Staff

Staff

Turkey on Sunday reported a total of 400,242 coronavirus recoveries with 4,015 new additions over the past 24 hours, according to the Health Ministry data.

The country registered 29,281 more COVID-19 infections, including 6,439 symptomatic cases, over the past day, the ministry figures showed.

The new symptomatic cases raised the overall count to 494,351.

The count of fatalities rose by 185, bringing the country's death toll to 13,558.

More than 168,200 coronavirus tests were conducted across the country since Saturday, bringing the total to over 18.41 million.

The number of patients in critical condition now stands at 5,011.

"The number of seriously ill patients continues to increase. Support our health care professionals who efficiently bear this burden. Add strength to this fight by better following the measures," Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said on Twitter.

The COVID-19 pandemic has claimed more than 1.45 million lives in 191 countries and regions since last December.

Over 62.44 million cases have been reported worldwide, with more than 39.97 million recoveries, according to figures compiled by the US' Johns Hopkins University.

While the US, India, and Brazil remain the worst-hit countries in terms of the number of cases, Europe is in the grip of a devastating second wave of infections.​​​​​​​

Turkey’s state aid agency on Sunday finished handing out blankets to 5,000 Rohingya families in Bangladesh's refugee camps on the eve of the arrival of winter.

“As part of our winter gifts to the Rohingya Muslims we have completed distribution of blankets to 5,000 Rohingya families. We will continue our support to the persecuted refugees throughout the whole winter season, which will hit Bangladesh in full swing starting in mid-December,” Ismail Gundogdu, Bangladesh coordinator for the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA), told Anadolu Agency.

The winter season could hit the Rohingya refugees in southeastern Bangladesh hard, according to refugees and locals.

Gundogdu added: “Since the very beginning of the Rohingya crisis in massive form following the August 2017 exodus, TIKA has been actively working to support the stateless people.”

Last week TIKA also completed a five-day distribution of food items among 5,000 Rohingya families in the camps.

TIKA was founded in 1992 and today has offices in 60 countries. The agency opened an office in Bangladesh in 2014 and has carried out hundreds of projects since then.

This September, the agency distributed 5,000 packages of dry food items among the Rohingya in Bangladesh's southern district of Cox’s Bazar.

Several times this year it also distributed healthcare items and food packages among Rohingya refugees.

Through 2019, TIKA had distributed hot meals to approximately 25,000 Rohingya refugees on a daily basis since Aug. 25, 2017 brutal military clampdown in Myanmar’s Rakhine State that forced more than 750,000 Rohingya refugees, mostly women and children, to flee Myanmar and cross into Bangladesh, pushing the number of persecuted people in Bangladesh above 1.2 million.

Persecuted people

Since Aug. 25, 2017, nearly 24,000 Rohingya Muslims have been killed by Myanmar’s state forces, according to a report by the Ontario International Development Agency (OIDA).

More than 34,000 Rohingya were also thrown into fires, while over 114,000 others were beaten, said the OIDA report, entitled Forced Migration of Rohingya: The Untold Experience.

As many as 18,000 Rohingya women and girls were raped by Myanmar’s army and police and over 115,000 Rohingya homes burned down, while 113,000 others were vandalized, it added./aa

At least seven civilians were killed when shelling by Houthi rebels hit a village in western Yemen, the Yemeni army said on Sunday.

Ten others were also injured in the attack on a village in the coastal city of Al Hudaydah, the al-Amalika Brigade said in a statement, adding that some of the wounded are in a critical condition.

Yemen has been beset by violence since 2014, when Iran-backed Houthis overran much of the country, including the capital Sanaa.

The crisis escalated in 2015 as a Saudi-led military coalition launched a devastating air campaign aimed at rolling back Houthi territorial gains. Thousands of people have been killed and displaced in the conflict since then.

Millions of children's lives are at "high risk" as the country moves closer to famine, according to UNICEF.

Last month the UN called for an immediate end to clashes in the Al Hudaydah province, where a cease-fire was agreed to in late 2018. The agreement reached during UN-sponsored peace talks in Sweden was never fully implemented.

Al-Hudaydah is the main entry point for Yemen’s commercial imports and aid./aa

Two giant pandas are to return to China after Canada suffered a shortage of bamboo due to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Calgary Zoo has been working since May to repatriate Er Shun and Da Mao after it became clear their bamboo supply - the pandas’ main food source - was dwindling to worrying levels. 

In the last few months the zoo has spoken openly about the complications in securing international permits for the pair, but now they are set to make the journey home. 

“After months and months of hard work to secure international permits to get our beloved giant pandas home to China,” the zoo posted to Facebook. “Today is the day!”

The pandas, who arrived in 2014, were due to stay in Canada for 10 years as part of an agreement between the two nations. The decision was widely dubbed “panda diplomacy”. 

Imports from China made sure that Er Shun and Da Mao had a healthy and consistent diet during their time abroad. 

Around 99 per cent of the pandas’ diets is made up of fresh bamboo, with up to 88lbs of it consumed by each panda everyday. 

But as flights were grounded by the coronavirus outbreak in March, the Alberta-based zoo was left struggling to keep up with the panda’s appetites. 

The zoo said domestic imports were “poor quality” and took too long to arrive. Often Er Shun and Da Mao would refuse to eat it. 

Just two months later it was announced the pair would return to China three years earlier than expected, so their diets could be better maintained. 

The zoo faced considerable delays in making sure they had the correct transport to fly them home. 

"The continued delays in international permitting is putting the health and welfare of these two beautiful giant pandas in jeopardy," Calgary Zoo president Clément Lanthier said at the time.

Those who want to keep up with the pandas during their journey and after they arrive in China are advised by the zoo to check its social media accounts for updates. 

French police are going through the “worst moral crisis in modern history”, according to one of the country’s leading law enforcement experts, following a string of violent incidents in which officers have been accused of misconduct, brutality and racism.

Decades of refusal by successive French governments to introduce UK-style independent oversight and systemic reform have brought its police to a perilous breaking point with swathes of an already sceptical population, according to eminent criminologist Sebastien Roché at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CRNS.

The French have long felt ambivalent about their force, which has come a long way since the dark days of 1961 in which officers under the command of police chief Maurice Papon, later convicted of crimes against humanity, massacred an estimated 200 Algerian protesters. “You’ll be covered,” he notoriously told his men.

Hailed as heroes in the wake of terror attacks, they have been equally vilified as heavy-handed and trigger-happy in recent mass demonstrations, notably during the “yellow vests” revolt where intensive use of stun grenades and rubber bullets maimed dozens.

However, in the past two weeks, the image of the French force has taken a battering of rare intensity, bringing to the fore long-held accusations of discrimination towards minorities, violence and a sense of impunity.

Storm clouds were already brewing over a new security bill debated this week, which included a controversial clause that bans the release of footage of identifiable police officers with “manifest intent to harm”.

Gérald Darminin, France’s tough-talking interior minister dubbed the country’s “top cop”, said it would help “protect those who protect us” but journalists warned it could harm press freedom and prevent the documentation of abuse.

As if on cue, police were filmed this week kicking and beating migrants whom had erected tents in Paris’ Place de la République to protest their lack of housing. A chief superintendent was caught on camera tripping one Afghan as he fled down a side street.

Then in a coup de grace for the force, four officers were filmed beating and racially insulting Michel Zecler, a black music producer for over ten minutes in his studio in central Paris.

Viewed 14 million online views, the footage prompted an outcry from a raft of public figures, including football World Cup winners Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann, who said: “I’ve got France ache.”

“This ultra-violent video is the reason why we will continue filming the police,” said actor-director Mathieu Kassovitz whose prescient suburban film La Haine (Hatred) laid bare police violence in 1995.

With the four suspended and held for questioning at the National Police Inspectorate General (IGPN), France’s “police of police”, prosecutors opened an investigation into “violence by a person in authority and false testimony”.

“Even if the images are shocking, this mustn’t become a pretext to denigrate an entire police institution,” said Fabien Vanhemelrhyk of the main Alliance police union.

But sensing snowballing public outrage, President Emmanuel Macron stepped in on Friday night to condemn the images of an "unacceptable attack” which “shame us”.

In a long Facebook missive, he asked the government to come up with proposals to "fight against discrimination”.

Yet experts expressed scepticism this would lead to any real change.

“French police are going through the worst moral crisis in modern history,” said Mr Roché, also Europe editor of the journal Policing and Society.

"For the past decade, numerous studies have shown that it is wracked by discrimination and racism. Yet successive governments and police unions continue to peddle the idea that there are just a few rotten apples. The problem is systemic,” he said.

Britain’s police had tackled the issues after to the 1997 MacPherson report in the wake of the murder of Stephen Lawrence, which concluded that the investigation into the killing had been “marred by a combination of professional incompetence, institutional racism and a failure of leadership”.

“France has known the same crises but has not questioned itself,” said Mr Roché. “After the 2005 suburban riots, the worst in European history. There was not even a commission of parliamentary inquiry, no national debate, no turning point."

A police white paper out this month all-but glossed over how to improve relations with the population. Police training is woefully short, just eight months, he added.

That has contributed to France coming third from bottom in a major European league table on whether police discriminated against race or minorities. They were third-worst in terms for being under "undue political influence". They came last in a recent EU poll on satisfaction levels of those who underwent a police check.

“We are also still paying the price for then interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy scrapping neighbourhood policing in 2003,” said Jean-Marc Berlière, a historian, adding that it had sounded the death knell of “policing by consent”.

The current interior minister, Mr Darminin, is a former Sarkozy protégé and has adopted similar jaw-jutting rhetoric. Analysts say that has suited Mr Macron in his bid to woo hardline conservatives in his likely rematch against far-Right leader Marine Le Pen in the 2022 presidential elections.

But in an editorial, Le Monde warned Mr Darminin’s inflammatory stance “risks dragging the country into a terribly dangerous spiral, aggravated by multiple tensions linked to (Covid) lockdown”.

The prime minister’s attempts to placate public opinion by ordering a parliamentary commission to totally re-write the controversial security clause failed to stop dozens of protests on Saturday against the law.

Police fired tear gas and stun grenades during a during a march in Paris after masked protesters launched fireworks at their lines, put up barricades and threw stones. The majority of the thousands of protesters marched peacefully, but several small groups clashed with police.

Two cars, a motorcycle and building materials were set on fire, which generated clouds of black smoke visible from miles away. Thousands of people also marched in Lille, Rennes, Strasbourg and other cities.

A central problem, said Christian Mouhanna, a sociologist and author Police Against Citizens?, was the lack of “proper counterweights” to the police, adding that the IPGN, its internal inspection unit, was toothless compared to HM Inspectorate of Constabulary.

Its boss is appointed by the interior minister himself. “And we have nothing like the Independent Office of Police conduct,” added Mr Roché.

That contributed to a “clan-like mentality and a law of silence,” said Mr Mouhanna.

While only advisory, the country’s rights ombudsman is gradually gaining prominence, however.

This week, it released a damning report on Théodore Luhaka, a 22-year-old left disabled for life after being allegedly sodomised with a police baton in a Paris suburb in 2017. Le Monde said the report was an “implacable demonstration of a string of police failures”.

Incredibly, those concerned avoided significant disciplinary action but this week, judges announced that three will stand criminal trial - a rare occurrence.

Experts agreed that the fact that police relations were becoming a “societal issue” was refreshingly new.

“But if the government doesn’t open a debate in parliament on these questions, it will end up being done in the street,” warned Mr Roché.

BAKU(AA) -At least 641 PKK/KCK terror suspects have been nabbed during two-day operations across Turkey, the Interior Ministry announced on Saturday.

The suspects were detained in 42 provinces in operations conducted in coordination with the Chief Prosecutor's offices, the ministry said in a written statement.

A large cache of guns, pistols, rifles, cartridges and magazines were seized in the searches, it added.

Digital materials and documents related to the terror group were also seized.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and the EU -- has been responsible for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa

UK and France have signed a new agreement to tackle illegal migration via the English Channel.

The French government has agreed to double the number of officers patrolling French beaches, from where migrants launch their perilous journey to Britain.

British Home Secretary Priti Patel and French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin “reaffirmed their commitment to make this route unviable,” as they signed the agreement, according to a government statement.

“They signed an enhanced agreement which builds on the joint co-operation that has already seen the proportion of crossings intercepted and prevented rise from 41% in 2019 to 60% in recent weeks,” the statement said.

Doubling the number of French security officers “will bolster the patrolling of the 150-kilometre stretch of coastline regularly targeted by people-smuggling networks and enable quicker response rates to suspicious activity, stopping migrants leaving French beaches in the first place and preventing more dangerous and unnecessary crossings.”

The two ministers also “agreed an enhanced package of cutting edge surveillance technology - including drones, radar equipment, optronic binoculars and fixed cameras.”

“On top of these new operational plans, we will introduce a new asylum system that is firm and fair, and I will bring forward new legislation next year to deliver on that commitment,” Patel said, confirming once again British government’s plans to curb migration into the country.

More than 8,000 people have crossed from French coasts to the UK this year, according to the local media reports./aa

Evidence given by ministers and public sector chief executives in the Christchurch terror attack probe will not be released for the next 30 years, authorities in New Zealand have declared.

An interview of the Australian-born terrorist Brenton Tarrant, who has been jailed for life, “will never be released out of concern it could inspire and assist further attacks,” daily New Zealand Herald reported on Saturday.

Tarrant killed 51 people and injured 40 more in attacks on the Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre on March 15 last year.

He was sentenced to life in prison this year in August without the possibility of parole, in the first such ruling ever handed down in the country.

Jan Tinetti, New Zealand’s internal affairs minister, received the inquiry report on Thursday and it will be publicly released on Dec. 8, after first being shared with victims' families and political party leaders, the newspaper reported.

“Evidence given by ministers and public sector bosses to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Christchurch terrorist attack will be suppressed for 30 years,” the daily said.

The report includes “any failings by police, spies, and other government agencies in the leadup and aftermath to the mosque shootings.”

Commissioners Sir William Young and Jacqui Caine cited “national security” as the reason for the non-publication order.

They said full publication of the evidence could provide a “how-to manual for future terrorists,” adding that those concerns would likely have “dissipated” in 30 years.

According to New Zealand’s government, the Royal Commission of Inquiry was tasked to “look into what state sector agencies knew about the individual’s activities before the terrorist attack, what, if anything, they did with that information, what measures agencies could have taken to prevent the terrorist attack, and what measures agencies should take to prevent such terrorist attacks in the future.”

The commission was scheduled to present its report by Nov. 26 “so the government can reassure the New Zealand public, including its Muslim communities, that all appropriate measures are being taken to keep people safe.”/aa

DHAKA, Bangladesh

Bangladesh donated funds worth $500,000 on Saturday to support Gambia at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to secure rights for the persecuted Rohingya Muslims.

The funds were handed over at the ongoing 47th OIC foreign ministerial meeting of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Niger.

Some 1.2 million Rohingya refugees are being hosted by Bangladesh, a pressure the South Asian state is finding difficult to handle.

“We have already disbursed the fund to the OIC for supporting Gambia in its legal battle,” said Bangladesh’s Permanent Representative to the OIC Mohammad Javed Patwary.

Gambia has said it needs $5 million for the legal battle calling on OIC states to make voluntary donations.

Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Nigeria have so far provided financial support to Gambia for the case it filed last year in the UN court against Myanmar for rights abuse against the minority Rohingya community.

Since Aug. 25, 2017, nearly 24,000 Rohingya Muslims have been killed by Myanmar’s state forces, according to a report by the Ontario International Development Agency (OIDA).

More than 34,000 Rohingya were also thrown into fires, while over 114,000 others were beaten, said the OIDA report, entitled Forced Migration of Rohingya: The Untold Experience.

As many as 18,000 Rohingya women and girls were raped by Myanmar’s army and police and over 115,000 Rohingya homes burned down, while 113,000 others were vandalized, it added./aa

PKK terrorists fought alongside the Armenian army in Upper Karabakh, the terror group's senior member has confirmed.

Speaking to a terrorist-affiliated media outlet, Layika Gultekin, a senior member, said they took part in recent Armenian attacks on Azerbaijan.

"We went to Upper Karabakh to fight alongside Armenian soldiers. We will always be with the Armenians whenever they wish us to be,” she said.

Turkish security officials believe the terror group expects to win Armenia's favor for its presence in northern Iraq.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and the EU -- has been responsible for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants.

Upper Karabakh, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, has been occupied by the Armenian military since 1991.

The decades-old conflict has been the cause of rift between the two former Soviet republics.

Fresh clashes erupted on Sept. 27 and ended in a Russia-brokered truce six weeks later./aa

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