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Worldcrunch Magazine #37 — Iran And The Taliban: The Drug Connection

June 12 - June 18, 2023

Worldcrunch Magazine #37 — Iran And The Taliban: The Drug Connection
Worldcrunch

This is the latest edition of Worldcrunch Magazine, a selection of our best articles of the week from the best international journalists, produced exclusively in English for Worldcrunch readers.

>> DISCOVER IT HERE <<

The cover story, by Hamed Mohammadi for London-Kayhan, looks at Iran's mild reaction to recurring Taliban provocations on its frontier, and asks the hard question: Is this due to diplomatic weakness, policy incompetence or is there some murky complicity inside Iran with the Afghan drug trade?

... Consider subscribing to Worldcrunch: full access to Worldcrunch Magazine is now included in the offer!

Table of Contents

Did Putin Tip Off Dam Attack With A Veiled Nuclear Threat Last Week? | Agents Media

Putin’s Message In Dam Explosion: If Cornered, I Will Stop At Nothing| Worldcrunch by Anna Akage

Are Iran And The Taliban Colluding In The Drug Trafficking Business? | Kayhan-London by Hamed Mohammadi

Lex Tusk? Poland’s Controversial “Russian Influence” Law | Gazeta Wyborcza by Piotr Miaczynski & Leszek Kostrzewski

Colombian Paramilitary’s Other Dirty War — Against LGBTQ+ People | El Espectador by Johan Sanabria

Pillar Of Shame: Tiananmen To Hong Kong To Berlin | Die Welt by Samuel Chu

How The Calabrian Mob Is Infiltrating Religious Traditions | La Stampa by Giuseppe Legato

22. Shakira, Miley Cyrus And The Double Standards Of Infidelity | Clarín by Mariana Rolandi

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Exclusive coverage from the world's top sources, in English for the first time.

Insights from the widest range of perspectives, languages and countries.

FOCUS: Russia-Ukraine War

If 3.3 Million Ukrainian Refugees Never Come Home? The Economics Of Post-War Life Choices

The war isn't the only thing that stands in the way of the homecoming of Ukrainian refugees. A lot depends on the efficiency of post-war economic recovery. A new study warns that up to 3.3 million won't be coming back after the fighting stops.

Photograph of a mother and her two children meeting an evacuation train from the Sumy region at the central railway station.​

July 16, 2023, Kyiv, Ukraine: People meet an evacuation train from the Sumy region at the central railway station.

Oleksii Chumachenko/ZUMA
Yaroslav Vinokurov

KYIV — Approximately 6.7 million Ukrainians have left their country since the Russian invasion. The longer the war lasts, the more these refugees will consolidate their new lives in their host countries, resulting in a heavy population drain for Ukraine.

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Earlier this month, the Kyiv-based Center for Economic Strategy (CES) presented a study on the attitudes of Ukrainian refugees that shows a large number of them will likely not return to their homeland even after the end of the war.

According to their calculations, Ukraine may lose 3.3 million citizens. There is also a strong likelihood that a large number of men currently fighting in the war will move abroad in order to reunite with their families that have settled there.

Even in peacetime, counting Ukrainians is not an easy task. A full-fledged census was conducted in the country only once: in 2001. It concluded that Ukraine had a population of 48.5 million.

After the Russian invasion in 2014, Ukraine was unable to compute how the population in the temporarily occupied territories had changed. According to latest calculations, as on February 1, 2022, an estimated 41.13 million people lived in the unoccupied territory.

After February 24, 2022, it became impossible to count the exact number of inhabitants, partly because the state does not have information on the number of Ukrainians who have fled the country as a result of the war.

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