
Mall-time in Malaysia
Jane Phare tours the markets and malls of Kuala Lumpur to snap up bargains, drool over designer labels and hunt for a scooter.
Jane Phare tours the markets and malls of Kuala Lumpur to snap up bargains, drool over designer labels and hunt for a scooter.
Shanghai proves mind-blowing for first-time visitors, writes Shandelle Battersby.
Walking through the historic centre of Macau, a world heritage site, it's easy to forget you're in Asia. As a former Portuguese colony, remnants such as St Augustine's church could serve as a backdrop for a movie set in Lisbon if you didn't know better.
Shandelle Battersby romps in an underground mud pool in China's south.
On a short stopover, Grant Bradley gets a taste of Guangzhou, the city where ancient China meets its modern counterpart.
Duncan Gillies vistis a city where one in 65 people is a millionaire - and romance is a growth industry.
Kara Hurring - ex-partner of the 'Runaway millionaire' - says home detention is no "walk in the park'' and she is counting down the days until the sentence ends.
Stress minimisation is the order of the day – for snakes as well as travellers, as Rachel Ashton finds.
Michelle Lv of the Ritz-Carlton in Guangzhou, the main city in southern China, showing off the hotel's presidential suite. The 420sq m room costs $10,000 a night.
Club Med's huge Asian eco-resort is expanding as the French business turns towards the east, writes Anne Gibson.
Former NZ diplomat Warren Searell called Damascus home until the Arab spring made life far too dangerous. This is his story.
Getting lost is part of discovering an unfamiliar city. And, as Chris Pritchard discovers, negotiating the streets of Kyoto throws up some unique challenges.
This month's toll of job losses is striking - but it's a reflection of a slowing of the Chinese economy. It's time to look for jobs that have a future.
Parking congestion at Auckland mosque more pressing issue than conflagration over clumsy anti-Islamic production.
Bernd Kubisch visits Cox's Bazar, a long, sandy beach in the south-east corner of Bangladesh that has been a prime surfing destination for keen surfers for two decades.
The idiosyncrasies of India's market vendors keep Catherine Masters on her toes.
It's not hard to see why Rudyard Kipling felt moved to employ a little license in his famous poem, writes Rosemary Cooper.
Nothing goes to waste at a Hong Kong market stall, finds Peter Calder.
Asia's first Legoland theme park opened to packed crowds in southern Malaysia on yesterday.
Jane Jeffries and her elderly parents look to access all areas in Hanoi.
Graham Reid leaves the clash and chaos of Kunming behind for a day of quiet.
Norwegian newsprint giant Norske Skog confirmed today that it will halve newsprint production at its Tasman Mill at Kawerau. A union claims more than 100 of the 280 employees may lose their jobs.