1. How British army camp food became a Hong Kong cafe staple as it spread from stalls near barracks Discover how British army camps in the New Territories introduced dishes such as curries ...
China's low birth rate and aging population are ending any hopes Beijing had of overtaking the U.S. as an economic giant.
Having created the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, our own overseas spy service, the good chaps set about serving the ...
The new US president has vowed to ‘take back’ the waterway, but there’s much more to this modern wonder than meets the eye ...
Hong Kong has a free market economy, highly dependent on international trade and finance - the value of goods and services trade, including the sizable share of reexports, is about four times GDP.
Of the 100,000 troops that go to Fort McCoy, Wisconsin each year to train, hundreds of them might live in barracks built during World War II. The Army is relocating five 83-year-old barracks to ...
Hong Kong dispatched a task force to Thailand on Sunday evening to meet local authorities and help bring back a dozen residents lured to Southeast Asian countries and forced into illegal work.
it explains why Hong Kong has so much green paint, from its postboxes to ferries. The reason that army green paint was so widely used was that it was cheap and accessible after World War II.
A video shows Chinese military helicopters conducting exercises featuring "long-range projection" and "ultra-low altitude penetration." ...