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China's J-10C vs French Rafale, fans defend Blackpink's Lisa: SCMP 7 highlights

China's J-10C vs French Rafale, fans defend Blackpink's Lisa: SCMP 7 highlights

We have selected seven stories from this week's news across Hong Kong, mainland China, the wider Asia region and beyond that resonated with our readers and shed light on topical issues. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider
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Reports that France's advanced Rafale fighter jet came off second best against the China-made J-10C Vigorous Dragon in a dogfight between the Indian and Pakistan air forces on May 7 attracted global attention.
After their first set of talks since US President Donald Trump's sweeping 'Liberation Day' tariffs turned Washington's trade war with China into a world-spanning conflagration, both Beijing and Washington – perhaps unsurprisingly – hailed the resultant removal of most of those steep import duties as a victory for their side.
The F-47 fighter jet and the YFQ-42A and YFQ-44A combat drones are being developed under Washington's Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) initiative. Photo: US Air Force
The US has unveiled more details about its sixth-generation fighter, including the aircraft's expected range, as competition intensifies with China for future air combat superiority.

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Youths 'can bridge AI gap between Global South, North'
Youths 'can bridge AI gap between Global South, North'

RTHK

time29 minutes ago

  • RTHK

Youths 'can bridge AI gap between Global South, North'

Youths 'can bridge AI gap between Global South, North' Boao Forum for Asia secretary general Zhang Jun, right, says artificial intelligence development gaps will fuel further digital divisions. Photo: RTHK Participants at the forum at the Convention and Exhibition Centre said access and skills for youths and young entrepreneurs posed challenges for their economies. Photo: RTHK Boao Forum for Asia secretary general Zhang Jun said on Friday youths play a key role in bridging the artificial intelligence development gap between the Global South and Global North. He made the remarks as the International Science, Technology and Innovation Forum of the Boao Forum made its debut in Hong Kong, with previous editions held in Macau, Zhuhai and Guangzhou. Speaking at a roundtable session, Zhang, who served as a permanent representative of China to the United Nations, said the digital divide, which includes AI development gaps, will further weigh on global fragmentation. He called on youths to help forge global collaboration to tackle such challenges. "Youths have a key role... in really trust-building, partnership-building, which is also badly needed in today's world, because we are more divided than [at any time] after the end of the Second World War. "And we are living in a world which is becoming very much dangerous because of the failure of the international governance system, including the United Nations," Zhang said. Many of the forum's participants pointed out challenges encountered during their countries' own digital transformation, especially with access and skills for youths and young entrepreneurs. Many said it's essential to ramp up digital literacy training and partnerships between nations. Mimala Chanthasone, an official of the Institute of Foreign Affairs in Laos, cited the China-Laos AI Innovation Cooperation Centre as an example. Launched in February, she said the centre marks the first China-Asean AI innovation cooperation. Conrad Ho, a member of the Youth Development Commission, called for more efforts to be made to address the employability gap created by the emergence of AI technology. "The post-AI world presents many challenges and also opportunities, including how youth might gain more senior-level skills as AI reduces the demand for entry-level and middle-management roles," he said. "I think as AI unlocks more capacity, we're going to transition from [having more] large corporations to smaller ventures, one-person teams, smaller teams that can still create very massive value. "And yet for all these companies, for them to be successful, the founders still need to have the critical hard and soft skills that they need to learn." The two-day innovation forum ends on Saturday.

As costs of Trump's chaos become clear, expect him to shift the blame
As costs of Trump's chaos become clear, expect him to shift the blame

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

As costs of Trump's chaos become clear, expect him to shift the blame

Perhaps this is a good moment for an audit of US President Donald Trump and his 'Make America Great Again' (Maga) acolytes' efforts to reshape the world as we have known it for over seven decades. That means reviewing the 130-or-so days since his inauguration, during which he has seeded the storm, and looking towards the 500-or-so days up to next year's US midterm elections, during which he is set to reap the whirlwind. Advertisement One clear certainty is that we face a period of unrelenting uncertainty, some deliberately provoked, but most of it the unintended product of mouth before brain. How much harm this will do, and whether Trump's team will succeed in 'blame-shifting' its way out of electoral responsibility, has yet to be revealed. But the auguries don't look good. Using more than 150 executive orders over the four months since his inauguration, Trump has successfully marginalised Congress, made 'ad hoc-ism' an art form and stirred a hornet's nest of conflicts with friends and foes alike. Trump's Maga loyalists remain convinced that the damage caused will be short-lived. The technocratic consensus does not share that conviction, but as Trump's procrastination, reversals and pauses generate considerable distance between cause and effect, he will no doubt try to shift the blame for inevitable harm elsewhere. 01:00 Trump justifies 'China tariffs' as US effort to curb 'greatest job theft in the world' Trump justifies 'China tariffs' as US effort to curb 'greatest job theft in the world'

Trump and Xi discuss Taiwan, troubled US-China trade ties in call breaking stand-off
Trump and Xi discuss Taiwan, troubled US-China trade ties in call breaking stand-off

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Trump and Xi discuss Taiwan, troubled US-China trade ties in call breaking stand-off

Read more about this: Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump held a much-anticipated call on June 5, 2025, during which they discussed Taiwan and their troubled trade relationship before extending invitations to visit each other's capitals. Trump on social media said the call 'resulted in a very positive conclusion for both countries'. The news followed weeks of tit-for-tat accusations as Washington and Beijing blamed each other for breaching a deal reached weeks ago in Geneva. The world's two largest economies had agreed to cut mutual tariffs for 90 days, an outcome Trump then dubbed a 'total reset'.

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