![logo-footer-1.png](/images/2023/04/29/logo-footer-1.png)
The English website of the Islamic magazine - Al-Mujtama.
A leading source of global Islamic and Arabic news, views and information for more than 50 years.
Turkey's policy of providing access to education, health, and social opportunities to refugees is "very positive," the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) chief said in southeastern Turkey on Friday.
At a news conference in the Gaziantep province, Filippo Grandi said that Turkey is home to approximately 4 million refugees including 3.7 million Syrians, while Afghans, who arrived in the country before the recent crisis in their country, constituted the majority of the rest.
Having met with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu, and Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu as part of his official visits to the country, Grandi said he will be visiting local authorities, refugees, local institutions, and the Turkish Red Crescent in the upcoming days.
He underlined that Turkey is the country that hosts the highest number of refugees in recent years.
He said the international community and organizations should deliver necessary aid to Turkey on time.
Speaking about the situation in Syria, Grandi said a political solution in the country means a condition that allows refugees to return to their countries.
He said efforts to establish peace in Syria will continue and that humanitarian institutions will keep providing aid for the affected people until all necessary conditions are met for the refugees to return to their homes.
Syria has been ravaged by a civil war since early 2011 when the Bashar al-Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protesters.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced, according to UN estimates.
Crisis in Afghanistan
Touching on the recent developments in Afghanistan, Grandi said currently the major problem in the country is displacement.
He said that of the 3.5 million internally displaced people in Afghanistan, 500,000 were displaced due to clashes in the country, and added that the displaced people, some of whom are homeless, will be more in need of humanitarian aid with the winter approaching.
As humanitarian institutions, we will continue negotiations with the Taliban for providing access to humanitarian aid in certain regions, he said.
Underlining that some of the displaced people in Afghanistan may seek asylum in other countries, Grandi said in that case the international community should help especially the neighboring countries including Iran and Pakistan.
He said that UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will call for providing aid in Afghanistan in a meeting to be held on Monday.
The Afghan people have suffered considerably over the last 50 years, with invasions by the former Soviet Union in 1979 and US forces in 2001, which lasted until their withdrawal on Aug. 31.
The Taliban seized power in Afghanistan after taking the control of the capital Kabul on Aug. 15, forcing the president and other top officials to leave the country.
On Tuesday, the Taliban announced the interim government in the country./aa
Over 42 million vehicle tyres dumped in Kuwait’s sands are being recycled to tackle the country’s waste problem.
Residents of the nation’s suburbs have long been frustrated by mountains of tyres producing clouds of toxic black smoke when set alight.
Seventeen years of tyre dumping has sparked a series of massive blazes and created an immense environmental risk for residents.
But this month, efforts to relocate all of the tyres to a new location at al-Salmi, near the Saudi border, was completed./agencies
The Supreme Committee for Corona Emergencies will hold a meeting in the coming days to coordinate with the health authorities to open the airport with full capacity within two weeks, local Arabic daily Al-Qabas reported.
According to report, this meeting will discuss the possibility of returning the airport to its normal state after taking the opinion of the health authorities. The health authorities will take a call on the possibility of allowing this decision to be taken or to wait according to the local and global epidemiological situation.
The decline in Corona infection in the country has revived hopes that the epidemic will gradually recede and the life will return to the normal. The recovery rate witnessed an increase and reaches 99.02% few days back. Currently Kuwait ranked second in the Gulf in terms of recovery rates from the epidemic.
SOURCE : IIK
Kuwait’s daily coronavirus cases rose by 62 to 410,693 as deaths increased by one to 2,429, the health ministry said on Friday.
Another 154 people were cured of the virus, raising the total of those to have overcome the disease to 406,855, according to ministry spokesperson Dr. Abdallah Al-Sanad in a statement.
The number of people hospitalised with the virus at COVID-19 wards is 87, with 38 of them in intensive care units, he added, revealing that another 1,409 are receiving regular treatment.
Some 15,501 swab tests were conducted over the last day out of a total of 3,918,050, mentioned the official.
He went on to urge nationals and expatriates alike that abiding by health precautions, mainly, following social distancing rules, is the only way to halt the spread of the virus.
SOURCE : TIMES KUWAIT
US technology firm Apple on Friday won an antitrust lawsuit that was filed by American software developer Epic Games regarding the popular online video game Fortnite.
The US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the Northern District of California ruled that Apple's restriction policies on developers, including its 30% commission on digital goods and services, do not pose a violation against antitrust laws.
She added that Apple does not need to allow other developers, including Epic Games, to use cheaper payment systems on digital platforms.
After Epic criticized Apple's 30% commission on purchases made on its App Store, and later changed how users can make purchases within Fortnite, Apple kicked the popular video game out of its App Store, and Epic filed the antitrust lawsuit in August 2020.
The judge also ruled that the Cupertino-based firm can maintain App Store as the only download method for its iPhone smartphones and iPad tablets.
She, however, warned that Apple's restrictions on developers that fails to inform customers of the existence of cheaper and alternative software options is in violation of California state law, and order the company to abandon this practice.
Apple's stock price was down 2.4% to 150.37 per share on the Nasdaq at 1.00 p.m. EDT./aa
Unvaccinated individuals are 11 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than those who have taken the jab, according to data released Friday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Director Rochelle Wallensky said the findings are based on a review of cases, hospitalizations and deaths in 13 states, and are a testament to the "power of COVID-19 vaccination."
The study looked at data from the past two months when the highly-transmissible delta variant became the dominant coronavirus strain in the US, and found that in addition to vaccines dramatically boosting protection from virus-related deaths, they are also highly protective against infection and hospitalization.
Individuals who are unvaccinated are roughly 4.5 times more likely to contract COVID-19, and over 10 times more likely to be hospitalized, Walensky said during a virtual press conference.
"As we have shown in study after study, vaccination works," she said. "The bottom line is this: we have the scientific tools we need to turn the corner on this pandemic."
The study will be released in full on the CDC's website later Friday./aa
The Turkish president on Friday said his Justice and Development (AK) Party is the party of all oppressed people around the world.
"From the Balkans to the Turkic republics, from Arakan (Myanmar’s Rakhine state) to Afghanistan, from Africa to Asia, all our brothers follow the developments in our country and pray for our success," Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a ceremony in the southern province of Kahramanmaras.
Erdogan went on to say: "The moves we have made in different fields, from Turkey's defense industry to the economy, from exports to production, make them as pleased as we are. The disasters that our nation experience saddened them as much as we are."
The president said that Turkey’s annual exports exceeded $207 billion, adding that the employment rate in the country has reached above the pre-pandemic levels.
"Our Central Bank reserves have reached $118 billion," he added./aa
Aggression against Canadian Muslims accelerated after the 9/11 attacks al-Qaeda terrorists carried out 20 years ago in the US, the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM) said in a report, Friday.
"It's become systemic since then," said Fatema Abdalla, communications coordinator for the NCCM, told Global News. "And what we're seeing now is that not only is it growing, but it's also evolving."
The tragic evolution has resulted in horrific attacks on Muslims. In 2017, a man visited a mosque in Quebec City and gunned down six worshippers and wounded 19.
More recently in London, Ontario, a man spurred by hate slammed into a Muslim family with his truck, killing four and leaving the lone survivor, a nine-year-old boy, an orphan.
"Those kinds of attacks, this hatred of Muslims, it has been a constant feature of Canadian political life in the period since 9/11," University of British Columbia professor Sunera Thobani, a Muslim, told Global.
The hate increased in the years immediately following the World Trade Center attack and has slowly grown since, with Statistics Canada reporting that anti-Muslim attacks numbered 99 in 2014, up from 36 in 2009.
In 2015, hate crimes ballooned to 159, a 60% jump, and in 2017 - the year of the Quebec City Mosque murders - incidents showed a dramatic increase, to 349, police reported.
Also in 2015, former Conservative Party leader and Prime Minister Stephen Harper wanted to form a "barbaric cultural practices hotline" where Canadians could call to report disturbing rituals their neighbors were involved with. The idea, which many considered stemmed from anti-Muslim sentiment, died when Justin Trudeau won the election the same year. But Islamophobia survived.
Then Quebec instituted a law banning religious symbols from being worn by public servants, such as teachers, nurses, and police, in the workplace. Critics said that regulation unfairly targeted Muslim women who wear a hijab. A challenge to the law has been launched in the courts.
“The prevailing narrative of all this sentiment was this vast conspiracy, that Muslims were trying to infiltrate and take over the West and commit a white genocide, or at least change the culture,” said Evan Balgord, executive director of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network.
Spurred by the horrific attack in London in June, a summit on Islamophobia was called July 22 by Trudeau and it offered a chance for "Muslim communities to identify concrete ways to combat Islamophobia across the country," according to a statement from the Government of Canada.
One of the recommendations put forth by the NCCM was a "federal Anti-Islamophobia Strategy by year-end."
"The reality is we cannot just keep adding onto a list of horrifying things that have happened," said NCCM head Mustafa Farooq said in a story with Anadolu Agency in July. "For our community, this is about survival."/agencies
The US' Harvard University has decided to stop investing in fossil fuels after nearly a decade long of criticism from students and faculty.
Harvard Management Company (HMC), which manages the Massachusetts-based university's endowment, "has been reducing its exposure to fossil fuels," President Larry Bacow said in a letter Thursday.
"HMC has legacy investments as a limited partner in a number of private equity funds with holdings in the fossil fuel industry. These indirect investments constitute less than two percent of the endowment, a number that continues to decline," he added.
Noting that HMC has not made any new commitments to such limited partnerships since 2019, Bacow said HMC does not intend to make such investments in the future.
Harvard University's endowment was valued at around $41.9 billion as of June 2020 -- the largest academic endowment in the world.
The university earlier this week appointed its first-ever Vice Provost for Climate and Sustainability, which aims to accelerate and coordinate research and education on climate change.
The Harvard Corporation, the university’s highest governing body, also directed HMC in April 2020 to develop a plan to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
"None of us will be spared the realities of climate change, which means we are all in this together ... we must find a way to work side by side to have any hope of changing behaviors, adopting policies, and decarbonizing the economy," Bacow said./aa
Germany will not tolerate xenophobia and hate against people with migration background, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said on Friday.
Steinmeier made his remarks during a ceremony at the Bellevue Palace marking the 60th anniversary of the signing of the German-Turkish labor agreement.
The president thanked Turkish immigrants who arrived Germany in the 1960s for contributing to the country’s economic growth and its transformation into a culturally diverse and rich society.
“The people who came at that time, who were called guest workers: You, your children, your grandchildren are today part of what makes Germany. A Germany without you is simply not imaginable hereafter,” he said.
“Immigrants, their children and grandchildren are not only working in factories today, but also some in research facilities. Among them are artists and musicians, entrepreneurs and vaccine developers, judges and public prosecutors, lawmakers, state secretaries or ministers,” he added.
Steinmeier said it took many years for Germans to acknowledge that Germany is a country of immigration, and added that for many years authorities neglected policies for the integration of immigrants.
He, however, underlined that Germany still needs skilled immigration to stay competitive and ensure economic growth and welfare.
Today, Germany has a 3 million-strong Turkish community, many of whom are children or grandchildren of workers who immigrated to the country in the 1960’s as part of the labor agreement signed between the two countries in 1961.
‘We will never tolerate xenophobia’
While thanking migrant communities for their contributions to Germany, Steinmeier also expressed regret over continued xenophobic attacks and hate crimes targeting people with migration background.
“I am appalled that people with different skin color, language or religion are today still the target of hatred and hate campaigns,” he said, and warned that the far-right propaganda on internet often leads to violence.
“These are not just words… It is like a poison…This poison makes some people believe that they are representing the people, and they are allowed to humiliate, threaten, hunt down, and even murder other people,” he added.
Steinmeier said Germany still remembers the victims of far-right terror, Turkish immigrants killed by the neo-Nazi terror group NSU, others who died in arson attacks in Moelln and Solingen.
“But we are not powerless! It is the duty of the state to protect all people,” he told the audience, which included representatives of migrant communities.
“Xenophobia is hatred of people. And we will never tolerate this hatred in Germany,” Steinmeier vowed./aa