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The Council of Ministers, in its regular meeting chaired by His Highness Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled yesterday, listened to an explanation by the Minister of Health Sheikh Dr. Basil Al-Sabah on the developments of the epidemiological situation based on the statistics that confirm the high rate of infections, deaths and treatment recipients in intensive care, explaining the seriousness of the situation and the importance of speeding up the process of vaccination, Al Anbaa reported.
The council decided to allow Tarawih prayers to be held for men for only 15 minutes while adhering to the precautionary requirements currently in mosques.
Government spokesman Tariq Al-Muzrim announced that the council decided to continue closing mosques after every prayer and banning i’tikaaf and holding lectures, lessons, etc.
Al-Muzrim added that the council also decided to prohibit the establishment of break of the fast and suhour tables in mosques and public and private places and to be satisfied with distributing meals without gathering.
The council urged those who have not received the anti-coronavirus vaccine to perform prayers at home.
Informed sources explained, in exclusive statements to the daily, that the Corona Emergency Committee, headed by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense Sheikh Hamad Jaber Al-Ali, among its tasks is to consider the request for the return of teachers stuck abroad and whose residency has ended with the ministry of education.
As for determining the appropriate timing that suits the Ministry of Education plan, as well as numbers and other details, it is up to the educational leaders, who submit to the Committee the perceptions and proposals, expecting that this will take place before a suitable time from the start of the new academic year initially set September and the student’s actual attendance.
Senior sources told the Arabic daily, that until now, no decision has been issued linking the return of students to schools to vaccinating them.
The sources expressed the ministry hopes that all students 16 years and over will be registered on the Ministry of Health website to receive the Covid-19 vaccine, along with all employees in public and private schools.
Japan decided Tuesday to dispose of radioactive wastewater from the Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea.
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga announced his government's decision following a cabinet meeting and said that disposing of the treated water is an inevitable issue in the decommissioning of the Fukushima Daiichi facility.
The plan will be implemented by ensuring broad and firm steps to prevent damage, he stressed.
Explaining that they have decided to release the water into the sea, Suga said the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and other third-party organizations will be involved in the process to observe that the plan is carried out with transparency.
He went on to say that the release plan is also based on the IAEA's scientific principles.
- Water containing tritium to be diluted
The radioactive materials formed in pure water, which functions as a coolant of the reactors, are decomposed except for the tritium material thanks to the Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS).
According to the plan, the water containing the element tritium will be diluted at the level of 1,500 becquerels per liter. Thus, the plant operator Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) will be able to discharge the water, which is increasing day by day, into the sea periodically.
TEPCO estimates that if the water stored in the plant is not released, the facility will fill its storage tank capacity by autumn 2022 at the latest.
The Kyodo news agency reported that the process of discharging the water into the sea will last two years./aa
The trade volume between Turkey and Qatar in the next period will exceed the $5 billion target, the head of the Independent Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (MUSIAD) said Monday.
In a statement, Abdurrahman Kaan said Qatari businesspeople and Turkish companies operating in the region are very happy with the market between the two countries.
Meeting with businesspeople in Qatar, Kaan underlined that the investment trend from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Gulf regions towards Turkey will continue.
Noting that Turkey is an attractive market for businesspeople in the region, Kaan said: "Considered as an intercontinental logistics center, Anatolia will become one of the most important centers of trade in the future."
In the business meetings, Kaan also met with Qatar Chamber chairman Sheikh Khalifa bin Jassim al-Thani./aa
Some 107 inmates who were among 1,844 convicts who escaped during an attack on their prison in Owerri city in Nigeria’s Imo state surrendered Monday.
James Maduba, the spokesperson for Owerri Prison, said the hunt for other inmates who escaped from the prison on April 5 continues.
Nigerian Interior Minister Rauf Aregbesola said earlier that the escaped convicts would not be punished further if they voluntarily returned.
Gunmen used explosives to force open the prison gate and stormed the prison.
During the incident, 35 inmates refused to escape while six others have voluntarily returned.
Officials announced that an inquiry into the jailbreak had been launched./aa
Myanmar’s military was fooling the international community by putting State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi out in front but controlling the government, the Director-General of the Arakan Rohingya Union (ARU), said Monday.
In an interview with Anadolu Agency, Dr. Wakar Uddin said Myanmar had seen a few years of democracy, but it has been the military basically holding the power, so “there's not fundamental change in the political landscape” of the country because of the military.
He said the military “cleverly” put State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi out front but behind the scenes it was controlling the government, which he said aimed to make the international community believe they would be cooperating with Myanmar.
“But they were kind of trying to fool the international community. They also knew, but everyone has patience. The international community thought it was okay and said let's give them some time,” he added.
He said the military junta has grown more aggressive, this time being brutal not only against ethnic minorities but also against everyone who opposes them.
“Everybody is equally affected. They want to hold on to power. They want to crush anybody who just stands up against them [and] asks them for democracy. The military doesn't want democracy. The military knew from the beginning that a true democratic system is not good for a military dictatorship,” he added.
He recalled that Suu Kyi once defended the military at The Hague, which he called a “bad move,” and she tried to please the military, but the military cannot be trusted.
“The military is pointing the blame at her, because that's how they set up the whole thing, to make her responsible,” he added.
Uddin called on China, Russia and Western countries to push Myanmar’s military to reinstate democracy and respect the voices of the people and the government that the Myanmar people have elected.
Myanmar's military seized power on Feb. 1 after allegations of rigging during the Nov. 8, 2020 elections and rising political tensions in the country.
The military detained several officials and ruling party leaders, including the country's de facto leader and Foreign Minister Aung San Suu Kyi and declared a state of emergency for one year.
High-ranking officials in custody are being tried in a military court as widespread demonstrations continue./aa
An Egyptian court decided Monday to retry Mahmoud Ezzat, the former acting leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, on charges of spying for the Palestinian Hamas movement.
According to Egyptian media including the state-owned Akhbar Alyoum newspaper, Ezzat appeared at the first session of the retrial in a court at the Tora Courts Complex in Cairo for allegedly collaborating with Hamas.
The case is claimed to have taken place during the events of Egypt's popular revolution in January 2011 in which the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas and Lebanese Hezbollah were accused of creating chaos in Egypt to topple the state.
In June 2015, the same court sentenced 20 people including Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohammed Badie to life in prison and handed death sentences to Ezzat, Muslim Brotherhood deputy leader Khairat al-Shater and 13 others for collaborating with Hamas.
On Thursday, an Egyptian court also sentenced Ezzat to life in prison in another case.
Ezzat, 77, was arrested in August 2020 after being in hiding since 2013 at an apartment in eastern Cairo, where he took the position of acting leader of the group after Mohammed Badie was arrested in August 2013. Ezzat was succeeded by Ibrahim Mounir to lead the group from abroad.
Following the ouster of former Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, Egyptian authorities persecuted Muslim Brotherhood members and leaders and outlawed the group./aa
France’s Senate adopted a controversial bill on Monday that has been criticized for targeting Muslims with several amendments that toughen provisions previously approved by the National Assembly.
The right-wing dominated Senate passed the bill Consolidating Respect for the Principles of the Republic with 208 votes in favor and 109 votes against after two weeks of intense discussions. The National Assembly approved it in February.
The new amendments, which are aimed at fighting "extremism," include prohibiting parents from wearing visible religious symbols while accompanying their children on school trips, the wearing of the burkini -- a swimming costume that covers the whole body with the exception of the face, hands and feet which is suitable for wear by Muslim women -- in public swimming pools and “preventing minor girls from concealing their face or wearing religious symbols in the public space." They also banned "prayers on the university premises and the display of foreign flags at weddings."
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin tabled a last-minute amendment upon President Emmanuel Macron’s request to fight against foreign interference in the matters of private schools. The amendment, which was adopted unanimously, will allow authorities to oppose the establishment of private schools by foreign organizations, like the one in Albertville by the Turkish Islamic association Milli Gorus, Darmanin said in a tweet. The association had earlier refused to sign the government's "Islamic charter of principles."
The bill, which aims to fight extremism and radical Islamism, provides for legislative measures against online hatred, home schooling, virginity certificates and polygamy and strengthens regulations on foreign funding of religious associations, education and neutrality of the public service.
The legislation, the brainchild of the Macron government to "secularize Islam" in France, has been widely condemned for indiscriminately targeting the entire French Muslim population.
The amended version of the Senate bill will now move to the Joint Committee, which will decide whether to include or drop several of these amendments before being tabled in parliament for final approval./ agencies
US President Joe Biden urged the country to let cooler heads prevail on Monday after protests erupted overnight in the wake of another fatal police shooting of a Black man near Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Biden urged all parties to listen to the mother of the Daunte Wright, the man who was fatally shot, who, Biden said, appealed for "peace and calm."
"Peaceful protest is understandable. And the fact is that we do know that the anger, pain and trauma that exists in Black community in that environment is real, serious, and consequential. But that does not justify violence," the US president told reporters at the White House.
Police in the Minneapolis-St. Paul suburb of Brooklyn Center released earlier Monday body camera footage of the incident showing police attempting to arrest Wright, 20, during a traffic stop on Sunday.
Three officers are seen in the video appearing to attempt to take Wright into custody as he stands at his ajar driver's side door with one officer attempting to put him in handcuffs. One of the officers says Wright is being taken into custody on an outstanding warrant.
Shortly thereafter a struggle begins as the man re-enters the vehicle with another officer yelling, "I'll tase ya! I'll tase you! Taser! Taser! Taser!"
One gunshot can then be heard before the car speeds away with a female officer saying, "Holy ****. I just shot him."
Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon said the shooting was an "accidental discharge," and said the officer who shot Wright intended to instead tase Wright rather than shoot him.
“It is my belief that the officer had the intention to employ their taser, but instead shot Mr. Wright with a single bullet," he said during a press conference.
Biden called the body camera footage "fairly graphic," but maintained time is needed to allow the investigation into the shooting to conclude.
"The question is whether it was an accident or intentional? That remains to be determined," said the president.
Wright's shooting led to violent protests in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area Sunday night. The region was already on edge amid the trial of former Police officer Derek Chauvin in relation to the May 2020 fatal arrest of George Floyd./aa
A Turkish charity on Monday distributed 15,000 food packets to Rohingya refugees and their hosts in Bangladesh for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan set to begin this week, said officials of the group, which is tied to Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate or Diyanet.
“For the 2021 Ramadan program we distributed 11,800 food packets for the Rohingya community. But we didn't forget the host community. We distributed 3,200 food packages for our Bangladeshi brothers and sisters,” Oguzhan Adsiz, the Bangladesh coordinator for Turkey’s Diyanet Foundation (TDF), told Anadolu Agency on Monday night.
Every package for a single family contains 16 items including dates, soybean oil, chickpeas, milk powder, sugar, salt, flour, and other necessities.
The packets are benefiting 80,000 persecuted Rohingya along with thousands of locals, as on an average there are seven members per Rohingya family in Bangladesh’s camps, according to official data.
Referring to the group’s special packages for various occasions including the holy Eid-al-Adha, Ramadan, and winter, Adsiz added: “The Turkiye Diyanet Foundation has been working since 2012 in Bangladesh. From the start of the Rohingya crisis in August 2017 till now we have done many projects for the Rohingya community.”
For the holy month of Ramadan, he said they have another project to donate 5,000 copies of the holy Quran among the host community.
The group is also producing Eid clothing for Rohingya at its sewing centers where young Rohingya women work.
Earlier, the group produced 45,000 bottles of liquid soap in its camp-based factory and distributed those among the persecuted people to ensure safety during the pandemic, Adsiz said.
Some one million Rohingya took refuge in neighboring Bangladesh amid persecution in Myanmar./aa
Since the beginning of this year, there have been countless reports of the possibility of Turkey “normalizing” its relations with Egypt, Israel and the Gulf countries.
These reports have a basis in reality, as Turkish officials have on several occasions made it clear that Ankara wants to mend ties with these regional actors — in particular those in the Gulf and especially after the January AlUla Declaration that ended the years-long dispute with Qatar.
In the past two decades, Turkey’s relations with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) have gone through ebbs and flows. Although Turkey’s relations with the GCC reached a high point after the regional bloc granted Ankara the status of strategic partner in 2008, developments in the aftermath of the Arab uprisings in Syria, Egypt and Libya, and more recently the situation in the eastern Mediterranean, have put Turkey on a collision course with some Gulf countries.
Ankara, which has good relations with Qatar, Kuwait and Oman, has stated that it is ready to make an effort to mend relations with the other Gulf states: Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain. Kuwait has a long history of mediation in the region, most recently the crucial role it played in ending the dispute with Qatar. Can it play a similar role in talks with Turkey? To answer this it is important to take a closer look at Turkish-Kuwaiti relations.
Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Ahmed Nasser Al-Sabah paid a two-day official visit to Ankara last week. He was in the Turkish capital to co-chair the second meeting of the Turkey-Kuwait Joint Committee for Cooperation. The first was held in October 2013. This meeting, almost eight years later and at the foreign ministerial level, is viewed as highly significant.
It has a long history of mediation in the region, most recently the crucial role it played in ending the dispute with Qatar
During the press conference that followed, ministers announced six agreements covering a number of sectors had been signed as part of the efforts to develop relations between the two countries. In addition, a five-year action plan was agreed and the two sides exchanged views on a number of regional issues, in particular Syria, Yemen and Libya.
In February, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu completed a Gulf tour that included visits to Kuwait, Oman and Qatar. The first stop was Kuwait, which has been an important regional partner for Turkey, particularly in the fields of economics and tourism. In an interview with Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Anba, Cavusoglu said that the visit — his first to the country — had symbolic significance because of Kuwait’s contribution to the recent resolution of the diplomatic crisis between Qatar and the other Gulf nations.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had also visited Kuwait and Qatar last October. During his stop in the former, he met the new emir, Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, and offered condolences over the death the previous month of his predecessor, Sheikh Sabah.
There are five motivating factors in Turkish-Kuwaiti ties: Historical/political, economic, security/defense, regional vision, and humanitarian assistance. Despite the rumors in 2018 that the Kuwaitis had asked Ankara to establish a military base on their soil, Kuwait ultimately opted for a less controversial option and instead signed an agreement for defense and security cooperation.
Turkey hosts millions of displaced Syrians and is providing humanitarian assistance to them in its refugee camps. Kuwait is among the largest donors of aid to the Syrian people and has carried out several humanitarian campaigns at Turkey’s southeastern border with Syria.
Turkey’s relationship with Kuwait could be described as the most stable of any with a GCC nation, without any significant ups or downs. It has not been affected, negatively or positively, by any issues. Ankara is now placing special importance on developing its relations with Gulf countries, despite their ideological differences, and Kuwait could serve as a significant pillar in the Turkish outreach to the region.
There were reports last week that Cavusoglu had twice called his Bahraini counterpart, Abdullatif bin Rashid Al-Zayani. They are said to have discussed bilateral ties and possible mutual visits. If any such visit happened in the near future, it would represent a significant development in Turkey-Gulf relations.
Erdogan also stated last month that Saudi Arabia was interested in buying armed drones from Turkey, the latest sign of a potential thaw in relations between the two states.
With the GCC rift with Qatar over and Libya’s war beginning to wane, there are opportunities for further cooperation. Time will tell whether any nations go down that path.
I have, for years, been supportive of mutual and respectful relations between Turkey and the Gulf countries. The two sides share a wide range of common interests and concerns in this volatile region, such as increasing Iranian activity, the rise of threats emanating from non-state actors, and the involvement of global actors in regional affairs.
Every state has its own perception of threats and vision for its posture in the region. However, diplomacy is a strong tool that can be used to mitigate ideological differences. No one expects that the issues Turkey has with the Gulf nations will be resolved overnight — but any step taken along this path will be a big step indeed./agencies