14 July 2026Focus · Africa · Central Asia & Pacific12 Items · 4 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
Care is being reorganized around scarcity before it is being reorganized around patients. Filipino nurses now watch American wards through screens while Somalia’s antibiotics move faster than its laboratories, and Fukuoka stretches language classrooms across remote links because migration has outrun staffing. The same logic appears outside medicine: robots promise standardized bodies, platforms sort ambition into micro-worlds, and tax law chases value booked somewhere else. Across Russia’s maternity wards, Jammu’s schoolbooks case, and Kashmir’s police process, institutions do not need clean bans when delay, custody, shame, and procedure can do the work. The week’s pressure is jurisdiction: who controls a body, a worker, a medicine, a language, a profit stream, once the system that uses it is no longer in the same place as the person who bears the cost.
A care gap in one rich country becomes a wage ladder and a workforce drain in a poorer one, with patients on both sides absorbing the tradeoff.
The Bedside Moves Offshore
U.S. hospitals are shifting nursing work offshore: Filipino nurses monitor patients, answer questions, and handle remote clinical tasks for American providers at lower cost. The labor arbitrage solves one staffing crisis by drawing on a country whose own health system already loses nurses to export markets.
In his job as a nurse and healthcare administrator, Chris decided on appropriate treatments for patients, and checked their vital signs. Sometimes, he monitored up to 10 patients in intensive care — and he did it all from Manila, thousands of miles away from the U.S. hospital he worked for.
Why it leads: U.S. hospitals are pushing bedside care into a lower-paid offshore tier: an ICU patient in America may now be watched from Manila by a contractor earning a few dollars an hour.
English · 5d ago · 5 min · Deep
The Brief
The Brief follows systems that outsource the hard part: care, censorship, judgment, profit, and belonging are all being routed through cheaper labor, remote tools, police process, or algorithms.
Somalia’s AMR problem, as described in the review, is a system failure across prescribing, diagnostics, surveillance and regulation.
Pressure point
Problem
Priority
Antibiotic use
Over-the-counter access and self-medication
Regulate sales
Clinical care
Empirical prescribing without lab confirmation
Expand diagnostics
Health system
Weak surveillance and fragmented response
Coordinate national policy
Hospitals
Inadequate infection prevention and stewardship
Train staff
Somalia’s antimicrobial resistance problem is built into the health system: antibiotics circulate without prescriptions, surveillance is thin, laboratories are underpowered, and conflict has normalized informal care. The crisis is not just misuse by patients but a market and governance failure around medicines.
Results: The findings demonstrate that antimicrobial resistance in Somalia is driven by multiple interconnected factors, including irrational antibiotic prescribing, limited microbiological diagnostic services, weak surveillance systems, healthcare-associated infections, inadequate regulation of pharmaceutical distribution, and persistent…
Robotic surgery promises precision, distance, and standardization, but the operating theatre still depends on tactile judgment, improvisation, hierarchy, and tacit skill. The machine changes the surgeon’s body and authority without abolishing the messy human system around the patient.
Robot-assisted surgery is already routine practice. But the dream of a machine operating alone underestimates the practical judgement, learned over decades, that makes a surgeon a surgeon.
A Russian woman was denied a pregnancy termination despite knowing the child would die, and was pushed through childbirth under moral pressure from doctors and officials. The human story exposes how abortion restriction works in practice: not always through a clean legal ban, but through intimidation, delay, shame, and institutional refusal.
The worst thoughts tormented me. I understood that, when everything is all right, doctors do not run out of the room like that, and I imagined that I was lying there on the couch, that the child inside me was dead, and that she did not know how to tell me.
New Zealand’s tax debate is moving toward the mismatch between domestic income-tax rules and global tech firms whose value is booked elsewhere. The useful question is not whether Big Tech is uniquely bad, but why tax systems built for resident companies struggle with platform rents, intangibles, and cross-border profit allocation.
There is also politics at play as I think the Government is not too keen to pick a fight with the United States tech companies and therefore attract the ire of President Trump. But notwithstanding that, applying the treaty royalty withholding tax rules might seem a more supportable action to take.
Humanoid robots are becoming cheaper and more capable, but demand remains the unresolved variable. The form factor is culturally powerful and technically seductive, yet factories and households may not need a human-shaped machine unless it beats specialized automation on cost, reliability, and deployment friction.
La comercialización de Neo, prevista para este año, podría poner en entredicho la hegemonía china que se ha ido consolidando en los últimos años. Hasta ahora, el 80 % de la proporción del mercado mundial de manos robóticas diestras «de alto grado de libertad»
Learning Japanese Anywhere: Remote Teaching Tech Enables Language Instruction at Multiple Sites
Fukuoka’s Japanese-language classrooms are being stretched across multiple sites with remote teaching tools as migration creates demand faster than schools can staff it. The technology is a workaround for teacher scarcity, uneven geography, and the practical need to integrate foreign residents outside the usual big-city infrastructure.
But Abe Mayuko, chief supervising instructor in the School Planning Division of the Guidance Department, explains that the arrangement was inconvenient for some pupils. “It could take more than an hour to reach another school. It also burdens the parents who have to take them there. Online classes could help lighten that load.”
जम्मू: कोर्ट ने ‘आपत्तिजनक’ किताबों के वितरण मामले में तीन प्रकाशकों को 10 दिन की हिरासत में भेजा
Three publishers in Jammu were remanded to ten days’ custody over books deemed objectionable after political parties objected to the material. The case shows how Kashmir’s information regime now works through police process, party pressure, and criminalization of publishing rather than only formal censorship.
Notably, the controversy concerns 251 copies of two books. The first book is titled Personality and Legends of Jammu and Kashmir, co-authored by Hilal Ahmad and Santosh Meenam and published by Jammu’s Oberoi Book Service.
Mindfulness is presented less as a wellness mood than as a targeted method for interrupting specific cognitive biases such as confirmation bias and loss aversion. The stronger claim is that attention training can change the timing of judgment: enough pause to notice the bias before it hardens into a decision.
Lawrence’s late Apocalypse is read as an attack on the Book of Revelation’s punitive, world-ending imagination. Against Christian catastrophe he sets a solar, bodily counter-myth, turning exegesis into a fight over what kinds of life religion permits.
À l’Apocalypse de saint Jean, au « plus détestable de tous les livres de la Bible », Lawrence réserve un traitement de « faveur », l’accablant de toutes les infamies. Qu’est-ce qui fait d’elle une « œuvre assurément assez répugnante » ?
Threads does not merely host self-improvement talk; its recommendation system appears to gather users into a recognizable micro-world of ambition, discipline, and status performance around places such as Olympic Park. The platform’s social life comes from algorithmic repetition: search once, and a lifestyle ideology starts to look like a community.
That Olympic Park and election fraud emerged as hot keywords on Threads, which is linked to Instagram, is to some extent a natural result. But the way Olympic Park rally participants used Threads differed somewhat from X or YouTube, which were used mainly to “certify” participation in the rally.
New Zealand First and One Nation both draw protest votes, but the comparison breaks down at political temperament and social base. Winston Peters channels grievance through institutional familiarity and coalition bargaining; Pauline Hanson’s appeal rests more directly on repressed rage and outsider hostility.
A shrewd and inventive opportunist? Yes. What successful politician isn’t? But it has never been Peters’ intention to burn New Zealand’s entire political system down to the ground. New Zealanders would never have voted for him and his party in such numbers if it was.
English · yesterday · 10 min · Skim
Many Views
Many Views tracks wars whose meaning changes with the vantage point: Hormuz and Komar look different in French, Arabic, Russian, and U.S. security idioms because each language is watching a different failure of force.
Many tongues on one question
the failed U.S.-Iran bargain
A French strategic read stays on Hormuz traffic and the memorandum that failed; an Arabic one sees a U.S. war that strengthened the very Iranian dominance it meant to break; a U.S. security newsletter tracks the deal’s rapid unraveling and renewed strikes.
Nearly a month after Tehran and Washington signed a memorandum of understanding, the real contest is still the shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. Le Grand Continent · French
Three weeks after signature, the U.S.-Iran memorandum is already coming apart amid post-ceasefire skirmishes and renewed strikes. War on the Rocks · English
Another question, several views
Ukraine's erosion of Russia's battlefield momentum
A Russian and a French military read converge on the same uncomfortable fact for Moscow: Ukraine is not winning by dramatic territorial reversals, but by changing the terms of local combat. One looks at Russia losing the lower air domain; the other at Komar, where Ukrainian success helps explain why Russia's advance slowed sevenfold in a year.
Under Attack From The Air: Can Russia find a response to Ukraine’s asymmetric counteroffensive?
Russia faces its hardest predicament since the retreats of autumn 2022, now from Ukraine's growing superiority in the lower air domain rather than from a broad territorial collapse. Re: Russia · Russian
Komar becomes the local proof point for a wider slowdown: Ukrainian success there helps explain how Kyiv cut the pace of Russia's advance to one-seventh in a year. Le Grand Continent · French
Deep Research
Deep Research maps states under constraint, where armies, minerals, sanctions routes, parliaments, clerics, and transport corridors become the machinery that decides what politics can still do.
One fault line, many vantages
Four Constraint Maps for a War That Has Become Industrial
The War’s Narrowing Grid
Read together, the war is no longer just a front-line attrition story. Logistics, manpower, arms production, and third-country energy arbitrage now set the limits: Ukraine tries to turn drones and private arms firms into strategic depth, Russia squeezes poorer regions and shadow hiring markets for bodies, and India turns sanctions pressure into a sovereignty test.
Ру · Russian independent reporting from recruitment bureaucracy and soldiers at the front
«Дураки за деньги закончились»: как российские власти пытаются решить проблему нехватки контрактников
Russia's manpower system is moving from bonus-driven recruitment toward coercion, referral bounties, prison-police channels, dubious 'rear' vacancies, and possible mobilization planning. The war economy here is local administration under quota pressure: regions buy bodies until the supply curve stops moving. Vyorstka · Russian
For New Delhi, secondary sanctions over Russian crude are not only Ukraine policy; they are a test of whether Washington can punish a partner for energy decisions treated in India as core national interest. The Russian discount has narrowed, but the political cost of compliance has risen, pushing India toward diversification without surrendering the language of strategic autonomy. Observer Research Foundation · English
One fault line, many vantages
When Force Stops Buying Regional Order
Read together, these pieces turn the war from a sequence of fronts into a conversion problem: military advantage no longer reliably becomes diplomacy, Gulf wealth no longer buys insulation, and Iran's old network no longer exports risk away from Tehran. The emerging order is not one bloc against another but several nervous centers hedging around Gaza, Palestine, energy corridors, and regime security.
ع · Iranian international-relations scholar hosted by the Arab Center in Doha
وقف إطلاق النار بين «حماس» وإسرائيل: من تدمير غزة إلى إعادة تشكيل الشرق الأوسط
The axis that entered October 7 is not the axis now: Assad's collapse, Hamas' attrition, Hezbollah's narrower room for maneuver, and Arab tactical rhetoric have changed the machinery under the label 'resistance'. A ceasefire becomes a sorting device: Iran loses the old Syrian corridor, Israel gains northern freedom of action, and Arab normalization can re-enter quietly under different public language. Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies · Arabic
中 · Chinese academic view from Fudan, written for Arab World Studies
The post-Gaza region splits into four centers: a Saudi-led moderate alliance, a Turkey-Qatar Muslim Brotherhood-friendly alliance, Israel, and Iran's resistance axis; beneath them sit three zones of prosperity, stability, and turbulence. Regional states are no longer just pieces for great powers: Gaza, Syria, and Lebanon become the boards on which Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Israel, and Iran compete while outside powers lose ordering capacity. Arab World Studies · Chinese
De · German Middle East magazine, Gulf-centered reading for European readers
Gulf restraint is not consent to Israel; it is hedging by monarchies that protect their reputation as dependable business hubs, keep channels to Iran, Israel, Washington, Beijing, and Ankara, and avoid turning the Gulf into someone else's proxy battlefield. Palestine still constrains normalization, but regime stability, logistics, energy corridors, and post-oil development explain the silence better than moral alignment. zenith · German
Many tongues on one storm
Rubaya, Goma, Doha: Congo’s War as a Parallel State Problem
Eastern Congo is no longer just a battlefield with minerals underneath it. M23/AFC and Rwanda have turned territory into taxation, border access and bargaining power, while US/Qatar diplomacy tries to build a mineral-security bargain around actors who do not control the same map.
En · Supply-chain investigation from field interviews, customs data and company responses; London-based investigators following the mineral route out of North Kivu.
Rubaya’s coltan does not simply “fund conflict” in the abstract: M23 taxes the pit, the road and the trader, then Rwandan export paperwork turns Congolese ore into global tantalum. The strongest pages trace the route from Rubaya through Kigali and East African ports to smelters in China and Kazakhstan, with traceability schemes becoming part of the laundering mechanism rather than a solution. Global Witness · English
Nl · Dutch-language Belgian/Great Lakes academic view; written from the Conflict Research Group orbit rather than the anglophone news cycle.
De Congocrisis reikt verder dan ‘conflictmineralen’
Minerals now finance M23, but mineral greed alone misreads the escalation. Verweijen and Vlassenroot put the group back into the longer chain of Congolese Tutsi armed politics, Rwanda’s security-economic interests, Kinshasa’s refusal to negotiate, and the Rwanda-Uganda-Congo rivalry that made Goma worth taking even at the cost of global scrutiny. MO* · Dutch
Fr · Kinshasa-based Congolese polling and political research, with national survey data rather than expatriate inference.
The war is also reorganizing Congolese political accountability: 58% say the country is on the wrong track, yet Tshisekedi’s image survives, helped by sovereignty politics and the Rwanda threat. The security section is the key: most respondents now prefer talks or diplomatic pressure over a military solution, while support for arming Wazalendo militias has risen sharply. Ebuteli · French
What they said would happen
The Revolution That Never Escaped the Officer Republic
Egypt did not return to Mubarakism; Sisi’s order hardened the 1952 officer republic into a debt-financed, military-guarded “second republic,” with parliament managed as succession machinery and labor unrest policed where wage law fails. The prediction ledger is now concrete: Wael Ghonim’s 2011 Internet-liberation line mistook mobilization for power; Robert Springborg’s February 2011 “game over” call was early but directionally right on military control; Daniel Pipes was right that the Brotherhood was not close to taking over in February 2011 but wrong to imagine the military might shepherd a broad liberal-national turn; Brotherhood fears came true for the 2011-12 ballot box and Morsi’s presidency, then ended in the 2013 military overthrow rather than an Islamist state. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim_Brotherhood_in_Egypt?utm_source=openai)) By 2026 the durable winner is not Islamism, Facebook, or liberal constitutionalism, but a president-army-security economy that can still rewrite term limits, discipline workers, and sell “nothing for free” as social policy. ([]())
En · Egyptian independent political memory; an internal January self-critique rather than a Western anniversary essay.
January 25 did not simply lose to tanks in 2013; it entered politics under the ceiling of the July 1952 state. The missing element was not courage but a freedom-centered program and organization able to outlast police-military bargaining, Brotherhood accommodation, and secular willingness to bless the army against Morsi. Al Manassa · English
En · Cairo-based reporting on electoral engineering, with Egyptian parliamentary specialists and Yezid Sayigh.
Parliament is treated less as representation than as machinery for preserving presidential succession rules: rivals disqualified, half the chamber secured unopposed, candidate numbers down from 10,251 in 2011 to 2,598 in 2025, and a fourth-term amendment already being floated. This is the Sisi state at the constitutional layer: managed pluralism as the route to permanent incumbency. ([]()) Al Manassa · English
En · Ground-level labor reporting from Alexandria to Aswan, with worker cases rather than macroeconomic abstraction.
Egypt’s wage question has re-entered politics from below: 100 documented labor protests in 2025, about 70% around minimum-wage enforcement, plus arrests and intimidation when factories, utilities, and military-linked firms met workers with security agencies. It gives the social underside of the “new republic”: price stabilization without wage recovery, law without enforcement, and unions weakened after 2011. ([]()) Al Manassa · English
ع · Arabic structural analysis from Carnegie Middle East; civil-military political economy rather than protest nostalgia.
الجمهورية الثانية: إعادة تشكيل مصر في عهد عبد الفتاح السيسي
Sisi’s “second republic” is not a restoration of Mubarak’s bargain but a redesign: “nothing for free,” austerity, state capitalism without developmental coherence, military and intelligence control over land and contracting, and foreign capital as regime fuel. Sayigh connects bread subsidies, gated cities, public-sector compression, private-sector crowd-out, and officer rents into one social contract. ([carnegieendowment.org](https://carnegieendowment.org/ar/research/2025/05/the-second-republic-the-remaking-of-egypt-under-abdel-fattah-el-sisi)) Carnegie Endowment for International Peace · Arabic
After the cameras left
After Qantar, the Bargain Hardened and the Map Moved
Qantar gave Tokayev room to retire Nazarbayev’s household politics, but not to open the system: the social promise became controlled redistribution talk, and parliament became a wider stage with tighter limits. Russia’s war did more to change Kazakhstan than the promised “New Kazakhstan” did: it pushed language, identity, logistics, sanctions risk, and Caspian/Central Asian routing into everyday politics.
Kk · Kazakh-language Almaty newsroom, with Kazakh economists, political scientists, and social theorists reading the promise of “Fair Kazakhstan” against wages, jobs, taxes, unions, and assets.
Тоқаевтың тұсында әлеуметтік әділдік пайда болды ма?
Qantar let Tokayev sell a new social bargain, but the economy still works through oligarchic concentration: the wage-share target missed, most “new jobs” are temporary or low-productivity, and roughly 100 people still hold about a third of the economy. The real post-Qantar shift is not redistribution; it is a new legitimacy script for the same political economy. Vlast · KK
Kk · Kazakh-language Vlast assessment of the outgoing parliament, built from interviews with deputies and political analysts inside Kazakhstan.
Тоқаев парламенті: әлеуметтік риторикадан консерватив іс-әрекетке көшу
The post-Qantar parliament gained parties, single-mandate deputies, and theatrical pluralism, but not autonomy: criticism is routed toward ministers and akims, never the presidency. The institutional result is controlled ventilation plus conservative lawmaking, with “traditional values,” foreign-agent logic, and discipline over public speech doing regime maintenance. Vlast · KK
Ру · Russian-language Kazakhstani essay using local polling, Qalam research, and everyday cultural flashpoints in Almaty and online Kazakh public life.
Russia’s war turned sovereignty from state doctrine into social boundary-work: support for Russia in Demoscope polling fell from 38.9% in March 2022 to about 13% by November 2022 and around 15% in March 2025, while language conflicts moved from policy seminars into cafes, menus, brand names, and boycotts. Qantar and the CSTO memory sit inside this: gratitude to Moscow became harder to sell once Russia itself became the warning case. Exclusive.kz · Russian
Ру · Kazakhstani publication of a cross-border investigation with Investigace.cz, IrpiMedia, and The Insider; useful for the supply-chain mechanics behind the Russia squeeze.
Как западное оружие и патроны продолжают попадать в Россию в том числе через Казахстан
Sanctions did not seal Russia off; they rerouted supply through the customs and certification gray zones around Russia. Kazakhstan appears here as a pressure valve and liability: exports to Russia’s neighbors rose, EAEU paperwork travels across borders, and Kazakh firms become the place where Western controls, Russian demand, and secondary-sanctions risk collide. Vlast · Russian
A standing interest, freshly read
Who Gets to Name the Community?
The live Arab cultural fight is less “tradition versus modernity” than a struggle over naming rights: clerics, states, sectarian memory, customary law, and online publics all compete to define the legitimate community. Read together, these pieces turn language, Quranic interpretation, leftist vocabulary, and Amazigh custom into institutional maps of authority.
ع · Arab leftist self-critique from inside the post-October 7 Arabic public sphere.
Islamists used to expel the left from the religious community by calling it atheist; now the more effective charge is treason. Once the accusation moved from “kafir” to “agent,” many Arab leftists lost the nerve to hold an independent line, because the penalty became exclusion from the national community they had built their identity around defending. Raseef22 · Arabic
ع · Moroccan cultural-legal debate, with researchers on Amazigh custom and religious practice.
العرف والدين والقانون: كيف تفاعلت الأعراف القبلية والأمازيغية مع القانون ومع الدين؟
Moroccan social order is not a two-player match between state law and Islamic law. Amazigh “azref,” village water rules, women’s claims to marital property through “kad wa si‘aya,” and the social prestige of the hajj all sit in a layered legal culture where custom can precede, bend, or outlast statute. Marayana · Arabic
ع · Moroccan/Arab Islamic hermeneutics, from a research institute built around religious and philosophical debate.
القرآنولوجيا المعاصرة: نصر حامد أبو زيد ومفهوم القرآن وطبيعته
Abu Zayd’s scandal was not merely “secularism against religion”; it was a method for moving Quranic authority from metaphysical closure into language, reception, genre, and history. The useful move is the lineage: al-Jurjani, Muhammad Abduh, Taha Hussein, Amin al-Khuli, and Abu Zayd become one long argument over whether sacred authority can be studied through the mechanics of text. Mominoun Without Borders · Arabic
ع · Syrian sociolinguistic reckoning after regime collapse, written from inside Arabic debate about sect, class, and speech.
There is no clean linguistic thing called an “Alawite dialect”; there are rural, coastal, classed, and local speech forms that Syrian television and political memory fused into one sectarian sound. After Assad, reclaiming those voices becomes a small but real test of whether Syrians can detach living communities from the regime that conscripted their accents. Raseef22 · Arabic