio aereo taiwanese
NYT: la Cina ha creato una barriera formata da centinaia di pescherecci nel mar Cinese orientale
Cina: è morto Nie Weiping, storico campione di Go
La Cina continua a puntare anche sul carbone
Cambogia, repressione sui “centri delle truffe”. Si sospetta collusione con le autorità
Vietnam, inizia la costruzione del primo impianto di produzione di microchip

L'articolo In Cina e Asia – Pil cinese: centrato l’obiettivo del 5,5%, ma l’economia rallenta proviene da China Files.

Chinese team restores legendary Tang dynasty ‘golden’ armour found in Tibetan tomb

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:52
“We will not leave the desert till we beat the foe, although in war our golden armour be outworn 100 times.” In this celebrated poem from China’s Tang dynasty, Wang Changling captured the unyielding spirit of soldiers in golden armour battling on the desert frontiers. But for centuries, the splendour of the Tang gold-plated armour lived only in poetry and imagination, as none had ever been unearthed. But that changed last week, when the Key Laboratory of Archaeological Sciences and Cultural...

23 dead, over 60 missing after Pakistan shopping centre fire smoulders for 24 hours

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:36
Pakistani firefighters ‌began pulling bodies from the smouldering remains of a sprawling Karachi shopping centre on Monday where more than 60 people were still missing after a ‍massive fire that killed at least 23 people. The fire started late on Saturday at Gul Plaza, which houses 1,200 shops in a multi-storey complex spread across an area larger than a football field. The blaze in Karachi’s historic centre raged for more than 24 hours before it was mostly extinguished. Videos showed fierce...

Malaysian reporter’s sedition arrest casts doubts on Anwar’s reform record

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s record on legal reforms has come under scrutiny after a journalist was detained under a colonial-era Sedition Act for asking a “sensitive question” linking the Gaza crisis to the treatment of ethnic Chinese in the Malay-majority country. Rex Tan, 31, a journalist for local news site Free Malaysia Today (FMT), was arrested early on Saturday morning after he asked the question at a public debate five days earlier in Kuala Lumpur. Tan is being investigated...

Chinese team restores legendary Tang dynasty ‘golden’ armour found in Tibetan tomb

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:52
“We will not leave the desert till we beat the foe, although in war our golden armour be outworn 100 times.” In this celebrated poem from China’s Tang dynasty, Wang Changling captured the unyielding spirit of soldiers in golden armour battling on the desert frontiers. But for centuries, the splendour of the Tang gold-plated armour lived only in poetry and imagination, as none had ever been unearthed. But that changed last week, when the Key Laboratory of Archaeological Sciences and Cultural...

China’s securities regulator clamps down on speculation to prevent sharp market swings

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:00
China’s top securities regulator has signalled it wants a slower, longer-lasting stock market rally rather than a short-lived speculative surge as it steps up measures to curb excessive trading after activity and margin financing hit fresh highs early this year. The stance, reiterated at a securities watchdog meeting last week, drew renewed attention after regulators moved to cool pockets of overheating in the A-share market following a strong start to 2026. At its January 15 work conference,...

Chinese husband smashes up home after wife buys dishwasher without his consent

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:00
A video clip released by a woman in China in which her husband is seen smashing up their home because she bought a 1,500-yuan (US$215) dishwasher has gone viral on social media. The woman, who lives in Guangdong province, southern China, said in a video posted on January 8, that she had bought the machine from an online platform without telling her husband. She said she needed it because the tap water in winter was too cold for her to wash by hand, the Dahe News reported. Her husband does not...

Harbouring ambitions: China’s port giants make waves with record growth

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:30
Even as global trade weathered extreme volatility in 2025, China is pressing ahead with port expansions, building bigger and more strategically positioned hubs to secure its trade future. In the first 11 months of 2025, China’s foreign trade container throughput jumped 9.5 per cent, year on year, to 320 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEU), contributing to a record US$1.19 trillion trade surplus for the full year, according to official data. Major ports helped drive the records. Shanghai, for...

China’s UBTech partners with Airbus to bring humanoid robots to aviation manufacturing

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 06:05
Chinese humanoid developer UBTech Robotics has struck a deal to supply European aviation giant Airbus with robots for its manufacturing facilities, the latest step in efforts to expand industrial applications of its robots outside China. Airbus purchased UBTech’s Walker S2 robot as part of a plan to jointly explore robotics applications in aviation manufacturing, Shenzhen-based UBTech said in a statement on Sunday. The deal follows a similar partnership last month with US semiconductor maker...

China’s securities regulator clamps down on speculation to prevent sharp market swings

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 07:00
China’s top securities regulator has signalled it wants a slower, longer-lasting stock market rally rather than a short-lived speculative surge as it steps up measures to curb excessive trading after activity and margin financing hit fresh highs early this year. The stance, reiterated at a securities watchdog meeting last week, drew renewed attention after regulators moved to cool pockets of overheating in the A-share market following a strong start to 2026. At its January 15 work conference,...

Harbouring ambitions: China’s port giants make waves with record growth

Even as global trade weathered extreme volatility in 2025, China is pressing ahead with port expansions, building bigger and more strategically positioned hubs to secure its trade future. In the first 11 months of 2025, China’s foreign trade container throughput jumped 9.5 per cent, year on year, to 320 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEU), contributing to a record US$1.19 trillion trade surplus for the full year, according to official data. Major ports helped drive the records. Shanghai, for...

2026 Hong Kong marathon, China pursues self-reliance: 5 weekend reads you missed

di:SCMP · SCMP
19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:30
We have put together stories from our coverage last weekend to help you stay informed about news across Asia and beyond. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. Japan urged to ‘correct historical errors’, return Tang dynasty stele to China 2. Melaku Belachew, Shitaye Eshete claim Hong Kong Marathon crowns - as it happened 3. Trump shrugs off concerns over Canada-China EV deal, calls it a ‘good thing’ 4. Philippines enters its ‘hour of danger’ in Marcos...

Divorced couple arrested in Malaysia for sharing hotel room under ‘khalwat’ rules

A divorced Malaysian couple looking to rekindle their relationship were arrested for being alone in a hotel room after religious enforcement officers raided their hotel room in Johor in the early hours of Sunday morning. Johor’s Islamic Religious Department (JAINJ) said on social media that officers detained the pair at 1.15am in a hotel in Kluang, following a tip-off about alleged immoral activity. They were suspected of khalwat, an Islamic moral offence under Malaysia’s state sharia laws for...

2026 Hong Kong marathon, China pursues self-reliance: 5 weekend reads you missed

di:SCMP · SCMP
19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:30
We have put together stories from our coverage last weekend to help you stay informed about news across Asia and beyond. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. Japan urged to ‘correct historical errors’, return Tang dynasty stele to China 2. Melaku Belachew, Shitaye Eshete claim Hong Kong Marathon crowns - as it happened 3. Trump shrugs off concerns over Canada-China EV deal, calls it a ‘good thing’ 4. Philippines enters its ‘hour of danger’ in Marcos...

Mainland China’s home prices extend slide, adding strain to struggling property sector

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:14
Home prices in mainland China continued to decline at a rapid pace in December, posing challenges for an economy that is struggling to find new growth drivers. New home prices fell 0.4 per cent month on month on average across 70 cities, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday. The fall matched November’s drop and was among the steepest in more than a year. Prices slipped 3 per cent year on year in December, accelerating from a 2.8 per cent drop in November. Only...

2-day Hong Kong Marathon could boost mega-event economy: lawmakers

Hong Kong should expand its annual marathon into a two-day race and add more diverse routes to attract more participants and boost the city’s mega-event economy, two lawmakers have said. They also said on Monday that organisers of the Standard Chartered Hong Kong Marathon could design routes through less urbanised areas, such as Kai Tak and the Northern Metropolis, to reduce traffic disruptions. Their calls were made a day after organisers pledged to set up a special task force to study the...

Japan’s Tepco delays Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear restart after alarm glitch

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:04
Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) will delay the restart of its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant, which was originally scheduled for Tuesday, public broadcaster NHK reported on Monday, after an alarm malfunction. It would have been the first reactor restart for Tepco since its Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was hit by a powerful tsunami in 2011. The company had planned to restart Unit No 6 at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa on Tuesday and Unit No 7 around 2030, as Japan seeks greater energy...

Mainland China’s home prices extend slide, adding strain to struggling property sector

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:14
Home prices in mainland China continued to decline at a rapid pace in December, posing challenges for an economy that is struggling to find new growth drivers. New home prices fell 0.4 per cent month on month on average across 70 cities, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday. The fall matched November’s drop and was among the steepest in more than a year. Prices slipped 3 per cent year on year in December, accelerating from a 2.8 per cent drop in November. Only...

China readies Davos sales pitch as US grants Beijing window of opportunity

As political and business leaders gather in the Swiss town of Davos for this year’s World Economic Forum, scheduled to begin on Monday, analysts expect China to continue positioning itself as a reliable trade partner and supporter of multilateralism – stances drawing an implicit contrast with the United States under President Donald Trump. This year’s meeting, themed “A Spirit of Dialogue”, will take place amid heightened global tensions in the wake of several controversial actions by Trump’s...

Leading quantum physicist You Chenglong joins cutting-edge Chinese research institute

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:00
Physicist You Chenglong has left the United States to take up a full-time position in China after working for more than a decade in the strategically important fields of quantum sensing and precision measurement. Previously based at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, You is regarded as a fast-rising researcher in his field. According to Chinese media reports, he joined the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (UESTC) in Chengdu as a professor this month. UESTC has...

China readies Davos sales pitch as US grants Beijing window of opportunity

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:00
As political and business leaders gather in the Swiss town of Davos for this year’s World Economic Forum, scheduled to begin on Monday, analysts expect China to continue positioning itself as a reliable trade partner and supporter of multilateralism – stances drawing an implicit contrast with the United States under President Donald Trump. This year’s meeting, themed “A Spirit of Dialogue”, will take place amid heightened global tensions in the wake of several controversial actions by Trump’s...

Leading quantum physicist You Chenglong joins cutting-edge Chinese research institute

19 Gennaio 2026 ore 05:00
Physicist You Chenglong has left the United States to take up a full-time position in China after working for more than a decade in the strategically important fields of quantum sensing and precision measurement. Previously based at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, You is regarded as a fast-rising researcher in his field. According to Chinese media reports, he joined the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (UESTC) in Chengdu as a professor this month. UESTC has...

China readies Davos sales pitch as US grants Beijing window of opportunity

As political and business leaders gather in the Swiss town of Davos for this year’s World Economic Forum, scheduled to begin on Monday, analysts expect China to continue positioning itself as a reliable trade partner and supporter of multilateralism – stances drawing an implicit contrast with the United States under President Donald Trump. This year’s meeting, themed “A Spirit of Dialogue”, will take place amid heightened global tensions in the wake of several controversial actions by Trump’s...

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