Press Release
Asian leaders gather in Harbin for 2025 Asian Winter Games opening ceremony, stress regional cooperation
As China enters the Year of the Snake, the country welcomes leaders from four Asian states, including Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Brunei and Thailand. Chinese President Xi Jinping held talks with them separately over the past few days, before the four leaders gathered in northeast China’s Harbin to attend the opening ceremony of the 9th Asian Winter Games on Friday.
With the theme of “Dream of Winter, Love among Asia,” the 9th Asian Winter Games were declared open by Xi at the opening ceremony.
Bridge for cultural exchange
It is the third time China is staging the winter continental games, having previously held the 1996 Harbin Asian Winter Games and the 2007 Changchun Asian Winter Games. It is also another major comprehensive international winter sports event held by China after the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.
Since winning the bid for the Games in July 2023, Harbin’s preparations have been in full swing. According to the organizers, over 1,200 athletes from 34 countries and regions across Asia will compete, making this edition the largest in terms of participating delegations and athletes.
“Fantastic! Very good,” Olympic Council of Asia Director General Husain Al-Musallam told CGTN when he talked about Harbin’s preparations for the winter games, noting that he wishes that the fantastic facility, the hospitality and the nice climate will help the athletes enjoy their competition and improve their standards.
The Asian Winter Games in Harbin have emerged as a powerful bridge for culture exchange across Asia, serving as a universal language that transcends borders, said Supitr Samahito, vice president of the Thai Olympic Committee, in an earlier interview.
She praised China’s expertise in hosting major sporting events, noting that it has raised expectations for the Harbin Games. “The Asian Winter Games are not just a sporting event but also a unique opportunity for Asian countries and regions to showcase their cultures and deepen mutual understanding.”
“The slogan of the 9th Asian Winter Games embodies the vision of deepening connections across Asia through winter sports,” said Mitsuya Yuko, vice president of the Japanese Olympic Committee. “It is hoped that the power of sports can reconnect people closely and promote communication and mutual understanding,” she added.
Win-win cooperation
During Xi’s talks with leaders of the four countries, cooperation has been a notable keyword. In his talks with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov, Xi called on both sides to create new drivers for growth by expanding cooperation on cross-border e-commerce, big data and artificial intelligence.
When meeting with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Xi said China appreciates Pakistan’s active support for the three global initiatives and participation in relevant cooperation mechanisms, adding that China is ready to deepen practical cooperation with Pakistan in various fields and work together to upgrade China-Pakistan Economic Corridor cooperation.
During his talks with Brunei’s Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah, Xi called on the two sides to build the China-Brunei-Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines East ASEAN Growth Area and the New Land-Sea Corridor as dual hubs.
Noting that China appreciates Thailand’s effective measures against online gambling and telecom fraud, Xi said that both sides should continue to strengthen law enforcement, security and judicial cooperation to safeguard the safety of people’s lives and property as well as the orderly exchanges and cooperation among regional countries in his talks with Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra.
A number of bilateral cooperation documents were signed following separate talks between Xi and each of the leaders.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Pichai Applauds Record-Breaking Success of THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2025 Over 142,000 Visitors and Trade Value Surpassing 135 Billion Baht
Bangkok, Thailand, 5th July 2025, ZEX PR WIRE, The Ministry of Commerce has officially announced the tremendous success of THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2025, Asia’s leading food and beverage trade show held at IMPACT Muang Thong Thani. The event drew an overwhelming response from international buyers and industry professionals, reaffirming Thailand’s role as a regional food trade hub and a vital contributor to global food security. It also served as a key platform for advancing the “Thai Kitchen to the World” policy and further enhancing Thailand’s trade competitiveness on the global stage.
Mr. Pichai Naripthaphan, Minister of Commerce, stated that the success of THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2025 not only reaffirmed the capabilities of Thai entrepreneurs, but also clearly demonstrated the growing international interest in Thailand’s food industry. This momentum aligns with the Soft Power strategy of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra’s administration, which aims to elevate Thai cuisine as a global cultural and economic strength.
“The event received strong interest from international business communities, creating tangible trade opportunities for Thai entrepreneurs — particularly SMEs and startups,” said Mr. Phichai. “It also delivered a positive impact on the grassroots economy by generating income and employment across various regions nationwide.”
The event attracted strong interest from international trade visitors, generating tangible business opportunities for Thai entrepreneurs. In particular, SMEs and startups gained increased visibility and valuable business connections. The event also contributed to Thailand’s grassroots economy by driving income generation and job creation across local communities nationwide.
THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2025 marked another milestone in its global presence and industry influence. This year’s edition featured 3,231 exhibitors across 6,208 booths, representing 57 countries — including 1,184 Thai exhibitors and 2,047 international exhibitors. The event welcomed a total of 142,370 visitors, comprising 88,349 trade visitors (20,566 international and 67,783 domestic), along with over 54,021 public visitors on the final day.
In terms of economic value, THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2025 generated a total trade value of 135.68 billion baht. This comprised 135.45 billion baht during the trade days — including 271.81 million baht in immediate orders and an estimated 135.18 billion baht in projected orders within one year. Additionally, retail sales on the public day accounted for 227.82 million baht. Notably, trade generated by Thai exhibitors alone totaled 99.10 billion baht.
The event is jointly organised by three key partners — the Department of International Trade Promotion (DITP), Ministry of Commerce; the Thai Chamber of Commerce; and Koelnmesse — who are now gearing up for an even larger and more impactful edition in 2026. THAIFEX – ANUGA ASIA 2026 is set to further elevate the show to the international stage, featuring global food trends and cutting-edge innovations. The event will take place from 26–30 May 2026 at IMPACT Muang Thong Thani.
For more information, please visit www.thaifex-anuga.com or follow us on Facebook: THAIFEX – Anuga Asia.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Dee Agarwal on Recognizing Industries That Are Ripe for Disruption
Dee Agarwal explores how to spot industries ripe for disruption by identifying inefficiencies, outdated assumptions, and cultural lag, urging innovators to look beyond technology and listen closely to what consumers and systems quietly reveal.
Atlanta, GA, 5th July 2025, ZEX PR WIRE, In the dynamic landscape of modern commerce, innovation is not a mere advantage; it is an existential necessity. Yet while some sectors evolve continuously, others linger in outdated paradigms, creating fertile ground for those with the vision to disrupt. According to Deepak (Dee) Agarwal, an innovative founder with experience in multiple industries, recognizing the conditions that precede transformation is as much a matter of pattern recognition as it is strategic foresight.
“Industries rarely shout that they’re ready for disruption,” says Dee Agarwal. “But they whisper. The key is listening closely to inefficiencies that have been normalized.”
At its core, disruption does not simply involve digitizing analog processes or streamlining supply chains. Rather, Dee Agarwal argues, true disruption stems from challenging a system’s foundational assumptions, often those left unquestioned for decades.
“If an industry still operates as though recent advancements haven’t fundamentally changed consumer expectations, that’s your first signal,” Dee Agarwal notes. “Things may be moving at the speed of light these days, but a lack of urgency in modernization isn’t a sign of strength; it’s a signal of vulnerability.”
Indicators of Latent Vulnerability
Dee Agarwal identifies several recurring characteristics that suggest an industry is ripe for reinvention. Chief among them is opacity, especially in pricing or service standards. Sectors where customers feel they are navigating a black box tend to be prime targets.
“When consumers can’t easily compare costs, timelines, or outcomes, incumbents are often relying on that confusion to maintain margins. That’s not sustainable,” says Dee Agarwal. “Disruptors thrive in sunlight.”
Another telltale sign is industries where technological inertia is disguised as regulation. While compliance and governance frameworks are necessary, Dee Agarwal cautions against conflating them with immutability.
“Highly regulated sectors like healthcare and finance are often assumed to be off-limits, but regulation isn’t the enemy of innovation,” Dee Agarwal says. “In many cases, it’s simply a design constraint, and ironically, the limits we’re given often unlock our most original ideas.”
Pain Points as Entry Points
Rather than focusing on industry size or market capitalization as indicators of opportunity, Dee Agarwal encourages founders and investors alike to concentrate on friction, especially the kind experienced by end-users.
“Disruption doesn’t begin with the product. It begins with a deep discomfort,” Dee Agarwal explains. “When users feel trapped in complexity, slow timelines, or bureaucratic systems, they’re not just open to change, they’re starving for it. When people only interact with an industry out of necessity—and dread the experience each time—that’s not just inertia. That’s a clear sign that the incumbents have deprioritized the customer. It’s an open invitation for change.”
The Myth of Market Saturation
One of the more persistent fallacies in business is the idea that some industries are simply “done,” that all major problems have been solved, or that margins are too thin for worthwhile entry. Dee Agarwal is quick to reject this thinking.
“Mature markets don’t mean dead markets,” he says. “It means there’s an orthodoxy entrenched, and orthodoxy is exactly what disruption targets.”
In fact, some of the most heavily penetrated sectors, like consumer packaged goods or transportation, continue to see waves of new entrants not because they are easy to navigate, but because consumer expectations continue to evolve faster than incumbent innovation.
“While legacy players often design for yesterday’s customer, the disruptor designs for tomorrow’s,” Dee Agarwal adds. “That delta is the opportunity.”
The Role of Cultural Lag
Beyond technology and regulation, Dee Agarwal highlights what he calls “cultural lag,” a condition in which institutional behavior fails to keep pace with social or generational shifts. Industries that ignore generational expectations around speed, sustainability, transparency, or equity, he argues, are living on borrowed time.
“You don’t need to be radical to be a disruptor,” Dee Agarwal notes. “You just need to be aligned with reality faster than everyone else.”
He points to shifting attitudes around mental health, privacy, and remote work as cultural indicators of change that are often more predictive than quarterly earnings or analyst projections.
“Disruptors aren’t just technologists or marketers. They’re sociologists in disguise,” Dee Agarwal says.
Looking Ahead
For executives, investors, and founders seeking their next frontier, the path forward doesn’t require clairvoyance. It demands attentiveness. In a world defined by the compression of time, patience, and resources, sectors slow to adapt are the ones most likely to be overtaken.
“The question isn’t whether an industry can be disrupted,” says Dee Agarwal. “It’s whether someone’s willing to see what others are too comfortable to question.”
In an era where disruption has become a buzzword, Dee Agarwal’s insights offer a return to first principles: that the most profound innovation often arises not from invention, but from interrogation.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
Press Release
Charlene Andersson’s Vision for a Kinder, Smarter Future
How a Los Angeles educator’s new books spotlight the urgent need for empathy, invention, and real-world learning in today’s classrooms
Los Angeles, CA, 5th July 2025, ZEX PR WIRE, In a time when anxiety, social disconnection, and academic pressure are rising among children, educator and therapist Charlene Andersson is offering a new path forward—one that blends creativity, compassion, and bold thinking. Featured in a newly released interview, Charlene shares the stories and values behind her two latest children’s books, which aim to spark emotional courage and intellectual invention in young readers.
Her new books, The Creative Adventures of the Brainstorm Buddies and A Circle of Friends, don’t just tell stories. They invite action. One introduces young readers to the world of invention, complete with a real provisional patent application. The other explores loneliness and kindness through the eyes of a child who changes someone’s life simply by being present.
“I wanted kids to feel that their ideas matter,” Charlene says. “When you guide them to see invention as an act of empathy, they stop thinking small.”
Charlene’s work aligns with a growing need in schools: safe environments that foster both innovation and emotional growth. According to recent data, over 70% of students report feeling stressed about school, and 1 in 5 children struggles with a learning difference. At the same time, studies show that children who feel emotionally supported are significantly more likely to succeed academically and socially.
Charlene’s approach—built on more than three decades of classroom experience and educational therapy—responds to this need by meeting kids where they are.
“I didn’t chase scores,” she says. “I chased trust. The scores followed because the students felt safe enough to try.”
That belief system has carried her across borders. In 2005, Charlene was selected as the U.S. delegate to Japan for international curriculum integration. She later consulted on education strategies in Cuba and the Middle East and worked with the U.S. Secretary of Education on differentiated learning. But her biggest wins often came in small, overlooked moments.
Her students once adopted an orphaned elephant in Africa, creating and auctioning artwork to help fund its care. The project sparked a passion for activism—many went on to form an animal advocacy group in high school. In another initiative, students led a community garden project and partnered with TOMS Shoes to organize a shoe drop, ultimately providing footwear to over 300 people in Africa. These projects not only made a tangible impact but also taught students the power of service-driven leadership.
Charlene believes that children need both challenge and care. “Not every solution is mechanical,” she adds. “Sometimes it’s just about being the one who stays, listens, and invites someone in.”
Her new books are a reflection of that belief—and a call to action for adults, educators, and policymakers alike.
Call to Action:
If we want to raise problem-solvers, visionaries, and empathetic leaders, we must rethink how we educate. Read with your child. Listen without fixing. Encourage them to build, imagine, and reach out to those left out. Create learning spaces where children aren’t afraid to feel or fail. That’s where the real change begins.
About Charlene Andersson
Charlene Andersson is a Los Angeles-based educator, children’s author, and certified educational therapist. She has over 30 years of experience working with students in traditional classrooms and private therapy. Her work includes curriculum development, arts-based hospital programs, and one-on-one academic and emotional support for children facing learning differences, social struggles, and confidence issues.
To read the full interview, click here.
About Author
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Digi Observer journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
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