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The Turkish Armed Forces neutralized a number of terrorists and destroyed over 20 targets of the YPG/PKK terror group in northwestern Syria, a security source said on Saturday.
This came in response to an incident in which rockets fired by terrorists from across the Syrian border landed in the southern Turkish province of Kilis on Thursday.
The Turkish military immediately retaliated the rocket attack and targeted terror elements in Tal Rifat, from where the rockets were believed to have been fired, said the source on condition of anonymity due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
In its more than 35-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 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants. The YPG is the PKK's Syrian offshoot./aa
Bangladesh’s health services chief ABM Khurshid Alam has tested positive for the novel coronavirus, a health official said on Saturday.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Dr. Md. Robed Amin said Alam, and his office secretary, and Director at the Directorate General of Health Services Mizanur Rahman tested positive for the virus on Friday.
Test results of several family members of the secretary also came in positive, Amin added.
On Feb. 7. Alam got his first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by the Oxford-AstraZeneca.
The head of the Directorate General of Health Services developed minor symptoms, Amin said, adding all of them are taking treatment at their homes.
Bangladesh launched a nationwide COVID-19 vaccination drive on Feb. 7, aiming to inoculate 130 million people for free. Over 4.3 million people have been given the first dose of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in the country so far, according to the Health Ministry.
Meanwhile, Ruhul Alam Chowdhury, vice chairman of Bangladesh’s main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, died of the virus on Saturday, according to party sources.
Some 1,868 virus infections and 26 deaths were reported in the country over the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of cases to 568,706 and fatalities to 8,668, said the Health Ministry./aa
The problem of climate change would not have been a big deal if the world's total population had been half of today's current number as well as people would not have faced the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a climate scientist.
In an interview with Anadolu Agency on the latest global developments related to climate change and the environment, such as the election of Joe Biden and Europe Green Deal, Levent Kurnaz, a professor at the Center for Climate Change and Policy Studies at Istanbul's Bogazici University, said that if 3.9 billion people were living in the world instead of 7.9 billion now, we would neither have a COVID-19 problem nor would climate change be that bad.
"Although COVID-19 stems from human-nature interaction, the problem here is that the human population has grown too much. In the same way, climate change is an issue that is experienced since the human population has increased too much and continues to increase," Kurnaz added.
On the basic reason for COVID-19, related to population, he went on to say that people start eating something that they normally wouldn't due to difficulties finding something to eat and drink.
Touching on people's perception of climate change and COVID-19, Kurnaz said that when a threat rises to number one in people's eyes, it undermines others' importance regardless of other's dangers.
"Unfortunately, climate change is something that will happen in our minds in the distant future. However, COVID-19 affects us today. Therefore, it has risen to number one among current threats," he said.
'Green deal to strengthen Europe's economy'
On the European Green Deal, one of the EU's targets regarding making Europe be the first climate-neutral continent, Kurnaz said it could change international production and trade substantially in a short time.
"The European Green Deal is put forward entirely to boost the EU economy. However, in Europe, the peoples want Europe to grow green. So there is pressure from below for green growth. At this point, Europe started to set the rules to make all its production green," he said.
Kurnaz stressed that the deal is not about CO2 emissions, rather it is about greening all production, it is a matter of production in a way that does not harm nature.
Mentioning that this would bring an additional expense for everyone from the farmers there to industries which means that the prices of the goods purchased increase Kurnaz said that at this point, the EU would ask countries to follow the same process that the block does.
"Here the EU says, 'We comply with the Paris Agreement, We have set and run many rules such as not using pesticides in production, not releasing harmful chemicals to the air. Therefore, I expect all countries that will send me products to follow the same rules. If the production rules are not followed, then you will tariff", he added.
Although saying that he does not think the deal is enough as part of desired environment-friendly future, Kurnaz noted that the EU has one of the strictest greenhouse gas reduction rules in the world, and it forces all countries that do business with the EU to set rules and this is directly concern Turkey since half of the country's exports is to the EU.
"Almost all of our production will have to be in line with the standards in the short term set by the EU. This is not just a matter of CO2. We need a change in the decision-making mechanism regarding all systems used in the entire production chain," he said.
Underlying that there is a "huge revolution" in the world in this regard right now, he stressed that If the US somehow also follows this trend, then all of the world trade will go on this path in the next ten years.
"The European Green Deal is our plan to make the EU's economy sustainable. According to the EU, we can do this by turning climate and environmental challenges into opportunities and making the transition just and inclusive for all.
The controversial deal is found not enough and highly criticized by environmental NGOs over not meeting expectations.
Future of Paris Agreement
In response to the question on the future of the Paris Agreement following the Joe Biden administration in the US, Kurnaz stated that there would not be important developments towards preventing climate change with Paris Agreement.
"I think the Paris Agreement is a token agreement to slightly reduce the voices of environmentalists and people making noise about it," he said.
He added that the only advantage that would come from Biden's administration is that countries, including Turkey, do not prefer to take part in the deal and say, 'Even the US is out of the deal', they cannot say this anymore.
Criticizing the commitments countries have been made towards reducing carbon emissions and the texture of the accord, Kurnaz said there is no logical relationship between what we ultimately want to achieve and what countries say they will do.
"Even if all countries have kept their promises, this agreement is leading us towards 3.5C degrees of warming. So keeping promises is not enough, countries need to improve their commitments a few times more so that this agreement will get somewhere," noted Kurnaz.
Also, since it is not a binding agreement, therefore, there would not be any sanctions in case the commitments are not fulfilled are serious shortcomings of the Paris Climate Accord, he added.
Biden signed an executive order to rejoin the agreement during his first day in the office and on Feb. 19, the US officially rejoined the Paris Climate Accord, the State Department announced, saying climate change and science can "never" again be "add-ons" in Washington's foreign policy.
The Paris Agreement, defined as "a bridge between today's policies and climate-neutrality before the end of the 21st century", seeks to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change by keeping global temperatures from rising above 2C degrees of pre-industrial levels over the next century and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5C degrees if possible./aa
Organizers of the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics said on Saturday that the world's biggest games would be held without overseas spectators, given the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
"We have to take decisions which may need sacrifice from everybody and we have to ask for understanding," said Thomas Bach, International Olympic Committee (IOC) chief.
The decision was taken in a virtual meeting today, Kyodo News reported.
Raging COVID-19 delayed Tokyo Olympics 2020 until summer this year.
At a virtual meeting on Saturday, heads of five organizing bodies, including IOC, International Paralympic Committee, met Saturday to decide not to allow spectators to come into Japan for the games.
Bach added the organizers' top priority is to "ensure the safety of all participants of the games and people in Japan."
The pandemic has hit major events worldwide as respective governments tightened borders to stem the infection's spread, which has affected over 122 million people, including over 2.7 million deaths since first reported in December 2019./agencies
Bangladesh police started a manhunt following an attack on houses in Hindu minority communities in a village in northern Bangladesh, the local police head said on Friday.
Police arrested 22 suspects on Friday after attacks on a village in Shalla Upazila of Sunamganj district on Wednesday, leaving 70 Hindu households destroyed.
The incident occurred after a Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh leader, an Islamic non-political group, was allegedly criticized in a Facebook post by a Hindu villager on Monday.
Police arrested the Hindu man for hurting religious sentiment but his arrest could not quell hard-liners.
Later, hundreds attacked several Hindu houses, according to media reports. There was no report of physical assault as the minority community left their homes because they feared being attacked.
“The situation in the region has been brought under control and normalcy has returned. And, we [law enforcement, including police and elite force RAB] remain on alert to avoid any unwelcoming situation.” local police station chief Nazmul Haque told Anadolu Agency “A separate police camp has been set up to provide necessary safety and security to the Hindu community and others. Additional forces are deployed and patrolling to this effect, including to the response of the scheduled visit of Indian premier [Narendra] Modi” he said.
Modi, the hardliner Hindus PM is scheduled to visit Dhaka to mark the Golden Jubilee of the Independence of Bangladesh and will join the 100 birth anniversary of Bangladesh's founding leader, Mujibur Rahman, on March 26 in Dhaka as a chief guest.
His visit has started witnessing huge protests.
A police official said 22 suspects were produced before a court for further legal proceedings. “Our drive is to continue to detain people involved in the attack on our citizens,” he said.
Two cases have been filed with police stations regarding the attack against more than 1,500 unidentified people.
Police and locals alleged that Hefazat-e-Islam followers were linked to the attacks. Hifazat-e Islam, however, denied a link and claimed that the attack was politically motivated.
In a statement sent to the media on Friday, the organization's central organizing secretary demanded the government take legal action against those involved in such heinous attacks and demand exemplary punishment.
Terming that Bangladesh is a place of communal harmony and peaceful co-existence of all religious faiths, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan and chief of RAB Chowdhury Abdullah Al Mamun warned that no one will be spared if found involved in the incident and hurting religious harmony in the country
Europe can achieve herd immunity by the end of the summer with four coronavirus vaccines approved by European health authorities, o Uğur Sahin, a Turkish-German scientist and CEO of BioNTech said on Friday.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency after receiving the Great Cross with Star of the Order of Merit, the highest honor in Germany for developing the world's first COVID-19 vaccine, Sahin said a new wave of pandemic caused by the UK variant will stay for several months.
"The UK variant is infecting faster and more efficiently and we need to really work on all levels. Everyone has to try to protect him or herself and thereby protect others. This is the only way to control the pandemic," said Sahin.
"This new wave will stay with us, I believe, for several months. It is important that we avoid as many as possible infections in parallel, continue with the rollout of the vaccines," he added.
Sahin said scientists achieved their goal to deliver a safe and effective vaccine which they did in less than one year.
"Our goal for 2021, is to ensure that we can supply as many as possible doses. So, we started to deliver to more than 60 countries. And we have a lot of work to do still," he said.
Responding to a question on applying two different jabs because of supply shortages and some countries' decisions on halting vaccination with AstraZeneca, Sahin said that should be possible but it needs to be tested.
"The UK started testing. I expect that this will be published very soon. I expect safety is not impacted. AstraZeneca vaccine followed by mRNA vaccine, that should work," he added.
Sahin said BioNTech and Turkey made a deal for 4.5 million doses to be delivered at the end of March and the company and the Turkish government continue discussions on the possibility to deliver more doses in the second half of 2021.
"And we had a number of good discussions with TUBITAK about cancer projects. And this is still ongoing discussions with scientists from the TUBITAK side and scientists from our side. And I'm confident that this will also come. It will not come now because we are now at the moment dealing with the pandemic situation. But it is something we are definitely interested in later on," he said.
Germany's President Frank-Walter Steinmeier conferred Turkish scientists Ugur Sahin and Ozlem Tureci with the country's highest award, the Order of Merit, on Friday for inventing the world's first effective vaccine against COVID-19, at a ceremony at the Bellevue Palace, which was also attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel.
The Great Cross with Star of the Order of Merit, which was given to the Turkish-German scientist couple, is one of the country's most prominent honors to pay tribute to individuals for service to the nation.
Sahin and Tureci were born to immigrant parents from Turkey who moved to Germany in the 1960s.
After studying medicine, they built successful careers in the fields of cancer immunology, molecular biology and mRNA vaccine technology.
The pharmaceutical company BioNTech, which the couple founded in 2008, managed to develop the world's first effective coronavirus vaccine together with its US partner, Pfizer./agencies
Investments in Turkey's entrepreneurship ecosystem set a record last year, reaching $139 million, the nation’s vice president said on Friday.
Speaking at the 3rd Value Summit and Turkey Add Value Brands Awards Ceremony, Fuat Oktay said the nation continues its efforts to simplify business procedures of all domestic and international investors to increase investments.
Turkey is one of the less restrictive Organisations for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD] countries with a 0.059 rate, which is measured by the OECD under the foreign direct investment Regulatory Restrictiveness Index, he said.
Stressing Turkey's '10 Turcorn' goal for 2023, Oktay said the fertile environment for indigenous unicorns that have a target of reaching more than a $1 billion valuation was formed in Turkey's tech-zones.
Saying that Turkey will strengthen its success with economic and law reforms, he pointed out Turkey's 1.8% growth rate in 2020 and added: "That figure is one of the most concrete indicators of Turkey's success, while the developed countries such as the US, the UK, and Japan contracted ranging between 3.5% and 9.9%."/aa
ISLAMABAD: Kuwaiti Foreign Affairs Minister Dr Ahmed Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah assured Pakistan on Friday that his country would increase the participation of Pakistani skilled workforce in its multiple trades in future.
Dr Sabah gave the assurance to Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development Sayed Zulfikar Bukhari at a meeting held here.
The SAPM in a tweet welcomed the Kuwaiti minister’s views on improving ties between the two countries.
Foreign Office Spokesman Zahid Chaudhri, while responding to a question about Kuwait visa curbs for Pakistanis at a briefing, expressed the hope that the issue would be resolved soon.
Mr Chaudhri noted that Dr Al-Sabah had appreciated the positive contribution of more than 100,000 expatriate Pakistanis towards the development of Kuwait.
Meanwhile, during a meeting with Dr Sabah, President Dr Arif Alvi invited Kuwait to benefit from the emerging economic opportunities under China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) by making investment in its various projects.
The president said Pakistan’s geo-economic importance was enhanced due to CPEC and Gwadar Port.
He said Pakistan and Kuwait had immense potential of cooperation in the fields of education, health and science and offered to provide the country’s skilled labour and professionals.
He said Pakistan could also provide training to Kuwaiti military personnel.
President Alvi said Pakistan accorded the highest importance to its cordial and fraternal relations with Kuwait and wanted to expand these ties.
Both sides discussed the existing level of cooperation and agreed to expand bilateral ties for the mutual benefits of the two countries.
The president highlighted the atrocities and human rights violations being committed in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) and lauded Kuwait’s support to Pakistan’s position on held Kashmir, especially at the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
The Kuwaiti minister also emphasised the need for further improving bilateral relations./ agencies
The Ministry of Foreign Condemned the criminal attack against the oil refinery in Riyadh, in the sisterly Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, with a drone bombed by the Houthi militia.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated in a statement that the repetition, escalation and targeting of these terrorist operations against civilians and vital areas is not only a threat to the security of the sisterly Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the stability of the region, but also a direct threat to energy supplies and the global economy and a direct challenge to international and humanitarian laws It immediately requires widespread international condemnation of these terrorist acts and work to put an end to them.
She concluded her statement by affirming that the State of Kuwait fully stands by the brotherly Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and its support in all measures it takes to preserve its security, stability and sovereignty.
After 11 days of implementing the partial curfew in the country, the numbers of Corona infection is still on the rise and recorded 14,245 injuries, 74 deaths, and 51 ICU cases after the start of curfew from March 7.
Quoting health officials, local daily Al-Qabas reported that the infections among Kuwaitis have increased significantly, registering about 67% of the total cases. The remaining 33% was distributed among non-Kuwaitis.
Al-Qabas also reported that the majority of Kuwaiti injured people are young and adolescents, pointing out that these segments are the ones who underestimate the disease.
Authorities continue to monitor banquets, weddings, and any gathering in offices. Meanwhile, officials announced the vaccination of 445,000 citizens.