8 June 2026Focus · MENA · Africa12 Items · 6 Translated · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
This week’s edition keeps returning to the same hard fact: authority now has to prove itself through infrastructure, not rhetoric. Bamako, Ouagadougou and Niamey try to turn passports and joint command into post-ECOWAS legitimacy; Seoul writes apology and prevention into the state’s disaster machinery; Taipei enters a blocked WHO system through an app, Google and side-door diplomacy. The same pressure appears at smaller scales: Varanasi cleanses the sacred city by pushing meat and fish workers outward, Yemen imagines a women-run petrol station as wartime governance, and India’s missing health indicators show how power can begin by deciding what will be counted. Across the dossiers, corridors beat communiqués: Sudan’s war runs through Dubai, Libya and Chad; Tunisia’s presidency rules by burning away intermediaries; antiquity itself becomes a supply chain for legitimacy.
Lines of dispatch · Edition XXI
Eight voices, gathered to the desk this week — each filed in its own tongue, from far afield.
The Sahel crisis is becoming an institution-building contest, not just a succession of military takeovers.
Borders Become Authority
Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger are trying to turn the Alliance of Sahel States from a coup-era security pact into a regional order with passports, military coordination and an anti-French sovereignty narrative. The move is less an isolated break with ECOWAS than a bet that legitimacy can be rebuilt through security, borders and control over external partnerships.
Why it leads: The Sahel crisis is becoming an institution-building contest, not just a succession of military takeovers.
English · Deep
The Brief
The Brief follows institutions under stress as they move from promises to control over borders, data, fuel, courts, cash and public space.
South Korea’s new Basic Act on Life Safety turns the post-Sewol demand for public responsibility into a legal duty of the state. The interview matters for its institutional detail: apology, prevention, investigation and follow-through become administrative obligations rather than gestures after disaster.
This is a matter in which there are victims. He must apologize until the bereaved families of those who died during the May 18 Democratization Movement, or the citizens of Gwangju, say, “That is enough.” We, in a sense, are not the direct parties, are we?
Taiwan’s National Health Insurance app entered the WHA orbit through Google’s AI-health case study, even while Taiwan remained formally absent from the assembly. The mechanism is workaround diplomacy: platforms, side events and civil networks carry Taiwanese state capacity into international agendas where formal recognition blocks the front door.
This was a Taiwanese case, cited on a Geneva stage during the WHA by the impact director of one of the world’s leading artificial intelligence institutions. In that moment, no one in the room asked “why Taiwan,” and no one attached any political footnote.
Varanasi’s planned relocation of meat and fish shops
What changes
Figure in piece
Named sites
Shops inside city to be moved out
~350-400 shops
Ramnagar, Sujabad, Ganeshpur, Avleshpur, Shivpur
First phase relocation sites
5 sites
Outer city limits
Mayor’s deadline
Within 6 months
All shops now inside city limits
Varanasi’s municipal order to move meat and fish shops outside the city is presented as urban nuisance control, but it works through caste, religion, livelihood and access to food. A sanitation argument becomes a spatial politics argument: which trades can remain visible in a Hindu sacred city, and which workers must absorb the cost of respectability.
वहीं, महापौर अशोक कुमार तिवारी ने कहा कि अगले छह महीनों के भीतर शहर के अंदर संचालित मीट-मांस और मछली की दुकानों को बाहरी क्षेत्रों में स्थानांतरित कर दिया जाएगा.
एनएफएचएस-6: ज़रूरी संकेतकों के न होने की आलोचना के बाद सरकार ने कहा- रिपोर्ट पूरी नहीं
The controversy over missing NFHS-6 indicators is about the politics of measurement: if anemia, nutrition, fertility or other sensitive indicators disappear or arrive late, public-health reality becomes harder to contest. The government says the report is preliminary, but the concern is whether inconvenient data will still shape policy.
Officials said anemia estimates will now be included in the Indian Council of Medical Research’s diet and biomarker survey. That survey uses venous blood samples, blood drawn from a vein, and its results are expected to be more accurate.
Andy Burnham’s importance lies less in managerial competence than in his willingness to challenge Britain’s inherited economic consensus. The contrast with Starmer is structural: one politics treats delivery as better control of the existing machine, the other reopens the question of what the machine is for.
It might be wise not to be too optimistic about Burnham bringing miracles of delivery, and focus instead on his willingness to question the long-prevailing economic consensus; where Starmer seems to have believed ‘change’ meant a surer hand on the controls, Burnham looks more ready to question the workings of the machine.
The fight to measure Earth’s true shape was a fight over what counted as scientific proof: expedition, instrument, calculation and institutional trust had to be made to agree. Geodesy becomes a history of how measurement changes theory rather than merely confirming it.
A women-only petrol station in wartime Yemen becomes a miniature institution: fuel, safety, labour and female solidarity are organized under conditions where ordinary public space has become dangerous. The film’s premise works because infrastructure and gender are inseparable in war.
"Trying to explain everything is also risking oversimplifying; I would have to make a series with many episodes to go into the various aspects of it all, and I don’t want to do that! I don’t want to be a scholar,” she explains. “I don’t want to teach the audience the geopolitics of my country.”
Birikim’s title points to an urban essay about vengeance, anonymity and the crowd: the city as a place where moral injury can be converted into spectacle or violence. With no snippet, the safe read is that its value is conceptual rather than reportorial, in the magazine’s usual register of political culture and social theory.
It would be facile to explain Travis’s condition, crushed as he is under sleeplessness, the feeling of having been left outside, inner distress, and a sense of emptiness, as post-traumatic stress disorder. Having been in Vietnam has of course wounded his soul.
Kim Seon-su’s memoir tracks a rare path from labour lawyer to South Korea’s Supreme Court, with the court seen through labour disputes, democratic struggle and judicial career hierarchy. The institutional point is that a judiciary built around prosecutors and judges had to absorb someone formed outside its own caste system.
At a time when debates over judicial reform are consumed superficially within the logic of political polarization, merely looking into the intense reflections of a former justice who believes that “the ground on which the judiciary exists is the people’s trust in and respect for it”
A SpaceX IPO would sell investors more than launch revenue; it would price a vertically integrated bet on rockets, satellites, Starlink cash flow and Musk’s control of orbital infrastructure. The financial story is really about monopoly-like position in a strategic supply chain that states and telecom markets increasingly need.
According to reports, the company plans to offer roughly 555.6 million shares at $135 each, in a deal that could raise as much as $75bn and give SpaceX a valuation approaching $1.75tn. If the deal proceeds on these terms, the offering would be more than a landmark technology listing.
एटीएम संगठन ने एसबीआई से मांगा सौ करोड़ रुपये का मुआवज़ा, कहा- छोटे शहरों में नहीं दिया कैश
ATM operators say SBI’s failure to fill machines in small towns and कस्बों has imposed losses across the cash-distribution chain. Beneath the compensation claim is a rural banking problem: digital finance has not removed the need for cash, but the infrastructure that supplies it is commercially fragile.
This is happening at a time when the overall availability of cash in the banking system has increased threefold. According to the NDTV report, cash availability has risen from about Rs 13 lakh crore in 2017 to more than Rs 41 lakh crore in financial year 2026, but digital transactions have diminished the importance of ATMs.
Translated from Hindi · today · 3 min · Skim
Many Views
Many Views catches wars and empires at the point where command stops working: Israel over Iran and Gaza, Moscow over veterans, Armenia and its own tax base.
Many tongues on one question
War, law and leverage in the Middle East
A Hebrew anti-war critique, a French legal-philosophical essay and an Iraq policy view all read the region’s widening wars through failed control: assassinations that do not collapse enemies, legal universals cracking over Gaza, and Baghdad squeezed by an Iran-Israel confrontation it cannot command.
Targeted killings give Israel headlines and public applause, but Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran have not collapsed; in Iran, the campaign may have tightened the regime’s grip instead of loosening it. Local Call · Hebrew
Gaza becomes the place where the universalist promise of international law visibly buckles, exposing a wider rearrangement of power in the violence of the Middle East. La Vie des id es · French
Ali al-Zaidi’s premiership starts under the shadow of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, with Iraq’s near-term path hinging on whether he can escape the constraints of its political system. International Crisis Group · English
Another question, several views
Russia’s weakening from the inside and at its edges
A Russian exile newsroom, a French geopolitical journal and a Spanish economic brief read Putin’s Russia through three pressure points: veterans unwanted in civilian life, Armenia slipping from Moscow’s orbit, and small firms pushed into survival mode by the tax state.
«Никому не хочется играть в русскую рулетку». Несмотря на заявления чиновников, вернувшихся с фронта россиян боятся брать на работу на гражданке. Ветераны «СВО» рассказывают, как стали «изгоями»
Moscow talks about jobs for returning soldiers, but even officials have acknowledged up to 250,000 ex-combatants unable to find work, while veterans describe becoming social liabilities at home. Veter · Russian
Nikol Pashinyan’s clear victory in Armenia marks another setback for Putin’s neighborhood strategy and points to a shrinking Russian grip around its borders. Le Grand Continent · French
A lower VAT threshold has tightened the fiscal squeeze on small and medium-sized firms, making survival rather than growth the stated strategy for a fifth of companies. Le Grand Continent (ES) · Spanish
Deep Research
Deep Research tracks legitimacy as a manufactured thing, whether routed through Sudanese logistics, Saïed’s anti-intermediary state or Europe’s uses of ancient Greece.
Many tongues on one storm
Sudan’s War Is Being Fed Through Corridors, Not Communiqués
The War Is Fed
The richest live dossier is Sudan because the war’s center of gravity is no longer only Khartoum, Darfur, or the SAF-RSF rivalry. Read together, these pieces map a system: Dubai shelters money and families, Libya and Chad move fuel and weapons, European arms-control paperwork leaks into Darfur, and Gulf diplomacy buys time for the same networks it claims to restrain.
ع · Egyptian independent Arabic newsroom, close to Sudanese exile politics and reading the UAE from the Arab media space rather than from Washington.
شبكات مشبوهة.. ملاذ حميدتي الآمن تحت سماء دبي المشمسة
Dubai functions as RSF infrastructure: property, companies, banking channels, family shelter, Toyota purchases, and gold sales sit in one operating environment. The $24 million property portfolio is the visible surface of a tighter fusion between the Dagalo family business, RSF finance, and Emirati permissiveness. Al Manassa · Arabic
En · Libyan conflict-economy analyst writing through an Italian policy institute; strong on Haftar’s family project and southern Libya as a Sudan supply machine.
The RSF survives because Haftar’s Libya gives it a rear area: airstrips, crossings, storage sites, escorts, and desert routes convert border control into combat endurance. Saudi-UAE rivalry then turns logistics into diplomacy; whoever can pressure the corridor managers can alter the war more than another ceasefire statement can. ISPI · English
Fr · Belgian Francophone arms-control research, useful for the European liability angle usually buried under humanitarian language.
French, Bulgarian, and British materiel legally sold to the UAE has appeared with the RSF in Sudan; the weak link is not only Emirati diversion but European risk assessment before export. The war reaches back into EU arms-control routines: end-use certificates fail when a strategic partner is also a conflict logistics hub. GRIP · French
After the cameras left
Tunisia After July 25: Rule Without Intermediaries
The afterlife of the 2021 power grab is a state trying to erase every institution between Carthage and “the people.” These pieces track the same mechanism through unions, media, debt, local development, and poisoned Gabès: crises are not solved so much as converted into morality tales about corruption, conspiracy, and purification.
En · Hatem Nafti, Tunisian analyst, writing in Noria’s MENA research series; regime architecture rather than event chronology.
Saïedism is a war on intermediaries: the UGTT is squeezed with legal and financial pressure, political talk radio is depoliticized under Decree 54, and the access-to-information authority is hollowed out. Carthage now speaks straight through presidential Facebook posts while organized society loses the machinery for contesting power. Noria Research · English
Fr · French-language Maghrebi political economy, by Éric Gobe and Thierry Desrues; institutional detail on the president’s economic ideology.
Saïed’s “economy from below” is not autonomous local socialism; community enterprises are tied to administrative territory, central supervision, weak member incentives, and state support. Three years in, 255 such firms by August 2025 against roughly 800,000 formal firms make the gap visible: moralizing markets is not a development model. Babor Media · French
Fr · Regional research close to the Stop Pollution-Gabès mobilization, using movement posts, local slogans, institutional statements, and press traces.
Gabès turns the regime’s own language of popular justice against it. Children’s asphyxiations and the chemical group’s chronic pollution turn a local environmental demand into a national test: when protest threatens phosphate production and regional order, Saïed shifts from naming an ecological crime to recoding mobilization as manipulation by the corrupt. Arab Reform Initiative · French
Fr · Tunisian newsroom; Louai Chebbi of Alert, translated from Arabic by Business News.
Saïed rejected a $1.9bn IMF loan as foreign social cruelty, then delivered adjustment by other means: hiring freezes, subsidy erosion, VAT and social levies, opaque debt, and expensive foreign borrowing. Sovereignty did not spare households; it displaced austerity into shortages, debt service, and disappearing fiscal transparency. Business News Tunisie · French
A standing interest, freshly read
Who Gets to Manufacture Antiquity?
Antiquity is not a storehouse of lessons here; it is a machine for distributing legitimacy. Modern Greece is asked to perform classical continuity, Europe keeps inventing a Greece fit for its ideological crises, bodies get disciplined by bad textual inheritances, and liberal democracy still speaks an ancient anti-democratic grammar.
中 · Chinese classical archaeologist in Athens, writing from inside Greek universities, museums, education debates, and foreign archaeological schools.
Modern Greece lives inside a curated classical set: the restored Acropolis, “Socrates’ prison,” contested DNA-continuity stories, and school fights over ancient Greek all turn antiquity into symbolic capital. The sharp point is that Greeks inherit a past partly built for them by Western philhellenism, then must keep proving they deserve it. The Paper · Chinese
Fr · French books-and-ideas review of Marie de Gandt, moving from Hippocrates and Pliny to Beauvoir, Woolf, Joyce, and Preciado.
The familiar story that Greek medicine already made menstruation impure is too neat: the harsher misogynistic turn runs through Pliny and then medieval and Renaissance witchcraft imaginaries more than Hippocratic medicine. The contemporary payoff is uncomfortable: even twentieth-century feminism often left menstruation in the shadows, while queer writing reopens it as time, measure, fluidity, and social relation. Nonfiction.fr · French
En · German political-theory journal, open-access article by Dirk Jörke, useful against Europe’s liberal-democracy crisis.
Present-day antipopulism borrows an old anti-democratic grammar: call the many irrational, route them through institutional filters, then train them into acceptable citizenship. Plato, the Federalists, Tocqueville, Mill, and today’s liberal-democracy debate line up around one paradox: democracy is defended through institutions built to limit democratic power. Politische Vierteljahresschrift · English