Top News Headlines In Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand & Vietnam: May 21, 2025
President Prabowo Subianto has appointed two new top officials to lead tax and customs agencies amid a sharp decline in state revenue during the first four months of 2025. Bimo Wijayanto, a senior bureaucrat at the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, will replace Suryo Utomo as Director General of Taxes. Meanwhile, Lieutenant General Djaka Budi Utama, currently serving as secretary of the State Intelligence Agency (BIN), has been tapped to lead the Directorate General of Customs and Excise, replacing Askolani.
The Health Ministry on Monday launched vaccination education tools based on the country's 'Pink Book' to raise awareness of immunisation and improve understanding of vaccines among low-literacy and diverse ethnic communities.
2. NEW LAO-THAI BRIDGE TO RAISE TRADE -- VIENTIANE TIMES
A 1,350-metre bridge linking Bolikhamxay province in Laos and Bueng Kan province in Thailand across the Mekong River will be opened at the end of 2025. It will boost travel and deepen trade between the two neighbours in the Greater Mekong Subregion.
MYANMAR
1. SAC READY TO TRANSFER POWER TO NEW GOVERNMENT -- THE GLOBAL NEW LIGHT OF MYANMAR
State Administration Council (SAC) Chairman Senior General Min Aung Hlaing said the current government will hand over the state responsibilities to the party that wins the elections. The administration is planning to hold a nationwide elections later this year.
SINGAPORE
1. SQ321 INCIDENT: ONE YEAR ON, PASSENGERS RECALL HOW EXTREME TURBULENCE UPENDED THEIR LIVES -- THE STRAITS TIMES
It has been six months since giving birth to her second child in November 2024, but Ms Saw Rong still cannot carry the baby girl.
2. SINGAPORE CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE, RESUMPTION OF AID AS GAZA VIOLENCE ESCALATES -- CNA
Singapore on Tuesday (May 20) called for an immediate ceasefire and the resumption of humanitarian aid into Gaza, as Israel intensified attacks across the territory.
THAILAND
1. THAI BUSINESS LEADERS URGE POLITICAL STABILITY AND STRATEGIC INVESTMENTS TO REVIVE ECONOMY -- THE NATION
The Thai business sector is increasingly concerned about the nation's political instability, fearing it could erode investor confidence and further weaken the already fragile economy.
2. PM BACKS HOLD ON HANDOUT -- BANGKOK POST
Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra has defended the government's decision to postpone the third phase of the 10,000-baht handout programme, saying uncontrollable circumstances made it impossible to implement it.
VIETNAM
1. MACRON'S VIETNAM VISIT WILL ELEVATE BILATERAL TIES -- VIETNAM NEWS
French President Emmanuel Macron and his spouse will visit Vietnam from May 25-27 which is expected to further deepen their 50-year-old bilateral ties. Macron is visiting on the invitation of State President Luong Cuong.
2. UNIFORM E-TICKETING SYSTEM TO IMPROVE PUBLIC TRANSPORT -- VIETNAMPLUS
Hanoi will implement an integrated e-ticket system on September 2 that will eliminate the current fragmented automated ticketing system across various transport models. This will promote non-cash transactions, transparent and friendly public transport.
-- BERNAMA
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The Star
3 hours ago
- The Star
Suspended Thai PM Paetongtarn hopes for fair court ruling in ethics case
Paetongtarn submitted her defence statement on Aug 4, meeting the deadline set by the Constitutional Court. - Photo: AP BANGKOK (Bloomberg): Suspended Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is seeking a fair hearing from a court probing allegations of ethical misconduct related to her handling of a border dispute with Cambodia, an official said. As the nation's leader, Paetongtarn's phone conversation with Cambodia's former leader Hun Sen was made in good faith with a sincere intention to promote peace between the two countries, Prommin Lertsuridej, secretary-general to the prime minister, told reporters. She submitted her defense statement on Monday, meeting the deadline set by the Constitutional Court, he said. "At this moment, we believe our intentions were right and will be fairly considered,' Prommin said. In the controversial June phone call with Hun Sen, which was subsequently leaked, Paetongtarn blamed the border standoff between the two neighbors on the Thai army. The remarks, which she apologized for later, sparked protests in Thailand and calls for her to resign. The court suspended Paetongtarn from her prime ministerial duties on July 1 after receiving a complaint from a group of senators accusing her of violating ethical standards. She could be disqualified and removed from office permanently if the court finds her guilty. A further escalation in the border dispute after Paetongtarn's suspension erupted into the biggest armed conflict between the two countries in decades. The fighting, which killed more than 40 people and displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians on both sides, stopped following a ceasefire agreement, mediated by Malaysia as the chair of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean) and a push by US President Donald Trump. Paetongtarn, the youngest daughter of billionaire and former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, came to power in August last year after her predecessor, Srettha Thavisin, was ousted in a similar ethics-related case over the appointment of a cabinet minister. She has remained in the cabinet as the Culture Minister while one of her deputies, Phumtham Wechayachai, stepped in as the acting prime minister. Paetongtarn's ruling coalition now has a slim parliamentary majority after the second-largest party in the bloc defected to the opposition following the furore over her phone controversy. -- ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Cambodian and Thai officials meet in Malaysia; both countries are aiming to iron out ceasefire details
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP): Thai and Cambodian officials met in Malaysia on Monday for the first round of cross-border committee talks since a tense ceasefire was brokered last week after five days of deadly armed border clashes that killed dozens and displaced over 260,000 people. The four-day General Border Committee meetings were initially due to be hosted by Cambodia, but both sides later agreed to a neutral venue in Malaysia, the annual chair of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean), which has mediated the halt in hostilities last month. The July 28 ceasefire followed economic pressure from US President Donald Trump, who had warned the two warring nations that the U.S. would not conclude trade deals with them if the fighting persisted. Washington lowered tariffs on goods from the two countries from 36% to 19% on Aug. 1 following the truce. Monday's talks focused on ironing out details to avoid further clashes. Discussions of the decades-long competing territorial claims over the pockets of land near the shared border are not on the agenda. Thailand and Cambodia have been feuding neighbours for centuries, since both were mighty empires. In modern times, a 1962 ruling by the International Court of Justice awarding Cambodia the land on which the ancient Preah Vihear temple stands marked a new low point in relations, and other border territory remained claimed by both countries. Fighting erupted in 2011 at Preah Vihaer, after which the International Court of Justice in 2013 reaffirmed its earlier ruling, rankling Thailand. Relations deteriorated again sharply in May this year, when a Cambodian soldier was shot dead in a brief fracas in one of the disputed border zones, setting off diplomatic and trade sanctions, one against the other. Soon after two incidents last month in which Thai soldiers were wounded by land mines in disputed territory, for which Thailand blamed Cambodia, the two sides downgraded diplomatic relations and fighting broke out, each side blaming the other for starting the armed clashes. The talks this week will include finalizing details and scope of reference for an Asean monitoring team, Malaysian Chief of Defense Forces Gen. Mohamad Nizam Jaffar said Monday. Despite some reports of attacks after the ceasefire came into effect, Nizam said such incidents were typical spillover violence and both sides showed strong commitment during Monday's talks to uphold the ceasefire. The main session of the General Border Committee on Thursday will be led by Thai Deputy Defense Minister Gen. Natthaphon Nakpanit and Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister cum Defense Minister Tea Seih and include observers from Malaysia, the United States and China, officials said. Despite the truce, tensions have persisted as both countries organised tours of the former battle areas for foreign diplomats and other observers to highlight damage allegedly caused by the other side. The two countries also continue to accuse each other of having violated international humanitarian laws with attacks on civilians and the use of illegal weapons. - AP


The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Indonesia targets at least 20 million students for free nutritious meal programme by Aug 17
JAKARTA (Xinhua): Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has set a goal of providing free nutritious meals to 20 million people before the country's Independence Day on Aug 17, Coordinating Minister for Political and Security Affairs Budi Gunawan said in a statement on Monday. As of the end of July 2025, the program had reached 7,374,135 beneficiaries through 2,375 active community nutrition kitchens.