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Four civilians were killed and 12 others were injured in a rocket attack Tuesday by the YPG/PKK terrorist group on the Syrian town Azaz.
The rockets were fired at the town from the nearby city of Tal Rifaat.
The injured were transferred to a nearby hospital amid fears that the number of casualties could rise.
Opposition forces responded to the attack with artillery fire on the terrorist group's positions in Tal Rifaat.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S., and the European Union – has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa
The families of five children and four adults murdered in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Newtown, Connecticut received a $73 million settlement Tuesday from the now-bankrupt gun manufacturer Remington.
“Today is a day of accountability for an industry that has thus far enjoyed operating with immunity and impunity,” said Veronique De La Rosa at a news conference.
De La Rosa’s 6-year-old son, Noah, was killed on Dec. 14, 2012 when 20-year-old Adam Lanza went on a shooting spree at Sandy Hook, killing 20 children and six adults before killing himself.
“Every day is a realization that he should be here, yet he’s not,” said De La Rosa.
The multi-million dollar settlement comes nearly seven years after the families filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Remington, which manufactured the Bushmaster AR-15-style rifle used in the massacre.
“The immunity protecting the gun industry is not bulletproof,” said Josh Koskoff, the families’ attorney. “We hope the gun industry takes this under advisement. We hope they realize that they have skin into the game, instead of blaming literally everybody else.”
“Nothing will bring Dylan back,” said Nicole Hockley, whose 6-year-old son was also murdered that day.
Hockley says the settlement should put gun manufacturers – as well as insurance carriers and the banking institutions associated with them – on notice that weapons like the one made by Remington should not be marketed.
“The Sandy Hook shooter chose the AR-15 for his massacre because of its ability to inflict the most lethal damage in the shortest amount of time,” said Hockley. “It’s not a useful weapon for hunting or for self-defense. It was designed to kill, quickly and efficiently.”
“The Sandy Hook shooter helped fulfill that purpose, shooting 154 bullets in less than five minutes and killing 26 innocent people, including my 6-year-old son,” she continued.
The families emphasized that the goal of this lawsuit was not to eliminate guns, but rather to make sure the gun industry markets and manufactures weapons to be used safely and responsibly.
Their attorney said the case was never about compensation but about forcing change, “to do whatever they can to help prevent the next Sandy Hook.”
“These families, they would pay everything. They’d give it all back just for one minute. That would be true justice.”/aa
Turkey reiterated support Tuesday for one of the largest Turkish minority communities in Greece as a probe continues into the Xanthi (Iskeçe) Turkish Union because of a march to defend its rights last July.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry asserted on Twitter the probe is part of Greece’s plan of intimidating and punishing minority members who seek to reclaim their rights which were guaranteed by various bilateral and international treaties, including the Lausanne Treaty of 1923.
The ministry highlighted that Greece did not implement rulings of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) regarding the registration of the association because it contained "Turkish” in its title.
"Against the discrimination, we stand by the Western Thrace Turkish minority,” the ministry added.
The march by the Xanthi Turkish Union, one of the oldest and most influential associations of the Turkish minority in Greece, had been attended by thousands and prominent figures who protested that Greece had not applied decisions of the ECtHR which favored the minority.
Decadeslong struggle for rights
Under a 2008 ECtHR ruling, the right of Turks in Western Thrace to use "Turkish" in the name of associations was guaranteed but Athens has failed to carry out the ruling, effectively banning the Turkish group’s identity.
The Western Thrace region is home to a Muslim Turkish community of around 150,000. In 1983, the nameplate of the Xanthi Turkish Union was removed and the group was completely banned in 1986, on the pretext that "Turkish” was in its name.
To apply the ECtHR decision, in 2017, parliament passed a law banning associations from applying for re-registration but the legislation included major exceptions that complicated applications.
Turkey has been urging Greece to comply with the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) decisions upholding the freedoms of the local Turkish minority, decrying Greek violations of the rights of its Muslim and Turkish minority, from closing down mosques and shutting down schools to not letting Muslim Turks elect their own religious leaders./ Daily Sabah
While the illegal trade of elephant tusks continues to devastate the population of Earth's largest land animal, a new study based on DNA testing on seized ivory shipments has revealed family ties among African elephants killed for their tusks. This will help in identifying poaching areas and trafficking networks as the research showed that as few as three major criminal groups are responsible for smuggling the vast majority of elephant ivory tusks out of Africa.
Researchers used analysis of DNA from seized elephant tusks and evidence such as phone records, license plates, financial records and shipping documents to map trafficking operations across the continent and better understand who was behind the crimes. The study was published Monday in the journal Nature Human Behavior.
"When you have the genetic analysis and other data, you can finally begin to understand the illicit supply chain - that’s absolutely key to countering these networks," said Louise Shelley, who researches illegal trade at George Mason University and was not involved in the research.
Thai customs officials display seized ivory originating from Nigeria and destined for China, during a press conference in Bangkok, Thailand, Jan. 12, 2018. (AP Photo)
Conservation biologist Samuel Wasser, a study co-author, hopes the findings will help law enforcement officials target the leaders of these networks instead of low-level poachers who are easily replaced by criminal organizations.
"If you can stop the trade where the ivory is being consolidated and exported out of the country, those are really the key players," said Wasser, who co-directs the Center for Environmental Forensic Science at the University of Washington.
Africa’s elephant population is fast dwindling. From around 5 million elephants a century ago to 1.3 million in 1979, the total number of elephants in Africa is now estimated to be around 415,000.
A 1989 ban on international commercial ivory trade hasn’t stopped the decline. Each year, an estimated 500 metric tons (1.1 million pounds) of poached elephant tusks are shipped from Africa, mostly to Asia.
Two young elephants play in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania, March 20, 2018. (AP Photo)
For the past two decades, Wasser has fixated on a few key questions: "Where is most of the ivory being poached, who is moving it, and how many people are they?"
He works with wildlife authorities in Kenya, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and elsewhere, who contact him after they intercept ivory shipments. He flies to the countries to take small samples of tusks to analyze the DNA. He has now amassed samples from the tusks of more than 4,300 elephants trafficked out of Africa between 1995 and today.
"That’s an amazing, remarkable data set," said Princeton University biologist Robert Pringle, who was not involved in the study. With such data, "it becomes possible to spot connections and make strong inferences," he said.
In 2004, Wasser demonstrated that DNA from elephant tusks and dung could be used to pinpoint their home location to within a few hundred miles. In 2018, he recognized that finding identical DNA in tusks from two different ivory seizures meant they were harvested from the same animal – and likely trafficked by the same poaching network.
The new research expands that approach to identify DNA belonging to elephant parents and offspring, as well as siblings – and led to the discovery that only a very few criminal groups are behind most of the ivory trafficking in Africa.
A herd of adult and baby elephants walks in the dawn light as the highest mountain in Africa, Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro, is seen in the background, in Amboseli National Park, southern Kenya, Dec.17, 2012. (AP Photo)
Because female elephants remain in the same family group their whole life, and most males don’t travel too far from their family herd, the researchers hypothesize that tusks from close family members are likely to have been poached at the same time, or by the same operators.
Such genetic links can provide a blueprint for wildlife authorities seeking other evidence – cell phone records, license plates, shipping documents and financial statements – to link different ivory shipments.
Previously when an ivory shipment was intercepted, the one seizure wouldn't allow authorities to identify the organization behind the crime, said Special Agent John Brown III of the Office of Homeland Security Investigations, who has worked on environmental crimes for 25 years.
But the scientists' work identifying DNA links can "alert us to the connections between individual seizures," said Brown, who is also a co-author. "This collaborative effort has definitely been the backbone of multiple multinational investigations that are still ongoing," he said.
Elephant tusks are stacked in one of around a dozen pyres of ivory, in Nairobi National Park, Kenya, April 28, 2016. (AP Photo)
They identified several poaching hotspots, including regions of Tanzania, Kenya, Botswana, Gabon and Republic of Congo. Tusks are often moved to warehouses in another location to be combined with other contraband in shipping containers, then moved to ports. Current trafficking hubs exist in Kampala, Uganda; Mombasa, Kenya; and Lome, Togo.
Two suspects were recently arrested as a result of one such investigation, said Wasser.
Traffickers that smuggle ivory also often move other contraband, the researchers found. A quarter of large seizures of pangolin scales – a heavily-poached anteater-like animal – are co-mingled with ivory, for instance.
"Confronting these networks is a great example of how genetics can be used for conservation purposes," said Brian Arnold, a Princeton University evolutionary biologist who was not involved in the research./Daily Sabah
Websites of several Ukrainian government agencies and major banks were targeted in a cyberattack on Tuesday.
There was a “powerful DDOS attack on a number of information resources of Ukraine” starting from Tuesday afternoon, according to a statement by the State Service of Special Communication and Information Protection of Ukraine.
Websites of the Defense Ministry and Ukrainian military, along with web services of Privatbank and Oschadbank, were targeted, the statement said.
The banks’ websites were up again by Tuesday evening, the statement said, adding that a “group of experts … is taking all necessary measures to localize and resist the cyberattack.”
The cyberattack comes amid heightened tensions between Russia and Ukraine, with several Western countries claiming that Moscow is poised to invade its former Soviet neighbor.
Moscow has denied that it is preparing to invade and said its troops are there for exercises.
Earlier on Tuesday, the Kremlin announced that some of its troops were returning to bases after completing training exercises near the Ukrainian border.
However, the US said it is yet to ascertain the veracity of Moscow’s claim of pulling back troops from the border./agencies
Gold prices hit their highest level in eight months as investors rushed to the precious metal as a safe haven amid the Russia-Ukraine crisis.
Price of gold hit $1,979 per ounce earlier Tuesday, climbing to its highest level since June 11, 2021, according to official figures.
It later retreated sharply to $1,851 an ounce as of 1215GMT as Russian Defense Ministry said it is withdrawing some of its troops after they completed military drills.
The ministry, however, added that other major military exercises would continue.
Price of silver also hit $23.99 per ounce on Tuesday. Although this is the highest level since Jan. 26, the previous time that the white metal challenged the $24 an ounce resistance level came in November 2021.
Crude oil prices were also on the rise amid the rising Russia-Ukraine tensions.
Price of international benchmark Brent crude soared to $96.7 per barrel on Monday, marking its highest level since Sept. 22, 2014, according to official data.
Brent oil price later retreated to $93.5 at 1230GMT on Tuesday./agencies
Swiss voters headed to the polls on Sunday to tighten their tobacco laws by prohibiting almost all advertising of tobacco products.
Nearly 57% of voters and 16 of Switzerland's 26 cantons backed the near-total tobacco advertising ban, a final tally of votes showed.
"We are extremely happy. The people understood that health is more important than economic interests, " Stefanie De Borba of the Swiss League against Cancer, told Agence France-Presse (AFP) as the results became clear.
Switzerland lags far behind most wealthy nations in restricting tobacco advertising – a situation widely blamed on hefty lobbying by some of the world's biggest tobacco companies headquartered in the country.
Currently, most tobacco advertising is legal at a national level, except for ads on television and radio, and ones that specifically target minors.
Some Swiss cantons have introduced stricter regional legislation and a new national law is pending, but the campaigners who forced the issue to a vote under Switzerland's direct democracy system demanded far tighter rules.
'Kills half of all users'
Opponents of the initiative, which include the Swiss government and parliament, had argued that it goes too far.
"Today we are talking about cigarettes, but we will soon be talking about alcohol and meat," warned Philippe Bauer, a lawmaker from the right-wing Liberal Party.
"It annoys me to live in a society ... with this dictatorship of the politically correct, where everything has to be regulated," he told the RTS broadcaster.
His concerns echo those voiced by Philip Morris International (PMI), the world's largest tobacco company, which, like British American Tobacco and Japan Tobacco, is headquartered in Switzerland and has helped fund the "No" campaign.
"This is a slippery slope as far as individual freedom is concerned," a spokesperson for PMI's Swiss section told AFP, decrying Sunday's result.
When drafting the decision into law, he urged parliament to do so with "moderation and measure," and ensure advertising directed at adults will remain legal.
"A total ban on advertising for legal products is contrary to the freedom of trade and industry enshrined in the constitution."
Jean-Paul Humair, who heads a Geneva addiction prevention center, hailed Sunday's win as "a very important step" in the battle against tobacco use, and flatly rejected the industry's arguments.
"This is not a question of freedom ... It is an illusion of freedom," he told AFP, pointing out that tobacco use creates severe dependency.
"There is no other consumer product that kills half of all users."
Campaigners say lax advertising laws have stymied efforts to bring down smoking rates in the Alpine nation of 8.6 million people, where more than a quarter of adults consume tobacco products. There are around 9,500 tobacco-linked deaths each year.
Sunday's win means that the new tobacco advertising restrictions will be added to a new tobacco law already due to take effect next year.
That law, which Swiss lawmakers voted through last September after years of debate, for the first time sets a nationwide minimum age for the purchase of tobacco – at 18.
Other issues on Sunday's ballot did not fare as well in the polls.
Nearly 80% of voters rejected a call to ban all animal testing.
All political parties, parliament and the government had opposed the initiative, arguing it went too far and would have dire consequences for medical research.
Researchers say medical progress is impossible without experimentation, and even the Swiss Animal Protection group has warned against the initiative's "radical" demands.
Swiss authorities also stressed the country already has among the world's strictest laws regulating animal testing.
In another animal-themed vote, inhabitants in the northern Basel-Stadt canton also massively rejected a bid to afford nonhuman primates some of the same basic fundamental rights as their human cousins, with nearly 75% opposed.
More than 55% of voters also rejected a plan by the national government to provide additional state funding to media companies, which have seen their advertising revenues evaporate in recent years.
Nearly 44% of eligible Swiss voters took part Sunday, which is not unusually low in a country where such popular votes are held every few months./DS
Turkey has so far invested $80 billion (TL 1.08 trillion) through 257 public-private partnership (PPP) projects, according to a statement of the PPP Center of Excellence (CoE) Monday.
PPP CoE head Eyüp Vural Aydın told Anadolu Agency (AA) that these projects have been used effectively since the 1990s.
Aydın stated that the PPP projects pass completely to the state after a set timeframe and thus provide important resources.
“For example, the third bridge of Istanbul, Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge, has been in operation for almost six years. Istanbul Airport has been in operation for three years and has an operational period of 25 years. All these projects are extremely important and will return to the state at the end of the day.”
Stating that one of the latest of these projects, the 1915 Çanakkale Bridge, is about to be completed and will be put into service soon, Aydın said it was completed in a short period of four years.
Aydın stated that PPP projects provide environmental, economic and time-saving advantages and that they can be completed quickly without expense for the public.
Aydın said, "We see that PPP projects in Turkey contribute to economic development, save time for citizens and increase the value of time in the country.”
Aydın noted that Turkey's PPP projects are shown as an example abroad and that most recently, senior bureaucrats from 42 countries from almost all over the world came to the Istanbul PPP Week, which they organized for the sixth time in December.
He said that they talked about successful projects such as Istanbul Airport, city hospitals, the Eurasia Tunnel and Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge.
Expressing that Central Asian countries have especially warmed up to Turkey's city hospital model, Aydın said that a hospital project was started in Azerbaijan last month and that Turkish companies will take the lead in it, while a hospital and an airport in Kazakhstan were built by Turkish companies.
He added that there will be good news regarding Kyrgyzstan very soon.
“Thanks to the experience of Turkish companies, they have the ability to undertake these projects in many different countries and regions all over the world,” he said.
Aydın stated that all of the current projects will be state-owned by 2040, noting that new investments can be facilitated with the budgets that will be obtained from the current projects./Daily Sabah
Astate in southern India reopened some schools on Monday that had been closed following protests last week over female students not being allowed to wear hijabs, or head-to-toe burqas, in class.
The issue, widely seen by India's Muslim minority community as a bid to sideline it by authorities in a Hindu-dominated nation, comes as Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) prepares for elections in key states.
Police stood guard as students in pink uniforms, about a dozen wearing hijabs, entered a government girls school where the issue first flared in Karnataka state's district of Udupi, about 400 kilometers (248 miles) from the tech hub of Bengaluru.
Authorities have banned gatherings of more than five people within 200 meters (650 feet) of educational institutions in the area, which have begun classes from primary to high school, although higher grades and colleges are still shut.
The move came after a state court, which has set a hearing of the matter for Monday, told students not to wear any religious clothing, ranging from saffron shawls to scarves or hijabs, in classrooms until further orders.
"Whether wearing of hijab in the classroom is a part of essential religious practice of Islam in the light of constitutional guarantees needs a deeper examination," the court said in an interim order last week.
The issue was spotlighted following protests last week after some schools refused entry to students wearing the garments, deemed to have fallen foul of a Feb. 5 order on uniforms by the state, which is ruled by Modi's BJP.
The party derives its support mainly from the majority Hindu community, which forms about 80% of India's population of roughly 1.4 billion, while Muslims account for about 13%.
Ayesha Imthiaz, a student in Udupi, said it was humiliating to be asked to take off the hijab before class.
She felt her "religion had been questioned and insulted by a place which I had considered as a temple of education," she told Reuters on the weekend.
An official in the coastal district of Udupi, Pradeep Kurudekar S., told reporters authorities would wait for further orders from the court or the government to resume all classes.
The issue prompted expressions of support for Muslim girls and women from the U.S. government and Nobel Peace laureate Malala Yousafzai./Daily Sabah
Australian parliament on Monday marked the 14th anniversary of the apology to the country’s Indigenous people over stealing tens of thousands of their children in the 20th century.
Speaking in parliament, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the government is sorry for the laws which enabled breaking apart of the families.
"So as we do this at this time every year, we remember the Stolen Generations," he said.
"Children taken from their parents. I say it again, children taken from their parents. No parent, no child could fail to understand the devastation of that, regardless of whatever their background is. Children taken from their parents. Families and communities torn apart. Again and again and again."
On Feb. 13, 2008, then Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd formally apologized on behalf of the nation to the Indigenous Australians for the inhuman treatment in the past.
According to the Australian Healing Foundation, an organization working for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, tens of thousands of children were forcefully removed by authorities from their families between 1910 to 1970 under government policies.
Under the government policies, children were forced to assimilate into white society and culture. Parents were not allowed to meet their children, and the children were not allowed to speak their native language.
According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), around 33,600 survivors of the Stolen Generations live in different states of the country, with 27,000 of them over the age of 50.
Morrison said forced removal of children from parents caused trauma, disconnection and unquenching pain, which came a national shame and a deep wound.
"Separated from country, from kinship, from family, from language, from identity. Becoming even strangers to themselves," he said.
"Sorry for the brutalities that were masked even under the guise of protection and even compassion," he further said./YS