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The global economic strain caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could stoke civil unrest in the Middle East and beyond, the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned on Sunday.
Speaking at the Doha Forum in Qatar, Kristalina Georgieva said Russia’s invasion and the resulting sanctions on Moscow have forced the world’s poorest to bear the worst of the crisis as they grapple with inflated food costs and scarcer jobs.
Georgieva hinted that the current situation evoked the lead-up to the 2011 uprisings known as the Arab Spring, when skyrocketing bread prices fueled anti-government protests across the Middle East.
“When prices jump, and poor people cannot feed their families, they will be on the streets,” she said. “One thing we know about trouble in one place, it travels, it doesn’t stay there,” she added.
Georgieva called for greater global cooperation to fill the gaps in commodity and energy supplies.
“Please, work together,” she urged. “Oil producers, gas producers and food producers today are in a position to help reduce this uncertainty,” she said.
She cited Ukraine’s importance as a top wheat exporter in urging a swift resolution to the war.
“The faster the tanks are out, the faster the tractors will be in,” she said. “We need by July the harvest in Ukraine to contribute to the stability of food prices,” she added./AP
Atotal of 159 children from orphanages in conflict-ridden Ukraine arrived in the southern Turkish province of Antalya on Sunday. The children will be accommodated in hotels in the city, which has a sizable Ukrainian population.
Their evacuation is the result of work by Turkish first lady Emine Erdoğan and Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska. The first ladies have been in close contact since the Russian-Ukrainian war broke out last month. Emine Erdoğan arranged the evacuation of Ukrainian children through the assistance of the Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of Family and Social Services.
The children, accompanied by 26 carers working in Ukrainian orphanages, flew to the Turkish city from Poland. They were welcomed by Ukrainian Ambassador in Ankara Vasyl Bodnar and Ukrainian Consul-General in Antalya Emir Rustamov. Bodnar told reporters at the airport that this was the first group of children and more would arrive in coming days. He thanked the Turkish government for the evacuation. “I hope the children will have a comfortable environment here and overcome (the trauma) of incidents in Ukraine. I hope we will be able to host some 2,000 children from orphanages in Ukraine,” he said.
Other countries have also stepped in to help children in orphanages in cities under Russian bombardment. A Scottish charity had sponsored a flight of some 50 youngsters from orphanages to the United Kingdom this week.
Children’s trauma
Since the war began, 4.3 million children – more than half of the country’s estimated 7.5 million child population – have been displaced, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said last week. “The war has caused one of the fastest large-scale displacements of children since World War II,” UNICEF chief Catherine Russell said in a statement. This includes more than 1.8 million who have crossed into neighboring countries as refugees and 2.5 million who are now internally displaced.
Along with orphans, Turkey, which took in at least 20,000 refugees from Ukraine, hosts families with children.
In Antalya, some 340 children who arrived with their families, attend educational courses organized by the municipality of Konyaaltı, a district of the province. Some 48 Ukrainian teachers volunteer for the children where psychiatrists help children to overcome the trauma of lingering conflict.
Volunteers say the horror of the conflict is reflected in the drawings the children make. Irina Chemadurov is among the Ukrainian psychiatrists who sought an insight into children’s minds and how they were affected by the conflict. She asked the children to draw something about their life back in Ukraine. What she got was what children witnessed: Tanks, soldiers and bombs falling out of sky. Some scrawled their parents “in graves” while others are seen hiding inside their houses. “They suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD),” she told reporters on Sunday./agencies
The United Nations warned Sunday that 90% of Ukrainians could face poverty if military actions continue in the war-torn country.
“We see across the country that people have lost their livelihoods,” Achim Steiner, senior United Nations Development Program (UNDP) administrator, told Qatar-based media outlet Al-Jazeera at the Doha Forum. Steiner added “the ability to look after millions of people who are not able to earn an income” could be very hard for Ukrainian authorities to handle.
“The economy is in large part suffering the consequences of supply chain constraints but also basic municipal services are increasingly not being able to function,” Steiner said.
The Russian invasion has devastated several Ukrainian cities, caused a humanitarian crisis and forced millions to flee their homes.
In a late-night television address on Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy demanded that Western nations hand over military hardware that was "gathering dust" in stockpiles, saying his nation needed just 1% of NATO's aircraft and 1% of its tanks.
Western nations have so far given Ukraine anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles as well as small arms and protective equipment, but have not offered any heavy armor or planes.
"We've already been waiting 31 days. Who is in charge of the Euro-Atlantic community? Is it really still Moscow, because of intimidation?" Zelenskyy said, suggesting Western leaders were holding back on supplies because they were frightened of Russia.
Ukrainian Interior Ministry adviser Vadym Denysenko said on Sunday that Russia had started destroying Ukrainian fuel and food storage centers, meaning the government would have to disperse stocks of both in the near future.
Zelenskyy also angrily warned Moscow on Saturday that it is sowing a deep hatred for Russia among his people, as constant artillery barrages and aerial bombings are reducing cities to rubble, killing civilians and driving others into shelters, leaving them to scrounge for food and water to survive.
"You are doing everything so that our people themselves leave the Russian language, because the Russian language will now be associated only with you, with your explosions and murders, your crimes," Zelenskyy said in an impassioned video address late Saturday.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has ground into a war of attrition in many places, with the toll on civilians rising as Moscow seeks to pound cities into submission from entrenched positions.
A nuclear research facility in the besieged city of Kharkiv, near the Russian border, again came under fire Saturday, and Ukraine's nuclear watchdog said that because of ongoing hostilities it was impossible to assess the extent of the damage.
Kharkiv has been besieged by Russian forces since the start of the invasion and has come under repeated shelling that has hit residential buildings and critical infrastructure.
Ukrainian authorities have previously reported that Russian shelling had damaged buildings at the facility, but there had been no release of radiation. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said the nuclear material in the facility is always subcritical and the inventory of radioactive material is very low, reducing the risks of radiation release.
Meanwhile, the head of Ukraine's Luhansk separatist region said Sunday it may hold a referendum on becoming part of Russia.
"I think that in the near future a referendum will be held in the territory of the republic, during which the people will ... express their opinion on joining the Russian Federation," Russian news agencies quoted Leonid Pasechnik as saying. "For some reason, I am sure this will be the case," he said.
On the western side of the country, Russian rockets struck Lviv on Saturday while U.S. President Joe Biden visited neighboring Poland, serving as a reminder that Moscow is willing to strike anywhere in Ukraine despite its claim to be focusing its offensive on the country’s east.
Early Sunday, a chemical smell still lingered in the air as firefighters in Lviv sprayed water on a burned section of an oil facility hit in the Russian attack.
A security guard at the site, Yaroslav Prokopiv, said he saw three rockets strike and destroy two oil tanks but no one was hurt.
"The third strike threw me to the ground,” he said.
Russia's back-to-back airstrikes shook the city that has become a haven for an estimated 200,000 people who have had to flee their hometowns. Lviv had been largely spared since the invasion began, although missiles struck an aircraft repair facility near the main airport a week ago.
In the dim, crowded bomb shelter under an apartment block a short ways from the first blast site, Olana Ukrainets, a 34-year-old IT professional, said she couldn’t believe she had to hide again after fleeing from the northeastern city of Kharkiv, one of the most bombarded cities of the war.
"We were on one side of the street and saw it on the other side,” she said. "We saw fire. I said to my friend, ‘What’s this?’ Then we heard the sound of an explosion and glass breaking. We tried to hide between buildings. I don’t know what the target was.”
Two cities on opposite ends of the country are seeing some of the worst suffering at the moment, Chernihiv in the north – strategically located on the road from the Belarusian border to the capital, Kyiv – and Mariupol in the south, a key port city on the Sea of Azov.
Both are encircled by Russian forces, but still holding out.
Chernihiv has been under attack since the early days of the invasion and over the last week, Russia destroyed the main vehicular bridge leading out of the city and rendered a nearby pedestrian bridge impassable, cutting off the last route for civilians to flee, or for food and medicine to be brought in.
Chernihiv’s remaining residents are terrified that each blast, bomb and body that lies uncollected on the streets ensnares them in the same macabre trap of unescapable killings and destruction.
"In basements at night, everyone is talking about one thing: Chernihiv becoming (the) next Mariupol,” said 38-year-old resident Ihar Kazmerchak, a linguistics scholar.
He spoke to The Associated Press (AP) by cellphone, amid incessant beeps signaling that his battery was dying. The city is without power, running water and heating. At pharmacies, the list of medicines no longer available grows longer by the day.
Kazmerchak starts his day in long lines for drinking water, rationed to 10 liters (2 1/2 gallons) per person. People come with empty bottles and buckets for filling when water-delivery trucks make their rounds.
"Food is running out, and shelling and bombing doesn’t stop,” he said.
More than half of the city's 280,000 inhabitants have already fled and hundreds who stayed have been killed, Mayor Vladyslav Atroshenko said.
Russian forces have bombed residential areas from low altitude in "absolutely clear weather" and "are deliberately destroying civilian infrastructure: schools, kindergartens, churches, residential buildings and even the local football stadium,” Atroshenko told Ukrainian television.
Refugees from Chernihiv who fled the encirclement and reached Poland this week spoke of broad and terrible destruction, with bombs flattening at least two schools in the city center and strikes also hitting the stadium, museums and many homes.
They said that with utilities knocked out, people are taking water from the Desna to drink and that strikes are killing people while they wait in line for food. Volodymyr Fedorovych, 77, said he narrowly escaped a bomb that fell on a bread line he had been standing in just moments earlier. He said the blast killed 16 people and injured dozens, blowing off arms and legs.
So intense is the siege that some of those trapped cannot even muster the strength to be afraid anymore, Kazmerchak said.
"Ravaged houses, fires, corpses in the street, huge aircraft bombs that didn’t explode in courtyards are not surprising anyone anymore,” he said. "People are simply tired of being scared and don’t even always go down to the basements.”
Britain’s Defense Ministry said Saturday that it doesn't expect a reprieve for citizens of Ukraine's bombarded cities anytime soon.
"Russia will continue to use its heavy firepower on urban areas as it looks to limit its own already considerable losses, at the cost of further civilian casualties,” the ministry said.
Previous bombings of hospitals and other nonmilitary sites, including a theater in Mariupol where Ukrainian authorities said a Russian airstrike is believed to have killed 300 people last week, already have given rise to war crimes allegations.
The invasion has driven more than 10 million people from their homes, almost a quarter of Ukraine’s population. Of those, more than 3.7 million have fled the country entirely, according to the United Nations. Thousands of civilians are believed to have died./agencies
Kuwait has banned iftar banquets inside mosques during the upcoming Muslim holy month of Ramadan as a precaution against spread of COVID-19, a local newspaper has reported.
The Kuwaiti Ministry of Awqaf (Endowments) and Islamic Affairs, has stressed the ban in a circular that, however, allows the benevolent distribution of pre-cooked meals outside mosques for people to eat at the sunset when daily fasting ends, Al Jarida added.
The ministry has also banned setting up the Ramadan tents within the precincts of mosques on health grounds, it said.
“The ministry will not be lax in handling any violation of the circular issued for organisational and health grounds, especially that the coronavirus repercussions are still affecting some sectors,” the paper quoted Awqaf sources.
The ban on hosting the Ramadan tens in the vicinity of mosques aims at heading off gatherings in indoor places, they added. “COVID-19 and its variants still exist despite the significant decline in daily infections and return to pre-pandemic activities,” the sources said.
Earlier this month, Kuwaiti authorities said all mosques in the country will be back to normal as part of easing anti-virus curbs. Worshippers are no longer required to observe physical distancing in mosques./GN
Head of the Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry Mohammad Al-Saqer stressed that the government measures taken regarding the “60-years” law for expatriates are uncivilized and may be unconstitutional, reports Al-Rai daily. He said, “His Highness the Crown Prince understands the matter and has adopted it. There are new procedures that are expected to be implemented in this regard.”
Al-Saqer explained that the business environment in Kuwait and the private sector does not find any sup- port from the government. All Gulf governments supported the private sector during the COVID-19 crisis, except for the State of Kuwait which did not support the private sector. He said, “We do not want financial support, but we want the authorities to facilitate procedures, change laws, and ease the restrictions on the private sector. We will have an extended session with the government in the future. We hope that the government will then adopt the concerns of the private sector again. The family’s list includes cadres and diverse experiences from all segments of society, representing national unity. There are no quotas. There is no privatization in Kuwait. It needs a clear program similar to what happened in the United Kingdom in the early 1980s, as well as the Norwegian program. Privatization must happen in major sectors such as oil, education and others.”
Al-Saqer expressed his fears that the rise in oil prices would turn out to be “a curse on Kuwait”. He said, “The chamber does not have fangs, but we have a mind and an idea through which we try to guide the government’s decision. There are corrupt merchants, including those who work in trade of visa, alcohol and prostitution. However, the commercial center in Kuwait enjoys a majority of those who have a patriotic sense and a keenness for the country.”/AT
The Saudi Arabian Grand Prix will go ahead as planned despite Houthis’ recent attack on a Jeddah oil depot, Formula 1 announced on Saturday.
"Formula 1 and the FIA can confirm that following discussions with all the teams and drivers, the 2022 FIA Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix will continue as scheduled," a statement said.
"Following the widely reported incident that took place in Jeddah on Friday, there has been extensive discussion between all stakeholders, the Saudi government authorities and security agencies who have given full and detailed assurances that the event is secure," it added.
The Jeddah Corniche Circuit, located 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the Jeddah oil depot, is set to host the second race of the season, with 50 laps to be run on a 6.1-kilometer (3.7-mile) track.
The qualifying laps of the second race of the season will start on Saturday at 1700GMT, with the race itself set for the same hour on Sunday./aa
A total of 136 children have so far been killed in Russia's month-long war on Ukraine, Ukrainian officials said Saturday.
Nearly 200 children have also been injured in the conflict since it began on Feb. 24, the Prosecutor General's Office said on Telegram.
Russian shelling has also damaged 570 educational institutions, including 73 which were completely destroyed, it added.
Ukraine has accused Russian forces of deliberately targeting civilian buildings and of committing war crimes.
The Russia-Ukraine war has met international outrage, with the EU, US, and UK, among others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow.
At least 1,035 civilians have been killed in Ukraine and 1,650 injured, according to UN estimates, while cautioning that the true figure is likely far higher.
More than 3.7 million Ukrainians have also fled to neighboring countries, with millions more displaced inside the country, according to the UN refugee agency./aa
With technology and digitalization playing an ever-greater role in the humanities, new frontiers are opening for historians to shine light on the past.
This includes Turkiye, where such technology has been instrumental in ongoing digitalization efforts of numerous archives and libraries, giving researchers and students of Ottoman/Turkish studies from all over the world invaluable access to a vast volume of primary sources.
Endeavors like these, which fall in the category of digital humanities, serve as a bridge between the humanities and digital technologies, said Fatma Aladag, a researcher at Leipzig University in Germany and founder of the Digital Ottoman Studies website.
In an interview with Anadolu Agency, Aladag explained that the digital humanities allow researchers to ask new questions and produce new data with the help of special software that can process multi-layered and complex data.
Digital supplanting conventional?
Noting concerns that digital technologies are "taking over" academia, Aladag underlined that the digital humanities had no such aim, but could rather be thought of as part of humankind's inevitable adaptation to the expanding role of technology in daily life.
"Can one expect our careers, research methods, or the institutions where we work to not be affected by these technological developments? Of course not," she argued.
According to Aladag, as humankind's cultural heritage becomes increasingly digital, the nature of knowledge as well as each individual's relationship with society, is in flux.
It is at this juncture that the digital humanities play a critical role in understanding these changes, she underlined, adding that, by facilitating open access to sources that may have otherwise been out of reach for many researchers, digitalization paves the way for inter-disciplinary work.
"Many different disciplines such as history, linguistics, literature, computer engineering, and architecture, along with their characteristic methodologies and sources, can be part of a digital humanities project," she said.
Applications in Ottoman-Turkish studies
Having worked for years in her field, Aladag pointed out the sheer volume of Ottoman archives in many languages, spanning diverse ethnicities and geographical regions, while making the utilization of technology even more important for study.
With its deep-rooted record-keeping tradition, the Ottoman Empire left a vast collection of archival documents, hundreds of thousands of manuscripts, and registers on population, tax, land, and religious endowments, she said.
"If we can transform this immense volume of Ottoman archives into big data, it would be much easier to classify it according to different eras, regions, and topics.
"Thus, through machine learning and artificial intelligence, still untapped parts of the archive, will be available for researchers and students."
Digital Ottoman Studies
On the Digital Ottoman Studies website, which she founded, Aladag said that the platform contains numerous projects, publications, and databases of maps, manuscripts, photographs, and dictionaries.
She also noted that the website had been recommended to researchers by academics at many prominent world universities including Harvard, Cornell, and Michigan.
On the state of digitalization in Turkiye, Aladag praised ongoing efforts by archives and libraries to scan documents and make them accessible online.
However, digitalization is more than scanning source material, she said, adding that researchers should be encouraged to use spatial and network analysis, augmented reality (AR), and virtual reality (VR) applications in their work.
Universities, and especially humanities departments, should step up efforts to train students in line with the latest currents and developments in the digital humanities field to remain relevant and in demand, Aladag asserted.
"Therefore, students become not just consumers of information, but producers, too."/aa
Residents near Batangas province in the Philippines have been warned of a possible "volcanic tsunami" after the Taal Volcano's spew on Saturday. Local officials encouraged people to evacuate their homes immediately.
Taal Volcano in Batangas province, 66 kilometers (41 miles) south of Manila, generated "a short-lived phreatomagmatic burst" at 7:22 a.m. (11:22 p.m. GMT), the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said in a bulletin.
This was followed by "nearly continuous phreatomagmatic activity that generated plumes (as high as 1.5 kilometers), accompanied by volcanic earthquake and infrasound signals," Phivolcs added.
Due to the activity, Phivolcs raised the alert status at Taal from level two to level three, which means there is "magmatic intrusion at the main crater that may further drive succeeding eruptions."
Local government officials in four villages around the volcano urged residents to evacuate to safer grounds, the national disaster agency said.
At least 1,100 residents have so far moved to five schools turned into evacuation centers, the agency said.
"Residents of the affected areas are advised to remain vigilant, take precautionary measures, and follow authorities' warnings and advisories," it said in a statement.
The Department of Health warned against exposure to falling volcanic ash: "Anyone who already suffers from problems such as bronchitis, emphysema or asthma should avoid exposure to volcanic ash."
"Stay indoors as much as possible, keep doors and windows closed," it added.
Taal's last major eruption was in January 2020, displacing more than 376,000 people. Thirty-nine people died due to illness while in evacuation centers and accidents caused by thick ashfall, according to the provincial government.
Taal has erupted 33 times since 1572.
It is a popular tourist destination for its picturesque crater lake and has the distinction of being the only known volcano in the world within a lake on an island./DPA
Since Russia declared war on Ukraine, civilians remain the most affected party, and Meskhetian Turks are among them.
Thanks to the efforts of the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Meskhetian Turks were evacuated from Ukraine by land to be brought back to their homeland.
Some 90 people on two buses carrying Meskhetian Turks, mostly women, and children, were taken out of the city of Mykolaiv, where there is a hot conflict raging currently. The bus entered Turkey the Hamzabeyli Border Gate, which is an opening into the neighboring country Bulgaria. The arriving convoy was welcomed by experts from the Provincial Immigration Administration.
Women who fled with their young children were happy to be leaving the war zone but were sad to have left their husbands and children above the age of 18 behind.
Züleyha Izatova told Anadolu Agency (AA) that they were experiencing a hard time in the region they lived because of the bombings.
Expressing her sorrow, Izatova said: "We were able to come, but my three sons, aged 22, 26, and 27, and my husband stayed there. We managed to save our lives but half of our hearts and minds are there."
"There was conflict everywhere. Russian soldiers come with tanks and drop bombs," she added.
Highlighting Turkey's support for the Meskhetian Turks, Izatova thanked President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Turkey for their kind support.
Another Meskhetian Turk, Makbule Emirsheeva expressed her concern for her relatives they had to leave behind. "May Allah be pleased with Turkey. You took care of us. We went through very difficult things there. I hope the war will end as soon as possible," she said.
Gülistan Izatova also expressed her gratitude to Turkey, which brought them out of the firing line. She said that their houses also suffered damage due to the explosions./aa