This Week's Brief
Sanction That! Pay Hike, Poll Plunge, X Marks the Exit, India’s Women Bowl ‘Em Over
THE STORIES WE ARE WATCHING THIS WEEK:
(These pins mark the stories with deeply buried, but globally significant signals.)
📌 US sanctions UN critic of Israel
📌 Public Backlash for Peru’s president doubling her pay
📌 Optionality Is the New Loyalty in Tokyo’s Playbook
📌 From X’s CEO to Ex-CEO, Linda Yaccarino Finally Quits
📌 WPP names Cindy Rose new CEO amid industry shake-up
📌 The Indian Cricket Team make history in England
Politics
US sanctions UN critic of Israel

The US has sanctioned the United Nations' special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories Francesca Albanese, a vocal critic of Israel’s actions in Gaza. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has accused Albanese of being “unfit” for the role and confirmed she is now subject to travel bans and asset freezes. Justifying the sanctions he said Albanese has overstepped by supporting ICC probes into US and Israeli nationals. Albanese called it “mafia-style intimidation”. Read more at Reuters
Peru’s president doubles her pay, draws public backlash
Despite a 2% approval rating, Peru’s President Dina Boluarte has issued a decree doubling her monthly salary to over $10,000. The country’s Economy Minister said that prior to the raise, Boluarte's salary had been the second lowest of 12 countries in the region, with only Bolivia paying its president less per month. Her new salary is now almost 35 times that of the monthly minimum wages, which stands at 1,025 soles ($288; £210). Critics call the pay raise out of touch, as protests and investigations continue to cloud her leadership. Read more at BBC News
Brazil’s ‘patron saint of the environment’ under fire
Environment Minister Marina Silva is facing personal and misogynistic attacks from lawmakers backing a bill to gut environmental protections. Critics say the push, led by agribusiness-aligned senators, aims to silence Brazil’s strongest voice for the Amazon. Silva has stood firm, but the political cost is mounting. Read more in The Economist
Japan’s Optionality Strategy Picks Up Pace
Japan-Canada Security Ties
Japan has signed a classified information-sharing agreement with Canada, boosting defence cooperation with another Five Eyes member. Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya and his Canadian counterpart Anita Anand inked the deal in Tokyo. Pending parliamentary approval, the agreement sets legal terms for handling sensitive data, part of Tokyo’s broader push to deepen strategic partnerships beyond the US. Read more in The Japan Times
Japan-U.K. Investment Ties

The Japanese strategy to expand beyond the US has been at quite the pace. The UK and Japan yesterday signed a Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) aimed at enabling increased UK investment into Japan, further strengthening the economic ties between the two nations. The agreement was signed at the British Embassy in Tokyo by Baroness Poppy Gustafsson of Chesterton CBE, UK Minister for Investment, and Mr. Seto Takakazu, State Minister of the Cabinet Office of Japan. Read more at UK Government
Business
Yaccarino quits X
Linda Yaccarino has resigned as CEO of Elon Musk’s X, after nearly two years of being set up to fail. With Musk calling the shots, alienating advertisers (remember his profanity laced middle finger to Disney’s Bob Iger?), and chaotic posting through his DOGE era in the Trump administration, her chances of real leadership were slim from the start. The only surprise? That she stuck it out this long. Read more in The Economist
WPP names new CEO amid industry shake-up
Advertising giant WPP has appointed Cindy Rose, Microsoft’s Global Enterprise COO and a long-time tech leader, as its next CEO. Rose, a non-executive director since 2019, steps in on 1 September as the company faces shrinking revenues and client losses. Her remit: to steady the ship and bring AI-era transformation to the business. Read more at Campaign Live
Sports
The Indian Cricket Team make history in England
India’s Women’s Cricket Team sealed their first-ever T20I series win on English soil and less than a year before the T20 World Cup returns to the UK. The team’s spinners led the charge at Old Trafford in Manchester, restricting England to just 126. Read more at ESPN Cric Info
In Tech We May Not Trust
Wimbledon organisers have apologised to players Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Sonay Kartal after a human error led to ‘Hawk-Eye’ being mistakenly switched off during a Centre Court match. The ‘Hawk-Eye’ system, which tracks the ball’s trajectory to call shots in or out, failed to register a clear error, prompting immediate fixes to prevent manual shutdowns in future. Read more at Sky Sports
Science
Still not just for the boys, apparently
In her new book Not Just for the Boys, Athene Donald skewers the cosy myth that science is a meritocracy. Women’s research is cited less, funded less, and judged more harshly by reviewers. One recent peer review summed it up with: “This paper is, simply, manure,” and lets not forget the citation gaps that still favour men. Not Just for the Boys, exposes how deep the rot runs in STEM — and why bias training alone won’t cut it. Read more at Live Science
We’ll leave you with an example of an actual peer review included in the book
“The first author was a woman. She should be in the kitchen, not writing papers.”
The strongest signals are often buried in soft language or dismissed as minor moments. That’s why we brief you. So when the story breaks big, you already knew where it started.