
Vietnam: Paradise won't last
Vietnam's Phu Quoc is what Phuket was 40 years ago. But it won't last, says Jacqueline Le.
Vietnam's Phu Quoc is what Phuket was 40 years ago. But it won't last, says Jacqueline Le.
Len Brown is taking his first overseas trip since the furore of his affair, which raised questions about a trip he made to Hong Kong.
Can a Kiwi cyclist out-sprint a hungry brown bear? In Japan Victoria Clark fixates on this point while pedalling through Hokkaido's forests. She need not have worried.
Pam Neville finds an unexpected joie de vivre among Beijing's bustling population.
Roll up! Roll up! For the chance to ride some of the best double-decker trams in Hong Kong, writes Russell Maclennan-Jones.
See Bangkok life from different perspectives, says Megan Singleton.
Good intentions are being abused in voluntourism, says Neesha Bremner.
Kiwis are being urged not to travel to some areas of Thailand and to be extremely careful in others after martial law was declared across the country.
In an uncharacteristic step by the North Korean government, officials made a public apology after a building collapse in Pyongyang reportedly killed hundreds of people.
Dutch historian Frank Dikotter, based in Hong Kong, has spent year immersed in the horrors to be found within China’s open archives.
Circles in the sky have become a hip way to view a city, so prepare your cabin for 'flight', says Peter Hamling.
This resort in Hokkaido prefecture, 1000km north of Tokyo, gets enough snow to allow skiing for seven months of the year.
For further information see 360niseko.com.
New Zealand has a rival for the world's most breathtaking landscapes, writes Hayden Donnell, after taking in the view from Mt Annupuri during a skiing trip to the resort of Niseko on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.
Sheriden Rhodes checks out some of the best spa-cations across Asia and Australia.
Hugh Biggar goes in search of exotic and elusive wildlife in Indonesia.
Rare pictures of Kim Jong-un as a boy have been shown during a televised concert for the air force in North Korea.
The Chinese government has shut down thousands of websites and social media sites in a bid to purge the internet of online pornography, it was revealed today.
Catering for many tastes requires a juggling act, finds Diana Dobson.
So few tourists go to colourful Bangladesh that you'll be spoiled, says J.J. Somerset - but you'll also be amazed and enchanted.
Solar power has won the global argument. Photovoltaic energy is already so cheap that it competes with oil, diesel and liquefied natural gas in much of Asia without subsidies.
Singapore serves up the food of the gods - and the devil, writes Sharon Stephenson.
Duncan Gillies saddles up for a surprisingly pleasant ride in a very busy city.