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Georgia is not merely “reforming” higher education, it is shrinking the country’s capacity to produce independent citizens, using quotas and degree compression to discipline universities that have become centers of dissent and European orientation. The government’s overhaul, packaged as labor-market rationality, reorganizes state universities into narrow specializations and hands the executive power to set student numbers. In practice, this turns admissions into an instrument of political economy: the state decides what kinds of minds it will fund, what kinds of skills it will tolerate, and how quickly young people should be pushed into the workforce. When a government claims it is aligning education with “needs,” the question is always whose needs, public prosperity, or regime stability. Ilia State University has been the prime target of the initiative. Long regarded as Georgia’s most academically independent public institution, built on liberal arts principles and interdisciplinary research, it is now being cut down to a skeleton. The quota approved by the prime minister reduces its intake from thousands to a few hundred, while stripping away the humanities and social sciences, the very disciplines that train students to analyze power, history, law, and ideology. The remaining programs are framed as useful: pedagogy and selected STEM fields. The message is not subtle: educate teachers and technicians, not critics. The shortening of degrees deepens the same logic. Compressing a four-year bachelor’s into three and a two-year master’s into one is not simply a curriculum tweak; it reduces critically time, time to read widely, to argue, to organize, to build intellectual communities that can survive beyond a protest season. In societies sliding toward illiberal rule, time is political. The less time students spend thinking, the more time they spend surviving. And survival, as every authoritarian system understands, is a powerful substitute for freedom. The Student protests along Chavchavadze Avenue, despite legal risk, capture what the state is really trying to extinguish: public confidence that institutions can still belong to the people rather than to the ruling party. The university’s insistence that the measures are unconstitutional and its promise to pursue every legal avenue reflects a last-stand dynamic common in democracies under pressure: the courts become a battleground not because they are strong, but because everything else is being narrowed.
Russia is giving Iran intel to target U.S. forces, officials say
The Dangerous Rise of Decapitation Warfare
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From shadow to power: who is Mojtaba Khamenei?
Gen Z Voters in Nepal Pin Their Hopes on a Millennial Rapper
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At least 22 people dead after pro-Iran protests in Pakistan and Iraq
Continuing Conflicts
October 7 did not ignite a triumphant “axis” against Israel, rather it detonated the region’s existing order, leaving Israel militarily dominant, Iran’s proxy architecture shattered, and the Middle East newly organized around fear, vacuum, and opportunism rather than any coherent balance. The past two and a half years read less like a linear war than a cascading systems failure. A single spectacular breach triggered an escalatory logic that Hamas and Tehran clearly expected to manage: pressure Israel, summon regional proxies, fracture Western resolve, and force concessions on Palestine. Instead, the sequence inverted. Israel absorbed the initial trauma and then methodically dismantled the surrounding network, not just degrading capabilities, but decapitating leadership and stripping deterrence from its enemies. What is left is a region where power has concentrated, but legitimacy has not: Israel can strike almost anywhere, yet it cannot translate supremacy into a stable political settlement, especially while Gaza remains pulverized and Palestinians are again treated as an afterthought by everyone with leverage. Iran’s predicament is the most destabilizing piece of this new map. Once the disruptive spine of the region, projecting influence through Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, and Syria, it now appears trapped between strategic humiliation and compulsive retaliation. When a regime loses its aura of inevitability, it often compensates by performing volatility: missiles, drones, theatrics, civilian terror, anything that signals it can still impose costs. That posture may satisfy hardliners for a week, but it is an economic and diplomatic suicide note long-term. The more Tehran internationalizes pain by hitting Gulf infrastructure and symbols of “normal life,” the more it manufactures a coalition of enemies that no amount of revolutionary rhetoric can dissolve.
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Haitian prime minister installs new government, calls on ministers to ‘save the country’
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Lebanon, France postpone conference to support Lebanese army
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Europe
With recent developments, it is clear that China is not losing the battle for Europe’s classrooms, it is rerouting it through the Balkans, where underfunded universities, permissive politics, and weak research safeguards allow influence to arrive in quieter forms: scholarships instead of slogans, joint degrees instead of flags, and “technical cooperation” where governance is too exhausted to ask who benefits. In Western Europe, Confucius Institutes became a symbol of reputational risk: accusations of censorship, surveillance, and political conditioning made the brand costly, and closures followed. In the Western Balkans, the same story is being rewritten with different packaging. The point is not merely language education. It is institutional entanglement: Chinese partnerships embedded inside universities, municipal agreements, and corporate training schemes that blur the boundary between education and statecraft. Where regulatory scrutiny is thin and budgets are tight, a foreign actor does not need to impose ideology openly; it only needs to become indispensable. We can see this most clearly in Serbia. Chinese language programs have been normalized across schools, multiple Confucius Institutes operate, and a cultural center built on the site of the bombed Chinese embassy ties memory politics to modern partnership. More importantly, Chinese companies are entering academic life directly through scholarships and university agreements, binding industrial investment to training pipelines. When education becomes a downstream product of foreign capital, curricula and career paths quietly adjust to the interests underwriting them. The influence is not theatrical, it is infrastructural and deeply politically symbolic. The Balkans’ wider political environment makes this possible. Governments pursue multi-vector foreign policies because EU accession remains delayed and conditionality feels selective and tired. Into that ambiguity steps an actor offering tangible, quick, and prestige-flattering partnerships, often without the governance demands Brussels attaches to its assistance. China’s advantage is not only money; it is the absence of awkward questions. Where institutions are already “partyized,” captured, or financially dependent, the temptation is to treat foreign funding as neutral oxygen rather than as a relationship that comes with gravity.
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The Kremlin spent years building a messenger to replace Telegram. Now it’s reportedly telling soldiers the substitute is too insecure to use at the front.
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Russia buys homes near military bases across Europe
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Asia
Nepal’s post-uprising election is poised to deliver a rupture disguised as a vote: a rapper-turned-Kathmandu mayor, Balendra “Balen” Shah, is emerging as the likely prime minister as his party surges past the old guard that the streets accused of corruption, impunity, and political decay. Shah’s rise is inseparable from last September’s bloodshed, when youth-led protests toppled a government and left dozens dead, turning “anti-corruption” from a slogan into a generational claim to power. He has built his appeal on a carefully managed simplicity, short, sharp messages aimed directly at Gen Z, a deliberate distance from mainstream press, and a social-media pipeline that bypasses gatekeepers and turns politics into direct address. In a country where institutional trust has been ground down by rotating coalitions and stale elites, that intimacy reads as authenticity. His political story also fits Nepal’s exhausted mood: a figure who began by attacking the palace of power in music, then translated that outsider posture into municipal performance, focusing on visible services like infrastructure and waste management. But his record carries its own warning. Critics have accused him of using police force against street vendors and the landless, a reminder that “efficiency” can become coercion quickly when it is paired with charismatic legitimacy. The same public that craves action can be taught to accept brutality as administrative neatness. The promises attached to his party’s platform are deliberately expansive, jobs, income doubling, reduced migration, a sweeping uplift in GDP, social safety nets, because Nepal’s desperation is expansive. Millions have been pushed abroad by low wages and limited opportunity; poverty remains stubborn; the state apparatus is widely viewed as corrupt and sluggish. In that context, maximal pledges are not policy plans so much as emotional contracts: the promise that the country can be made livable again, and that “normal” does not have to mean permanent departure. Yet the hardest battle will begin after the ballots. Nepal’s bureaucracy is not designed to reward reformers; it is designed to survive them. Analysts warn that without an unusually competent team, any new prime minister is likely to be devoured by the system he is expected to fix, an administrative machine riven by patronage, slow procedures, and rent-seeking that can absorb even a popular leader and leave only disappointment. This is the trap of post-uprising politics: the public expects transformation, but the institutions are built for continuity. What Shah represents, then, is not only a generational shift but a test of whether Nepal can convert protest legitimacy into state capacity. If he succeeds, he could redraw a political map long monopolized by aging parties and permanent coalitions. If he fails, the failure will not be read as technical, it will be read as proof that nothing can change, and that the only “leaders” who endure are those who learn to bargain with corruption rather than fight it. In countries like Nepal, that is how revolutions are contained: not always by bullets, but by bureaucracy.
Hong Kong court upholds new vehicle registry policy limiting journalist access
While the Iran conflict continues, the Afghanistan-Pakistan crisis is only getting worse
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Taliban gives green light to domestic violence, bans dissent, and makes sodomy punishable by death
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Africa
Nigeria’s northeast has suffered another mass-casualty raid in Borno State, where gunmen attacked the remote village of Ngoshe during Ramadan, killed an unknown but “massive” number of civilians, and reportedly abducted more than 100 women and children, an assault so severe that it briefly restored the insurgents’ old wartime posture: taking and holding territory, not just striking and vanishing. The details are grim in the way Borno’s worst nights have always been grim. The attack came as families were breaking their fast, turning a moment of communal pause into a moment of maximum vulnerability. Reports describe simultaneous targeting of a nearby military base and a camp for displaced people, with civilians and soldiers killed, including the village’s chief cleric and elders, the social spine of a small community. The senator representing the area said the attackers held Ngoshe for roughly two days before the military forced them out using air power and ground troops. Even without an exact death toll, the pattern is clear: a raid designed to kill, to kidnap, and to humiliate state protection. This is why the abductions matter as much as the fatalities. Kidnapping is not a side effect of insurgency in this region; it is an economy and a strategy, exacting labor, ransom, leverage, and terror. The scale being reported, with women and children taken in the hundreds, signals intent to replenish that machinery. And the warning about stolen weapons is the other half of the cycle: attacks on military positions aren’t only about immediate tactical gain, but about rearming for the next village, the next convoy, the next camp. When insurgents leave with state weapons, the state effectively subsidizes the next massacre. The deeper institutional failure is how familiar the sequence has become. Ngoshe is described as a place where residents had already been displaced by insecurity and were only recently resettled by the government, meaning people were brought back under a promise of restored order, then attacked in the very act of trying to rebuild ordinary life. This is how trust dies in insurgent zones: not only through violence, but through repeated state assurances that cannot be made real on the ground. “Resettlement” becomes another form of exposure when protection is intermittent and response arrives late. /
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Son of Zambia's ex-President Lungu ordered to surrender 79 cars, petrol station and 'luxury' flats
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Egypt’s parliament approves cabinet reshuffle
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Middle East
Yemen’s Houthi leader is signaling that the Red Sea front is not dormant, but rather it is merely waiting for the right cue. Abdul-Malik al-Houthi has publicly declared alignment with Iran and warned that his movement is prepared to act “at any moment,” framing the current confrontation as a regional struggle rather than a contained Iran–Israel–U.S. conflict. In the language of militant politics, this is not a promise of immediate escalation; it is a threat designed to widen everyone’s risk calculus. The statement matters because the Houthis do not need to match Iran’s firepower to shape the battlefield. Their leverage has always been asymmetric: shipping lanes, drones and missiles aimed at infrastructure, and the ability to impose global costs through local disruption. When a group like Ansar Allah declares its “hands are on the trigger,” it is reminding Gulf capitals and Western militaries that the region’s economic arteries, ports, maritime chokepoints, insurance markets, energy logistics, remain vulnerable to a comparatively cheap form of violence. Al-Houthi’s rhetoric also reveals how proxy alignment is being translated into moral narrative. He casts Israel as seeking regional domination and preparing for a broader war, then turns his attention to Gulf Arab states, accusing them of prioritizing the protection of U.S. bases, and ridiculing their appeals to the United Nations about Iranian strikes. This is classic coalition-shaming: the Houthis want Gulf governments to look not merely cautious, but complicit, guardians of American infrastructure rather than defenders of their own citizens. The objective is political infection: sow doubt about alliances, fracture public consent, and make neutrality look like submission. Yet the deeper institutional failure is that Yemen remains the perfect platform for this kind of externalized warfare. A fractured state, a militarized movement with governing control in parts of the country, and a regional system that has never resolved the Yemen conflict, only managed it, creates permanent readiness for escalation. The Houthis can threaten action precisely because they have already built a war economy, a propaganda ecosystem, and an operational habit of turning regional crises into opportunities for relevance. For the wider region, this is the danger of “widening wars”: each actor believes it can activate an additional front to strengthen deterrence, while the cumulative result is less deterrence than entanglement. The Houthis’ announcement is a reminder that the Middle East’s armed movements are not waiting for permission from states; they are waiting for moments when states are distracted, overstretched, and politically cornered, when a single strike in the wrong place can make escalation feel inevitable rather than chosen.
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Americas
Mexico is fighting a war that looks like a crackdown on paper but functions, in reality, like a struggle over who governs the periphery, because the cartels are no longer just traffickers, they are territorial corporations embedded in the state and the economy, and decapitation victories can trigger as much chaos as they prevent. The killing of “El Mencho” mattered because it struck at the leadership of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, a machine that has grown into something closer to a national-scale enterprise than a criminal gang. The immediate backlash, arson, roadblocks, and attacks on security forces, was not simply revenge; it was messaging. Cartels retaliate publicly to demonstrate continuity, to frighten communities into compliance, and to remind the state that “success” can be punished. In this kind of conflict, the goal is not only to win battles but to control the story of who is still in charge when the smoke clears. The deeper problem is that Mexico’s cartel power is built less on firepower than on infiltration. Bribes, threats, and co-opted institutions have given criminal networks a level of intelligence penetration that makes state action porous; they often know what the government is planning because parts of the government are, functionally, within their supply chain. That is why cartels endure even after arrests: the state is not just fighting enemies outside the system, it is fighting a corruption economy inside it, one that has learned how to survive reforms by buying the people meant to enforce them. Mexico City’s relative calm also exposes the geometry of cartel strategy. The cartels don’t need to terrorize every neighborhood to dominate the country; they need ports, highways, border routes, extraction zones, and local governments. That leaves the capital and other high-visibility urban cores looking deceptively normal while the provinces become laboratories of coercion. It is a classic insurgent logic, adapted to profit: hold the periphery, keep the center stable enough for business, and let the state pretend it governs a nation that has been partially franchised..
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Accreditation:
Tanzania doesn't have an election but a crackdown disguised as democracy
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