Rio Times · asia Intelligence
Key Facts
—Manila trial The Philippine Senate opened its first-ever impeachment trial of a sitting vice president.
—Convict count It will take 16 of 24 senators to remove Sara Duterte from office.
—Pacific missile A Chinese submarine fired a missile with a dummy warhead into the Pacific at 12:01 pm.
—Mumbai floods At least 13 people have died in three to four days of heavy monsoon rain.
—Korea football Chung Mong-gyu quit after 13-plus years, and a reform panel launched the same day.
—Johor vote Malaysia’s Johor state goes to the polls on July 11, with early voting July 7.
Asia woke tense and watchful today, gripped by a historic trial in Manila and a Chinese missile that flew into the Pacific. Beneath the drama runs a mix of grief, anger and quiet pride across the region.
Philippines – A Historic Trial Opens
The Senate becomes a court
For the first time ever, the Philippine Senate met as an impeachment court to judge a sitting vice president, Sara Duterte, who did not attend.
Senator Francis Escudero was chosen to lead the proceedings, and prosecutors accused Duterte of making grave threats and misusing public money.
Streets on edge
More than 4,000 police fanned out across Metro Manila as over 300 protesters chanted near the Senate building.
Escudero ordered a sealed box of Duterte’s tax records returned to the tax bureau, keeping it out of the case for now.
China and Japan – A Missile in the Pacific
The launch
A Chinese navy submarine fired a missile carrying a fake warhead into the Pacific Ocean at 12:01 pm, an unusual move not seen since September 2024.
Japan said it was told about half an hour earlier and urged Beijing to reconsider, warning the test threatened Japan’s safety.
Two very different tones
Japan, Australia and New Zealand all criticised the launch, while Chinese spokeswoman Mao Ning called it routine yearly training.
Tokyo told Beijing not to endanger its security and ordered its defence ministry to watch the seas more closely.
Outside the Senate, more than 300 protesters chanted while over 4,000 police stood guard.
India – Mumbai Drowns Again
Red alert and rising water
Weather forecasters issued their highest warning for Mumbai and nearby areas, expecting very heavy rain and tides reaching up to 12 feet.
At least 13 people have died over the past few days, and schools closed, exams were postponed and the Mumbai-Pune highway briefly shut after a landslide.
Anger over the toll
A three-storey tenement building collapsed in Mankhurd on Sunday night, killing six people, and two people were arrested.
The opposition Congress party in Maharashtra called the deaths a ‘man-made disaster’ and blamed the administration; families of the victims were promised 500,000 rupees each.
South Korea – Football Chief Steps Down
An end after 13 years
Chung Mong-gyu resigned as head of the Korea Football Association after 13 years and 5 months, following the national team’s early World Cup exit.
The culture minister said public trust in football’s leadership had collapsed and fans felt let down.
A push to rebuild
On the same day, a reform panel co-led by former star player Park Ji-sung was launched to overhaul the sport.
A vote for a new chief must be held within 60 days, and lawmakers plan a parliamentary hearing late in July.
Japan – A Stalled Parliament
Succession bill stuck
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi told lawmakers she was against changing the royal succession law right now, pointing to a lack of agreement in parliament.
The proposed law would let female royals keep their status after marriage and allow certain adoptions from old princely families.
A distracted premier
She urged her party to keep parliament running smoothly before the session ends on July 17.
She also drew criticism for attending a jewellery best-dressed award ceremony while the legislature was gridlocked.
Malaysia – Johor Heads to the Polls
Anwar on the attack
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim claimed his rivals had joined forces against him because his government is tough on corruption.
He urged Johor voters to back candidates aligned with the national government for faster development.
The race takes shape
A total of 172 candidates are competing for 56 state seats, with early voting on July 7 and polling day on July 11.
Immigration officers detained about 200 people during a night-market raid in the Taman Maluri area.
Thailand – Scandal and a Homegrown Train
Exam probe widens
Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul ordered a broad investigation into a local government exam scandal, with 15,000 appointments now under review.
Five interior ministry officials face disciplinary action over the affair.
A rare bright spot
A record 1.2-tonne marijuana seizure in Poland was linked to shipments from Thailand, prompting a security review.
On a happier note, the first electric train built in Thailand was handed to the state railway, developed with over 30 private partners to reduce reliance on imports.
Vietnam and Indonesia – Diplomacy and Doubt
Vietnam looks outward
Party chief and President Tô Lâm welcomed new ambassadors from Portugal, Iran, Mongolia, the United States and Myanmar as they presented their papers.
Russia became Vietnam’s third-largest source of tourists in the first half of the year, with nearly 743,000 arrivals, up about 186 percent.
Jakarta’s honesty test
Indonesia’s forestry minister reported himself to the anti-corruption commission after admitting he had returned an envelope from a local official.
Lawmakers said they were surprised and would seek answers, while the economy is forecast to grow between 4.9 and 5.7 percent this year.
The Bigger Picture
Asia today feels tense and watchful, with China’s Pacific missile test unsettling Japan and its neighbours even as Beijing insisted the launch was simply routine practice.
At the same time, the Philippines gripped a historic reckoning as Sara Duterte’s impeachment trial opened before chanting crowds, a moment that could reshape the country’s next presidential race.
Beneath the drama runs a current of exhaustion and grief, from deadly floods in Mumbai to Korea’s football shame, softened by flashes of pride in cultural and economic wins.
What We Are Watching
Today – Chinese navy ships prepare to visit Ho Chi Minh City, signalling closer ties with Vietnam.
Today – Mumbai and Maharashtra remain under a red rain alert with more flooding expected.
This week – Johor holds early voting on July 7 ahead of its July 11 state election.
This week – Thailand’s parliament debates competing constitution amendment versions on July 7 and 8.
This week – Samsung Electronics reports quarterly earnings, a key moment for Korean markets.
July 17 – Japan’s Diet session ends, the deadline for Takaichi’s stalled bills.
Late July – South Korea may hold a parliamentary hearing into its football association.
By early August – The Sara Duterte impeachment trial continues over a roughly 92-day run.
Go Deeper
The full asia Intelligence Dossier — the interactive risk dashboard, the six people who matter and the downloadable PDF — is updated daily by the Rio Times Intelligence Desk.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


