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.
Germany on Monday harshly criticized alleged Russian cyberattacks as part of Moscow's disinformation campaign to influence the outcome of the Sept. 26 general elections.
Speaking at a regular government news conference in Berlin, Deputy Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Andrea Sasse said the Russian-led cyberassault was "totally unacceptable" as it posed "a threat to (German) national security" and a "severe strain" on bilateral ties.
Sasse claimed that Germany had "reliable information" that the Russian military intelligence service was behind the attack which reportedly targeted dozens of German policymakers.
"The federal (German) government urges the Russian government to stop these illegal cyber activities with immediate effect," she stated.
Sasse also said that Russian hackers are believed to belong to the disinformation campaign dubbed "Ghostwriter," which is linked to Russian military intelligence.
The cyberattack targeted seven members of Germany's parliament, all of whom belonged to the co-ruling Christian Democratic Union and the Social Democratic Party (SPD), in addition to 31 other state lawmakers, according to media reports.
Germany's Interior Ministry warned in June that the September elections face a risk of being targeted by Russian cyberattacks.
There have been mounting cyberattacks in the past few weeks, according to a ministry assessment seen by German broadcaster ARD, among them so-called brute force attacks on e-mail accounts in order to access sensitive data.
In the report, the Interior Ministry said it regards the assault against political parties and foundations as a "serious threat" in view of the upcoming federal elections./agencies
The Senate in the Philippines adopted a bill on Monday postponing elections in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM) until 2025.
“The bill regarding postponement of elections was passed with 15 in favor and three against,” Murad Ebrahim, chief minister of the autonomous region, told Anadolu Agency over the phone from Cotabato city.
At least seven bills were submitted in the Congress and Senate – six of which seek an extension while one advocates that elections be held at the agreed time in 2022.
He said the bills are being discussed in the country’s Congress.
“The process is going on in the Congress. There is a little discrepancy in (contents of) Senate and Congress (bills), but it can be resolved easily by the two houses,” Ebrahim added.
Once Congress passes the bill, it will go to President Rodrigo Duterte to sign it into law.
The development came after intense debate over extending the period of the Bangsamoro Transitional Authority (BTA) until 2025.
Before the BTA was founded in 2019 following a popular referendum, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), led by Ebrahim, asked for a transition period of six years during peace negotiations with the Manila national government.
But negotiations resulted in a three-year transitional government under Ebrahim until 2022.
The two sides agreed to allow the transitional government to take control of regional governance and run affairs until 2022 when elections were agreed to be held.
But voices were raised to extend the period until 2025. Almost all BTA parliament members unanimously supported the motion, while residents across the region held rallies supporting the demand in recent months.
Members of the current Bangsamoro regional government believe they need more time to implement the political and normalization efforts embodied in the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro.
Bangsamoro is a region of nearly 5 million people who are ethnic Moros and mostly Muslims. It has five provinces and three cities, including a capital.
The MILF led the region’s struggle for autonomy since the mid-20th century, ultimately resulting in peace talks and the BTA formation after a referendum on Jan. 21, 2019./agencies
Russia on Monday urged for the "immediate release" of Guinea's president, calling on the sides to solve differences via dialogue.
The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Moscow opposes "any attempts of anti-constitutional change of power."
On Sunday, Guinea's President Alpha Conde was detained by soldiers led by an army colonel, who announced the move on state television.
"We demand the release of Alpha Conde and that his immunity is ensured. We consider it necessary to return the situation in Guinea to a constitutional course as soon as possible. We urge all Guinean political forces to refrain from actions that could provoke further violence and to work towards a peaceful settlement of the current situation through negotiations," the Russian statement read.
It also announced that the visit of the Guinean Foreign Minister Ibrahima Khalil Kaba to Moscow, scheduled for Sept. 7, was canceled amid the situation in the West African country.
Conde, in power for more than a decade, was detained by soldiers led by Col. Mamadi Doumbouya, who accused the president of personalizing politics and not doing enough to improve the country's economic and social conditions.
The move was protested by the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres who strongly condemned "any takeover of the government by force of the gun" and called for "the immediate release of President Alpha Conde."/agencies
As pupils in Turkey returned to classes on Monday after a long COVID-19 break, the nation’s president vowed to maintain in-person learning with strict measures in place.
“With the digital infrastructure we have established at the National Education Ministry, we closely monitor and will follow the processes in our schools and the course of the disease. We are determined to continue in-class learning,” Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a ceremony in an Istanbul school, marking the first day of the new term.
Touching on the adverse impact of the pandemic on education, he said: “As Turkey, we had to act carefully during the last academic year because of the extent of the deadly effect of the virus.
“We have exercised extreme caution not to risk the lives of our teachers, children, and their families. We left behind the period when we opened our schools from time to time but mostly held lessons via the EBA,” which stands for Educational Informatics Network, the TV and internet platform through which most of the distant education was carried out in Turkey.
Erdogan said the National Education Ministry and Health Ministry set the rules and measures to be taken at schools.
“By supplying hygiene and cleaning materials and masks, we formed an infrastructure through which the parents will send their children to school safely,” he continued.
The course of the disease will be followed closely via the digital infrastructure at the National Education Ministry, Erdogan said, calling on all citizens to get vaccinated.
“The total number of doses that have been administered as part of our vaccination campaign that we maintain on the basis of volunteering nears 100 million,” he added.
As schools have reopened for face-to-face learning after a long break since March 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, some 18 million students will attend classes five days a week.
Breaks and meals times will be scheduled for different intervals to avoid crowds. Classes will be held in 40-minute periods at most.
School administrations will provide free-of-charge masks for students and school personnel in case anyone needs them.
Unvaccinated teachers and school staff will take PCR tests twice a week. Parents and visitors will not be admitted to schools except in mandatory situations. School authorities can check the visitors’ HES code – coronavirus contact tracing system – to see whether they are “risk-free.”
Turkey has so far confirmed over 6 million coronavirus cases and 52,860 deaths, while nearly 80% of the country’s adult population has received at least one dose of a two-shot vaccine./aa
The escape of Palestinian detainees from the maximum security Gilboa Prison in northern “Israel” was greeted with joy in the Gaza Strip.
Celebrating the event by forming a convoy on the streets and distributing sweets, the Palestinians carried placards with the names of the escaped prisoners and “the second biggest escape from the prisons of the Zionist enemy”.
It was seen that the celebration, which was held by handing out sweets, was organized by the Islamic Jihad Movement, to which 5 of the escaped detainees belonged.
Six Palestinian detainees had escaped from the maximum security Gilboa Prison in “Israel” this morning.
Israel Public Broadcasting Organization (KAN), Zekeriya ez-Zabidi, member of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs, the armed wing of the Fatah Movement, and Yakub Nufeyat, Mohammed Kasım al-Arıda, Yakub Mahmud Kadri, Eyhem Fuad Kemamci, Mahmud Abdullah al-Arıda, from the Islamic Jihad Movement. He reported that they stayed in the same ward in the prison and they dug a 10-meter tunnel.
It is stated that Gilboa Prison is one of the high security prisons in “Israel” and was built under the supervision of Irish experts and opened in 2004.
However, Palestinians all over the occupied Palestine have distributed sweets to celebrate the escape of the six Palestinians from a high-security Israeli prison on Monday./agencies
“Israeli” authorities have launched a manhunt after six Palestinian prisoners escaped from one of the country's most secure jails overnight.
The men are believed to have dug a hole in the floor of their cell at Gilboa prison, then crawled through a cavity and tunnelled beneath the outer wall.
Farmers who noticed them running through fields alerted officials.
The fugitives include a former leader of the militant group Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade and five Islamic Jihad members.
An “Israel” Prison Service official described the escape as "a major security and intelligence failure". Palestinian militant groups hailed it as "heroic".
The alarm was raised at Gilboa Prison, a high-security facility in northern “Israel” known as "The Safe", when authorities received reports from local farmers about "suspicious figures" in nearby agricultural fields.
When prison staff carried out a headcount at 04:00 (01:00 GMT), they found six inmates were missing.
The Palestinians are believed to have made their way out of the cell that they shared by digging a hole in the floor of their bathroom. The Jerusalem Post reported that they had used a rusty spoon that they hid behind a poster.
The hole led to a hollow space underneath the prison that was created during the facility's construction, when piles were sunk into the ground. An “Israeli” police commander described it as a "structural flaw".
The inmates are believed to have moved through the space to reach the prison's outer wall, then dug a tunnel that emerged in the middle of a dirt road just outside.
The Shin Bet security service said it believed the prisoners had been in contact with people outside the prison using a smuggled mobile phone and that they had been picked up in a car.
The six fugitives include Zakaria Zubeidi, a former commander of the Palestinian militant group Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade in the West Bank city of Jenin, as well as five members of Islamic Jihad.
Four of the Islamic Jihad members were serving life sentences after being convicted of planning or carrying out attacks that killed Israelis, while the fifth had been held without charge for two years under a so-called administrative detention order, according to Israeli media.
Zubeidi was arrested by Israeli forces in 2019 on suspicion of involvement in a number of shooting attacks and is currently standing trial.
“Israeli” border police and army troops involved in the manhunt have reportedly set up roadblocks to stop the men reaching the nearby occupied West Bank or Jordan, which is about 14km (nine miles) to the east of Gilboa prison.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett spoke to Public Security Minister Omer Bar-Lev and "emphasised that this is a grave incident that requires an across-the-board effort by the security forces" to find the fugitives.
Islamic Jihad described the jailbreak as "heroic" and said it would "shock the “Israeli” defence system", while Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said it was a "great victory" that proves "the will and determination of our brave soldiers inside the prisons of the enemy cannot be defeated"./agencies
The U.S. has logged 40 million Covid-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, as the fourth wave brought on by the delta variant continues to spread.
The country has recorded 40,000,070 cases and 651,690 deaths, according to the latest NBC News tally. It recorded 35,355 news cases and 279 deaths Sunday. About 207 million people have received their first doses of a vaccine, and more than 175 million have been fully vaccinated.
Vaccination rates have risen slowly since July, but still no state or territory has passed the 70 percent fully vaccinated threshold, and the country is nowhere close to its peak in April, when more than 3 million people were getting shots every day.
Health care workers attend a patient with Covid-19 at the Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center in Tarzana, Calif., on Sept. 2, 2021. (Apu Gomes / AFP - Getty Images)
The fourth wave, which many experts say could have been prevented with better vaccination rates, has overwhelmed hospitals.
At Billings Clinic in Montana, the intensive care unit is nearing 150 percent capacity as the hospitals in the state have called on the National Guard for help.
Hospitals are seeing an average of 100,000 Covid patients a day, higher than at other any point since last winter, when the vaccines weren't available for most people. At the same time, hospitals face a nurse staffing crisis, as many nurses exhausted by the pandemic are quitting or retiring.
August was Florida's deadliest month for Covid cases since the pandemic began — it recorded more than 1,300 deaths as hospitalizations among children skyrocket.
In central Texas, a school district closed until after Labor Day after two teachers died of Covid./agencies
A man wearing full body armor fatally shot four people, including a mother and the 3-month-old baby she was cradling, and engaged in a massive gunfight with police and deputies before he was wounded and surrendered, a Florida sheriff said Sunday. An 11-year-old girl who was shot seven times survived.
Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd said during a press conference that even after 33-year-old Bryan Riley was arrested Sunday morning, he was so aggressive that he tried to wrestle a gun from police as he lay on his hospital gurney.
Judd said Riley, a former Marine who served as a sharpshooter in both Iraq and Afghanistan, seemed to have targeted his victims at random and appeared to be suffering from mental health issues. Judd said Riley's girlfriend told authorities Riley had been slowly unraveling for weeks and repeatedly told her that he could communicate directly with God.
“They begged for their lives and I killed them anyway,” Judd said Riley told them during an interrogation.
Investigators said preliminary evidence shows 40-year-old Justice Gleason just happened to be an unlucky stranger out mowing his lawn Saturday night when Riley drove by his home in Lakeland, about 30 miles (48.28 kilometers) east of Tampa, saying God told him to stop because Gleason’s daughter was going to commit suicide.
A second, unidentified person also confronted Riley, telling him that story wasn’t true and warned they’d call police if he didn’t leave, Judd said. He referred to the person as a victim but declined to clarify which one.
Authorities responded to the scene but never found Riley.
About nine hours later, around 4:30 a.m., Riley returned to the home, laying out glowsticks to create a path leading to the house to draw officers “into an ambush,” Judd said.
Randomly, a lieutenant far in the distance heard popping noises and immediately put the agency on active-shooter mode, bringing all state and local law enforcement in the area to the scene.
Following the sounds of gunfire, authorities arrived at the home and found Riley’s white truck ablaze and an unarmed Riley outside, dressed in camouflage.
Riley immediately ran inside, where authorities heard another round of gunfire, “a woman scream and a baby whimper,” Judd said.
Officers tried to enter the front of the house, but it was barricaded. When they circled to the back, they encountered Riley, who appeared to have put on full body armor including head and knee coverings and a bulletproof vest.
Authorities exchanged heavy gunfire, with dozens “if not hundreds of rounds” fired, before Riley retreated back into the home, according to the sheriff.
Everything fell silent, Judd said, until a helicopter unit alerted authorities on the ground that Riley was coming out. He had been shot once and was ready to surrender.
Meanwhile, officers heard cries for help inside the home, but were unsure whether there were additional shooters and feared the home was booby-trapped. A brave sergeant rushed in and grabbed the 11-year-old girl who had been shot at least seven times.
She told deputies there were three dead people inside, Judd said, adding that she was rushed into surgery and was expected to survive.
Deputies sent robots into the home to check for explosives and other traps. When it was clear, they found the bodies of Gleason; the 33-year-old mother; the baby; and the baby’s 62-year-old grandmother, who was in a separate home nearby. Authorities released only Gleason’s name, and did not say if or how he was related to the other victims.
Authorities declined to say how many times the victims had been shot or where they were in the home, but said they were all hiding and huddling in fear. The family dog also was shot to death.
Authorities said Riley’s girlfriend of four years, whom he lived with, had been cooperative and was shocked, saying he was never violent but suffered from PTSD and had become increasingly erratic.
She said he’d spent the previous week on what he called a mission from God, stockpiling supplies that he said were for Hurricane Ida victims, including $1,000 worth of cigars.
“Prior to this morning, this guy was a war hero. He fought for his country in Afghanistan and Iraq,” said Judd. “And this morning he’s a cold-blooded killer.”
Riley, who had no criminal history, also told authorities he was on methamphetamines. His vehicle had also been stocked with supplies for a gunfight, authorities said, including bleeding control kits.
While being treated at the hospital, Riley jumped up and tried to grab an officer’s gun.
“They had to fight with him again in the emergency room,” Judd said, adding that Riley was ultimately tied down and medicated.
He is expected to recover and will be transferred to jail to face charges.
“The big question that all of us has is, ‘Why?’” State Attorney Brian Haas said. “We will not know today or maybe ever.”/agencies
Countries across Latin America have reported new COVID-19 infections and fatalities, according to official data announced late Saturday.
Brazil
At least 692 more people lost their lives in Brazil and 21,804 people were infected over the past 24 hours.
The death toll in the country rose to 583,362 and the total number of confirmed cases exceeded 20.87 million, according to the Health Ministry.
The country has reported over 19.83 million recoveries so far.
Mexico
According to the Health Ministry, Mexico's COVID-19 case tally surged by 15,586, while fatalities increased by 647 over the past day.
The country of some 126 million people has so far recorded more than 3.42 million cases, 262,868 deaths, and over 2.75 million recoveries.
Colombia
Colombia’s Health Ministry reported 72 more fatalities from the virus over the past 24 hours, raising the country’s death toll to 125,230.
The total number of cases surpassed 4.91 million, including 2,099 new infections, while the number of recoveries stood at over 4.76 million.
Argentina
Some 2,486 new infections raised Argentina’s case tally to over 5.2 million, according to Health Ministry data.
The nationwide death toll rose to 112,444 as 88 patients died over the past day. More than 4.89 million recoveries have so far been reported.
Chile
Over the past day, Chile reported 26 deaths related to COVID-19, pushing the death toll to 37,067, according to the country's Health Ministry.
The number of infections rose by 474, raising the total number of cases to more than 1.64 million. More than 1.59 million people have recovered so far.
Paraguay
According to data from Paraguay's Health Ministry, 25 more COVID-19 patients died over the last day, pushing the death toll to 15,889.
The country reported 45 new cases, raising the total number of infections to 458,844, while recoveries reached 438,337.
- Guatemala
According to local media in Guatemala, the country reported 48 fatalities in the past 24 hours, bringing the death toll to 12,203.
The number of coronavirus cases in the country rose by 2,556 to reach 486,819, while a total of 423,094 people have recovered from the virus./aa
Students in northwestern Turkey on Sunday raced the electric vehicles they built to compete during the country's largest aerospace and technology event.
Industry and Technology Minister Mustafa Varank examined the finalist vehicles made by high school and university students taking part in the races organized by Turkey's scientific council in the Kocaeli province as part of the TEKNOFEST Aerospace and Technology Festival.
Varank told reporters that the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) had been organizing these races for 16 years and that they recently started to be held as part of TEKNOFEST.
He underlined that this was not a competition of speed, but of efficiency, explaining that with the vehicles they designed and built, the students aimed to cover the greatest distance with the least energy.
"Our aim is to enable our young people to be inclined towards future technologies, to conduct research using these technologies, to learn team spirit through these competitions, and to become successful engineers and scientists in the future," Varank noted.
Nearly 50,000 teams applied to take part in the competitions in 35 different categories, while a total of 200 teams applied for the electric vehicle races, the minister added./aa