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Government is planning to implement full curfew in the country during the last 10 days of Ramadan, Al Qabas daily reported quoting high level sources.
At present, government extended the partial curfew till April 22nd
According to Al Qabas report, in the event that the number of deaths and infections with the Coronavirus continues to increase and the number of case in intensive care unite also increases, government may consider full curfew during the last 10 days until Eid al-Fitr./agencies
Turkish security teams on Saturday held at least 54 irregular migrants in the northwestern Canakkale province, according to security sources.
The Turkish Coast Guard rescued the migrants off the coast of Ayvacik in Canakkale, said a source, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
After routine health checks, all of the asylum seekers were taken to the provincial migration authority.
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./aa
The UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) Friday said 58 women and children, who were abducted last year during vicious intercommunal fighting in Jonglei State, have been reunited with their families.
In a press statement, it said the exchange of abducted women and children came following a community-led goodwill agreement between the Lou Nuer, Murle and Dinka Bor ethnic communities.
“Abductions are a horrific aspect of conflict in this area,” said David Shearer, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for South Sudan and head of UNMISS.
“However, the agreement reached to release the abducted women and children is an essential step to build trust and avoid the cycle of revenge. I applaud all those involved for their efforts to reunite these innocent victims with their families,” he added.
Intensive efforts to broker peace between the three communities have been underway since December 2020, backed by the United Nations Mission in South Sudan, working together with agencies supported by the UK and the US.
The UN helicopters have been shuttling between Pibor, Pochalla, Pieri and Juba to pick up groups of women and children and return them to their communities.
The Director General of Information in Pibor Administrative area, Yasir Babakir, told Anadolu Agency by phone that authorities of Greater Pibor Administrative area have handed over 27 abducted children to authorities in Central Equatoria, Pochala County and Nuer community of Jonglei State.
He said their authorities have handed over 14 abducted children to Nuer, seven to Anyuak and six to Central Equatoria state.
He revealed that after handing over 14 children to Nuer community of Jonglei, Nuer also returned 14 children of Murle.
“Administration of Pibor is working hard to implement the resolutions of the peace conference held in Juba sometime back by people of Jonglei and Pibor. We want to have peace with all our neighboring states,” Babakir said./aa
Turkey on Friday condemned a deadly terrorist attack in northern Mali.
“We are saddened to receive the news that four MINUSMA (United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali) peacekeepers lost their lives and twenty other persons were injured in a terrorist attack carried out today (2 April) at the Aguelhok base, located in Mali’s northern region of Kidal,” said Turkish Foreign Ministry in a statement.
“Turkey attaches importance to peace and stability in friendly and brotherly Mali,” it added.
“We strongly condemn this terrorist attack, extend our condolences to the families and relatives of those who lost their lives, and wish a speedy recovery to the wounded,” the statement concluded./aa
A63-year-old Turkish man with Alzheimer’s was critically injured after being shot by a German police officer in the southeastern Bavaria province, reports said Friday.
The man, identified as Habeş Temiz, had refused to leave the premises of his neighbor’s property, Ihlas News Agency (IHA) reported, adding that police came upon the neighbor’s complaint.
In video footage shared online, Temiz, who was holding a toy truck, started swinging the toy.
The police used pepper spray against him first and fired a round of warning shots, followed by three shots targeting the man.
Temiz was hospitalized after the incident, the report said.
In a statement, the German police said Temiz, who had been trespassing refused to cooperate with officers despite warnings.
An investigation has been launched into the incident.
Germany is home to 81 million people and the second-largest Muslim population in Western Europe after France. Of the country’s nearly 4.7 million Muslims, at least 3 million are of Turkish descent.
Racist officers among Germany's police force also intentionally target Turkish people and other minorities in what they call "Turk hunts," according to a recent study on racism and police violence in the country./agencies
Following record-low figures in recent months, trade between Turkey and Saudi Arabia almost zeroized in March, according to official data, reinforcing the damage suggested to be caused by the kingdom's monthslong unofficial boycott.
Exports to Saudi Arabia plunged to just $19 million in March, Turkish Exporters Assembly (TIM) data showed, collapsing 93.7% year-on-year from around $298.23 million a year ago.
The data showed that in the first quarter of the year Turkish exports to the kingdom shrunk 93% on an annual basis to $56 million, down from $810.6 million in the January-March period of 2020.
Furthermore, many industries have seen their sales almost reset in March, including ship-yacht, carpet, jewelry, water products and animal products, ornamental plants, tobacco, fresh fruit and vegetables. Many others saw drops of up to 90%.
The electric and electronic industry’s exports also dropped significantly but somewhat maintained flow. The sector alone accounted for $6 million of the overall exports in the month.
Turkey raised the boycott issue this week at a World Trade Organisation (WTO) Goods Council meeting in Geneva, at which Saudi Arabia’s “restrictive policies and practices concerning Turkey” was discussed and Riyadh responded, the WTO’s website said. Ankara’s move could help bring about a settlement.
Saudi business people and retailers last year called for a ban on Turkish imports over political tensions between the two regional rivals.
The Saudi government has never formally acknowledged the boycott and said the authorities have not placed any restrictions on Turkish goods.
To circumvent the unofficial blockade, some Turkish exporters have been rerouting food, clothing and other goods.
Production in nearby countries allows exporters to obtain customs documents and to ditch “Made in Turkey” product tags, allowing goods to enter the kingdom, exporters, traders and a diplomat told Reuters Thursday.
Brokers are taking the Turkish goods to other ports and forge the documents so they appear to be coming from China or Europe for fees, one importer of building materials to Saudi Arabia, who requested anonymity, told Reuters.
The trade data also shows unusual parallel jumps of 200% to 400% in Turkish garments, textiles, chemicals and jewelry arriving in Oman and Lebanon.
Large Turkish companies are said to have held talks in Saudi Arabia in recent months to reopen trade with the kingdom, without any clear breakthrough.
A diplomat who requested anonymity said Saudi traders had lost billions of riyals last year as goods piled up at customs.
They complained to authorities and eventually found “a turnaround to still get the Turkish products in, especially those with no better alternatives,” the person said.
Ankara and Riyadh have in recent months attempted to repair some diplomatic damage after a decade of tension, especially after the 2018 murder of dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia’s Istanbul consulate.
The international community has blamed the Saudi authorities for Khashoggi’s murder, namely Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS). The whereabouts of Khashoggi’s body remain unknown.
Aside from the Khashoggi incident, Saudi Arabia’s rapprochement with Israel, support of the coup in Egypt and its stance on Libya and Syria have been other points of contention between Ankara and Riyadh.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Saudi Arabia’s King Salman agreed in November to “keep channels of dialogue open to improve bilateral ties and overcome issues,” and Ankara has also recently pursued better ties with Saudi ally Egypt.
Orange county police stated Friday that they believed the gunman in Wednesday's shooting in Southern California that left four people dead, including a 9-year-old boy, was not acting randomly, knew all the victims and his motive may have involved personal or business relationships.
"This was not a random act of violence,” Lt. Jennifer Amat said Thursday of the attack at a two-story building that housed small businesses in Orange, southeast of Los Angeles.
Aminadab Gaxiola Gonzalez, 44, was identified as the suspected shooter. He was in critical but stable condition. It wasn't clear whether he was wounded by police or shot himself, Amat said.
Gonzalez, from nearby Fullerton, was staying at a motel in the neighboring city of Anaheim and used a rented car to arrive at the office building on Lincoln Avenue.
He chained the front and rear gates to the complex with bicycle cable locks and was spotted on security video wearing a bandana over his face, brandishing a semiautomatic handgun and hauling a backpack that contained pepper spray, handcuffs and ammunition, police said.
He targeted Unified Homes, a mobile home brokerage business, authorities said. The dead included a 9-year-old boy who was found cradled in the arms of a wounded woman, who was in critical but stable condition.
A family member identified one victim as Luis Tovar, 50, who owned Unified Homes. "Our world is shattered,” 28-year-old Vania Tovar, one of Tovar’s five children, told The Orange County Register.
Thalia Tovar, another one of his children, said on a GoFundMe page that her sister Genevieve Raygoza was also killed. She said Leticia Solis and Matthew Farias, a young boy, were also among the victims.
Posts on the same GoFundMe page identified Farias' mother, Blanca Tamayo, as the attack's wounded survivor. Orange County coroner officials would not immediately confirm the identities of the victims, said Carrie Braun, a spokesperson for the county sheriff's department.
Reports of shots fired in the city of Orange sent officers to the scene within two minutes, and they exchanged gunfire with the shooter through a gate before the locks were cut, Amat said.
A man was found dead inside an office, a woman in another office and a second woman was found on an outdoor landing upstairs.
"It appears that a little boy died in his mother’s arms as she was trying to save him during this horrific massacre,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said.
The preliminary motive is believed to be related to a business and personal relationship between the suspect and the victims, Amat said. She said the precise relationships were still being determined.
The violence was the nation’s third major mass shooting in just over two weeks. Last week a gunman opened fire at a supermarket in Boulder, Colorado, and killed 10. A week before that, six Asian women were among eight people killed at three Atlanta-area spas.
Scott Clark, who is the owner of Calco Financial that is two doors down from Unified Homes, said he has seen about 10 people working inside Unified Homes but doesn’t know them well.
He said he has chatted with Luis Tovar, sometimes inviting him inside his own office to take a break, and described him as hard-working. "He’s there day and night,” Clark said.
Clark left his office on Wednesday around 4:45 p.m., earlier than usual. "I must have had an angel from God watching out for me to make me leave an hour before I usually do,” he said.
Gonzalez was charged in 2015 in Orange County with cruelty to a child and other counts. He pleaded guilty to misdemeanor battery and served one day in jail.
All other counts were dismissed, and the conviction was expunged in 2017, said Lauren Gold, spokeswoman for the city of Anaheim.
The Islamic Cooperation Youth Forum (ICYF), which works with over 600 million youth aged 18-35 in 56 Islamic countries around the world, is organizing the "Young Muslim Women's Summit" that will welcome successful Muslim women from around the world who have broken new ground between April 6 to April 8.
The opening ceremony of the event, which will be held on April 6 within the framework of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth Forum, will be attended by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu. The summit will be held with the theme of women as the rising power of the 21st century. Among the participants, there is Nobel Peace Prize winner Tawakkul Karman, Yemeni activist Ala Salah, the symbol of the Sudanese revolution Mona Diab, a Muslim engineer on Facebook's artificial intelligence team Ayshe Yusufi, a Nigerian activist from the "Bring Back Our Girls" movement Sumeya Faruki, leader of the first Afghan all-girl robot team Angel Al Nimer, and Sarah Quraishi Pakistani, an aerospace engineer and CEO of the first private aviation company focused on environmentally friendly aircraft engines.
Canada's first hijab-wearing TV host Ginella Massa, Iran's first female triathlon athlete, Shirin Gerami, the first female leader of the Muslim Council of Great Britain, Zara Mumammed, Belkis Abdulkadir, who plays basketball with a hijab in the United States, and Gulsum Abdullah, the first weightlifter to compete with a hijab in the United States, will also be speakers at the summit. Rima Sultani Rimu, a woman fighting to provide Arakanese refugees with educational facilities, American filmmaker Samah Safi Bayazid, Ubah Ali, an activist fighting for the end of female genital mutilation, Zahra Billoo, an activist in San Francisco exposing Islamophobia and prejudice and also offering legal aid to Muslims who are victims of prejudice, filmmaker Ala Hamdan, and last but not least, Ihssane Benalluch, one of Instagram's top-earning Muslim influencers will also grace the summit with their presence.
ICYF head Ayhan: We reached 15 million youth
"ICYF was established in 2004 through initiatives led by Turkey in the interest of about 600 million young people in 56 member countries. The organization works to raise young people's awareness about economic development, education, Islamic culture and heritage, and to establish a dialogue between civilizations. ICYF, the umbrella institution for Muslim youth around the world, has managed to reach about 15 million young people through its online work during the pandemic. It has brought together social leaders, such as entrepreneurs, investors, young businesspersons, opinion leaders and artists with young people," said ICYF President Taha Ayhan on the summit and added:
"At this summit, we will bring together young women who have achieved firsts in all fields, from sport to arts, to politics to science, from around the world. The first day of the summit will take place on the sidelines of the ECOSOC Youth Forum, which will provide a global platform for dialogue on solutions to challenges affecting young people's well-being and will be an important part of the event."
The second batch of medical supplies has been sent to the fire-gutted Turkish field hospital located in a Rohingya refugee camp at Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar, an official said Friday.
"As we promised, today the second Turkish Air Forces (Command) cargo plane landed in Chittagong airport bringing medical equipment and 13 health professionals for the new Turkish field hospital that is being reestablished in the Rohingya refugee camp," said Turkish Ambassador to Bangladesh Mustafa Osman Turan.
Earlier, the first flight containing equipment, along with a 26-member expert team, arrived in Bangladesh on Saturday and had already begun rebuilding the fire-gutted hospital from its ashes, with a target to resume health services by next week.
The Turkish field hospital was completely destroyed in the giant blaze at the world's largest refugee camp in Cox's Bazar. The fire also consumed over 10,000 Rohingya tents, killed at least 15 people and injured more than 550 members of the persecuted community.
People inspect debris after a fire in a makeshift market near a Rohingya refugee camp in Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, April 2, 2021. The fire broke out early Friday when residents of the sprawling Kutupalong camp for Myanmar's Rohingya refugees were asleep. (AP Photo/Shafiqur Rahman)
As many as 45,000 Rohingya were internally displaced due to the deadliest fire ever at the refugee camps on March 22.
"Our hospital will be fully functional very soon, resuming its essential health services to a thousand patients daily from (the) Rohingya and host communities," Turan said.
Currently, more than 1.2 million Rohingya, marked as one of the world's most persecuted people by the United Nations have been living in crammed makeshift tents in Bangladesh's southern tourist-hub city of Cox's Bazar.
Most of the members of the stateless community fled a brutal military crackdown in the western Rakhine state of their home country Myanmar in August 2017 and took shelter in neighboring Bangladesh.
Frequent incidents of fire at the congested camp settlements have made life more challenging for the Rohingya refugees.
Another major fire in mid-January this year also burned over 500 shanties to ashes, while dozens of minor fire incidents have also been reported since the mass exodus of the persecuted community, including the latest fire early Friday that claimed three lives and destroyed seven refugee shops.