Japan and Indonesia have pledged to deepen economic and defense ties during a visit by the Japanese prime minister
The Japanese prime minister visited Indonesia and Malaysia, as part of efforts to integrate the Southeast Asian nations into Tokyo’s preparations for a catastrophic US-led war against China.
Indonesia's top diplomat is heading off this weekend in his second solo outing to attend the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Retreat in Langkawi, which kicks off Malaysia's 2025 chairmanship of the regional grouping.
Among issues both leaders discussed while having a lunch in Kuala Lumpur were border issues, labor transfer, coordination on fisherfolk in conflicted areas along Malacca Strait and ASEAN Community Building,
Before arriving in Jakarta, Ishiba held talks in Kuala Lumpur with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. "For our foreign policy, strengthening cooperation with Southeast Asia is one of the biggest priorities," Ishiba said. With US encouragement as it ...
A flight of Pakistan International Airlines landed at 11:14 a.m. local time (0614 GMT), marking the airport's first commercial arrival, the statement added. (Pakistan-New Gwadar International Airport)
Japan is to give Indonesia two high-speed patrol boats, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said yesterday, as Tokyo seeks to boost regional maritime security cooperation in the face of growing assertiveness by China.
Shigeru Ishiba arrived in Jakarta on Friday from Kuala Lumpur after meeting Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. His visit to the two countries is meant to promote regional cooperation to ...
The incentives were granted for the conversion of 1,111 units of gasoline-powered motorcycles into electric ones in 2024 as compared to the previous year’s figure of 145.
A landslide in Pekalongan, Central Java of Indonesia has claimed at least 16 lives and left 10 others injured, according to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNBP) on .
WEF FROM an early age, we are taught the alphabet as the foundation for reading, understanding, and solving problems. Yet as the world becomes more complex, humanity’s greatest challenges seem to return to the basics: the first four letters of the alphabet.
Singaporean and Vietnamese youths are also the most optimistic and satisfied about their countries’ political systems, law enforcement and economic future than their peers in four other Southeast Asian countries,