All Asia Pacific
- Oklahoma shooting spurs soul-searching in Australia over gun control
Oklahoma shooting: Christopher Lane was shot and killed in a random drive-by shooting as he was jogging along a street in the normally sleepy town of Duncan, Oklahoma.
- Teach about sex? Attitudes start to shift - slowly - in China.
Li Yinhe never thought she'd be allowed to host a safe-sex talk at her workplace. Despite cultural taboos, she hopes to introduce safe-sex ed in schools across China.
- Hong Kong weighs the importance of its last farms
Concerns over the safety of imported food from China – Hong Kong's largest supplier – have many criticizing a new plan to turn much of the last of its farmland into apartments.
- China cracks down on critics Beijing vows to end corruption – but on its own terms.
- Where's Bo Xilai? Chinese wait – and wait – for scandal-laced trial to begin.
China's leaders have reason to tread carefully: The fallen political star still has influential fans – and his trial could pose an uncomfortable challenge to President Xi's authority.
- FocusChina's city in the sky: just a fantasy?
Outsized ambition undergirds a Chinese billionaire's project to create a city in a building that most residents would never need to leave.
- Focus'Skyscraper curse' may portend a Chinese economic bust
It may not be a scientifically validated theory, but economic declines have often followed record-breaking buildings around the world.
- FocusChina's building debate: How high is too high?
Tall buildings are a status symbol; more than 250 taller than 650 feet are in the works across China.
- Could city farming be a solution for Bangkok’s urban poor?
A group of nutritional experts say the trend could be harnessed to improve access to food for Thailand’s growing numbers of urban poor.
- Hiroshima marks atom-bomb anniversary as Japan unveils warship
Hiroshima marked the 68th anniversary Tuesday of the dropping of 'Little Boy' on the city. Sixty-eight years later, citizens of Hiroshima and the nation of Japan are considering revising its war-renouncing Constitution.
- Communist Party makes a comeback ... in Japan
July's elections were the first in Japan in which online campaigning was permitted, and it was Japan's Communist Party that is widely seen as having made best use of it.
- Japan's one small step for robots, one giant leap for robot-kind
Japan launched a talking humanoid robot astronaut into space on Sunday. The robot, modeled off the anime character Astroboy, is an experiment in the emotional comfort robots can provide humans.
- Australia's Rudd calls election, hoping to revive Labor's fortunes
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has called parliamentary elections after less than two months on the job.
- Cambodia's opposition rejects election results, claims fraud
Calling for an investigation into alleged cheating, Cambodia's opposition has rejected its narrow loss to long-time Prime Minister Hun Sen's party.
- Myanmar opens doors to Big Oil, but investment pitfalls still lurk
After decades, Myanmar's rich energy reserves are now available to foreign companies. But sectarian violence and cronyism may still give some companies pause.
- 'The Forgotten War': Five facts you should know about the Korean War (+video) July 27, 2013, marks the 60th anniversary of the Korean Armistice Agreement. Here are five things you should know about the Korean War and armistice.
- For younger South Koreans, the Korean War is just ancient history
Despite the ongoing rivalry between North Korea and South Korea, many seem to have grown apathetic toward the war’s impact on the peninsula, say observers.
- Young Cambodians take to the streets ahead of Sunday's election
Though many acknowledge the opposition has little chance to win, some hope to effect some change in the way the government handles land grabs.
- Decoding Xi Jinping's 'China Dream'
Xi Jinping's reformist agenda goes hand in hand with his crackdown on social activists – but that may not be as contradictory as it sounds.
- Australia asks: Are we sexist?
Weeks after Australia’s first woman prime minister was deposed, data has come out finding that employers would rather hire men than women.