Plus: South Africa placed on financial watchdog list
Hi there Intriguer. A tiny home in the Brazilian favela of Belo Horizonte has won ArchDaily’s prestigious international 'House of the Year' award. Built with common materials found in the favela, it was designed to maximise natural light. We admire how the proud bachelor owner also uses his unique dwelling to throw banging parties: “We barely have 66 square metres, but I’ve had parties here with close to 200 people.”
Today’s edition is a 4.9 min read:
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🇬🇧 The UK and EU (potentially) figure out Northern Ireland.
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🇿🇦 South Africa placed on financial watchdog ‘gray list’.
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➕ Plus: Turbo-charging the solar transition, how the papers are covering Nigeria’s election delays, and some intriguing insights from the son of Iran's last shah.
– VC & EP
🗺️ AROUND THE WORLD
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🇳🇵 Nepal: The Communist Party has left Nepal's ruling coalition after the Prime Minister declined to support its presidential candidate. If the PM loses an upcoming no-confidence vote, Nepal will have to form its 12th government since becoming a republic in 2008.
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🇧🇾 Belarus: Belarusian anti-war partisans claim to have destroyed a Russian surveillance plane at an air base near the capital, Minsk. The attack has raised concerns that Belarus, whose pro-Russia president is currently in China for talks, might enter the Russo-Ukraine War.
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🇲🇾 Malaysia: Two Abu Dhabi-based firms will pay the Malaysian government $1.8B for their role in a massive corruption scandal known as 1MDB. Investigators say the firms knowingly helped former PM Najib Razak and others embezzle taxpayer dollars.
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🇸🇻 El Salvador: 2,000 inmates have been transferred to El Salvador’s new 'mega-prison', which has a claimed capacity of 40,000 people. Some 60,000 people have been arrested for suspected gang ties since El Salvador entered a state of emergency last March.
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🇸🇾 Syria: Representatives from several Arab countries, including Jordan, Egypt, and the UAE, met Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus on Sunday. Arab governments are beginning to re-engage with Syria after more than a decade without formal ties.
🇬🇧 UNITED KINGDOM | BREXIT

The UK and EU took inspiration from the humble stoplight to resolve their customs battle.
UK and EU might have stepped over one of Brexit’s final stumbling blocks
Briefly: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak struck a deal with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Monday (27 February) to break a years-long deadlock over Northern Ireland (NI).
A little background: The Republic of Ireland is part of the EU, while NI is part of the UK. They both share an island (called Ireland). Some on the island (up north) are proudly British. Others are proudly Irish. Some are proudly both. And everyone was part of the EU… until Brexit.
The UK then signed a deal with the EU known as the Northern Ireland Protocol, to avoid dividing the island with polarising EU-UK border checks. Until now, this meant EU officials instead checked goods on ships passing between the British mainland and the island.
However, pro-British voices on the island (aka 'unionists') didn't like the way this separated them from the British mainland, and instead wanted a 'hard' EU-UK land border between the Republic of Ireland and NI.
Pro-Irish voices (aka ‘nationalists’) oppose dividing the island like this: it hasn't had a land border since the Good Friday Agreement ended decades of sectarian violence in 1998.
The Windsor Framework, announced outside Windsor Castle on Monday, attempts to resolve it all. The Framework allows NI to be in both the UK and EU markets by creating:
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🟢 A “green lane” to eliminate the customs border for British goods destined for NI, and
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🔴 A “red lane” to preserve the customs border for British goods destined for the Republic of Ireland.
Intrigue’s take: Brexit is the ultimate political quicksand, helping drag several of Sunak’s predecessors to their demise. Many pro-Brexit lawmakers in Sunak’s own party (plus pro-British lawmakers in NI) oppose this latest deal, and have promised to vote against it when given the opportunity. Something tells us this isn’t the last we’ll hear of Brexit 😒.
Also worth noting:
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Pro-Brexit lawmakers accused Ursula von der Leyen of undermining the British Monarch’s apolitical status by meeting with King Charles during her visit.
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As of February 2023, only 33% of Brits continued to support Brexit.
📰 GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
How different newspapers covered: Election delays in Nigeria over the weekend.

Links: Cameroon Tribune, The Guardian, CNN.
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🇿🇦 SOUTH AFRICA | FINANCE

Money laundering is easier in some places than others. Via Giphy..
South Africa placed on money laundering ‘gray list’
Briefly: The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global financial crimes watchdog, placed South Africa (and Nigeria) on its money laundering ‘gray list’ last Friday (24 February).
Like getting put on Santa’s naughty list, a FATF listing is a serious reputational blow. It also means more scrutiny and costs for South African banks, making it tougher to do business and invest in the country.
South Africa's rand fell against the US dollar as investors digested the news. Meanwhile, the South African government pledged to address FATF’s concerns and strengthen its regulations to fight money laundering and terrorism financing.
Intrigue’s take: Unemployment in South Africa is now around 34% (ten times the US rate). Its economy is actually smaller than it was a decade ago. So South Africa needed this FATF listing like Grey's Anatomy needed a 19th season.
Also worth noting:
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The OECD is forecasting South Africa’s economy will grow 1.1% in 2023 and 1.6% next year.
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Last year, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa was accused of covering up the theft of $4M in undisclosed foreign currency he kept hidden in a sofa.
📊 CHART OF THE DAY

Credits: Financial Times
🎵 Here comes the sun, doo-doo-doo-doo…🎵
Solar power is set to overtake all other power sources by 2027 according to the International Energy Agency. New solar photovoltaic capacity will account for 60% of all new power installations in the next five years.
Last year’s energy crunch, ambitious climate goals, and generous US and EU green subsidies are all behind the boom. But a core driver is cost: solar costs have dropped 99% over the past four decades, including an 89% drop from 2009 through 2019 alone.
Geopolitically, this is excellent news for China, which controls over 80% of global solar panel manufacturing. It’s also great news for Yuma, Arizona, the world’s sunniest city (which logs 4,015 average annual sunshine hours), but less so for Totoró, Colombia (whose residents get just 637 hours of sunshine per year).
👀 EXTRA INTRIGUE
We’re very online, so you don’t have to be.
🗳️ POLL TIME!
Yesterday's poll: How confident are you that a new President can fix Nigeria's problems?
⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ 😀 100% (2%)
🟨⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️⬜️ 😊 75% (6%)
🟨🟨🟨🟨⬜️⬜️ 🤔 50% (27%)
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 😅 25% (36%)
🟨🟨🟨🟨⬜️⬜️ 🤭 0% (29%)
Your two cents:
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😅 G.F: "I think we give presidents a bit too much credit. One man, no matter the position, won't be able to fix all of the problems Nigeria faces alone."
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🤔 H.L: "The next president has an insurmountable task ahead of him but some of the solutions are rather straightforward. It’s only a question of political will."