16 June 2026Focus · Latin America · South & Southeast Asia11 Items · 6 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
Power this week sits less in declarations than in operating systems: Nepal’s election finance, CBSE tenders, USAID supply chains in Uganda, Brazil’s procedural politics, France’s grid rules. Bodies and territories become inputs for those systems, from Nigerian maternity wards and Roman households to Latin American forests priced through carbon finance and India’s sugarcane-fed E100 turn. Naming is one of the mechanisms: Ebola is kept “remote” by geography, Mackenzie King is rescued from managerial dullness by institutional memory, and “good governance” in Kathmandu becomes the machinery prosperity keeps failing to find. Read together, the edition asks who gets treated as the primary stakeholder: the patient, the refugee, the forest community, the examinee, the reactor operator, the voter, or the state that absorbs them all into procedure.
सुशासन र समृद्धिका तगाराहरू | Nepal's first 24-hour updated news portal - Ratopati
Nepal’s repeated political transformations have failed to yield good governance and prosperity because the country’s deepest obstacles lie in political culture, institutional weakness, distorted incentives, and unresolved social, economic, geopolitical, and environmental contradictions.
The Wheel Takes First
Nepal’s political-economic blockage is traced to a rotten incentive structure: expensive elections, opaque party finance, clientelist administration, and a state that rewards extraction more reliably than production. “Good governance” is not treated as civic decoration but as the machinery without which prosperity policy cannot bite.
“The root of Nepal’s political-economic crisis lies in a distorted incentive structure. Expensive elections, opaque fundraising, and a burdensome party structure had transformed politics from service into a profession and a medium of investment. As a result, policy corruption, transactional dealings, and crony capitalism flourished.
Why it leads: Nepal’s revolutions keep producing the same bargain: expensive elections, opaque party finance and crony capitalism turn public office into an investment, so every new promise of prosperity is captured before it reaches citizens.
Translated from NE · 6d ago · 16 min · Deep
The Brief
The Brief follows institutions at the point where paperwork, money and habit become command over bodies, land and public trust.
Ebola’s geography is not just epidemiological; names, maps, and colonial habits help keep outbreaks mentally quarantined in “remote” places until containment fails. Disease nomenclature turns political neglect into common sense by making the virus seem naturally African rather than institutionally unmanaged.
Nel 2019 l’epidemiologo Eugene Richardson notò che alcuni attori internazionali preferivano adottare misure di contenimento del virus all’impiego di terapie esistenti. La sua impressione era che l’obiettivo non fosse tanto salvare vite, ma evitare che il virus si avvicinasse al Nord globale.
Latin American forests sit inside a collision between climate pledges, Indigenous land rights, carbon finance, agribusiness, and weak enforcement. The report’s value is likely in connecting policy instruments to the people and institutions that actually decide whether a forest is protected, monetized, or cleared.
Solare Wucht stresst Reaktoren—Die Sonne knipst die französischen Atomkraftwerke aus
France’s nuclear fleet was built for steady baseload, but solar and wind now force reactors into flexible operation they were never designed to perform. The German electricity transition is no longer an external contrast to French nuclear exceptionalism; it is directly changing how French reactors must run.
But heat also means sunshine. And that poses the greater operational challenge. “There will be significant problems in ten years,” Gandhi says. A few weeks ago, EDF pointed to the high costs incurred in 2025 because nuclear power had to be curtailed. “There is no sign that it will get better. This effect will increase from year to year.”
Nigerian women describe being given an extra vaginal stitch after childbirth without consent, a practice justified through husbands’ sexual pleasure and normalized inside maternity care. The violence is medical, marital, and institutional at once: pain is discounted because the patient is not treated as the primary stakeholder in her own body.
Roman slavery was not a marginal cruelty attached to an otherwise familiar classical world; it structured households, agriculture, sex, status, law, and elite leisure. The force of the piece is likely its refusal to isolate slavery from “civilization,” making the admired Roman order depend on coerced human availability.
The lively engagement with epigraphy is the book’s primary achievement. It extrapolates stories from the little text left behind: no complete first-person narrative of life as a Roman slave survives.
English · yesterday · 7 min · Deep
日 Uganda's Helping Hands · Translated from Japanese
How USAID’s dismantling reaches refugees in Uganda.
Pressure point
Figure
Effect
Refugees hosted
~1.9m
Uganda’s open-door system depends on outside aid
Cash coupons
28,000 UGX/month
Suspended after USAID withdrawal
Aid workers globally
>250,000
Jobs lost as projects halted
USAID cuts are followed through Uganda’s refugee system, where food, clinics, schools, and local humanitarian businesses were built around American funding flows. The withdrawal is not an accounting adjustment; it shifts risk onto host communities, aid workers, and refugees who had organized daily life around a donor infrastructure.
Finally, making use of traditional artistry tied to people’s roots helps them preserve and strengthen their identity even while separated from their homeland. Handicraft is not merely “work.” I believe it is a simple but powerful means of enabling refugees to live with dignity.
सूचना आयोग ने सीबीएसई को 10वीं-12वीं बोर्ड परीक्षाओं की टेंडर प्रक्रिया से जुड़ी जानकारी तलब की
India’s Central Information Commission has ordered CBSE to disclose procurement details for class 10 and 12 board-exam answer sheets after the board refused an RTI request. The story is small but structurally pointed: mass examination systems are public institutions, procurement machines, and accountability black boxes at the same time.
The CIC held that the Central Public Information Officer (CPIO) had invoked exemption clauses to deny the information “without giving any proper reason.” The commission said, “As no justification of any kind has been furnished for not providing the information sought, the impugned reply given by the CPIO on March 18, 2025, is set aside.”
A delação rejeitada, a pesquisa suspensa e a votação contra o aborto legal
Brazilian politics is caught through three institutional moves: a rejected plea bargain, a suspended poll, and a vote against legal abortion. Even if brief, piauí’s format can connect legal procedure, electoral management, and moral legislation as parts of the same power field rather than separate headlines.
Ana Clara Costa: Daniel Vorcaro’s second plea proposal is hanging by a thread. The Federal Police and the Office of the Prosecutor General believe the former banker talks a lot but still delivers very little. What is missing are new facts, evidence, confession, and the money trail.
नितिन गडकरी ने गाड़ियों में 100 प्रतिशत एथेनॉल ईंधन के इस्तेमाल के नियमों को दी मंज़ूरी
India is moving toward rules for E100 fuel use in automobiles, with ethanol sold as a route to lower import dependence and pollution. The policy sits at the junction of energy security, farm lobbies, vehicle standards, and the political economy of sugarcane.
Unlike E20, E85 and E100 fuels require flex-fuel engines. The government plans to make E85 available at about 500 petrol pumps by December and to increase that number to around 5,000 by the end of 2027.
Mackenzie King is treated as an institutional maker rather than a dull managerial survivor: modern Canada emerges through coalition maintenance, imperial adjustment, labor politics, and careful ambiguity. The biographical route is useful if it explains how a weak-looking political style built durable state capacity.
If most Canadians know anything about King, it is as ‘Weird Willie’, a man who sought counsel from his dead mother, his dead dogs (all named Pat), the dead President Roosevelt, and the even more dead Leonardo da Vinci, a man who consulted Ouija boards and mediums, and whose virginity was the result either of repressed mommy-desire or of h…
English · yesterday · 9 min · Deep
Many Views
Many Views tracks exposure as politics: Iran read through Tehran and Islamabad, the self read through feminism, confession and the audited body.
Many tongues on one question
paths out of the Iran war
A Brazilian left interview from Tehran and an English-language conflict analyst from Pakistan look at the same U.S.-Israel confrontation with Iran and split over agency: one sees Persian resistance, Israeli sabotage and a U.S. strategic defeat; the other watches Islamabad try to turn proximity and risk into a diplomatic opening.
From Tehran, the war belongs to a longer history of Persian resistance, with Israel cast as saboteur, Washington as strategically beaten, and China and Russia as the powers shaping what comes next in the Middle East. Outras Palavras · Portuguese
Islamabad sees enough danger in the U.S.-Israel bombing of Iran to carry proposals for ending the war, even though mediation exposes Pakistan to its own risks. International Crisis Group · English
Another question, several views
Networked malaise and the exposed self
Portuguese, Spanish and French essays trace three exits from life lived before an audience: resentment against feminism, public confession, and the body as a permanent audit file. The split is over where the pressure lands — on gender politics, intimacy, or flesh itself.
Three ways networked life turns the self into a public problem.
Para entender o fenômeno dos jovens antifeministas
Young men’s antifeminism is not just a toxic-feed problem: deteriorating life prospects turn gender into the scapegoat for precarity, with South Korea as the warning case. Outras Palavras · Portuguese
The first-person online confession borrows the tone of intimacy while stripping it of privacy, turning self-perception and emotion into public performance. Jot Down · Spanish
Social platforms make the body measurable before an uncontrolled crowd, producing shame less from imperfection than from being endlessly exposable. AOC · French
Deep Research
Deep Research goes beneath headlines to the infrastructures of endurance: sanctions workarounds, air defense, ports, migration policing, nuclear restarts and stages that refuse easy consolation.
One fault line, many vantages
The War Beneath the Front Line: Labor, Imports, Demography, and Sanctions Escape
Exhaustion Learns Motion
Read together, these four move the war from daily maps to the systems that keep it going: Russia’s militarized accounting, Ukraine’s shrinking human base, China’s preferred diplomatic architecture, and Iran’s reading of Russia as a sanctions-survival manual. The useful tension is between exhaustion and adaptation: every actor is paying, but each is trying to convert a different constraint into leverage.
Укр · Ukrainian domestic strategic debate, with historical demography and labor-market policy at the center.
Війна за людей: Україна втрачає населення швидше за Росію
Ukraine’s binding constraint is not only ammunition or territory, but the conversion of a depleted population into soldiers, workers, taxpayers, and future families. The comparison with Muscovy, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the Ukrainian state-building failure after 1917 turns migration policy from culture-war noise into a survival instrument. Texty.org.ua · Ukrainian
فا · Iranian sanctions-policy reading, extracting operational lessons for Iran from Russia’s wartime adaptation.
For an Iranian policy audience, Russia is a sanctions laboratory: ruble settlement, non-Western trade routes, China/India/Arab/Africa/Latin America links, BRICS/SCO diplomacy, and quick diversion of gas into fertilizer production become the playbook. The triumphalist tone is part of the value: Tehran is studying Russia less as a belligerent than as proof that sanctions should be broken around, not bargained away. Center for Strategic and International Analysis · Persian
One fault line, many vantages
The Gulf Learns That Neutrality Needs Air Defense
The regional order is no longer a neat contest between Iran's axis and a U.S.-Israeli-Gulf camp. Gulf capitals want de-escalation because their development model runs on confidence, aviation, ports and finance; Turkey fears Iranian collapse more than Iranian strength; Israel's freedom of action is becoming a liability for the very states it hoped to normalize with.
ع · Gulf Arab strategic-autonomy view, Doha-based policy circle
ديناميكيات ما بعد الحرب: الخليج في قلب نظام عالمي جديد
Gulf security can no longer be built around containing Iran alone. Israeli escalation, Red Sea disruption, cyber vulnerability and U.S. prioritization of Israel push the GCC toward a portfolio strategy: deterrence, preventive diplomacy, China/India/Europe ties and more autonomous defense capacity. Middle East Council on Global Affairs · Arabic
فا · Persian-language reading of Emirati recalibration after direct exposure to war
جنگ ایران چگونه استراتژی منطقهای امارات را بازتعریف میکند؟
The UAE's old formula, peace through trade plus careful diplomacy, looks exposed once missiles hit ports, airports and energy infrastructure. Abu Dhabi is moving toward harder security ties with the U.S. and Israel while also loosening dependence on GCC/OPEC frameworks and widening links with India, Ukraine, Greece, Cyprus and Ethiopia. BBC · Persian
ع · Turkish security logic, carried in an Arabic regional forum
كيف تنظر تركيا إلى الحرب الأمريكية الإسرائيلية على إيران؟
Ankara does not want to save Tehran, but it fears a broken Iran: PJAK/PKK space across a new border front, another refugee wave, lost trade, and a stronger Israeli hand after Iran is weakened. The Turkish threat map is domestic and geographic before it is ideological. Middle East Council on Global Affairs · Arabic
En · Anglophone mainstream, useful here as a foil to the Gulf-Arab policy note
The Gulf bargain had three pillars: U.S. protection, cautious outreach to Iran, and expanding economic ties with Israel. The war damages all three at once: Washington escalates, Tehran can still punish Gulf infrastructure, and public anger over Gaza limits any open alignment with Israel. The Guardian · English
Many tongues on one storm
Ecuador’s Export Economy Learns to Govern by Fear
Ecuador’s crisis is not a sudden cartel invasion. Cocaine, gold, land, water, prisons and child labor now meet inside the same weak institutions: ports move the export product, informal settlements and schools supply territorial control, and militarized order catches the visible poor while finance and logistics keep working.
Es · Ecuadorian organized-crime observatory; data-first view from Quito on homicide geography and criminal-market logistics.
The murder map follows criminal markets, not generic insecurity: Guayas and the coastal ports, Los Ríos as road and storage corridor, and Amazon provinces where illegal gold has become a second engine of violence. Firearms dominate the killing, and children are no longer collateral damage but a measurable casualty class inside the new criminal labor system. Observatorio Ecuatoriano de Crimen Organizado / PADF · Spanish
Es · Ground-level Ecuadorian reporting from Santo Domingo, built around families, schools, police records and child-protection workers.
Recruitment in Santo Domingo is labor supply, territorial discipline and social control at once: boys become lookouts, couriers, extortion collectors and recruiters because schools, households and neighborhoods sit inside gang territory. The city is not peripheral; it is a logistics node between the northern border, the coast and the export ports. La Barra Espaciadora · Spanish
What they said would happen
Fukushima Did Not End Nuclear Power; It Reassigned It
Fukushima did not kill nuclear power; it changed who could build, who would host risk, and which states were willing to pay the political price. The 2011 scorecard is mixed: Naoto Kan’s July 2011 call for Japan to reduce and eventually eliminate nuclear dependence was right for the shutdown decade and wrong for the 2025 settlement, where nuclear is back in the strategic plan at roughly 20% by 2040; Angela Merkel and Norbert Röttgen’s May-June 2011 German exit promise was essentially fulfilled, three months late in April 2023; the IEA’s 2011 warning that “second thoughts on nuclear” would mean more fossil imports, higher security exposure and harder climate arithmetic came true most clearly in Japan and Europe’s Russia-gas shock, but not as a simple global fossil victory because solar and wind scaled far faster than expected; John Rowe’s 2011-12 verdict that the US nuclear renaissance was dead, and Alexander Glaser/Mycle Schneider’s line that the global renaissance had ended, were right for liberal-market new build and wrong if read as China, Russia and South Korea stopping. The present settlement is institutional sorting: Japan is restarting old reactors while Fukushima Daiichi becomes a 40-year-plus public works problem, Germany proved an advanced grid can exit nuclear but still fights the next sectors, and the global fleet is stable-to-shrinking outside a China-centered construction system.
日 · Fukushima prefectural reporting, close to local contractors and towns trying to turn decommissioning from burden into livelihood.
At Fukushima Daiichi, decommissioning is no longer an emergency story; it is a local industrial regime with an unclear end-state. Contractors in Futaba and Okuma can see work coming, but cannot plan labor, qualifications or investment because the post-debris stages remain vague. Fukushima Minpo · Japanese
日 · Japanese energy-policy NGO working from METI and utility statistics.
Japan’s substitution actually looks like this: renewables 26.5%, variable renewables 12.6%, nuclear 8.8%, fossil thermal 64.6%, with LNG and coal still the main shock absorbers. Fukushima opened a FIT-driven solar buildout, not a clean nuclear-to-renewables swap. Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies · Japanese
De · German transition think tank writing from inside the Energiewende policy machine.
Germany’s post-Fukushima experiment now has hard numbers: emissions fell to 640 MtCO2e in 2025, renewables supplied 55.3% of 528 TWh power consumption, and the electricity sector kept cutting CO2 after the nuclear exit. The weakness moved from “can the grid survive without nuclear?” to networks, permitting, industry, heat and transport. Agora Energiewende · German
En · Independent international nuclear-industry tracker; anti-nuclear in orientation, but unusually data-dense on starts, closures, construction and geography.
The retreat/renaissance binary collapses: 404 reactors were operating on January 1, 2026, five fewer than a year earlier; 2025 brought four starts and seven closures; 36 of 66 reactors under construction were in China. Nuclear did not disappear, but expansion concentrated in state-industrial systems. World Nuclear Industry Status Report · English
After the cameras left
Tunisia’s New Republic: Quiet Streets, Hard Borders, Poisoned Air
Saied’s Tunisia did not become a restored, orderly state. It became a hyper-presidential system where formal politics is thinned out, dissent reappears through bread-and-meat prices, migration policing, and poisoned provincial air, and many citizens read the failure of the democratic decade through nostalgia for a state that once promised security and cheap life.
Fr · Tunis-based rights reporting, with migrant community testimony, OMCT material, and scrutiny of IOM/EU language.
“Voluntary return” has become the respectable label for a coercive migration regime: arrests, closed asylum channels, WhatsApp recruitment, opaque buses, and departures chosen under fear rather than consent. The useful reframe is that Tunisia is not just drifting into xenophobia; it is being made into Europe’s outsourced border while Saied’s racial-nationalist rhetoric supplies the domestic legitimacy. Nawaat · French
Fr · Ground-level Tunis reporting from livestock sale points, with consumers, butchers, and consumer-rights voices.
The Eid sheep market becomes a small, exact sociology of the new order: collapsing purchasing power, state-regulated sales that fail at the point of contact, intermediaries and price chains stronger than official promises, and families caught between ritual duty and humiliation. Saied’s conspiracy language cannot hide the material fact that meat has become seasonal luxury for the lower middle class. Nawaat · French
A standing interest, freshly read
When the Stage Stops Consoling the Public
These pieces treat performance as a social machine: who gets to authorize memory, who controls public attention, who may speak after domestic slavery, and what happens when participation stops being a gimmick and becomes a test of trust. The strongest common thread is suspicion of easy catharsis: good theatre here does not heal society by naming wounds; it exposes the institutions that decide which wounds become legible.
中 · Taiwanese theatre criticism, from inside the island’s post-martial-law small-theatre and left-memory debates.
Taiwanese White Terror theatre can turn political violence into a clean victim narrative: state cruelty, family grief, human-rights language, catharsis. Chien Wei-chiao restores the missing structure: class conflict, the destroyed socialist left, the Cold War anti-communist order, and the US-backed security state that made today’s transitional-justice memory politics possible. 表演藝術評論台 · Chinese
Fr · French-language criticism looking at a Lebanese production created in Beirut and performed by kafala survivors.
Lebanon’s kafala system appears not as background exploitation but as a machine that confiscates papers, names, kinship and bodily autonomy. The stage becomes a rare place where Ethiopian and Afro-Lebanese survivors control the account themselves, with dance doing the work that testimony cannot carry alone. Mouvement · French
Fr · A French interview with a Flemish participatory-performance company, useful as a diagnosis of post-COVID European audience politics.
The Belgian collective that once built its name on audience discomfort has moved from humiliation to trust because polarization now does the humiliating for free. Alexandre Devriendt’s turn is not softness as taste but a theory of spectatorship: in Handle with care, removing the artist’s authority tests whether strangers can organize attention without hierarchy. Mouvement · French
De · German-language theatre debate from Austria/Germany, written by a scholar of media, theatre and gender performativity.
The Peter Thiel invitation row at the Wiener Festwochen is read as more than a curatorial scandal: platform logic has entered the publicly funded festival. Outrage becomes cultural capital, dissent becomes unpaid publicity, and the theatre panel imitates the very attention economy it claims to critique. nachtkritik.de · German