Staff

Staff

ANKARA

Japan’s nuclear reactor hit by a 2011 earthquake in the northeastern Miyagi province will resume operations by the end of this year, according to officials, the local media reported on Wednesday.

Miyagi Governor Yoshihiro Murai will formally announce his consent to restart the nuclear reactors at Onagawa complex by the end of the year, the Kyodo News agency said.

Early this year, the 825,000-kilowatt reactor, operated by Tohoku Electric Power Company, won the approval of the country's Nuclear Regulation Authority.

All the three reactors were shut down when the massive quake and a 13-meter tsunami hit northeastern Japan on March 11, 2011, flooding the underground floors of the No. 2 unit.

Nearly 10,000 people lost their lives while over 4,000 others are still missing.

Onagawa nuclear reactor is the second such disaster-ravaged complex, after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, to pass stricter nuclear safety standards.

The world has witnessed the worst nuclear disaster in 1986 at Chernobyl in today’s Ukraine.

Unlike the Fukushima Daiichi plant of Tokyo Electric Power Company, the Onagawa plant's emergency cooling system did not fail and underwent no meltdown after hit by the earthquake and tsunami.

To restart the Onagawa nuclear reactors, the consent of local government leaders is the last remaining step needed after it cleared a national safety screening in February.

Tohoku aims to restart the No. 2 unit of Onagawa nuclear complex in 2022 at the earliest. Currently, a 800-meter-long seawall at the plant is under construction. The operator has already decided to scrap unit No. 1.

Murai would be the first governor of a disaster-hit province to allow resumption of a damaged nuclear reactor's operations.

The 2011 earthquake and tsunami triggered one of the world's worst nuclear crises in Japan’s Fukushima province which caused all of Japan's 54 reactors to halt. However, since then, nine units at five plants of the country have restarted following regulatory and local approvals.

“When the plenary session [of the local assembly] shows its stance, I will make a decision upon hearing the opinions of mayors of cities, towns, and villages within the prefecture,” Murai said./aa

KARACHI, Pakistan

The assassination of a renowned religious scholar last week in the southern port city of Karachi is part of a fresh ploy to stoke the Shia-Sunni divide in Pakistan, say local experts.

In the latest of a string of targeted attacks, Maulana Adil Khan, a renowned Sunni scholar and head of one of the largest seminaries in the country, was gunned down by unidentified assailants on a busy street in the city's eastern district Saturday, triggering fears of a fresh flare-up in otherwise dissipating sectarian violence in Sunni Pakistan.

Khan's assassination coincides with an already tense atmosphere that developed after provocative speeches by some Shia scholars during processions last month marking Muharram, prompting some Sunni groups to pay them back.

Mainstream Sunni and Shia scholars and groups, however, distanced themselves from the provocation, terming it another “conspiracy" to trigger sectarian violence.

Security agencies are still groping in the dark in search of clues that might identify the assassins.

The South Asian country has a long history of Shia-Sunni conflict involving violence and assassinations. Many religious scholars from both sects, including Maulana Yousaf Ludhyanvi, Mufti Nizamuddin Shamzai, Mufti Jameel Ahmed Khan, Allama Hassan Turabi, Allama Aftab Haider Jafri and Allama Hadi Taqvi have been assassinated, mainly over the past two decades. Shias make up roughly 10% of Pakistan's population of over 220 million.

Proxy war

Some analysts see the latest move to refuel sectarian tensions as another reflection of a proxy war between Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran that spilled over Pakistan's borders in the late 1970s following the Iranian revolution.

"There has been a deliberate attempt for quite some time to bring Pakistan back to where it was some decades ago by pitting Shias and Sunnis against each other," Lt Gen.(Retd) Talat Masood, an Islamabad-based security analyst, told Anadolu Agency.

Riyadh and Tehran, he said, had long been patronizing and funding several far-right groups which were involved in sectarian violence in Pakistan.

"Both sides [Saudi Arabia and Iran] have their proxies here whom they are funding and supporting. But in the end, Pakistan suffers," Masood, who served in the Pakistani army from 1950 to 1990, went on to argue.

The proxy war, he observed, had not even benefitted Tehran and Riyadh, which "have got nothing out of it except for further stoking the sectarian divide in the region and ultimately indirectly benefitting Israel."

Supporting Masood's views, Abdul Khalique Ali, a Karachi-based political analyst, sees a deliberate campaign by the hardline groups to inflame Shia-Sunni tensions.

"Things in terms of sectarian harmony have improved to a great extent in the near past [in Pakistan], except for targeted attacks on scholars and influential persons from both sides. There has been no public clash between the two sects in the close past," he said.

"But for the past few months, it seems clearly that something is brewing.”

Foreign hand

Prime Minister Imran Khan was quick to accuse longtime rival India of being involved in the assassination of Shia and Sunni scholars to fan the sectarian divide in Pakistan.

In a Twitter post hours after Maulana Adil Khan’s assassination, the premier said: "Condemnable targeted killing of Maulana Adil of Jamia Farooqia in Karachi this evening. My government has known, and I have repeatedly stated this on TV, since last 3 months India’s attempts to target kill alims [clerics] from Sunni & Shia sects to create sectarian conflict across the country."

Analysts, however, partially support Khan's accusations.

"Indian and Israeli intelligence agencies might be supporting the elements involved in sectarian violence, but this is not the primary problem," Masood said.

"There are several other fault lines which need to be checked and addressed by our government and the security forces, " he said. “Primarily, it is our own challenge which we have to live up to."

"We must not turn a blind eye to the real causes behind sectarian tensions by simply heaping the blame on India alone," he maintained.

Ali sees a link between ongoing Afghanistan peace talks and the recent sectarian tensions.

"If you look at the events and their timings, they clearly coincide with the crucial phase of the reconciliation process in Afghanistan," he said.

If the reconciliation process succeeds, he added, Pakistan will be the second beneficiary after Afghanistan.

"But the spoilers in the Afghan and Indian intelligence agencies have become active to derail the process by targeting those scholars who have any kind of links with the Afghan Taliban," he said, referring to reports that Maulana Adil Khan and his late father Maulana Saleemullah Khan had taught several Taliban leaders in their seminary Jamia Farooqia Karachi.

Palestine issue

Sabir Karbalai, secretary general of Palestine Foundation Pakistan, associates the fresh campaign to ignite sectarian tensions with the latest developments in the Middle East.

According to him, the motive behind the move is to divert attention from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain's recognition of Israel.

"Pakistan is one of the few countries that has strongly reacted to the normalization of ties with the Zionist state by some Arab countries," he said while speaking to Anadolu Agency.

Holding a "nexus" of Israel, India and America behind the latest move, Karbalai said the Zionist state and their "cronies" in the region would be the real beneficiaries of the Shia-Sunni divide.

"First, they got killed a number of Shia scholars to pit Shias against Sunnis, and now they are targeting Sunnis to pitch them against Shias," he said. "But they will not succeed this time because the people of Pakistan have understood the motives behind this campaign."

Disagreeing with Karbalai, Masood said there was no concrete evidence to prove the contention.

"This impression is being created because the Middle East developments are going in favor of Israel to counter Iran's influence. Otherwise, it [the campaign] is purely because of our own conditions and fault lines fomented by internal and external forces," he said.

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia

Although women constitute half of the cabinet in Ethiopia, the emancipation has not percolated to rural women.

Even after performing household chores, like cooking, cleaning, raising kids, and then working in the fields along with men, rural women are still unable to find a decent living for their families.

Living in a village near Legetafo-Legedadi town, devoid of tap water and electricity, 50-year old Adanech Hirpo, however, has shown means to the village women to supplement their income.

As her cow does not yield enough milk, she goes around the village to buy milk and turn it into butter and cheese.

With 15 kilograms of these milk products in a basket on her back, the mother of six children travels 40 kilometres to the nearby city to find buyers.

“I usually walk up to one hour from my home to take a bus to Addis Ababa to deliver butter and cheese to my customers according to their orders,“ she told Anadolu Agency.

“I have been selling butter and cheese in this manner for the last 15 years to supplement the family income, whose main source of living is producing grains and cereals, which are barely enough to feed a family of six,“ she said.

She has been able to marry two of her children, who have now established a home of their own.

Like Adanech, hundreds of thousands of other women also supplement their incomes by engaging in dairy farming.

“The dairy sub-sector offers a pathway out of rural poverty and hunger for millions of small- farmers through income generation,” said Food and Agriculture Organization officials.

According to a study, the dairy sector engages over 750 million people globally (mostly in developing countries) and is continually expanding, given the growing demand for milk and its products.

Dairy prospects for Ethiopia

Ethiopia, which has one of the highest cattle populations in Africa, estimated at 60 million, therefore has potential to promote the dairy industry to create livelihoods and self-employment for over 85% of households in some areas, says the FAO.

According to the UK-based academic research journal the Conversation, Ethiopia produces about 4 billion liters of milk per year. But with low per capita consumption, estimated at just 20 liters, the industry has not been able to take a flight.

The FAO recommends that the per capita consumption of milk for any healthy society should be about 200 liters, meaning 22 billion liters of milk is required.

“This can be done through different practical interventions, for example locating milk collection facilities closer to producers within villages, or providing women with access to technology (and provide training on its efficient use) to enable women to expand their engagement in the sub-sector,” says the FAO.

While the proposal sounds auspicious, for Adanech who lives at a humble home at Wolgewo rural locality in Berek district, the hardships of preparing and selling butter and cheese remain unchanged.

But surely, she remains the heroine of her family – which is depended on her for much of income and also for undertaking household chores such as cooking food, washing clothes, tidying the house, and fetching water from nearby springs.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency Adanech said she only wants tap water for her village, which is at a stone-throwing distance from Legedadi dam, a scheme that supplies a significant portion of the tap water to the residents of Addis Ababa. Even being near the capital city, this rural locality does not have electricity either, making life for her and her community even harder./aa

MUGLA, Turkey

The Turkish Coast Guard rescued 12 asylum seekers Tuesday who were stranded in Gedik Bay in Mugla province’s Marmaris district. 

Coast Guard teams were dispatched to the area after the asylum seekers sought help.

The teams transferred the asylum seekers to the coast guard boat and brought them to land.

The asylum seekers were brought to Marmaris Port and were transferred to the provincial migration office.

The Turkish Coast Guard also rescued seven other asylum seekers, according to security sources.

After the engine of their rubber boat broke down at sea, the asylum seekers made their way to a small island, said the sources, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking the media.

After they called for help, the coast guard was dispatched to the area from Bodrum district in southwestern Mugla./aa

KARACHI, Pakistan(AA)

Pakistan was re-elected to the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) with 169 votes in the 193-member UN General Assembly, a statement from the Foreign Ministry said Tuesday. 

Pakistan secured the highest number of votes among the five candidates from the Asia-Pacific region vying for four seats in elections in New York, the statement said.

The country has served on the UNHRC since Jan. 2018 and will continue for another three-year term commencing Jan. 1.

Since the UNHRC’s establishment in 2006, this is the fifth time that Pakistan has been elected to the UN’s premier body on human rights.

"The international community has once again reposed confidence in Pakistan, recognizing our contribution to the national and global human rights agenda and strong credentials as a consensus builder in the (UN)HRC," according to the statement that said it would sustain efforts toward ensuring that the HRC’s work is guided by the principles of universality, impartiality, dialogue and cooperation.

"Pakistan will remain actively engaged with the Council as well as its related processes to continue to highlight the plight of Kashmiris and other oppressed people all over the world," it concluded.

The 47-nation UNHRC is an inter-governmental body based in Geneva within the UN system that is responsible for the promotion and protection of all human rights around the globe.

WASHINGTON(AA)

The UN General Assembly voted Tuesday to elect a new tranche of 15 Human Rights Council (HRC) members, including China, Cuba and Russia.

The trio of countries won seats over objections from critics who challenge their rights records.

Cuba and Russia were shoe-ins for the spots after running without a sufficient number of challengers in the regional groups established by the UN to open the possibility that they would not claim victory.

China, however, faced stiff competition in the Asia-Pacific region where six nations were competing for five spots. China secured the last of the five spots as Saudi Arabia failed to cross the needed vote threshold.

The final results in that contest were Pakistan with 169 votes, Uzbekistan at 169, Nepal with 150, and 139 for China. Saudi Arabia received just 90 votes.

Louis Charbonneau, Human Rights Watch’s UN director, said Riyadh's failure to win a council seat "is a welcome reminder of the need for more competition in UN elections."

"Had there been additional candidates, China, Cuba and Russia might have lost too. But the addition of these undeserving countries won’t prevent the council from shining a light on abuses and speaking up for victims," he said.

All UN member states are eligible to sit on the HRC where terms last for three years.

Asked about preventing countries with abysmal rights records from serving on the HRC, UN spokesman Brenden Varma demurred, saying the responsibility for upholding human rights rests primarily with individual nations.

He added, however, that HRC membership comes with a duty to uphold high human rights standards.

IZMIR, Turkey 

At least 25 asylum seekers left stranded in Turkish territorial waters by Greek authorities were rescued early Tuesday.   

According to a statement by the Coast Guard Command, teams were sent to the area upon learning there were asylum seekers on two lifeboats off the coast of Cesme district in Izmir province. 

The teams rescued the asylum seekers in the Aegean Sea and they were taken to the provincial migration office.  

Turkey has been a key transit point for asylum seekers aiming to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution. 

 The country opened its gates earlier this year to asylum seekers seeking to cross to Europe, accusing the European Union of failing to keep its promises under a 2016 migrant deal./aa

ABUJA, Nigeria 

Nigerian forces on Monday rescued 26 people who had been taken hostage by armed groups. 

Acting Director of Defense Media Operations Brig. Gen. Bernard Onyeuku told reporters that Operation Sahel Sanity was launched against the groups in the states of Katsina, Zamfara and Kebbi.

Those rescued include seven women, Onyeuku said.

Three bandits were neutralized in the operation while many others escaped with wounds and a large amount of ammunition was seized, he added.

Information on when the 26 people were kidnapped was not provided.

- 12 civilians killed in Kaduna state

According to local media, armed bandits raided the villages of Kidandan and Kadai in Kaduna state and randomly opened fire.

Twelve people were killed, while eight were wounded and many others were kidnapped in the attack.

The country's northwestern region sees occasional clashes between the herder Fulani people -- one of the largest ethnic groups widely dispersed across West Africa -- and neighboring sedentary tribes.

The Fulani, who migrated to the south of the country to graze their animals, claim that farmers try to steal their livestock and attack their people.

Armed groups sometimes take advantage of these conflicts and organize attacks./aa

BOGOTA, Colombia

Latin America surpassed 10 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 over the weekend, according to a tally by US-based Johns Hopkins University.    

At least 10,050,000 infections and 369,000 deaths have been recorded in the region, the area of the world hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic.  

Brazil 

With over 212 million inhabitants, Brazil has reported more than 150,000 deaths from the coronavirus, according to the country’s health ministry.  

Brazil has the second highest death toll in the world after the US, but there are signs that the rate of infections is slowing in the South American country. Experts worry that the country could be facing a second wave of the outbreak even before the first one is over. 

President Jair Bolsonaro has dismissed the virus as a “little flu” and opposed lockdowns, even though he was infected with the disease. 

Colombia  

Colombia reported 7,767 new cases and 151 deaths from COVID-19 over the past 24 hours, taking its national death toll to 28,318. 

The nation's health authorities have shown concern over a recent spike in infections, which is why the country could be placed under quarantine if the number of new cases continues to increase.  

Colombia began more than five months of lockdown in March but started loosening quarantine measures in September, allowing dining at restaurants and international flights.  

Mexico 

Mexico has over 817,500 cases 83,700 deaths. The country has the world’s fourth highest death toll after the US, Brazil and India. 

Although Mexico has fewer cases than other Latin American countries, it has suffered a high number of deaths compared to its neighbors. 

Argentina 

Demonstrators took to the streets in cities across Argentina on Monday to protest against President Alberto Fernandez’s new extension of quarantine measures against COVID-19. 

Argentina on Monday reported 9,524 new confirmed cases of coronavirus infection and 318 additional fatalities, bringing the total to 903,730 cases and 24,186 deaths. 

Peru 

Peru opened the Machu Pichu ruins for a single Japanese tourist after he waited almost seven months to enter the site while trapped in the country during the coronavirus outbreak. v

“He had come to Peru with the dream of being able to come,” Minister of Culture Alejandro Neyra said in a virtual press conference Monday.  

Peru has reported 33,305 coronavirus-related deaths and 849,371 cases so far. International flights recently resumed, but the country's tourism industry has been devastated by the pandemic. 

Chile 

Authorities in Chile are concerned over the rise of coronavirus cases in three southern regions of the country. 

The Ministry of Health reported 1,517 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total caseload to 482,832, with 13,376 deaths from the disease./aa

ANKARA 

Nigerian security forces shot at least one man dead Monday amid nationwide protests over alleged violence, extortion and harassment committed by a police unit, local media reported. 

The incident occurred as police opened fire on unarmed protesters in the Surulere area of Lagos state, according to the Premium Times newspaper. The victim has not yet been identified. 

A police officer was also reportedly killed by a stray bullet during the shootings, according to the report. 

The protester is the second to be killed by security forces in three days. Two days ago, Jimoh Isiaka was shot dead in Ogbomoso, Oyo state, according to the Premium Times. 

On Sunday, Nigeria’s police chief dissolved the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) following protests against police brutality across the country. 

Protesters had been demonstrating for several days against the unit and besieged its headquarters. 

They chanted “End SARS” and poured red paint on the street in front of the building – a symbolic reference to the alleged killings by SARS officers. 

Despite the dissolution of SARS, the protesters are continuing to demonstrate until their demand for comprehensive police reforms including punishments for erring officers is met as well as the unconditional release of all detained protesters and compensation for families of the victims of police brutality. 

Reacting to the developments, Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari said that dissolving SARS was only a first step. 

“The disbanding of SARS is only the first step in our commitment to extensive police reforms in order to ensure that the primary duty of the police and other law enforcement agencies remains the protection of lives and the livelihood of our people,” he tweeted.

In a recent report, Amnesty International said the authorities had failed to tackle the impunity enjoyed by SARS, whose brutality and corruption were “becoming increasingly brazen.”/aa

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