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Japan’s Health Ministry on Thursday granted emergency approval for the use of the oral COVID-19 pill made by US drugmaker Pfizer.
The drug, Paxlovid, will be used to treat people with mild symptoms of the coronavirus.
Last December, Japanese authorities also approved American Merck & Co’s molnupiravir oral drug for the treatment of the coronavirus.
Japan is witnessing a sixth wave of COVID-19 driven by the omicron variant, with the government extending the quasi-state of emergency in 13 provinces until March.
The country has already agreed with the Japanese arm of US pharmaceutical giant Pfizer to procure enough of the drug for 2 million people within the year. Following the ministry's approval, the government will initially secure enough for 40,000 people.
Japan has reported more than 3.56 million COVID-19 cases, including 19,742 deaths, since the start of the pandemic./aa
A research study of the microbial ecology of a unique and perhaps Martian-like lake in southwestern Turkiye has been completed.
The study, carried out by scientists of the Turkish Environment, Urbanization and Climate Change Ministry and Istanbul Technical University, seeks to compare the lake’s ecology from data from Mars gathered by NASA.
The US space agency last year compared Lake Salda to the ancient state of Mars’ Jezero Crater, which scientists believe may have once been the site of a lake and river delta.
NASA posted a photo online of Lake Salda in which rocks can be seen below the azure water's surface lying on pristine white sand, saying scientists believe it mirrors scenes on Mars from 3.5 billion years ago.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Beyhan Oktar, deputy head of Turkiye’s directorate general for preservation of natural heritage, said the project “will provide an important database of traces of life on Mars.”
Oktar said that a 2019 visit to Lake Salda from NASA scientists and a university team created awareness of the issue and that they launched the project afterwards.
“The aim of this project is to reexamine Salda’s similarity to rocks on Mars and reveal new kinds of rocks,” said Oktar, adding that DNA-based analyses were carried out and very important DNA gene sequences were revealed during the studies.
When samples from Mars are examined, scientists can compare the findings, she added.
There does not seem to be life on Mars, but at some point the red planet may have supported microorganisms.
During the Salda project, samples were taken from key points both in the water and around the lake, said Oktar.
Oktar also said they are preparing to share details of the project results with the international academic community in a workshop in the near future.
Salda is thought to be the only lake on Earth that has similar minerals and deltas to those found at Jezero Crater, thought to have once been the site of a sprawling lake, NASA said last February./aa
Ukraine on Thursday "strongly protested" a decision by Russia to block parts of the Black Sea, Sea of Azov and Kerch Strait "under the pretext of holding regular naval exercises."
"Unprecedented coverage of maneuvers makes navigation in both seas virtually impossible. In essence, this is a significant and unjustified complication of international shipping, especially trade, which can cause complex economic and social consequences, especially for the ports of Ukraine," the country's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
The ministry deemed unacceptable such "aggressive actions" by Moscow, which it said "fit into the concept of its hybrid war against Ukraine."
The Sea of Azov lies northeast of the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia annexed from Ukraine in March 2014. It is connected to the Black Sea by the narrow Kerch Strait.
Russia's annexation of Crimea has been labeled illegal by the EU, Turkiye, and the UN General Assembly.
"This is a manifestation of open disregard for the norms and principles of international law, including the UN Charter, UN General Assembly resolutions and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea," it added.
The statement emphasized that Ukraine is "closely working" with partners, primarily those in the Black Sea region, to ensure that such Russian actions "receive a proper assessment and response."
Recently, Russia amassed thousands of troops near Ukraine's borders, prompting fears it could be planning another military offensive against the former Soviet republic.
The US and its allies have warned of an imminent attack, and threatened Russia with "severe consequences."
Moscow, however, has denied it is preparing to invade Ukraine and said its troops are there for exercises./aa
A Muslim college girl from the Indian state of Karnataka, who has become a symbol of Muslim women's resistance to protect their right to wear hijab or headscarf, said on Thursday that there is "no need to fear."
Earlier this week, a video widely circulated on social media showed Muskan Khan, a college girl in a headscarf being harassed by a mob of men with saffron shawls -- a color seen as a Hindu symbol, but also associated with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.
Khan has been hailed for braving threats and confronting the mob as she arrived at the college in southern Mandya city on Tuesday.
While the mob yelled “Jai Sri Ram” (Hail Lord Ram) repeatedly, Khan shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is great) as she was led away by college officials.
Khan told Anadolu Agency in an exclusive interview that when was confronted by the mob, she was not scared and remembered Allah.
"I remembered Allah because when we remember Allah, we get lot of courage and power. So I shouted Allahu Akbar," she said.
A row over hijab has erupted across India after a college in Karnataka told students to take off their headscarf inside the classroom. Those protesting the move say that the Constitution allows Indians to wear clothes of their choice and display religious symbols.
Muslim students have challenged the move in court. The Karnataka High Court has referred the case to a larger bench that will take the case on Thursday.
While the hijab ban in college was disappointing, Khan said she was overwhelmed by the support she had received.
"Everybody is sending me love, support ... I am not scared," she said, adding that she is a "proud Indian."
Stating that she is only fighting for her rights, the young Muslim woman said that she is waiting for the High Court hearing.
"I am waiting for the High Court hearing and our great Constitution is not against any religion. I am proud of it," she said.
Khan said she was hopeful for an India where religious harmony prevails.
"There are some people who have gone astray, but they are also my brothers. I am sure everything will be fine very soon," she said, adding that the college principal and other staff at the institute have supported her./aa
By: Prof. Salman Sayyid*
In yet another Islamophobic measure, the French regime is set to establish a new body to manage the largest Muslim population in the European Union: The Forum of Islam in France. This forum will consist of people selected by Paris, not to represent the Muslim community but to help Macron shape Islam in France's own image.
Secular France funding Christian schools in Muslim countries
Macron and his ministers assert that the forum will prevent extremism, curb the influence of foreign powers in affairs of religious minorities in France and ensure that Muslims abide by the country's claims of secularism in public life. It is difficult to take these justifications seriously when at the same time, the French regime is to double its funding of Christian schools in countries with large Muslim populations.
For a self-proclaimed secular country like France to fund foreign Christian schools would seem to contradict its policy on Islam and Muslims at home. Alas, we have all become so used to the double standards of Western powers that such contradictions rarely surprise us anymore.
Islamophobia becomes a default position
Western powers have a long history of preaching democracy at home and supporting tyrants and thugs abroad, and one could argue that France is engaging in this usual absent-minded hypocrisy. However, since the early 1990s, successive regimes in France have embarked on a crusade against expressions of Muslimness.
Many analysts assume that the Islamophobia of Macron is only an election ploy. However, this view neglects how Islamophobia does not retreat to the pre-election levels after each election campaign but settles, and the subsequent campaign extends it further.
As a result of this constant ratcheting, Islamophobia has spread from being the preserve of right-wing parties to becoming the default position of large sections of the French state and society across the political spectrum.
Islamophobia is being mainstreamed across the world
The effect of this normalization of Islamophobia ranges from police harassment and violence against Muslims, discrimination in employment opportunities, the use of numerous administrative processes to ban Muslim civil and human rights organizations, including, for example, the Collective Against Islamophobia in France, which recorded and reported on racism directed at Muslims. So not only has the French establishment promoted Islamophobic policies, but they have sought to silence those who combat Islamophobia and raise awareness of its consequences.
It would be a mistake to see the intensification of Islamophobia in France as being isolated episodes. Islamophobia is being mainstreamed across the world. Ultra-nationalist regimes throughout the world are increasingly expressing their fears and desires through the language of Islamophobia. This mainstreaming means increasing convergence in the justifications that Islamophobes use to explain their discriminatory actions.
What is especially dangerous about the mainstreaming of Islamophobia in France is not only that it directly threatens the livelihoods of six million Muslims, but it has been fostered for decades in a well-known, established liberal democracy. Thus, showing that Islamophobia is not only associated with military dictatorships, totalitarian regimes, settler-colonies, or dynastic despots. Liberalism and democracy have been complicit with colonialism, racism and there is no reason that they cannot be complicit with Islamophobia.
Islamophobic policies as a form of racism
Islamophobia is not about hate against Muslims or disputes about matters of faith. It is a type of racism that targets behaviors and groups that are perceived to exhibit Muslimness. Islamophobia is not just about attacks on Muslims on the street by individuals; it is also about discrimination by institutions. Racism is not just beliefs that people carry in their heads; rather, it is a system of rule. What is crucial to it is not the existence of "races" but the process of racialization.
That is a process that converts social groupings into identifiable biological groups. For example, when Muslims go through airports, there is an entire system of surveillance that identifies them according to how they dress, how they appear, the countries they come from or go to, what they carry in their hand luggage, how they speak. The system of surveillance identifies Muslims not based on devotional status or individual intentions and characteristics but on whether they bear the marks of Muslimness.
Muslimness, however, is not simply a matter of hijabs, beards, and halal food; it is increasingly seen as an identity that is connected across the globe rather than contained in the nation-state. The figure of the Muslim is presented as being anti-national, she is made to be a sign of dual loyalty, irredeemably alien, a sign that the nation is not whole.
A colonial nostalgia
Secularization means undoing Muslimness. Secularization is not the separation of the "church" from the state; in relation to Muslims, it means annexation by the state of Islamic institutions and their means their compulsory nationalization. Attempts to nationalize Muslims and cut them off from any sense of ummah-like solidarity is a feature of Islamophobic regimes across the world.
It is not the belief in secularism that drives the French regime but colonial nostalgia. Paris cannot come to terms with the decline of its place on the world stage and sees in the stubborn persistence of Muslimness an affront to its sense of an imagined self. The advance of Islamophobia in France as elsewhere in the world heralds the replacement of the promise of inclusive citizenship with apartheid of colonial rule.
If the Forum of Islam in France were about reconciling Muslimness with French identity, it would have a structure that represents Muslim voices rather than being complicit with the silencing of Muslims. It would not be a body of regime appointees. It would accept that Islamophobia is the problem in France, not Muslimness. It would accept that Islamophobia is a type of racism and needs to be resisted, not promoted. It would recognize the struggle against Islamophobia is not just a struggle for justice for Muslims or those who are perceived to be Muslims or allies of Muslims rather, it is a struggle to preserve and expand the hard-won freedoms for all.
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*The writer is the author of Recalling the Caliphate and Professor of Decolonial Thought and Rhetoric at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom.
**Opinions expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of the Anadolu Agency.
France will initiate legislative changes to provide extraterritorial jurisdiction to the country’s courts in matters of international crimes, paving the way to prosecute perpetrators of crimes against humanity committed during the war in Syria, the government said Wednesday.
Last week, the National Assembly -- the lower house of parliament -- adopted a bill authorizing international judicial cooperation between the French government and the United Nations mandated International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM) for Syria. The bill will be put before the Senate before the final approval of parliament.
More than 40 proceedings are underway before the French courts to prosecute the perpetrators of the most serious crimes committed in Syria.
“The co-operation with IIIM will allow France to fight against impunity for perpetrators of international crimes,” a joint statement from the Justice Ministry and Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs said Wednesday.
Established in 2016, the IIIM “collects and analyses information and evidence of international crimes committed in Syria to assist criminal proceedings in national, regional or international courts or tribunals that have or may in the future have jurisdiction over these crimes.”
“This agreement will notably allow the transmission of information from the French courts to this Mechanism (IIIM), which is not possible under the current state of the law,” the statement added.
-Lack of progress in Cesar investigation in France
The bill for judicial cooperation was initiated in the wake of a judgment delivered last November in the case of Abdulhamid C, a former Syrian intelligence official of President Bashar al-Assad’s security apparatus, that the Court of Cassation lacked extraterritorial jurisdiction to prosecute Syrians living in France for committing war crimes in their country. The court cited the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which allow prosecution of foreign nationals residing in France for crimes committed in their native country only if that state is a party to the Rome Statute.
The decision provoked outrage among human rights organizations, who appealed to French President Emmanuel Macron to urgently amend the country’s legal Code of Criminal Procedure and exercise the principle of “universal jurisdiction” in order to prosecute war criminals living in France.
The joint statement by the ministries said this decision is “subject to further review” and new legislative amendments will be initiated quickly following the next court decisions.
France opened an investigation of a “crime against humanity" against Abdulhamid C, who was living in the country illegally after fleeing Syria over his involvement in the Caesar Files on charges of torture in prison facilities in Syria. The state-sponsored torture came to light after a former Syrian military police employee, “Caesar,” who defected from the regime provided evidence of such torture in the form of thousands of gory photographs of half-naked, starved and burnt corpses in the prisons.
Germany has prosecuted two former Syrian military intelligence agents, Anwar R and Eyad A, also involved in the Cesar Files, on the principle of “universal justice.”/aa
As truck blockades in Canada spread to include three Canada-US border crossings, the White House said Wednesday the protests threaten the auto industry supply chain.
"We are watching this very carefully," White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said at a news briefing. "The blockade poses a risk to supply chains, for the auto industry."
Meanwhile, a nearly two-week truck blockade continues to paralyze the capital, Ottawa, which declared a state of emergency earlier this week.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said during an emergency debate of the House of Commons this week that the Ottawa protesters are "trying to blockade our economy, our democracy and our daily lives. It has to stop.”
"The people of Ottawa don't deserve to be harassed in their own neighborhoods."
Protesters are demanding that all mandated coronavirus vaccine measures be ended by the government.
In Toronto, Canada's largest city, with a population of about 2.8 million, police took action Wednesday to secure road entry points to Queen's Park, the provincial government headquarters in the downtown.
The Ambassador Bridge spans the Detroit River, linking Windsor, Ontario to Detroit and about CAN$400 million (US$316 million) in trade between the two countries passes daily. It is the main crossing for auto parts and agricultural products.
The blockade entered its third day Wednesday.
Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens said Wednesday that the police are not removing the 50-75 vehicles at the crossing because violence could break out.
“You have a number of people who are…part of the protest group who have openly stated…they feel such a passion for this particular cause that they are willing to die for it,” Dilkens said.
At Coutts, Alberta, protests in support of the Ottawa blockade began Jan. 30 and grew to strand cross-border truckers. Millions of dollars in trade is routed through the Coutts crossing. Police said Wednesday they are prepared to act but preferred that the demonstrators moved on their own.
Yet another blockade was created at Sarnia, near Windsor, where transport trucks were backed up while trying to cross into the US by the Blue Water Bridge.
Meanwhile in Ottawa, about 500 trucks continued to shut down the city and the protesters remain "volatile," said Ottawa Police Deputy Chief Steve Bell.
Police there had made 22 arrests and issued more than 1,300 tickets for idling, noise and open-fire violations./aa
Samsung unveiled three new smartphones for its Galaxy S22 lineup Wednesday and another three tablets in its Galaxy Tab S8 series.
The new smartphone lineup includes the standard S22 with a 6.1-inch screen, the S22+ that has a 6.6-inch display and the S22 Ultra with a 6.8-inch panel.
They will have a starting price of $800, $1,000 and $1,200, respectively, in the US.
Samsung said all models come with the company's fastest chip ever and have Wi-Fi 6 connectivity, while the latter two models support 5G networks.
All three phones will be available in four colors -- white, pink, black and green -- but the S22 Ultra will also be available in burgundy and equipped with an S Pen for note-taking and drawing.
Other colors for online exclusive orders will include graphite, cream, sky blue and violet for the S22 and S22+ and red for the S22 Ultra.
All are equipped with ultrasonic fingerprint and face recognition for biometric authentication, featuring aluminum frame, water and dust resistance and Corning Gorilla Glass Victus+.
The S22 and S22+ will have a 10 megapixel (MP) selfie camera on the front and a three-lens camera system on the back: a 12MP ultrawide camera, a 50MP wide-angle lens and a 10MP telephoto camera.
The S22 Ultra has a 108MP wide-angle lens and two 10MP telephoto cameras, in addition to a 40MP selfie camera.
While the S22 will be powered by a 3700 milliampere per hour (mAh) battery with 25 watts (W) of super-fast charging, the S22+ and S22 Ultra has 4500mAh and 5000mAh batteries, respectively, as they support 45W super-fast charging.
The S22 Ultra will support additional storage up to 1 terabyte, while the other two models support 256 gigabytes.
- Tablets
The South Korean tech firm Android tablets Galaxy Tab S8 has an 11-inch screen, while the S8+ has 12.4 inches of display and the S8 Ultra with 14.6 inches.
They will have 24% faster central processor and 52% faster graphics processing -- the fastest chip ever on a Galaxy tablet, according to Samsung. All models support 5G networks.
While the Galaxy Tab S8 will have a price tag of $700, it will be followed by S8+ at $900 and S8 Ultra at $1,100 in the US. They all have an on-screen fingerprint scanner.
All three come with the brand new S Pen, which magnetically snaps to the back of the tablet to charge and allow users to take memos, sketches and drawings, in addition to edit videos faster and more accurately in S Pen responsiveness.
Users will also be able to transfer huge photos and video files to their phones or personal computers with ease, according to Samsung.
The dual front camera in Tab S8 Ultra with ultra-wide and wide lenses provide a large field of view with optimal 4K video recording. The other two models have ultra wide front camera. All three models are equipped with 12MP cameras.
The S8 will be powered by a 8,000 mAh battery, S8+ and S8 Ultra have 10,090 mAh and 11,200 mAh batteries, respectively.
Coming with armor aluminum casing that guards the tablets against bumps and drops, Samsung said the new lineup is the company's thinnest and toughest tablets./agencies
Major indexes in the US stock market rallied to close with large gains Wednesday ahead of key consumer inflation data.
The Dow Jones added 305 points, or 0.86%, to close at 35,768.
The S&P 500 gained 65 points, or 1.45%, to end the day at 4,587.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq soared 295 points, or 2.08%, to finish at 14,490.
The VIX volatility index was down 6.4% to 20.07, as the fear index continues to find strong support at the key level of 20.
The dollar index fell 0.1% to 95.55 and the yield on 10-year US Treasury notes decreased 0.46% to 1.947%.
Precious metals were on the rise, with gold adding 0.4% to $1,833 per ounce and silver gaining 0.46% to $23.3.
Crude oil prices recovered from a two-day loss. Brent crude was trading at $91.78 per barrel with a 1.1% gain, while US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was at $90.03, up 0.75%.
US consumer prices in December were up 7% year-on-year, marking the highest annual increase in almost 40 years. The rise for January is expected to come in at 7.3%, according to estimates.
The consumer price index for January will be released before the market opens at 8.30 a.m. EDT Thursday./aa
Financial stability and privacy considerations are most significant to the design of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said Wednesday.
"Central banks are committed to minimizing the impact of CBDCs on financial intermediation and credit provision. This is very important for the wheels of the economy to run smoothly," she said at an event by the Atlantic Council in Washington, D.C.
Georgieva said the world is in the early days for CBDCs and it is not yet known how far and how fast they will go.
"What we know is that central banks are building capacity to harness new technologies—to be ready for what may lie ahead," she told.
Stressing that unbacked crypto assets are inherently volatile, Georgieva said even the better managed and regulated stablecoins may not be a match against a stable and well-designed CBDC.
"If CBDCs are designed prudently, they can potentially offer more resilience, more safety, greater availability, and lower costs than private forms of digital money," she said.
Georgieva noted that around 100 countries are exploring CBDCs at some level, as some central banks are researching and testing, a few of them have already been distributing to the public.
She, however, emphasized that there is no universal case for CBDCs because each economy is different.
"In some cases, a CBDC may be an important path to financial inclusion—for instance, where geography is an obstacle to physical banking. In others, a CBDC could provide an essential backup in the event that other payment instruments fail," she said.
"So, central banks should tailor plans to their specific circumstances and needs," she added./aa