9 June 2026Focus · MENA · Africa12 Items · 7 Translated · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
Scarcity is the week’s common regulator: organs in Taiwan, eggs in China, births and workers in Japan, clean air in Indonesian cities, and hard currency in Sudan all acquire brokers, formulas, checkpoints and fees. States keep appearing after the market has already done its sorting: Taiwan revokes Chen Yao-li’s licence after cross-border transplant deals, Brussels turns carbon accounting into a trade condition, and Egypt’s tolerance of Sabry Nakhnoukh shows how private force can sit inside the security economy. The climate thread is not separate from this machinery; Prabowo’s nickel downstreaming, CBAM compliance and plastic inhaled at home are all arguments over who pays for transition and who merely hosts its costs. In MENA and Africa, the same question hardens: whether sovereignty still means public authority, or simply control of courts, mines, corridors, elections and outsourced violence. Even the body becomes infrastructure this week, priced before birth, managed for marriage, traded in illness, defended in pain and theorised after death.
Lines of dispatch · Edition XXIII
Nine voices, gathered to the desk this week — each filed in its own tongue, from far afield.
The Chen Yaoli case exposes a long-neglected structural dilemma in Taiwan, where transplant ethics, medical oversight, and the desperation of patients fighting to survive collide across borders.
The Licensed Crossing
Chen Yao-li’s case turns an individual license revocation into a map of Taiwan’s transplant shortage: patient demand, weak cross-border enforcement, and medical intermediaries converge in a market where illegality does not erase trust. The ethical problem is not only one doctor’s conduct but a system that pushes desperate patients toward brokers while regulators police the border after the deal is already done.
The case began with a two-year investigation by prosecutors. They found that these cross-border transplants involved not merely isolated instances of physicians illegally arranging transactions or brokers charging exorbitant fees, but in fact a transplant business sustained by patients’ desperation, trust in medical expertise, disparities…
Why it leads: Chen Yaoli’s fall turns one doctor’s criminal file into a map of the transplant market: desperate patients, trusted specialists, opaque Chinese hospitals, and brokers turning the border into a business model.
Bilingual · 2d ago · 1 min · Deep
The Brief
The Brief tracks shortages becoming systems: when care, security, marriage, wages, carbon and clean air are rationed, intermediaries learn to govern first.
Taiwanese egg donors and would-be parents enter China’s underground fertility market for opposite reasons: donors monetize reproductive capacity, while lesbian couples and infertile families buy access unavailable or constrained at home. The trip itself is the structure: informal transport, hidden clinics, legal ambiguity, and bodily risk become the supply chain of reproduction.
According to Xiaoya's experience, a China cycle lasts about two weeks. Follow-up visits take place at ordinary clinics; only the egg-retrieval operation is done at the "laboratory." On retrieval day, the donor rides in a business van, a "black car" fitted with dark blackout curtains.
Sabry Nakhnoukh sits at the junction of Egypt’s private security industry, informal coercion, and state tolerance. The Falcon Group angle makes the case more than a crime story: it points to how outsourced force, political protection, and business ownership blur in Egypt’s security economy.
Prabowo’s downstreaming agenda is being judged on the wrong metric if value-added stops at export earnings. The harder test is whether nickel, batteries, and processing capacity produce local wages, cleaner energy use, and regional development instead of another extractive enclave with more factories attached.
Erdogan’s consolidation is not a single rupture but the cumulative capture of courts, media, elections, and opposition space after the failed 2016 coup. The title is blunt, but the likely value is structural: Turkey’s authoritarian turn works through legal procedure and institutional exhaustion as much as repression.
The best strategy for Özel would be to leave the CHP entirely and start a new party, taking the vast majority of his members and supporters with him. But for Turkey’s democracy, it is too late. Erdoğan’s move against the party is the final stage in his takeover – the culmination of his two decades of pragmatic authoritarianism.
Countries are no longer treating the EU’s carbon border tax as a distant Brussels rule: India is tying it to trade negotiations and possible WTO action, while exporters are adjusting compliance strategies. The pressure mechanism is external regulation through market access, with climate accounting becoming a condition of trade.
Indonesia microplastics research cited in the piece
Study
When
Finding
UI/Greenpeace
Jan 2023-Dec 2024
95% of biological samples contained microplastics
BRIN Jakarta rainwater
Began 2018; released Oct 2025
Rainwater contains harmful microplastic particles
Ecoton/UI/SIEJ air study
Dry season 2025
Airborne microplastics found across 14 provinces
Urban Indonesians are not merely exposed to plastic pollution; city life makes avoidance practically impossible through air, food, water, packaging, and waste systems. The likely strength is proximity: pollution becomes a household routine rather than an environmental abstraction.
The researchers, however, did not release individual test results, citing medical privacy. The study, published in February 2025, found that an astonishing 95% of the biological samples contained microplastics. The highest concentrations were found in stool samples, followed by blood and urine.
Samsung’s bonus settlement splits workers by business line: semiconductor employees expect gains from DS profits, while device-side workers see the formula as embedding internal inequality. A company-wide labor agreement becomes a map of Samsung’s uneven profit machine.
This creates a circular phenomenon, like a Moebius strip. Suppose, for example, that workers at a certain company demand 10 percent of operating profit as a bonus. If the company’s operating profit is 10 billion won and its interest expense is 9 billion won, EBT is 1 billion won.
Voor jongens is er meer geregeld, meiden veroorzaken te weinig overlast.
Youth services are easier to mobilize around boys because boys produce visible disorder; girls’ needs remain underfunded when they do not become public nuisance. The line is sharp because it names the incentive structure: welfare follows disturbance, not vulnerability.
That is how it works now: you have to reserve, otherwise the girls cannot get a look-in. For boys there is more room, youth worker Sahila says; girls cause too little nuisance.
Bilingual · 2d ago · 2 min · Skim
日 Guide to Japan Society · Translated from Japanese
Konkatsu turns marriage into an organized search process using apps, agencies, events, and self-marketing. Under Japan’s demographic pressure, the vocabulary itself records a social shift: partnership becomes a project to be managed, not a life stage that arrives by default.
In Japan, konkatsu encompasses a wide range of activities through which single people seek a marriage partner. Often translated as “spouse hunting,” the term refers to the use of paid services such as dating apps and matchmaking parties.
Translated from Japanese · yesterday · 1 min · Skim
Baby Decline: Births in Japan Drop for the Tenth Successive Year
Japan recorded about 670,000 births in 2025, the lowest level since records began in 1899. As a data piece it is probably thin, but the number is stark enough to anchor a broader demographic packet with marriage, wages, and care infrastructure.
The number of births in Japan fell to 671,236 in 2025, a decrease of 14,937 from the previous year. Demographic statistics released by the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare confirmed that births remained below 700,000 for a second consecutive year, and, on the basis of comparable statistics dating back to 1899, reached a record low f…
Translated from Japanese · yesterday · 2 min · Skim
Blue-Collar Wages Rising in Japan Amid Labor Shortage
Labor scarcity is raising wages in Japanese blue-collar sectors that long sat outside the prestige economy. The structural interest is the reversal: demographic contraction gives bargaining power to workers whose status did not previously match their necessity.
A sector-by-sector breakdown of average pay shows that the largest increase over the past five years, at 64%, came among field clerical workers, including bill collectors, statistical surveyors, and meter readers.
Translated from Japanese · 2d ago · 2 min · Skim
Many Views
Many Views sits at the border between spectacle and flesh, where the World Cup and the dying body both expose who gets access, who bears cost and who claims authority.
Many tongues on one question
The World Cup's off-field costs
A Russian security read, a Chinese-language capitalism critique and a MENA business view meet around the 2026 World Cup before a ball is kicked. One sees Mexico’s cartel violence testing state control; another sees tickets, visas, health rules and geopolitics sorting who gets access; the third asks whether FIFA’s promised windfall can survive the bill.
Мундиаль под прицелом. Мексика примет Чемпионат мира по футболу на фоне нарковойн. Удастся ли властям обеспечить безопасность и какой ценой?
Mexico is not simply run by cartels, but cartel violence is severe enough that World Cup security becomes a test of state capacity and the price paid to stage a global spectacle. Novaya Gazeta Europe · Russian
Ticket prices, visa rules, health standards and geopolitics decide who can belong to the tournament before sport begins, making the World Cup a miniature of the current world order. The Reporter · Chinese
After years of preparation, billions in investment and heavy promotion, the MENA business lens tests FIFA’s growth story against the costs of the largest World Cup yet. Majalla · English
Another question, several views
Who owns the body at death?
Italian, Portuguese and Spanish vantages meet at the point where the body stops being simple biography: an artist draws death, a palliative-care doctor defends the sufferer’s authority over pain, and a metal-inflected essay turns the corpse into philosophy and surplus value.
Death should be spoken of early, responsibly and tenderly, because pain gives the sufferer first claim over the body and its care. Portuguese · Portuguese
Kantian aesthetics and Carcass lyrics turn rot into an argument about art: beauty is not the object but the representation, even when the object is a corpse. Jot Down · Spanish
Deep Research
Deep Research follows institutions under stress: Sudan’s revenue corridors, Tunisia’s post-coup depoliticisation and antiquity’s contested inheritance all turn legitimacy into a fight over ownership.
Many tongues on one storm
Sudan’s Partition Is Being Written in Gold, Gum Arabic, and Checkpoints
The Profitable Divide
Sudan’s war now looks less like a contest for Khartoum than a struggle to own revenue machines: mines, border roads, remittance channels, humanitarian corridors, and Gulf clearing houses. Read together, these pieces make the ceasefire problem clearer: the battlefield follows the supply chain, and the supply chain rewards partition.
En · Horn of Africa / Sudan political economy, from Chatham House and Sudan Policy & Transparency Tracker researchers
Gold is not background loot; it is operating capital for both SAF and RSF. The decisive move is regional: Sudanese bullion runs through UAE, Egypt, Chad, Libya, South Sudan and banking channels, so sanctions on a commander or company barely touch the system that keeps brigades liquid. Chatham House · English
En · Humanitarian economy and market monitoring from Darfur-focused key informants
West Darfur’s formal economy has been replaced by old banknotes, Central African francs, hawala fees, RSF checkpoint taxation, gum arabic theft, and traders who become the banking system. The report’s strength is granular: partition appears first as prices, currencies, road fees, and blocked markets before it appears on a map. ACAPS · English
ع · Arabic-language Swiss view on gold refining, sanctions gaps, and UAE transit opacity
من مناجم السودان إلى مصافي سويسرا...الذهب الإماراتي يغذّي الصراع بين الأشقاء
Dubai is not the endpoint; it is the laundering room before Swiss refineries. The Swiss due-diligence regime can accept UAE gold as formally legal while losing sight of Sudanese conflict origin after repeated refining and re-export. SWI swissinfo.ch · Arabic
It · Italian strategic view linking Sudan-Libya logistics to Mediterranean and European security
The front line is only the visible layer; the war is sustained by adaptive corridors through Libya, Chad and the wider Sahel where weapons, gold, fuel, mercenaries and migrants share infrastructure. Europe’s corridor politics misses the point if it maps ports and rail while armed gatekeepers already govern the routes that matter. Formiche · Italian
After the cameras left
After the Coup, the Ballot Became a Ritual and the Street Became Environmental
Tunisia did not simply return to the old dictatorship. Saied’s system has turned elections, local government and anti-elite sovereignty talk into instruments of depoliticisation, while ordinary anger has moved into harder-to-dismiss zones: asthma in Gabès, collapsing services, youth exit, family remittances, and the memory of a supposedly safer Ben Ali era.
ع · Tunisian watchdog reading the new local architecture from inside the legal and administrative machinery.
البناء القاعدي – من نبوة الرئيس إلى سياسة دولة – حصيلة جوفاء لمسار عبثي
Saied’s promised “bottom-up construction” has replaced elected local democracy with councils whose powers are unclear, whose relationship to municipalities is confused, and whose development logic depends on the president’s pet fixes: penal reconciliation money and community companies. The core move is anti-politics: invoke “the people’s will,” then empty the institutions where people could actually contest policy. Al Bawsala · Arabic
Fr · Tunis electoral-observation and institutional analysis, with the Administrative Court/ISIE conflict treated as a political mechanism rather than a procedural footnote.
The 2024 vote was not a competitive election with a bad result; it was a managed ratification device. Seventeen initial candidacies became three, Saied took 90.69% on 28.8% turnout, and only 6% of voters were aged 18-35: the machinery did not mobilise society so much as demonstrate that politics had been drained out of the electoral form. Al Bawsala · French
ع · Tunisian researcher at a regional Arab policy network, working through memory, youth socialisation and the unfinished transition.
الضياع في المرحلة الانتقالية: فخاخ الحنين إلى الاستبداد في تونس
The social base for reversal is not reducible to fear or ignorance. A failed break with the old regime, weak transitional justice, and the unmet economic promises of the democratic decade let the Ben Ali years reappear as a fantasy of amn w aman, stability and state prestige, even among young Tunisians who barely lived under him. Arab Reform Initiative · Arabic
A standing interest, freshly read
Antiquity Is Not a Shrine: It Is a Fight Over Institutions, Rights, and Cultural Ownership
Read together, these pieces strip antiquity of two lazy roles: founding myth and moral costume. Athens, Rome, Greek epic, and “the classics” become tools for testing how power is shared, how rights are socially made, how bad regimes get named, and how non-Western scholars decide what to do with a tradition they refuse simply to inherit.
En · Comparative archaeology and political science, using premodern cases from the Mediterranean, Americas, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and beyond.
Democracy is not treated as a Greek invention that slept until Europe revived it. A 40-case archaeological comparison makes the harder claim: collective government appears across regions, and autocracy tracks less with scale than with external revenues, patrimonial bureaucracy, spectacle, and inequality. Science Advances · English
En · Political theory from New Zealand, via Greek tyranny, Roman dictatorship, revolutionary sovereignty, and modern authoritarianism.
“Tyranny” once named a ruler’s character; “dictatorship” and then “authoritarianism” shifted the problem toward sovereignty, legitimacy, and institutional accountability. The payoff is not semantic trivia: modern political science lost one diagnostic lens and gained another. The Review of Politics · English
It · Italian classical scholarship reading Athenian law against Constant, Dworkin, honor cultures, and modern rights talk.
Athenian rights were not liberal rights avant la lettre, but they were not absent either. The key term is timē: a claim to social recognition and legal protection made against others inside a civic order, where right and duty are braided together rather than split into individual versus state. il manifesto · Italian
中 · Chinese classical reception, from Fudan and Shanghai Review of Books, on how Greek antiquity is being selected, translated, and contested inside China now.
Greek and Roman antiquity should not be domesticated into Christian morality, Confucian revivalism, Straussian political philosophy, or academic career machinery. Zhang Wei’s sharper claim is that the classical spirit survives only as an alien pressure: a source of creative disturbance, not a prestige language for existing orthodoxies. Shanghai Review of Books · Chinese