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Turkey was forsaken in its efforts to prevent irregular migration, the Turkish president said on Thursday.
"Turkey has been left alone in its extraordinary struggle to prevent irregular migration originating from Syria," Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a video message sent to a symposium on the Aegean Sea and Turkish-Greek relations.
Saying that the 2015 refugee crisis – when 1.3 million people came to Europe to request asylum – could have been instrumental in strengthening cooperation between Turkey and Greece, Erdogan said Athens wasted this opportunity with its “uncompromising stance.”
Turkey has been a key transit point for irregular migrants who want to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution such as the Syrian civil war.
Through its March 2016 agreement with the European Union, Turkey was instrumental in bringing down migrant numbers and alleviating the crisis.
On recent disputes with Greece, including the maritime jurisdiction areas, violations of the non-militarized status of Aegean islands, and provocative Navtex announcements, he said Turkey prioritizes solving issues through dialogue and negotiation.
Erdogan stressed that they never neglected opening up a field for diplomacy while defending Turkey's legitimate rights arising from history and international law.
He said that Turkey expects Greece to respect its rights and interests and called on Athens to avoid "unilateral actions" and attempts at making faits accomplis.
"We will find solutions based on fairness, justice, and cooperation with Greece, observing neighborhood ties," he added.
Turkish leaders have repeatedly stressed that Ankara is in favor of resolving outstanding problems in the region through international law, good neighborly relations, dialogue, and negotiations.
‘Unacceptable’ territorial waters demand by Greece
Speaking at the same event, Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said Turkey and Greece have a variety of disputes, including the continental shelf, territorial waters, airspace, violations of the non-militarized status of islands in the region, provocative actions, as well as issues triggered by irregular migration and the European border agency Frontex.
He said Turkey is working hard to resolve these conflicts in line with international law, logic, and good neighborly relations, while the Greek side remained persistent in its aggressive attitude and acts.
Akar said Greece sought to expand its territorial waters to 12 miles unilaterally, which would translate into its domination over the Aegean as only one-fifth of the region would be open sea and two-thirds of it would become territorial waters of Athens.
This would make it almost impossible for the Turkish navy to cross into the Mediterranean through international waters, while third countries would also need Greece’s permission while crossing the Aegean Sea.
“There is no way Turkey would agree to this,” he added.
Akar added that the refugee crisis was a common problem of all countries with the EU in particular, and that the Greek attitude towards refugees made NATO's work more challenging, adding that violations of basic human rights, inhumane detentions, and violations as well as forced pushbacks into Turkish regions by Greek authorities are unacceptable.
Turkey and human rights groups have repeatedly condemned Greece's illegal practice of pushing back asylum seekers, saying it violates humanitarian values and international law by endangering the lives of vulnerable migrants, including women and children.
A recent report by Amnesty International, Greece: Violence, lies and pushbacks, documented “how the Greek authorities are conducting illegal pushbacks at land and sea.”
Pushbacks are considered contrary to international refugee protection agreements./aa
A recent stark increase in suicide rates in Tanzania highlights a growing mental health crisis plaguing the society as young people experience bouts of toxic emotions that lead them to take their own lives, experts have warned.
Suicide mortality rates among people aged 15 to 29 have increased significantly in Tanzania during the past decade as people end their lives by hanging, poisoning, and shooting themselves, according to official data.
In 2016, more than 3,000 people killed themselves in Tanzania, placing the country fourth in Africa with the highest suicide rates.
As the world marks World Suicide Prevention Day on Sept. 10, mental health experts in Tanzania have urged authorities to adopt effective suicide prevention strategies to rescue the younger generation.
Worldwide problem
Suicide is a major public health problem accounting for approximately 6% of all deaths in young people. Globally, one person dies of suicide every 40 seconds, cumulating to about 800,000 deaths every year, according to the World Health Organization.
While officials link suicide to a mental health crisis, researchers have established strong correlations between suicide and social and economic crisis such as unemployment, family conflicts, failed marriages, domestic violence, and unwanted pregnancies.
Identity crisis
While Tanzania is banking on young people to drive its economic future and bring social development, the majority of them face a serious identity crisis that deters them to realize their potential.
Praxeda Swai, a senior psychiatrist and mental health specialist at the Muhimbili National Hospital in Tanzania, said young people often kill themselves when they fail to solve the emotional problems they face.
“We are in the middle of a serious mental health crisis,” she told Anadolu Agency.
According to her, the toxic mix of psychological problems due to social and economic woes could trigger a wave of suicides among young people who are still learning what life is about.
At a busy Sinza suburb in Dar es Salaam, local residents were shocked when 29-year-old Alex Korosso, an accountant with a local firm, killed his friend after an argument over a drink and shot himself in late July.
According to eyewitnesses, the visibly disturbed young man reached his decision after he was disappointed in his relationship.
Despite being a major public health threat, experts say suicidal behavior has not been thoroughly investigated, thus prompting more people to kill themselves.
Swai urged the government to adopt effective suicide monitoring and prevention strategies to help young people cope with stressful situations.
“Many people who are mentally troubled don’t always seek help. Identifying people at risk of suicide can help save their lives,” Swai said.
One important way to reduce the risk of death by suicide is to keep the victims from lethal medications and firearms.
“We must enhance life skills and help young people manage stressful situations,” she said.
A family secret
While death by suicide is the worst nightmare for parents, psychologists say most such incidents are often treated as a family secret that is not thoroughly investigated to protect other children from a similar fate.
Charles Mallow, a Dar es Salaam-based psychologist, said talking to the people on the verge of committing suicide can save their lives.
“If you are worried about your depressed child, you should openly talk to him/her and ask if he/she has suicidal thoughts,” Mallow said.
Mary Lyatuu visits her daughter’s grave at the Kinondoni Cemetery in Dar es Salaam every evening as she comes to terms with the loss so overwhelming months after her daughter took her own life.
“I feel pain in my heart, my daughter did not say goodbye to me,” she mourned.
Despite the eerie silence, solitude and darkness that engulf the cemetery, Lyatuu holds her rosary when she silently recites the litany of the Virgin Mary, as she desperately tries to find answers to hard questions plaguing her mind.
Lyatuu’s daughter Sarah, who was struggling with suicidal thoughts after she had failed to secure a job despite her impressive academic qualifications, took her own life early this year.
Meanwhile, Jorum Makumbi, a resident of Mwanza in northern Tanzania, still remembers a phone call he had received from his neighbor informing him his son Bakari is gone forever.
“It was the most traumatic experience of my life that I don’t want to recall,” he said.
On a fateful day, Makumbi was working in the field when he received the shocking news about his 21-year-old son who hanged himself using a bedsheet.
“I still struggle to understand the reasons that led my son to kill himself,” he said./agencies
UK-based satellite communication company Inmarsat and Turkish satellite operator TurkSat have signed a first partnership agreement for the Turksat 5B communications satellite, which is set to go skyward at the end of the year.
The deal announced Thursday was signed by Selman Demirel, Turksat Satellite Services deputy general manager, and Inmarsat Vice President of Satellite Operations Mark Dickinson at Satellite 2021, the world's largest satellite fair, held in Washington, DC.
Under the deal, Inmarsat Global Xpress services will be carried in Turkey over the Turksat 5B satellite.
Global Xpress operating in the Ka-band is the first and only high-speed mobile broadband network to seamlessly span the world, according to Immarsat.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, Demirel said the agreement would be good global cooperation, noting that Turkstat will have the opportunity to create a joint global capacity with Inmarsat.
Dickinson also said the company wants to improve its relations with Turkstat, stressing the importance of Turkstat’s capacity to meet the needs of users in Turkey and the region.
"This is a really important step for Inmarsat to expand its Global Xpress Ka-band network," he said.
With the announcement of Turkey’s national space program this February, the implementation of programs for the creation of satellites for various purposes has accelerated.
As of this January, the number of active Turkish satellites in Earth orbit had reached seven, a number made possible thanks to the successful launch of the fifth-generation telecommunications satellite Turksat 5A./agencies
Boats carrying migrants from France to UK shores will be intercepted by British border forces, and migrants will be pushed back, risking a row with French authorities, according to local reports.
The UK’s border force staff are being trained to use “turn-around” tactics at sea to prevent migrants on boats from reaching the coast, according to a statement from the Home Office.
However, the new tactic is a subject of dispute between the British home secretary and French interior minister, who met on Wednesday to discuss migration during a G7 ministerial summit.
French authorities are likely to oppose the proposed British measures, as Gerald Darmanin said preventing any loss of life at sea must come first, BBC News reported.
"Safeguarding human lives at sea takes priority over considerations of nationality, status and migratory policy, out of strict respect for the international maritime law governing search and rescue at sea," said the interior minister.
Discussion of the new tactic to push back migrants in boats to French waters comes after more than 1,500 migrants crossed the English Channel this week.
According to a report by The Daily Telegraph, Home Secretary Priti Patel had secured legal advice for vessels to redirect small boats away from British waters.
The paper reported that the tactics would only be used when it was deemed safe and in limited circumstances.
Greek example
The tactic proposed by British authorities has been already in use in the Aegean Sea in southern Europe, by Greek authorities who push migrants in boats back to Turkish waters.
Turkey and human rights groups have repeatedly condemned Greece's illegal practice of pushing back asylum seekers, saying it violates humanitarian values and international law by endangering the lives of vulnerable migrants, including women and children.
A recent report by Amnesty International, Greece: Violence, lies and pushbacks, documented “how the Greek authorities are conducting illegal pushbacks at land and sea.”
Pushbacks are considered contrary to international refugee protection agreements./aa
Turkey on Thursday remembered attaché Bora Suelkan, who was assassinated by an Armenian terror group in 1982.
“We remember with respect our martyr Bora Suelkan, Administrative Attaché of the Turkish Consulate General in Burgas, assassinated in the heinous attack by the Armenian terrorist organization JCAG on 9 September 1982,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said on Twitter.
On Sept. 9, 1982, in front of his house in the Bulgarian Black Sea port city, Suelkan was shot from close range with three bullets, one of which found his heart.
The attack was one of the scores of assassinations of Turkish diplomats and their families around the world by Armenian terror groups: the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA), Armenian Justice Commandos (JCAG) and Armenian Revolutionary Army (ARA).
According to data compiled by Anadolu Agency, a total of 77 people – 58 of them Turkish citizens, including 31 diplomats and members of their families – lost their lives in attacks carried out by the terrorist groups from 1973 to 1986.
The murderous campaign started in 1973 when Turkey's Consul General in Los Angeles Mehmet Baydar and diplomat Bahadir Demir were martyred in an attack by a terrorist named Gourgen Yanikian.
ASALA was the first Armenian terrorist group to wage war against Turkey. It targeted not only Turkey but also other countries and became infamous for a 1975 bomb attack on the Beirut office of World Council of Churches.
The JCAG initially gained notoriety by claiming responsibility with ASALA for the Oct. 22, 1975 attack on Danis Tunaligil, Turkey's ambassador in Vienna.
The ARA is considered to be a continuation of JCAG under a different name./aa
Oil prices rose on Wednesday on the back of an estimated increase in US gasoline inventories and the ongoing supply disruption in the US following Hurricane Ida.
International benchmark Brent crude was trading at $72.66 per barrel at 0716 GMT for a 0.08% increase after closing Wednesday at $72.60 a barrel.
American benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was at $69.36 per barrel at the same time for a 0.08% increase after it ended the previous session at $69.30 a barrel.
Late Wednesday, the American Petroleum Institute (API) announced its estimate of a fall of 6.4 million barrels in US gasoline inventories. The API also forecast that the country’s crude oil inventories would increase by 2.9 million barrels, lagging behind the market expectation of a draw of 3.9 million barrels.
The forecast of a larger inventory draw signals a recovery in crude demand in the US, easing investor concerns about declining demand, which, in turn, supports higher prices.
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) will release official oil stock data later on Thursday. Oil prices are expected to continue rising if the EIA signals a drop in stocks.
Meanwhile, supply disruptions in the US are still ongoing in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, putting upward pressure on prices.
Over four-fifths of US oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico remains offline as corporations fight to reactivate offshore rigs. Ida was said to be the most damaging storm for offshore oil and gas production in almost 16 years.
According to the US Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, 76.9% of current oil production and 77.2% of natural gas production in the Gulf of Mexico has been shut in./aa
Visiting U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin reaffirmed here on Wednesday the United States's supportive position for security and stability of Kuwait.
During a meeting with Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, Austin conveyed appreciation by U.S. President Joe Biden, expressing his country's gratitude for Kuwait's cooperation in Washington's evacuation process in Afghanistan while facilitating the transit of evacuees through its airport, the Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) said.
He stressed the United States's firm and supportive position for security and stability of Kuwait, KUNA said.
During the meeting, the two sides reviewed ways to strengthening bilateral relations and enhance cooperation in various fields. The two sides also addressed top issues of common interest and the latest developments in the region.
On Aug. 24, Alina L. Romanowski, the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait, said that the first flight of Afghans evacuated from Afghanistan on their way to the United States arrived in Kuwait for transit.
"These Afghans at risk have been safely evacuated to a coalition military facility in Kuwait," the ambassador said via Twitter. /agencies
Kuwait Airways announced re-launching commercial flights scheduled to 11 destinations in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka starting from Tuesday. The destinations include Mumbai, Delhi, Kochi, Chennai and Trivandrum; with two flights, a week scheduled, in addition to Bangalore and Ahmadabad with one flight a week, the airline said in a statement yesterday. Furthermore, Kuwait Airways operates two flights a week to Islamabad and one flight to Lahore, in addition to one flight a week to Colombo and five flights a week to Dhaka, it noted.
Last Sunday, Kuwait Airways announced the resumption of commercial operations to Cairo from with two daily flights. Public Relations and Information Director Fayez Al-Enezi said the first scheduled flight to Cairo will be at 12:25 pm, while the second will be at 11:35 pm. He said this destination is highly important and has large demand.
Enezi said Kuwait is ready with operational and backup centers to complete the resumption of commercial operations of all flights from and to Kuwait, in addition to being ready to increase operational as well as passenger capacity. He said Kuwait Airways continuously seeks to offer its passengers wider choices to meet their traveling needs.
Meanwhile, Kuwait Airways announced that its first flight to Amsterdam took off yesterday; noting that two flights will be scheduled each week. The airline had earlier announced it had launched its first commercial flight to Munich, Germany on July 17, with schedule flights to this destination two times a week; Thursdays and Saturdays. KAC had launched on July 10 its first commercial flight to Geneva, Switzerland, as it schedules two flights a week to this destination: on Mondays and Fridays.
On July 8, the airline announced increasing weekly flights to London to three, on Saturdays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Kuwait Airways had resumed operations to the British capital in the middle of June at a rate of a single flight a week. It has also announced renewing operations to Paris, Malaga, Frankfurt and Sarajevo.
On June 15, it announced starting three flights per week to Bodrum on Saturdays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. And on June 18, it began organizing three flights a week to Trabzon on Sundays, Mondays and Fridays, in addition to the regular flights to Istanbul. Moreover, the national carrier announced two flights per week to Tbilisi on Mondays and Fridays, in addition to several summer tourism destinations.
The corporation has affirmed its readiness to restore full operations of commercial flights in line with approval of the health authorities and resumption of air navigation in other countries. KAC had relaunched its first commercial flight to Paris in August. Flights to this destination operate thrice weekly on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays./agencies
Hungary and Serbia will work together to protect Europe from potential migration waves, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said Wednesday.
Addressing a joint press conference with his Serbian counterpart Ana Brnabic, Orban said in the wake of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, millions of migrants could head to Europe by land, adding Serbia and Hungary would then be in a very difficult situation.
Pointing out that the migrants do not wish to live in Serbia or Hungary but want to reach Germany, Orban said if there is a wave of migration, Serbia and Hungary will stop it with a joint force and defend Europe.
He argued that Hungary and Serbia should act jointly to stop migrants further south, emphasizing that the two countries will not be refugee camps.
Brnabic expressed her gratitude to Hungary for its support for her country's European Union membership.
Noting that a new wave of migration may occur in Europe, Brnabic said that although Serbia is not a member of the EU, it supports joint action on this issue./aa
The death toll in the US state of Louisiana from Hurricane Ida rose to 26, the Louisiana Health Department said Wednesday.
The 11 additional fatalities occurred in New Orleans between Aug. 30 and Sept. 6 and were confirmed as storm-related by the Orleans Parish Coroner's Office, the department said in a statement.
Nine of the victims, who were elderly, died from "excessive heat during an extended power outage," and two others perished because of carbon monoxide poisoning.
The ages of the victims range between 24 and 79.
Ida made landfall in Louisiana on Aug. 29 as a devastating Category 4 hurricane, bringing with it mass flooding and damage that devastated wide swathes of the state. One million people were left without power.
US President Joe Biden visited Louisiana on Friday and surveyed the damage there and met with survivors./aa