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Officials have warned that aviation fuel at Havana’s main airport is running dry, forcing airlines to plan around the island rather than through it, ensuring the logistical equivalent of a quarantine, and a direct hit to tourism, remittances-in-kind, and the informal suitcase economy that has managed to keep households supplied in a failed state. Washington has tightened the screws on Cuba’s oil access, and Havana is responding with rationing that reads less like temporary austerity than an admission of structural failure: reduced public transport routes, a shortened work week, and shifting some university instruction online. Even the tourism sector, the regime’s hard-currency engine, is being “consolidated,” with resorts reportedly shuttered so visitors can be concentrated into fewer hotels, maximizing revenue while the rest of the system is closed to maintain dwindling fuel supplies. At the same time, Nicaragua has moved to close a critical escape hatch. By reinstating visa requirements for Cuban citizens, Managua is effectively throttling a migration corridor that has functioned as a pressure-release valve for a society in rapid decline. The strategic picture is bleak: a government increasingly unable to guarantee the basic inputs of modern life, now facing disruption not only to domestic mobility but to the international air routes that once brought in tourists and, more importantly, medicine, food, and necessary consumer goods. Humanitarian shipments, like the recent aid sent by Mexico, will help soften the blows of this most recent setback, however, they do not fix the underlying problem: an economy that cannot reliably power itself, and a political system that treats negotiation as optional but control as non-negotiable.
Pro-democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai jailed for 20 years in Hong Kong
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Bangladesh votes in world's first Gen Z-inspired election
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Outgunned and overrun: Nigeria struggles to contain surge in militant violence
Drone-pigeons, Putin’s daughter and a plan to control minds
Arrests of Azerbaijani opposition Popular Front Party members continue
‘Treacherous assassination’: Who was Saif al-Islam Gaddafi?
Tunisian police arrest member of parliament who mocked president
As food prices surge, Russians stop buying fruit, ignore expiration dates, and brace for more hikes
An election that hopes to bring democracy back to Bangladesh
Syrian security forces continue to deploy in Kurdish areas under deal with SDF
Cubans also want an amnesty for their political prisoners
Iran signals willingness for nuclear talks with US
Under Prabowo, Indonesia is veering off course
What Xi Jinping’s purge of China’s most senior general reveals
An Apparent Calm With a Long Shadow: Revisiting Central Asia’s Illiberal Peace
Russia using Interpol's wanted list to target critics abroad, leak reveals
My survival guide to the Kremlin’s winter of terror in Kyiv
Over 36,500 killed in Iran's deadliest massacre, documents reveal
Continuing Conflicts
West Africa’s jihadist insurgencies are acquiring a new layer of reach and intimidation through the utilization of cheap, commercially available quadcopter drones repurposed into airborne IEDs and surveillance platforms. ACLED data cited by the BBC records at least 69 drone strikes by JNIM (al-Qaeda’s regional affiliate) in Mali and Burkina Faso since 2023, with Islamic State affiliates carrying out roughly 20 more, mostly tied to Nigeria’s long insurgency. The most recent flashpoint is Borno State: on January 29, ISWAP combined armed drones with ground fighters in a two-pronged assault on a military base, killing nine Nigerian soldiers. The pattern is increasingly clear: drones scout, distract, and strike; ground units exploit the confusion and close in. The “war from the skies” framing is not hyperbole so much as a warning about trajectory. The most destabilizing shift is not simply optics and death tolls, but also the afordability and ease in which these drones can be used. They are described as relatively inexpensive and widely available, yet they allow militants to gather intelligence with minimal risk, probe defenses, and attack positions that once demanded costly, casualty-heavy assaults. Even where states tighten import controls, smuggling networks and porous borders do the rest. Any hope of regulation is pitiable when enforcement capacity collapses along borders and when officials treat drone-importation controls as a paperwork exercise rather than a means to dismantling longstanding violent conflicts. JNIM appears to be the most aggressive adopter, with reports of FPV-style tactics, with precision drops of improvised explosives, mirroring techniques that were refined in the war in Ukraine. That matters because precision changes the psychology of war: soldiers are pressured by the sense that nowhere is safe, and civilian life becomes newly exposed when markets or “suspect” communities are framed as legitimate targets. Even if most strikes are aimed at militaries and allied militias, the threshold for civilian harm is low when targeting is opportunistic and accountability nonexistent. Drone warfare reduces the operational cost of harassment, expands the effective perimeter of insurgent control, and rewards groups that can iterate faster than state procurement cycles. Countermeasures, such as jamming, air defense, preemptive strikes on assembly and launch sites, appear feasible and straightforward on paper, but in practice require intelligence penetration, disciplined militaries, and logistics that many West African government military forces do not reliably possess. If governments remain trapped in reactive posture, officially mourning the last attack while militants rehearse the next, this new, “off-the-shelf” escalation will become normalized in a future where insurgents don’t need airpower to impose it.
If Russia wants to invade, Gotland is ready
Boko Massacre in Nigeria; Ethiopia on the Brink; M23 Drone Attack; IS Attacks Niamey: Africa File
US oil blockade: How long before Cuba collapses?
At the last open crossing, Ukrainians flee Russia’s annexation
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US ‘ready’ to meet Iran, says Rubio, but talks must address ballistic missiles programme
Zelenskyy says 55,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in war
Epstein files reveal Turkey's final ultimatum to Assad before Syrian war
Ukraine Accuses Russia Of 'Winter Genocide' After New Strikes On Energy Sites
Vietnam’s military ‘secretly planning for US invasion’
China bankrolling Putin’s war to gain advantage over West, MPs told
Why peace remains elusive in Pakistan’s troubled Balochistan
Coca-Cola, cat food, tampons: The missing goods of military-run Myanmar
Half of all Sudanese children not in education due to civil war
Damascus extends truce with Kurds in northeast Syria
Electoral violence is on the horizon in Kenya
Aftermath challenges daily life in Syria
Norwegians told to prepare for wartime property seizures
My children were recruited in a trafficking scam. I joined a police hunt to find them
Sudan paramilitary forces say 'regret' deadly Chad border clash
'Muslim NATO': Turkey in advanced talks to join Saudi-Pakistan mutual defense pact
China Won’t Save Iran’s Regime – But Chinese Surveillance Technology Might
Russian strikes on Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk leave one million without water and heat
Lebanese army says it has taken over security in Hezbollah-dominated soutSaudi Arabia’s allies in Yemen oust UAE-backed separatist from government
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Europe
Russia’s latest “innovation” pitch is a familiar genre: take something disturbing, dress it up as civilian utility, and dare the outside world to name the obvious use case. The Telegraph reports that a startup, Neiry Group, is implanting neural chips in pigeons under a project codenamed PJN-1, steering them via electrodes and a head-mounted stimulator while a chest camera streams video and a small solar-powered pack carries the controller. The selling point is not just endurance; it’s plausibility. A pigeon doesn’t look like a drone. It can move through cluttered terrain, perch near people and infrastructure, and operate inside the visual “normal” of a city. The “civilian monitoring” framing doesn’t survive contact with basic logic. A remotely guided, camera-equipped animal is surveillance hardware with feathers. The article itself points toward the escalation pathway: Neiry’s founder speaks about adapting the system to other birds for different environments (ravens, seagulls, albatrosses), and outside experts warn that any such platform can be repurposed for military ends. In a world of electronic jamming, air-defense saturation, and restricted airspace, the incentive is straightforward: if machines are being detected, disrupted, or shot down, you look for carriers that blend into the background of everyday life. The report describes substantial funding and suggests links, direct or indirect, to Kremlin-linked technology programs and investment networks. This matters because projects like these rarely appear on “usefulness” alone. They emerge because they are politically legible: easily marketable as modernization, asymmetric advantage, or technological sovereignty. In that environment, the ethical question isn’t a barrier; it’s a communications problem. The darker edge is that “bio-drones” don’t only seek stealth in the air, they manufacture ambiguity on the ground. A conventional drone is visibly a machine and therefore visibly accountable. A bird is not. If something goes wrong, if surveillance crosses a border, if a payload is attached, if a civilian is harmed, the system is built for denial: it was only a pigeon, a hobbyist experiment, a harmless prototype. The technology’s value lies partly in that blur, because blurred lines slow accountability and soften consequences. Even if Neiry’s pigeon program never becomes operational at scale, the direction is the point. Russia is steadily widening the space where coercion can be tested under the cover of novelty, and where “dual use” becomes a euphemism for “waiting for permission never granted.” The result is a future where monitoring, intimidation, and potentially attack can be embedded into ordinary urban life, quietly, cheaply, and with just enough plausibility to keep officials’ hands clean.
From Classrooms To TikTok, China's Soft Power Push Expands In The Balkans
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Bulgaria probes secret taping of women in beauty salons for porn sites
The King’s cousin and a corrupt officer, inside Spain’s narco scandal
Queer Azerbaijani influencer detained for ‘immoral activity’ on social media
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Killed by Russian drones, two bodies lie in the snow, testament to love’s endurance
Armenian opposition politician says country needs ‘ministry of sex’
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The Collapse That Created Today’s Russia
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After presiding over Georgia’s free speech crackdown, Kobakhidze calls for ‘healthy’ public debates
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UAE limiting students coming to UK over Muslim Brotherhood concerns
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Asia
The Cambodian government is learning, the hard way, that reputations do not collapse only because of what happens on the ground. They also collapse because of what people can imagine, and what films like the Chinese No More Bets make instantly legible: a Southeast Asian “fraud farm” landscape where foreign workers are trapped behind casino facades. The film’s ambiguity, with vague references to Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, was precisely the problem for Cambodian officials and social media users: it treated the region as interchangeable terrain for organized cybercrime, and Cambodia as the default backdrop. The government’s preferred rebuttal is familiar and strategically convenient, asserting that the infamous compounds are “transnational,” run by foreigners, staffed by non-Cambodians, and fed by recruitment pipelines that begin in victims’ home countries, not Ca,bodia. The arrest of Fujian-born tycoon Chen Zhi is presented as proof of this supposedly systemic invasion of foreign criminals. In videos from raids, those fleeing the compounds are overwhelmingly foreign; in official statements, Cambodia is framed as an unfortunate victim, not the state responsible for such lawlessness. Yet the government’s defense can also serve as proof of guilt and culpability, showing how vast networks of scale were able to operate openly inside the country, embedded in real estate development and casino expansion, without meaningful friction until the Chinese government’s international pressure made inaction more costly. Chen’s personal story sharpens the contradiction between the official government statements and reality. He built his fortune in Cambodia, became a citizen, cultivated elite access and influence through patronage and philanthropy, and helped reengineer Sihanoukville into a casino boom town, exactly the kind of transformation that invites cash, secrecy, and impunity in equal measure. The allegations around Prince Group and its affiliates, in human trafficking, cyberfraud, online casinos, and social-media scams targeting victims back in China, shift the “transnational” label into something far more uncomfortable. These scam compounds were not floating threats passing through, but rather entire ecosystems that benefited from local permissiveness, legal loopholes, and the political advantages of not asking too many questions about who was building what, with who’s money, and for whom. What makes the case especially corrosive is how quickly it has spread beyond Cambodia’s borders and into the architecture of global finance and enforcement. Offshore shell-company webs, luxury assets, and the laundering of proceeds into international markets have shown that the scam compounds were the visible edge of a much larger machinery, one that took place in Singapore, the Cayman Islands, Dubai, London, and, ultimately, Western countries that publicly critiqued the scam compounds. China’s concerns, mainly related to famous missing citizens, embarrassment, and the suggestion that criminality is “counter to traditional friendship” underscore yet another reality: Cambodia’s image is increasingly hostage to the priorities of bigger states, and “friendship” becomes leverage when domestic enforcement cannot plausibly police the problem alone. The final and most damning govenrment statement, (that of an anti-trafficking official saying Cambodia still doesn’t understand why traffickers choose the country), lcan be interpreted as either denial or despair. However, the response is not at all mysterious. As long as Cambodia has permissive and relatively porous borders, lucrative grey industries, rapid-build development zones, weak oversight, and a political economy that rewards growth optics over scrutiny, widespread criminality will only prosper, . Unless Cambodia can make enforcement credible before Beijing demands it, and unless it confronts the enabling structures, such as real estate, casinos, shell finance, protection networks, its “image problem” will remain less a branding crisis than a security diagnosis. And in a world where cybercrime scales faster than regulation, the next wave won’t need a movie to convince people where it thrives.
Thai Youth Question Future as Reformist Party Loses Ground
Taiwan condemns 'harsh' sentence for Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai
India seizes three oil tankers linked to Iran’s shadow fleet
Bangladesh’s Hindu minority in fear as attacks rise and a national election nears
UN experts condemn conviction of human rights defenders in Pakistan
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Africa
Ethiopia is dragging a simmering border dispute back into open daylight, accusing Eritrea of occupying Ethiopian territory and demanding an “immediate” troop withdrawal, language that signals more than routine diplomatic irritation. In a letter dated February 7, Foreign Minister Gedion Timothewos frames Eritrean movements along the frontier not as isolated incidents but as sustained incursions, and he pairs the territorial claim with a second, more politically combustible accusation: that Asmara is materially supporting armed groups operating inside Ethiopia. The timing matters. Ethiopia and Eritrea were once existential enemies (1998–2000), then abruptly rebranded as peacemakers with the 2018 détente, and later functioned as wartime partners during Ethiopia’s two-year conflict with Tigray’s regional authorities. But Eritrea never signed the 2022 agreement that ended the Tigray war, and the relationship has since decayed into mutual suspicion, Ethiopia alleging Eritrean meddling, Eritrea denying it, and both sides reinterpreting the post-war map to their advantage. What sharpens this particular exchange is that Addis Ababa links its demand for withdrawal to an offer of dialogue that quietly widens the agenda beyond border demarcation: maritime affairs and access to the Red Sea, including the Eritrean port of Assab. That is not a small add-on. Ethiopia is landlocked and strategically constrained; Eritrea sits on coastline that has become newly valuable as trade routes militarize and regional alliances harden. By placing Assab on the table in the same breath as troop withdrawals, Ethiopia is effectively admitting that security and sea access have become fused questions, each now a lever on the other. Eritrea’s sensitivity is predictable. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s repeated public insistence that Ethiopia has a “right” to sea access is heard in Asmara less as an economic argument than as a pretext, an implication that geography must be corrected, and that force might be the instrument. Against that backdrop, Ethiopia’s letter reads like a bid to formalize grievances before they metastasize: establish a paper trail of “aggression,” demand de-escalation on borders, and reserve the right to escalate diplomatically (or otherwise) if Eritrea refuses. /
Is Ethiopia’s Abiy helping RSF in Sudan’s civil war?
UAE says welcomes US-backed peace plan for Sudan
Somalia welcomes its first bowling alley as the middle class and diaspora returnees grow
US, Russia vie for influence in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso
Thousands attend Gaddafi son’s funeral, highlighting Libya’s divided loyalties
Islamic militants kill at least 162 people in attacks on 2 villages in Nigeria, lawmaker says
Zimbabwe's Mugabe latest former African leader to be mentioned in Epstein files
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of former leader, killed in Libya
Morocco evacuates over 100,000 people from 4 provinces after floodsNiger: Who attacked Niamey’s airport and what it reveals?
Eswatini education minister's anti-LGBTQ+ remarks risk harm to students, advocates warn
‘Executions, torture, abductions, rape': Ethiopia’s hidden conflict
Egypt’s crackdown on online discussion of religion violates fundamental freedoms, Amnesty International warns
South Sudan continues to restrict humanitarian access to opposition-held areas
Kenya's ex-deputy president alleges assassination attempt in church attack
Half of all Sudanese children not in education due to civil war
Militarising the Sahel will not defeat terrorism
Sudan's women face 'world's worst' sexual violence amid brutal conflict, minister says
Wife of Uganda’s opposition leader describes moment armed men attacked her at home
Nigeria: Gunmen kidnap more than 160 in church attacks
Kenya seeks $824mn from pipeline company privatisation as debt pressures mount
Saudi Arabia opens new gold market in Africa, ending Dubai’s long-standing dominance
Uganda police deny arresting opposition candidate amid clash over election credibility
US pursues integrated strategy to stabilise Libya, safeguard interests
Middle East
Iran has moved to neutralize what remains of its reformist camp, detaining at least four senior reformist politicians on allegations of plotting to overthrow the Islamic system, marking a another escalation during the peace-talks in Oman. The arrests took place just weeks after the country’s deadliest unrest in years, and as the Iranian government is attempting to manage high-stakes negotiations with Washington under the shadow of implied military options. State-linked outlets say Azar Mansouri, head of the Reformist Front, was arrested at home, alongside Mohsen Aminzadeh, a former deputy foreign minister for American affairs, and veteran politician Ebrahim Asgharzadeh; a fourth detainee was not named, and other figures were reportedly summoned. The official framing is familiar, with claims of undermining “national solidarity,” coordinating with “enemy propaganda,” and building “secret mechanisms” to topple the theocracy, language which was designed to recast domestic dissent as foreign-directed subversion, and to criminalize politics itself rather than any specific act. The detentions land amid competing, and wildly divergent, death toll narratives from last month’s protests. A rights monitor has put the number of people killed in the thousands; the government has acknowledged a smaller figure but insists the violence was driven by mercenaries and “terrorists” allegedly backed by the U.S. and Israel. Outside opposition groups claim far higher totals, while diplomats concede verification is almost impossible in an environment where information is throttled, access is constrained, and the state controls the evidentiary pipeline. The arrests also expose the regime’s increased actions toward even “loyal” critics. Mansouri had recently signaled deep disillusionment with incremental reform, publicly regretting support for President Masoud Pezeshkian and urging him to resign, an extraordinary admission from within the system’s sanctioned opposition. At the same time, a leaked audio attributed to senior reformist Ali Shakouri-Rad alleges security forces themselves carried out sabotage during the protests to justify a crackdown, prompting hardliners to demand evidence or prosecution. The pattern is unmistakable: the state does not merely suppress street opposition; it must also be able to control the veneers of opposition and polite criticism. But there is a deeper contradiction at the center of this crackdown. By arresting prominent reformists, figures who historically served as shock absorbers between public anger and state power, the government is dismantling its own pressure valves. It may buy short-term control, yet it also narrows the political channel through which the state claims legitimacy, leaving coercion to do the work of consent. When a government treats reformists and state-sanctioned opposition figures as coup-plotters, it effectively admits that it no longer believes in reform, and only in enforcement and control.
Building collapse in northern Lebanon kills at least nine people
Kurds in northeastern Syria fear end of autonomy
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Syria signs landmark offshore oil field deal with Chevron and a Qatari investor
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Power vacuum in Yemen threatens biodiversity of the one-of-a-kind Socotra archipelago
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Who are the Kurds?
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Americas
Venezuela’s opposition briefly claimed a rare win on February 8, only for it to end in disaster. Juan Pablo Guanipa, a veteran opposition politician, was reportedly freed as part of a prisoner release and was seen publicly outside Caracas’s feared Helicoide detention complex. However, mere hours later, opposition leader María Corina Machado said he was kidnapped in the Los Chorros neighborhood of Caracas. Machado’s account described armed men in civilian clothes arriving in multiple vehicles and violently taking him away, demanding his immediate release. Family statements echoed the demand for proof of life. Venezuelan authorities, at least in the immediate reporting, did not publicly explain the seizure, a silence that serves as a response in a deeply dysfunctiona; government. What makes this most recent development so noteworthy is the nature of the disapearance. First, the openly broadcasted release, “proof of life and freedom moment”, and then the shaddowy re-detainment. It signals that “liberations” can be provisional, and release permissions that can be revoked the moment a figure regains public appeal. In that sense, the point is not only to neutralize one politician, but to remind everyone else that the state retains the right to reclassify ordinary political activity as an arrestable offense whenever it suits the regime’s internal needs.
Haiti’s transitional council hands power to US-backed prime minister
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China hacked email systems of US congressional committee staff
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Despot of the Week
President Samia Suluhu Hassan
Accreditation:
Tanzania doesn't have an election but a crackdown disguised as democracy
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Recent Achievements:
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Tanzania — from leader of Frontline States to a net exporter of authoritarianism