🌐Weekly News Digest [ January 5 – January 11 ]
That was the first full-fledged week of the new year of 2026, during which rulers forgave those who polluted their land, dismissed those who were managing their oil.
💡Here are the key highlights:
🇧🇼 Botswana
— Botswana Invites Russia to Invest in Its Mining Sector
🇨🇩 DR Congo
— Congolese clergy speaks against the US-DRC agreement.
— The government allows processing units to accept ore from artisanal miners amid protests
🇬🇶 Equatorial Guinea
— Equatorial Guinea moves its capital to a brand new city built on oil revenues
🇬🇭 Ghana
— A Ghanaian prophet predicts the discovery of major onshore oil deposits in Ghana
— Ghana hopes to keep its oil fields viable until 2040
🇲🇱 Mali
— JNIM militants attack a gold mine in southeastern Mali
🇳🇪 Niger
— Niger replaces its oil minister
🇳🇬 Nigeria
— President reshuffles the country's oil sector management
🇸🇩 Sudan
— Sudan’s central bank and Sudanese Mineral Resources Company set up a joint commission to curb illegal gold exports.
🇺🇬 Uganda
— Uganda to start its first oil exports by October, despite environmental concerns
🇿🇲 Zambia
— First report on the toxic pollution caused by a Chinese company designates 160 people as victims
— Zambia is concerned over the safety of its workers in southern DRC
#NewsDigest
➡️ Follow to stay informed - @devilsbelow
📰 Saudi Arabia’s Booze Ban: The Quiet Revolution
Saudi Arabia is quietly lifting its decades-old ban on alcohol—no fanfare, no press release, just a discreet nod to modernization. In Riyadh, non-Muslim residents with premium status can now buy beer, wine, and spirits at a single, unmarked store.
This isn’t just about booze. It’s about image, money, and the kingdom’s bid to attract wealthy expats and tourists. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has spent years transforming Saudi Arabia: women drive, concerts happen, and bars are built—even if they were empty until now.
The process is low-key. At the liquor store, buyers show their residency card, prove they’re not Muslim, and stash their phones before browsing. The selection is decent, prices are high, but it’s still cheaper than the black market.
Analysts say the change is just the start. Expect alcohol at luxury resorts and hotels along the Red Sea, following Dubai’s playbook. The kingdom needs foreign cash, and relaxing moral rules is part of the pitch.
But it’s not a free-for-all. Alcohol will stay banned in religious cities like Mecca and Medina. The government is treading carefully, aware that most Saudis remain conservative.
As one longtime expat put it:
“It’s exciting. No more dangerous homemade liquor or overpriced smuggled bottles.”
So while Saudi Arabia still executes dissenters and bans homosexuality, it’s learning to serve a cocktail.
#SaudiArabia#alcohol#modernization#MBS#DubaiModel
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
📰 The Baby Cartel: How God Became the World's Last Functioning Daycare
Religion isn't beating the fertility crisis with prayer alone. It's running a shadow welfare state — and winning.
A new analysis drops a thesis that's been hiding in plain sight: religious communities aren't having more babies because they believe harder. They're having more babies because they built actual infrastructure — mutual aid networks, internal credit markets, communal childcare, endogamous marriage pools — everything the secular state promised and forgot to deliver.
"Fertility requires both motivation and infrastructure," the study argues. "Norms without material support are ineffective."
Translation: your government's "have more babies" poster campaign isn't a policy. It's a vibe.
The framework identifies six interlocking mechanisms — collective childcare, internal economies, meaning narratives, intergenerational norm transfer, endogamous marriage, and residential clustering — that together turn childbearing from a financial catastrophe into a socially subsidized act. Ultra-Orthodox Jews, the Amish, and Iranian post-revolutionary society all run some version of this playbook. None of them asked Brussels or Washington for permission.
Iran is the case study nobody wants to discuss. Post-revolution, the regime pumped the ideological gas on fertility — and it worked, briefly. Then the economy ate the infrastructure. Birth rates cratered. God-talk without grocery money is just noise.
The kibbutz story is even darker for secular progressives: when collective support systems eroded, fertility dropped — even in communities still ideologically committed to "the collective." The commune dissolved. The cradles emptied.
So here's the question secular liberal democracies won't ask out loud: if your society has atomized people so thoroughly that only cults and tightly-knit religious minorities can afford to reproduce — what exactly did modernization optimize for?
The researchers frame religious communities as "analytical models," not anomalies. Read: the rest of you are the control group, and you're losing.
No hashtag needed. The data is the punchline.
#demographics#fertility#religion#welfare#modernization
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
🇺🇸
#Beijing_Review🇨🇳📕[PDF]⬇️
6 #November2025
#Weekly_Magazines
For learning, for free(dom).
@backupofmagazines
Beijing Review spotlights China’s #15thFiveYearPlan and its vision for a coordinated, green, and globally inclusive future. The issue unpacks Xi–Trump #Summit diplomacy in Busan, China’s push for #GenderEquality partnerships, and #RCEP as an engine for regional #Integration. Articles explore how strategic planning drives #Sustainability and global development under the banner of #Modernization. From energy transition to cyberspace security, the issue portrays a confident China charting a course for shared growth and stability.
#China#GlobalGovernance#Sustainability#FiveYearPlan#RCEP#XiTrumpMeeting#ClimateAction#DigitalFuture#GenderEquality#AsiaPacific