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It is great fun decorating the house on Halloween, but in normal times such scary ornaments could lead to questions at dinner time and intrigued looks as a Bolivian miner found out after covering his house with sculptures of long-horned devils and other scary creatures, intended as a playful nod to the country's colonial past but which has instead shocked some neighbors who fear a link to occult rituals.
The adobe-brick house in the high-altitude city of El Alto belongs to David Choque, who hired an artist to create the skeletal devils from cement and wood and installed them on his roof, doors and walls.
There is an imprint of a black skull on Choque's front door and giant teeth around one window frame, below which an intricately carved dragon lurks.
Choque told Reuters he hoped the spooky house could spur local tourism.
"Close-minded people will think it's something supernatural, but people need to open their minds and see it as a tourist attraction, something that can improve the area," said Choque, who comes from a mining family.
"It'll bring good things, not evil."
Choque added that the sculptures are an allusion to life in Bolivian mines centuries ago during Spanish colonial rule when local indigenous men were frightened and forced into digging for silver.
The colonial masters would show miners images of devils and warn them they would be abducted by the spirits if they refused to work.
Over three centuries of Spanish domination, Bolivia, like Mexico, was a major source of silver that was shipped to Asia in exchange for goods like porcelain and silk, in one of the world's first major commodity trades.
Some neighbors see the devils on Choque's house, many with their mouths bared in grotesque grins, as signals to Satanic worshippers, and Choque laments he is battling baseless rumors.
One resident, Maria Laurel, said she has heard talk of naked rituals in the house. "The neighbors here are scared," she said as she leaned against her car. "The truth is it frightens me."
Choque denied any such rituals, and noted that similar depictions of devils appear on altars at mine entrances where workers often leave offerings including coca leaves and alcohol, believing this will protect them in the mines./DS
Sleep is such an important part of life that it even has its own special day. World Sleep Day is an annual event that celebrates the benefits of good and healthy sleep and draws attention to the burden of sleep problems. Like everything else, sleep has also been affected due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"COVID did a big number on our human experience," said Dr. Randall Wright, a neurologist who specializes in sleep disorders at Houston Methodist Hospital. "Our sleep patterns changed."
Wright told Anadolu Agency (AA) that during lockdowns and quarantines, especially in the early stages of the pandemic, people’s routines and habits went out the window because the majority of the world stayed at home, living with stress and anxiety.
"Insomnia was really one of the biggest, the highest number of cases that I saw over the pandemic year," he said. "Anxiety and stress can ... lead to insomnia, it’s actually one of the most common causes of insomnia.”
And between adults working from their living rooms and kitchens and children going to virtual school from their bedrooms and basements, Wright said sleep cycles were severely disrupted.
"We binge-watched a lot of movies over the pandemic, and so we were staying up later, and we weren’t respecting the boundaries because I haven’t had to wake up for traffic ... so I can just go ahead and stay up later and wake up later.”
World Sleep Day
Organizers are using the occasion to raise awareness about the importance of sleep during the pandemic.
This year’s theme is "Quality Sleep, Sound Mind, Happy World."
Wright said this is the perfect opportunity to emphasize getting a good night’s sleep, citing the alarming statistic: "30 to 35% of the American adult population suffer from chronic insomnia.”
That means one-third of all adults in the United States get less than 5-1/2 hours of sleep every night, due to either not being able to fall asleep, waking up in the middle of the night or not being able to fall back asleep once they wake up.
"Sleep really is an important part of our lives,” he said. "If we don’t sleep, we feel really, really bad.”
Pandemic or no pandemic, the world does not stop.
"We staff the mission control center 24/7,” said Mike Lammers, flight director at NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Lammers told AA that NASA’s work is never done, whether it is the crew on the ground at mission control or astronauts in space manning multibillion-dollar projects like the International Space Station.
He said sleep is a must.
"There is a lot of detail work, attention to detail, and mental acuity is required for both astronauts and flight controllers in running through procedures and potentially responding to malfunctions on the spacecraft,” said Lammers
"Astronauts are required to sleep at least eight-and-a-half-hours each day,” added Paul Spana from Space Center Houston.
Spana points out that sleep is crucial for astronauts, who have an incredible amount of responsibility on their shoulders to not make any mistakes.
"In space, sleep is even more important because of the risks involved in their job,” he said. "They need to have a clear mind in order to focus on making lots of critical decisions while on a mission.”
Wright agreed, emphasizing that if we do not get enough sleep, "we can’t focus, and we can't concentrate, and we can’t think straight, we can’t perform.”
But he stressed that sleep alone will not make someone healthy.
He said the proper amount of sleep must work hand-in-hand with eating healthy, getting enough exercise and taking care of one’s mental health by reducing stress and anxiety.
"You’re going to sleep well if the other aspects of your life are in order,” said Wright.
A perfect example of the cocktail for success is Major League Baseball player, Randal Grichuk, who plays center fielder for the Toronto Blue Jays.
"I would say the best sleep schedule to get the best rest for my body would be going to bed early and getting 8-plus hours of sleep,” Grichuk told AA via text message.
Grichuk is one of the world’s top professional athletes.
He tries to maintain the perfect balance of sleep, nutrition, exercise and living a stress-free life with his family.
"In the offseason, my wife and I make sure we get a good night’s rest and are well recovered for offseason training,” he said. "I also drink Skinny Girl Cherry Juice every night to help fall asleep quicker and recover better.”
Grichuk stressed the importance of getting a proper regimen of sleep.
"It 100-percent affects your game,” he said. "Recovery is the most important thing in-season, I would say. If you are well rested and recovered, your body will be physically ready to play at your top level each and every day.”
And with a sport like professional baseball, where every athlete is at the top of his game, Grichuk said sleep can make the difference between success and failure on the field.
"If athletes don’t get a good night’s rest or not enough hours of sleep, we can tell with our energy level and just the way our bodies feel sluggish.”
So, how much sleep should you get every day?
On average, Wright said those aged 10 to 18 should get at least eight hours per day. If you’re 20 to 30 years old, seven hours is a good number and for those 30 and older, you should get at least six hours every day.
"Sleep is just part of the human experience we have to have,” said Wright.
"If we didn’t sleep, we wouldn’t survive.”/DS
The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said Friday that the world is not prepared for a new pandemic that could follow the coronavirus and reiterated his view that the narrative that the crisis is over is false.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus remarks were made in an address to the three-day Munich Security Conference in Berlin.
"We have been saying the world has not been prepared for a long time," said Tedros. "And it was caught by surprise due to this pandemic. I don't see that the world is prepared. And I worry because the investment we expect is not happening."
Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, who was also at the conference, said he does not think the world can reach the goal of 70% vaccination in 2022.
“It’s too late, too late," said Gates. "There are a lot of diseases out there,” he said. “We live in a very inequitable world."
"I think a disease like this reminds people how inequitable global health is every single day," he added.
Tedros addressed an often-asked question about when the pandemic will end.
"So when will it end? Is it ending now? These are some of the major questions being asked.
"Indeed, high vaccine coverage in some countries, combined with a lower severity of omicron, is driving a dangerous narrative that the pandemic is over. But it's not," he said.
He said the pandemic could not end when 70,000 people die from a preventable and treatable disease in one week.
"Not when 83% of the population of Africa is yet to receive a single dose of vaccine," said Tedros.
The WHO chief said it could not happen when health systems continue to strain and crack under the caseload.
Tedros said that COVID-19 is a highly transmissible virus, circulating almost unchecked, with too little surveillance to track its evolution.
"In fact, conditions are ideal for more transmissible, more dangerous variants to emerge," he said.
He said that the pandemic could end as a global health emergency this year.
"We have the tools; we have the know-how. In particular, we're calling on all countries to feel the urgent financing gap of $16 billion for the ACT accelerator to make vaccines, tests, treatments, and PPE (personal protective equipment) available everywhere," said Tedros., referring to the global collaboration to ensure equitable access to coronavirus tests, treatments and vaccines.
He said that compared to the costs of another year of economic turmoil, $16 billion is "frankly peanuts."/aa
Acar transport ship with a haul of thousands of Porsches, Bentleys, Audis and other brands from the Volkswagen Group caught fire in the mid-Atlantic and went adrift off the Azores Islands, with the Portuguese Navy rescuing the vessel's 22 crew members.
Shipping in the area was warned that the 200-meter-long (650-feet-long) Felicity Ace was adrift near Portugal’s Azores Islands after the crew was taken off on Wednesday, Portuguese navy spokesperson Cmdr. Jose Sousa Luis said.
The Felicity Ace can carry more than 17,000 metric tons (18,700 tons) of cargo. Typically, car transport ships fit thousands of vehicles on multiple decks in their hold, with the Felicity Ace having a capacity to carry more than 4,000 vehicles.
Volkswagen Group said in a brief statement the Felicity Ace was transporting to the U.S. vehicles that the German automaker produced. The company declined to comment on what consequences the incident might have for U.S. customers or the VW Group.
The Panamanian-flagged ship’s operator, Japan’s Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, said in an email to The Associated Press (AP) it could not provide information about the cargo.
Automotive and navigation websites reported that the vessel was carrying 1,100 Porsche and 200 Bentley luxury vehicles.
A Portuguese navy ship sailed to the vehicle transporter, which was sailing from Emden in Germany to the port of Davisville in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, according to online vessel trackers. A navy statement said the fire was still burning and showed a photograph of large clouds of white smoke billowing out.
The navy ship was to check whether the cargo vessel was in danger of sinking or causing pollution, Sousa Luis told AP.
The ship's owner is seeking an ocean-going tug, but the Felicity Ace is unlikely to be towed to a port in Portugal’s Azores Islands because of its size, Sousa Luis said.
The crew were taken by helicopter on Wednesday to Faial Island on the archipelago, about 170 kilometers (100 miles) away, and are staying at a hotel there. None of them was hurt.
The Russian and Filipino crew was initially evacuated to the oil tanker Resilient Warrior, which was diverted to help in the rescue operation, before being flown by military helicopter to Faial, RTP reported.
The Felicity Ace reported a fire in the hold when it was 90 nautical miles southwest of Faial. The blaze "continued to spread" during Thursday, the port captain at Horta a Faial, Joao Manuel Mendes Cabecas, told public channel RTP.
He added that tugs were expected to arrive on Monday from Gibraltar to tow away the giant ship./agencies
Among the 288 trapped passengers onboard an Italian-flagged ferry that caught fire Friday en route to Italy were 24 Turkish nationals as per media reports. No casualties have been reported though Ihlas News Agency (IHA) reported that a Turkish national is missing.
Hayrullah Çetin, a Turkish truck driver, was among the rescued passengers. Çetin told the Hürriyet newspaper that he was among the last passengers to board the ferry and heard the evacuation call around two hours after their voyage began. “We were directed to an evacuation area and the navy police came. After that we are taken to lifeboats and then, to Corfu island,” he said. Çetin said he lost everything including his passport.
Fahri Özgen, another Turkish passenger, said he was going to Italy on a business trip by car. He said there were 22 truck drivers from Turkey aboard the ferry. “I saw people jumping into sea,” he recounted the moments of fire.
Cevdet Bilen, Turkish captain of a vessel helping the evacuation efforts, said they were searching for people presumed to be missing in the area. “We don’t know if they are aboard the ship or jumped into sea,” he said. Bilen said they were told that all 22 Turkish truck drivers were evacuated to Corfu island./DS
Amajor strike paralyzed most of Paris's metro network and city train grid on Friday, disrupting the daily commutes of millions of people, as workers demand greater pay hikes than offered by the management.
The French capital's RATP public transport company said six subway lines were closed, down from eight reported earlier on Friday, with the remaining lines operating only partially.
The city's main RER north-to-south and east-to-west lines were also heavily hit.
Just two lines, the 1 and 14, which are both self-driving, without a human conductor aboard, were unaffected by the strikes, RATP said on its website.
"We call on businesses to make maximum use of home office working," Transport Minister Jean-Baptiste Djeebbari said on Twitter.
RATP workers have said the walkouts, which come as unions and management head into annual wage talks, were a result of insufficient pay increases offered by the state-owned company.
RATP had said it was prepared to hike wages by 2.7% in 2022, a move unions described this month as a "provocation."
French national annual inflation was last reported at 3.3% in January.
In recent years, Paris's public transport system, one of the world's busiest, has been thrown into chaos several times.
Parisians remember above all the monthlong walkouts in the fall of 2019 when public transport and railway workers protested against plans for pension reform by President Emmanuel Macron.
Macron later called off the reform, citing the changed situation because of the COVID-19 pandemic./DS
Nationwide operations were launched by Turkish police on Friday to capture 114 suspects accused of having links to the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ).
Suspects are sought as part of two investigations by the Chief Prosecutor’s Office in the capital Ankara. They were identified as “secret imams” for the terrorist group. In FETÖ jargon, secret imams are handlers for the group's infiltrators in several critical places. Those sought in the Ankara-based probes were “imams” for infiltrators in the Gendarmerie General Command and provincial, district governorates. National Intelligence Organization (MIT) cooperated with police to identify the suspects.
Ninety-nine suspects among the wanted were allegedly handlers for FETÖ’s infiltrators, mostly military officers, in the gendarmerie forces. Some 73 among them were civil servants who were earlier dismissed from their jobs on suspicion of FETÖ links while the rest were “private sector employees” according to the investigators. Fifteen other “secret imams” are wanted in a separate investigation on FETÖ infiltrators in governorates. Seven among them were civil servants who were already investigated for possible links to the terrorist group.
Several district governors have been suspended from their duties and arrested on charges of FETÖ membership since the investigation began over the July 15, 2016 coup attempt by the terrorist group’s military infiltrators.
Operations are underway in 45 provinces to capture the suspects.
Police in Ankara announced Thursday that they detained 4,724 suspected members of FETÖ last year.
While 246 out of 4,724 detained FETÖ suspects were remanded by judges, a total of 1,244 detained suspects accused of terrorism benefited from the “effective remorse” law, it said. The law grants lenient sentences and sometimes, release, for terrorist suspects who collaborate with authorities. Thousands of FETÖ members were identified in the past few years thanks to information by collaborators.
As a result of the statements of suspects who benefited from effective remorse, Ankara police identified 19,856 other FETÖ members in 2021.
Moreover, with the information received from those who benefited from remorse law, Turkish police in the capital identified a total of 4,780 unindicted FETÖ members, according to the police statement./agencies
Former police officer Kim Potter was sentenced Friday to two years in prison for fatally shooting Daunte Wright in the state of Minnesota.
Potter broke down in tears addressing Wright’s family before the judge handed down her sentence.
“I am so sorry that I brought the death of your son,” she said, directly addressing Wright’s mother via a court webcam. “Katie, I understand a mother’s love, and I am sorry I broke your heart. My heart is broken for all of you.”
Potter was convicted in December of first- and second-degree manslaughter in the April 11, 2021 shooting in a suburb of Minneapolis.
She claimed during her trial that she confused her handgun for her taser when she pulled the trigger.
Wright’s family believes the two-year sentence was too lenient.
“Kim Potter murdered my son,” Katie Wright, said at a news conference. “Today, the justice system murdered him all over again.”
“We’re very disappointed in the outcome,” she said. “Yes, we got a conviction … but again, this isn’t okay.”
Potter asked the Wright family for mercy before her sentencing.
“And I do pray that one day you can find forgiveness, only because hatred is so destructive to all of us,” she said.
Wright said that is not going to happen.
“And I’ll never be able to forgive you for what you’ve stolen from us,” she said./aa
A comprehensive investigation into the deaths of two migrants from the Ivory Coast and Cameroon as they sought asylum in Europe revealed on Thursday that Greek coastguards were to blame.
Greek security authorities were interviewed during the investigation, conducted by British daily The Guardian and German news website Der Spiegel, as well as the Dutch Lighthouse Reports and French Mediapart online journals. It also evaluated health reports, photographs, videos, and satellite images.
Citing eyewitnesses, the report said Greek border guards took Sidy Keita, an Ivory Coast national, and Didier Martial Kouamou Nana, a Cameroon national, from the Samos Island on Sept. 15, 2021 before pushing them into the sea on a raft, ultimately leading to them drowning.
The Lighthouse Reports said Greece's border policy in the Aegean was "based on a regime of detaining newly arrived asylum seekers on the Aegean islands and forcing them onto life rafts with no engines, then setting them adrift" towards Turkiye.
After reconstructing the final days of Keita and Nana via "verified witness accounts," the Lighthouse Reports "found evidence that suggests the men drowned because of a new tactic by the Greek coastguard of throwing small groups of asylum seekers overboard" and making them swim to Turkiye.
Seven witnesses out of 36 migrants who were interviewed as part of the investigation said they clearly remembered the two men reaching the Greek island.
According to The Guardian's report, lawyers working for the Human Rights Legal Project (HRLP) received "a text from an unknown number informing them of the dinghy's arrival, with photos taken from the land of a Greek coastguard vessel" spotted in the area of Samos.
"The HRLP emailed local police, the UN refugee agency UNHCR, a member of the European Commission based on the island and the Reception and Identification service for asylum seekers on Samos, informing them of the arrival," added The Guardian's report.
Citing the statement by the sole eyewitness Ibrahim -- who used an alias -- Keita, Nana, and Ibrahim "were driven to a port, put on a speedboat, beaten and thrown into the sea without a life jacket."
Ibrahim said Keita and Nana both drowned but he was able to swim to the shore "thanks to his time in the Cameroonian navy."
"Nana's body was later found floating in the shallows not far from the mainland by the Turkish coast guard," added the investigative report.
Ibrahim further identified the boat "as a Rafnar, a vessel used by the coastguard on Samos."
Also including the comments of two Greek officials with their direct knowledge of the coastguard operations, the report said they "confirmed that what Ibrahim described had happened before to asylum seekers." The whistleblowers had spoken on condition of anonymity, it added.
"The rationale, the sources said, is to avoid using life rafts when possible because they are expensive and any public tender for their replacement might raise questions about their use," it said.
Thrown into the boat as if 'garbage'
The Guardian's report also included a young single mother's statement, saying that "she was robbed of her money and her baby was thrown into the life raft 'as if you were throwing a garbage can'."
Pascaline, who also used an alias, said: "We have to denounce this because it's inhuman. They hit people in front of us, they traumatized the children."
EU member Greece has long been criticized by human rights groups for violently detaining irregular migrants and forcibly returning them to Turkiye, in violation of its human rights obligations under EU and international law.
Ankara has repeatedly urged Greece to stop illegal pushbacks, but Athens has denied engaging in the practice.
Evidence from video footage, eyewitness accounts, and international media has also implicated the EU agency Frontex in the illegal and abusive pushbacks.
According to The Guardian and Dutch website De Correspondent, Frontex is no mere spectator to Greek pushbacks, but actively helps these illegal activities.
In 2020, it was estimated that over the preceding three years, more than 70,000 asylum seekers were pushed back to Turkiye by Greece.
But, the EU has been unwilling to crack down on the illegal and abusive practice.
The European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE), a European network of 103 non-governmental organizations in 39 European countries, told Anadolu Agency there was an unwillingness of EU institutions to act because the general strategy was based on preventing the arrival of people seeking protection, regardless of the costs and consequences./aa
Azerbaijan has sufficient natural gas reserves and can supply more natural gas to Europe, the country's deputy energy minister told Anadolu Agency.
"But two people dance a tango. In natural gas, unlike petroleum, the processing of the fields cannot be started without a buyer,” said Elnur Soltanov. “In case of a large volume gas supply increase, buyers should be determined and agreements should be signed.”
On the energy crisis in the world and Europe's greater natural gas demand from Azerbaijan, Soltanov said it is very difficult to balance demand and supply without a strategic approach to oil and natural gas.
He went on to say that it takes six to seven years to start the operation of a natural gas field and significant investments are required for the maintenance of existing deposits.
Soltanov underlined that steps to be taken require strategic calculations and the coronavirus pandemic astonished calculations and created uncertainty.
Noting that serious steps have been taken in the direction of green energy in the world and "even though natural gas is the cleanest fossil fuel," Soltanov said there are hesitations in the use of such fuels due to global warming.
The hesitations create difficulties for banks to provide loans, provide certain concessions to strategic projects and process fossil deposits, thus, work becomes more expensive, he added.
Energy crisis in the world
Emphasizing that cold weather in Europe is below seasonal normals and the tensions between Russia and Ukraine are among the reasons for the world’s energy crisis, Soltanov said the situation was felt more in Europe and that there was a serious increase in natural gas prices.
He said officials who attended the 8th Advisory Board Meeting of the Southern Gas Corridor in Baku on Feb. 4 brought the crisis to the agenda and Azerbaijan's contributions to overcoming the crisis came to the fore.
Regarding the main natural gas reserves of Azerbaijan, Soltanov highlighted that the Absheron deposit has "enough reserves," while the Shafak Asiman, Umit and Babek basins are "large enough," adding that the third phase of the Shah Deniz deposit can be further developed.
"There is a discussion on the transfer of Azerbaijani oil to the western Balkans via TAP (Trans Adriatic Pipeline). European authorities also brought this up. Azerbaijan can do this, but these things should be mutual and based on signed agreements," he said.
TAP is an essential part of the Southern Gas Corridor, offering a direct and cost-effective transportation route to southeast European countries and beyond.
It transports natural gas from the Caspian basin to Europe, connecting the Trans Anatolian Pipeline (TANAP) at the Greek-Turkish border, crossing Northern Greece, Albania and the Adriatic Sea before coming ashore in southern Italy to connect to the Italian natural gas network.
"Azerbaijan's potential is high enough. Within the framework of serious dialogue and responsibility sharing, we can meet the energy needs of our European partners at a higher level by developing existing pipelines," Soltanov said./aa