Who had it good — and who had it bad — in 2023 – GWC Mag

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Curtis S. Chin, a former U.S. ambassador to the Asian Development Bank, is managing director of advisory firm RiverPeak Group. Jose B. Collazo is an analyst focusing on the Indo-Pacific region. Follow them on X at @CurtisSChin and @JoseBCollazo.

As 2023 comes to a close, we take a look at the year that was in Asia and the Pacific region.  

From an earthquake in Turkey and Syria that killed 54,000 in February to devastating fires in Maui, Hawaii, that swept through the historic U.S. city of Lahaina this summer, it was a year that many across the vast Asia-Pacific region will want to put far behind them. 

But who had it good and who had it bad in 2023? A year that was seemingly full of conflict and empty of much hope and joy.

Best year: India’s space agency

The region was far from all doom and gloom this August as ISRO — the Indian Space Research Organization — dazzled the citizens of what is now the world’s most populous country and space exploration fans everywhere with its latest lunar mission.

The Indian space agency’s Chandrayaan-3 (“moon craft”-3 in Sanskrit) spacecraft entered lunar orbit on Aug. 5, and just over two weeks later, its lander named Vikram touched down near the lunar south pole, making India only the fourth nation to successfully land on the moon. A lunar rover named Pragyan would soon be literally making tracks on the moon. 

Good year: Blackpink going global

Mixed year: U.S.-China relations

Bad year: China’s property market

Worst year: Asia’s forgotten

In American politics, presidents as different as Franklin Roosevelt and Donald Trump have evoked “the forgotten man” when it served their purposes and agenda. Trump declared that his inauguration marked a moment when “the forgotten men and women of our country will be forgotten no longer.”

In 2023 in Asia, however, the region’s most vulnerable — often displaced by armed conflict — remain for the most part forgotten. Priorities shifted and the world’s headlines turned away from “yesterday’s news” —moving on to war in Ukraine and then Gaza. Yet, far from most front pages and news feeds, the crises go on in Asia, including in Myanmar and Afghanistan. 

The most significant escalation in hostilities in Myanmar since the 2021 coup, for example, worsened an ongoing humanitarian crisis in 2023. From Oct. 26 to Dec. 8, more than 578,000 people were newly displaced in Myanmar on top of nearly 2 million who were already displaced before the surge in fighting, according to the United Nations.

Humanitarian needs also continue to grow in the country’s western Rakhine State, where some 200,000 people are living in camps, mostly Rohingya who have been denied freedom of movement since 2012. The U.N. Refugee Agency reports that Bangladesh hosts close to a million Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, making it one of the largest protracted refugee situations in the world. 

In and outside of Afghanistan, the plight of Afghan women and children remains dire. Few are likely to know that Afghan refugees are the third-largest displaced population in the world after Syrian and Ukrainian refugees. In 2023, there were at least 8.2 million Afghans hosted across 103 different countries, according to the UNHCR, with some in Pakistan now being forced to return to Afghanistan.

And so, “worst year” in Asia 2023 sadly goes to Asia’s forgotten men, women and children — whether in Myanmar, Afghanistan or elsewhere. Give a thought to how you might learn more and do more to ease their plight in 2024 and beyond.

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