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More than 2,000 irregular migrants were held across Turkey on Friday, the Interior Ministry said on Saturday.
During operations against irregular migration across the country, a total of 2,028 irregular migrants and 127 suspects accused of human smuggling, including 72 foreign nationals, were nabbed, a ministry statement said.
Thousands of places were searched by over 36,000 personnel as well as more than 600 sniffer dogs.
Six of the detained suspects are affiliated with a terrorist organization, the ministry added.
Turkey has been a key transit point for asylum seekers and irregular migrants who want to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution.
Turkey, which already hosts four million refugees, more than any country in the world, is taking new security measures along its borders to prevent a fresh influx of migrants./YS
Marking the National Day of Resistance and Social Solidarity of Western Thrace, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said on Twitter that this day was a "turning point" in the struggle to secure their rights, as well as recognition of their identity as Turks.
It pledged to always stand with the Turks of Western Thrace, who it said "work devotedly for the exercise of these rights, especially the Elected Muftis."
- Events of Jan. 29 in Western Thrace
In response to a decision by the Greek judiciary to close associations with the word Turk in their names, on the grounds that "there are no Turks in Greece," in 1988, Turks in Western Thrace held a mass march on Jan. 29, 1988.
On the second year of these protests, some fanatical nationalist Greeks launched mass attacks against Turks in Komotini and Xanthi.
The Turkish minority of Western Thrace holds commemoration events every year on this day as part of the National Day of Resistance and Solidarity./YS
The YPG/PKK terror group kidnapped and recruited another 15-year-old boy in the city of Al-Hasakah, northeastern Syria.
The terror group, which uses the label SDF, continues to use children as fighters, despite signing a deal with the UN on ending the recruitment of children.
On Jan. 26, YPG/PKK terrorists kidnapped Muhammed Azad Hasan, who was born in 2007 in Al-Hasakah, to recruit him in its “child fighter” squad, according to local sources.
The family of the boy has called for his release on social media.
The terror group kidnapped at least 19 children between Oct. 1 and Dec. 15 last year, according to a Syrian Human Rights Network (SNHR) report published on Dec. 16.
The terror group's recruitment and exploitation of children in the conflict-hit country was also reflected in UN reports.
On Jan. 16, 2020, the UN Human Rights Council shared findings that YPG/PKK terrorists are using children as fighters in Syria.
The YPG is the Syrian branch of the PKK, a designated terror group in the US, EU, and Turkiye. US support for the YPG-led SDF has significantly strained relations with Ankara.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkiye, the PKK has been responsible for the deaths of at least 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./YS
Azerbaijan is ready to supply Europe with some emergency gas, said Elin Suleymanov, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the UK, TurkicWorld reports.
“If there is an urgent need as we saw in Turkey, some volumes of course would be made available,” Suleymanov said in an interview in London.
Azerbaijan can produce more gas and expand its Southern Gas Corridor. It can also channel flows from Turkmenistan as the two nations are set to develop Dostlug field in the Caspian Sea, the ambassador said.
“We don’t look at energy security and potential expansion and increase in volumes through a short term crisis, you cannot succeed with short-term mandates. It’s long-term planning, it is a process, it’s not like someone shows up and says ‘Give me more gas’,” he added.
The Southern Gas Corridor, which is comprised of Shah Deniz 2, the South Caucasus Pipeline Expansion, the Trans Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP), and the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) became fully operational on December 31, 2020.
A total of 8.1 billion standard cubic meters of gas was transported via TAP from December 31, 2020 to December 31, 2021. TAP supplied 6.8 billion cubic meters to Italy and 1.2 billion cubic meters to Greece and Bulgaria./aa
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has warned of an increasing drop-out of school for Lebanese children amid the country’s deep economic crisis.
"Lebanon’s crisis is increasingly forcing young people to drop out of learning and engage in ill-paid, irregular and informal work just to survive and help feed their families," UNICEF said in a report released in Beirut.
The report said more than 4 in 10 youth in Lebanon reduced spending on education to buy basic food, medicine and other essential items, and 3 in 10 stopped their education altogether.
According to the report, enrolment in educational institutions dropped from 60% in 2020-2021 to 43% in the current academic year.
“The crisis is depriving adolescents and youth of the stability that is so important at their age. It should be a time for them to focus on their learning, their dreams, their future,” UNICEF's representative in Lebanon Ettie Higgins said.
In March 2021, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) said 74% of the Lebanese people living in Lebanon are suffering from poverty.
The Lebanese pound has lost 90% of its value since October 2019, eroding people’s ability to access basic goods, including food, water, healthcare, and education, while fuel shortages have caused widespread electricity blackouts./YS
The French region of Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes suspended subsidies for a street-art festival in Grenoble because of a mural of a woman wearing a hijab.
The region said in a statement that the mural was "provocative" and "unacceptable."
It argued that it only benefits extremists, fueling violence and hatred and said subsidies planned for the "Street art fest Grenoble Alpes" was canceled.
Media reports said the mural was drawn eight months ago and a decision was made to cancel the subsidy although the mural had nothing to do with the festival.
Festival director Jerome Catz said the reason for the cancelation of €10,000 ($11,149) in financial support for the festival is political and it happened before the presidential election that will be held in April.
Catz said that the artist who drew the mural wanted to draw attention to the fact that some people are discriminated against because of their religion.
After the suspension, it was learned that the mural was defaced with black paint.
On the right side of the mural where there was a yellow star with "Muslim" written on the woman’s chest, is now black./aa
A man in the US state of Tennessee was shot and killed by nine police officers after a tense standoff on a Nashville highway.
The Metropolitan Nashville Police Department released a video statement on Friday and said a Tennessee Highway Patrol trooper was driving on Interstate 65 when he noticed Landon Eastep, 37, sitting on a guardrail on Thursday.
The trooper stopped to give Eastep a ride but reported Eastep pulled out a box cutter.
An off-duty Mt. Juliet police officer arrived and began talking to Eastep, waiting for backup.
A five-minute video of the standoff was released from MNPD Officer James Kidd’s body camera detailing the Mt. Juliet officer’s interaction with Eastep.
“Just drop it brother,” he said. “Landon, come on, brother, let me help you out, you will not end up in jail.”
Right after the exchange, bodycam footage shows two officers raising their guns.
The Mt. Juliet officer continued to talk for two and a half minutes, encouraging Eastep to drop the box cutter from his left hand and take his right hand out of his pocket.
''Look, I don’t have a damn vest on, and I still stopped here on the Interstate because I want you to go home today, I don’t want you to end up dead on the side of the interstate … just drop the knife, get your hand out of your pocket. If that’s a gun what you got in there, don’t worry about it, we’ll figure it out.”
Less than 30 seconds later, the two had one last exchange.
“Landon, please, brother, don’t do it, don’t do it.”
At that moment, Eastep appears to pull something from his pocket and points it at police.
The Mt. Juliet officer shouts: “No! No! No!” And all officers immediately fire at Eastep, as he drops to the ground.
The gunfire lasts about 5 seconds, until an officer yells, “Cease fire!”
“The metal cylindrical item Eastep pulled from his pocket was not a firearm,” said police spokesman Don Aaron. “Nine law enforcement personnel fired their weapons after Eastep took a stance, as if he had a firearm.”
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is investigating the fatal shooting, which involved six MNPD officers, two Tennessee state troopers and the Mt. Juliet officer.
The six MNPD officers have been placed on administrative leave./aa
One person was killed in a fire that destroyed more than 50 maize mills and 100 houses Friday on the outskirts of the capital, Kampala.
“Police are investigating a fire outbreak that took place today afternoon in Kisenyi. The police directorate of fire prevention and rescue services responded and managed to extinguish the fire,” police spokesperson Luke Owoyesigire said in a statement.
He said Godfrey Mukasa, 50, was found dead during a search of the area.
”It has been established that Mukasa was seated with his friends when the fire started but he was unable to flee because he had disabilities,” he added.
The fire took time for it to be contained because the area is in a congested slum and not easy to reach by firefighters.
More than 1,000 people have lost their livelihood because the area where the fire burned is where they were earning a living./aa
The UN human rights chief on Friday urged the international community to step up pressure on Myanmar’s military junta to stop its campaign of violence against the public and to insist on the prompt restoration of civilian rule.
“One year after the military seized power, the people of Myanmar – who have paid a high cost in both lives and freedoms lost – continue to advocate relentlessly for their democracy,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet in a press statement.
She said the actions taken by the UN Security Council and by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have been insufficient to convince Myanmar’s military to cease its violence and facilitate humanitarian access and aid deliveries.
“It is time for an urgent, renewed effort to restore human rights and democracy in Myanmar and ensure that perpetrators of systemic human rights violations and abuses are held to account,” said Bachelet, urging governments and businesses to listen to her plea.
Private companies’ withdrawal
Bachelet did welcome some private corporations’ decisions to withdraw on human rights grounds, calling it a “powerful tool to apply pressure on the financing of the military’s operations against civilians.”
She met with human rights defenders this week, who are pleading with the international community not to abandon them and instead to take strong measures to ensure their rights are protected and the military is held accountable, she added.
Bachelet said she has heard chilling accounts of journalists being tortured, factory workers being intimidated, silenced, and exploited, and ethnic and religious minorities being persecuted more aggressively.
Oppression of Rohingya Muslims
She said the minorities include the Muslim Rohingya, who have long been subjected to oppression and state violence, citing arbitrary arrests, detentions, and sham trials of political opponents.
“And yet, courageous human rights defenders and trade unionists continue to protest, to advocate, to document and accumulate the mounting evidence of violations,” she said.
The brutal effort by security forces to crush dissent has led to the killing of at least 1,500 people by the military since the Feb. 1, 2021 coup, she said, adding that this figure does not include thousands more deaths from armed conflict and violence that have intensified across the country.
The UN Human Rights Office said it has documented gross human rights violations on a daily basis, the vast majority of which are committed by security forces.
At least 11,787 people have been arbitrarily detained for voicing their opposition to the military in peaceful protests or through online activities, with 8,792 still in custody.
At least 290 people have died in detention, many of whom were most likely tortured.
Bachelet said armed clashes have increased in frequency and intensity, with every part of the country experiencing some level of violence.
“The military has been punishing local communities for their assumed support of armed elements,” Bachelet explained.
The rights office has documented village burnings, including places of worship and medical clinics, mass arrests, summary executions, and torture.
She asserted that the crisis has been exacerbated by a combination of factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic and the failure of banking, transportation, education, and other sectors, leaving the economy on the brink of collapse.
“There are projections that nearly half of the population of 54 million may be driven into poverty this year,” said the UN rights chief./aa
Europe's options for alternative gas supplies to Russian resources should it decrease exports to the bloc are with LNG increases from the US, Qatar and Australia and storage drawdowns, experts told Anadolu Agency on Friday.
Tensions in Ukraine have been on the rise for months after Russia amassed tens of thousands of troops near Ukraine's border, a build-up the West says is in preparation for war. NATO and the EU have warned the Kremlin of severe economic consequences if it invades its neighbor.
The escalation in tension in the region immediately fueled worries over a new energy crisis in the EU, with the continent's supply security put at risk and the probability raised of a halt in Russian natural gas imports.
Kadri Simson, the European Union commissioner for energy, said last week that the bloc is actively discussing options with partners over an increase in gas supplies to the EU. Simson is scheduled to attend meetings in Azerbaijan and Washington next month.
US officials also announced on Tuesday that the US administration is in discussions with major natural gas producers in response to a potential cut by Russia due to sanctions that will take effect in the event of an invasion of Ukraine.
- 'US, Qatar, and Australia: first places to look for additional supply'
According to Samantha Gross, director of the energy security and climate initiative at Brookings Institution, additional gas supply would need to come in the form of LNG.
'The US, Qatar, and Australia are the world’s three leading LNG producers and the first place I would look for additional supply. The Biden administration is being cagey about who they are talking to, but these are the most likely candidates,' she said.
The US has been already been sending significant LNG volumes to Europe as a result of high prices there.
'There might be room for more, but the fact that the US has recently become the world’s leading LNG exporter shows how hard the industry is working in response to high prices. I doubt there is a lot more capacity there, although maybe some LNG could be diverted from other customers,' Gross explained.
Gross said that only some redirecting of supplies could take place given that suppliers have contractual obligations to other customers, especially in Asia, but warned that it would not be enough to replace all Russian pipeline supply, should the taps be completely turned off in response to sanctions.
'If Russia decreases or eliminates pipeline exports to Europe, that is a significant loss to global gas supply. Unlike oil, which is broadly fungible and easy to move around, gas travels through dedicated pipelines or through LNG infrastructure, which doesn’t exist everywhere. Demand for LNG would increase immediately, affecting all LNG customers. Much LNG is supplied through long-term contracts, but these would come under intense pressure everywhere,' Gross added.
- 'Any replacement will come from storage and LNG flow diversion'
Marco Giuli, an associate policy analyst at the European Policy Centre (EPC), said options for the EU to replace Russian gas supplies, if the flow is decreased or halted, largely depends on the type of disruption, the number of routes affected and the length of time any disruption would last.
'If a disruption is limited to flows through Ukraine – which are at historical lows at the moment – EU states that are affected can most likely cope through increases of storage withdrawals. This can be further alleviated in case Russia diverts flows towards the Yamal-Europe route and through minor increases in LNG imports,' Giuli explained, noting that a full halt of Russian supplies is considered remote at the moment.
The 2,000 kilometer-long Yamal-Europe pipeline runs across Russia, Belarus, Poland and Germany to export gas to Western Europe, transmitting 33 billion cubic meters of gas per year. However, the pipeline has been operating in reverse mode, that is from Germany to Poland, since Dec. 21.
Pointing to the global supply tightness as the reason for months of very high prices, Giuli stressed that there is not so much spare capacity outside Russia.
He believes that any replacement for Russian supplies would come from storage and LNG flow diversions if European prices become high enough to signal a change in LNG cargo routes from Asia to Europe.
He also explained that the type of sanctions that Russia could face will also determine the impact on the global energy market.
He cited the example of removing Russia from the SWIFT financial messaging service, which he said “would immensely complicate transactions and likely create shortages and price spikes not only on gas markets but also in crude oil and oil products markets.”
However, he said this is seen as a rather extreme scenario, and in times of tight supplies, Russia’s adversaries might prefer to go for certain exemptions for the energy sector./aa