Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
How Venezuela's crisis tests global sovereignty
The Mercury
|January 09, 2026
THERE is a reason the argument has stalled on a single word.
Not missiles. Not explosions. Not the extraordinary claim that a sitting head of state has been seized and flown out of his country by a foreign power.The word is 'capture' - and its rival is 'kidnapping. This is not semantics. It is jurisdictional warfare. What we are witnessing is not merely a foreign policy crisis. It is a stress test of sovereignty itself, staged as spectacle. And the outcome will not hinge on verification alone, but on which grammar of power prevails.
To say capture is to pre-legitimate violence. It installs a police narrative before any legal forum can intervene: suspect apprehended, justice pending, order restored. To say kidnapping is to rip away the costume and name the act for what it is: armed seizure across borders, sovereignty overridden by force, law trailing behind violence like an afterthought.
Sovereignty, in theory, is simple. States are equal. Borders matter. Violence across them is prohibited except under narrow, clearly defined circumstances.
In practice, sovereignty has always been hierarchical - robust for the powerful, negotiable for the rest. What makes this moment different is not that the US has intervened abroad. That history is long, bloody, and well documented. What is different is the form: the convergence of military force, criminal indictment, and executive spectacle into a single gesture - the raid.
This is sovereignty hollowed out and repackaged as law enforcement. The logic runs as follows: if a leader is criminalised, sovereignty dissolves around him. Once indicted, he is no longer the president but a fugitive. Once a fugitive, he can be "captured." Territory becomes incidental. Borders become inconvenient. International law becomes commentary, not constraint.
This is not how law is meant to function. It is how the Empire modernises.
Bu hikaye The Mercury dergisinin January 09, 2026 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
The Mercury'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
The Mercury
The new pirates of the Caribbean keel-hauling international law
CENTURIES after the golden age of piracy on the high seas - the glamorous days when names like Blackbeard, Sea Hawk, Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn... have come and gone after stretching our imaginations to depths even greater than 2000 fathoms, and when everyone felt it was again safe to take a sea cruise - a cartoon by the internationally recognised and iconic Jock Leyden, appeared in the Daily News, in 1961, depicting a peg-legged, patched-eye, 'Long John Silver' walking into the offices of a shipping line and inquiring: \"When is the Santa Maria scheduled to sail?\"
1 min
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Food trends that will define our plates in 2026
AS JANUARY rolls in, many of us find ourselves reflecting on the year ahead — sorting out cupboards, rethinking grocery lists, and making promises to our future selves.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Meta partners with US nuclear companies to power AI data centers
TECH giant Meta has announced major agreements with three US nuclear energy companies that it says will add up to 6.6 gigawatts of clean power by 2035.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Discovery Health must pay for its mistakes as administrator, says MISA
DISCOVERY Health's members should not bear the brunt for mistakes the Administrator made when processing the claims of its members, according to MISA, the Motor Industry Staff Association.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Unions raise alarm as Motus retrenches 86 workers and cuts pay for hundreds
AUTOMOTIVE group Motus Retail has retrenched 86 employees and implemented remuneration and benefit changes affecting a further 579 workers from 1 January 2026, prompting strong concern from labour unions Motor Industry Staff Association (MISA) and the Congress of SA Trade Unions (Cosatu).
1 min
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
DA leader Steenhuisen faces allegations of cadre deployment
FORMER DA Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), Dr Dion George, has accused the party's leader, John Steenhuisen, of actions “tantamount to cadre deployment” after he removed him from his position and appointed the current minister, Willie Aucamp.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Funding chaos threatens KwaZulu-Natal school reopening: meals, textbooks missing
LABOUR unions are warning that many schools are not ready to reopen and might not be in a position to provide meals on the first day of school.
3 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Copper lure drives Rio Tinto into R3.4trln merger talks with Glencore
Shares in Glencore surge 10% on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, closing at over R100-per-share
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
Treasury releases withheld funds to 75 municipalities, urges tighter fiscal discipline
THE National Treasury and the South African Local Government Association (Salga) have confirmed that the December tranche of the Local Government Equitable Share (LGES) was disbursed over the festive period to 75 municipalities whose funds had been withheld due to financial mismanagement.
1 mins
January 12, 2026
The Mercury
How Africa can turn fragmented mineral belts into coherent regional value chains
In 2023, a mine operating along the Central African Copperbelt moved its first test consignment through the Lobito Corridor, using the refurbished rail spine that links the Democratic Republic of Congo to Angola's Atlantic coast.
4 mins
January 12, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
