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Kuwait has received the fourth shipment of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine as part of a deal that will see doses supplied on a weekly basis, the health ministry said on Sunday. With the arrival of more doses, Kuwait’s vaccination campaign looks poised to reach its target of inoculating the “wider population,” said Dr. Abdullah Al-Bader, the ministry’s Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Assistant Undersecretary.
As more vaccination sites continue to open nationwide, in addition to some 15 centers launched to date, Kuwait’s inoculation drive against COVID-19 is expected to move into higher gear, added the official. The vaccination centers will also be equipped with the easy-to-store Oxford/AstraZeneca shot, which has already been given the regulatory go-ahead in Kuwait, he said. Kuwait has so far registered 177,701 coronavirus infections and 1,003 deaths./agencies
WhatsApp and telegram both come under the title of messaging apps. But there are numerous reasons for users today to starting using Telegram in place of WhatsApp. And, today, Telegram became the most-downloaded app in the world. The app also overtook Tiktok in terms of popularity.
By January 2021, Telegram has 63 million downloads, making it the most-downloaded app ever. And, India is the most-downloaded country with 24 per cent, followed by Indonesia with 10 per cent. That means, more than 15 million installs are from India alone.
A few months ago, people don’t even know what Telegram app is. But, the fate of Telegram changed overnight when Facebook-owned app, Whatsapp decided to change its privacy policy. WhatsApp also issued an ultimatum to users that they will have to accept the updates in the privacy policy or their accounts would be deleted. WhatsApp had stated that it will share a lot of data with Facebook and third-party developers. The news obviously didn’t go well with the users.
Talking about Telegram, it uses open source since it was launched in 2013 and its chats are encrypted. Also, Telegram is a peer to peer technology that refers to the blockchain which emphasis mainly on usernames rather than cell numbers, unlike WhatsApp. Hence the risk to unleash your personal contact information remains contracted to your telegram usernames only. Your phone number ️will not be revealed to anyone.
Some of the other benefits in Telegram are: No one can add you to the group unless you permit by changing the setting and once you leave a group, admin cannot add you unless you join back voluntarily. The best part is, one can use Telegram without owning a smartphone with the help of Telegram Web. We can also edit and delete our message and it will reflect in all members phone.
One can also transfer their old WhatsApp chat to Telegram very easily on Android:
* Open a chat in WhatsApp and then tap the three vertical dots on the top right corner.
* Tap Export Chat > select Telegram in the Share menu.
* You’ll be asked to restore with or without media. Select the option as per your preference.
Occupied Palestine (Reuters) - Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is not troubled that U.S. President Joe Biden has not phoned him yet, Zionist’s ambassador to Washington said on Saturday, seeking to play down the lack of direct contact so far.
There has been speculation that the Democratic president could be signalling displeasure over the close ties Netanyahu forged with former President Donald Trump, who called Netanyahu two days after his inauguration in 2017.
“The prime minister is not worried about the timing of the conversation,” Ambassador Gilad Erdan told N12’s Meet The Press. He said Biden had urgent matters to contend with, such as the coronavirus pandemic and its economic fallout.
On Friday, the White House denied that Biden was intentionally snubbing Netanyahu by failing to include him so far in phone calls to foreign leaders since taking office on Jan. 20, saying the two leaders would speak soon.
Biden has already called numerous foreign leaders, including those from China, Mexico, Britain, India, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea and Russia.
David Makovsky, a former U.S. Middle East negotiator at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said on Twitter that once Biden starts phoning Middle East leaders, Netanyahu would likely be first among them.
While the right-wing Netanyahu was in lock-step with Trump over Middle East policy, he could be in for frostier relations with Biden, although Biden has long been regarded in Israel as a friend in Washington.
Netanyahu may find the alliance tested if Washington restores U.S. participation in the Iran nuclear deal that Trump withdrew from and opposes Zionist settlement building on occupied land where Palestinians seek statehood.
TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisian police took Ahmed Gam from the shop where he worked, accused him of looting during recent protests, and beat him so badly during his detention last month that he lost a testicle, he said.
Ahmed Gam, 21, who he says was tortured by police during his two-day detention last month, lies in a bed in his parents' home in the coastal city of Monastir, Tunisia February 10, 2021. Picture taken February 10, 2021. REUTERS/Tarek Amara
Lying in bed in his parents’ home in Bennane, near the coastal city of Monastir, Gam, 21, could not stand without help and cried as he described police beating and burning his genitals.
His account was supported, in part, by a hospital report viewed by Reuters.
Tunisia is widely seen as the sole relative success story of the 2011 “Arab spring” revolts for its democratic advances. It holds regular elections and has a press that criticises the state.
But Gam’s case is one of at least 100 in which, a Tunisian and international rights group says, security forces recently used violent abuse after people engaged in protest and dissent, freedoms won during the revolution 10 years ago.
The protests, which began on Jan. 15, the day after the 10th anniversary of the revolution, have increasingly focused on abusive tactics by police.
The Interior Ministry, which has oversight of the police, said it would not comment on ongoing cases, including Gam’s, when asked by Reuters. But it denounced allegations against police as “attacks aimed to undermine the credibility of its structures” and said it sought a balance between upholding rights and enforcing the law.
“Some individual mistakes happen but ... we have maintained self restraint despite provocations,” said Jamel Jarboui, spokesman for the national syndicate of security forces, a police union.
A judge in Monastir is investigating Gam’s complaint of torture. The family gave the judge the report from Sahloul Hospital in Sousse describing Gam’s admission on Jan. 30 with “testicular trauma” and a decision to remove the testicle.
The document, viewed by Reuters, is stamped by both the hospital and the Monastir Court of First Instance and dated Feb. 4. An official at the hospital, who asked to remain anonymous, confirmed Gam was hospitalised on Jan. 30 and his testicle removed.
The judge could not be reached for comment but the state news agency TAP cited a court spokeswoman as saying he had opened an investigation for torture which caused the loss of an organ after seeing the doctor’s document and hearing from the plaintiff.
The judge has asked three people to appear before him on Monday in connection with the case, TAP reported.
The recent unrest, which began on the day after the 10th anniversary of the revolution, started as clashes at night between police and youths in poor city districts before spreading to daylight protests.
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While the protests initially targeted inequality, they later focused more on anger at police abuses, with demonstrators last week shouting: “police everywhere, justice nowhere”.
TORTURE
Gam denies having taken part in the protests as well as the accusations of looting. He said police seized him on Jan. 27 while he was at work and started hitting him in the face as soon as they put him in their vehicle.
They took him to a detention centre in Monastir, tied his feet to the legs of a table “like a chicken” and then beat him in the groin with sticks, he said.
“I told them I would die,” he said.
They then removed his clothes. “One of them took a lighter and put it to each testicle,” he said. The policeman stopped when a colleague told him to, Gam said.
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A group of seven police continued to torture him for more than an hour, he said. He was then held for two days without medical treatment.
To end the assault, he said he told police he “stole everything”, a confession he told Reuters was untrue.
After two days police took him to hospital in the nearby city of Sousse, his testicle swollen and blackened. Doctors then removed it, he said.
After his operation he was returned to custody and still faces prosecution for looting. However, the judge ordered his release while under investigation because of his medical condition, he said.
Apart from viewing the medical records, Reuters was not able to independently corroborate his account.
Turkey is aiming to expand its investments in Ethiopia which already add up to billions of dollars, Ankara's ambassador to the African nation said.
Turkey's investments in Ethiopia currently stand at $2.5 billion, Yaprak Alp told Anadolu Agency.
It is the second-largest investor in Ethiopia after China -- with its state-of-the-art textile industries and cable manufacturing firms.
The ambassador's remarks came ahead of Ethiopian Foreign Minister Demeke Mekonnen's scheduled visit to Turkey.
Demeke will meet Turkey's top officials to discuss bilateral cooperation as well as international and regional issues of common interest, local broadcaster FANA reported.
Demeke, who is also the deputy prime minister, will inaugurate the newly built Ethiopian Embassy in Ankara./aa
Occupied Palestine
The Palestinian Foreign Ministry on Sunday called on the International Criminal Court (ICC) to speed up the opening of an investigation into Zionist crimes against the Palestinians.
A ministry statement said Zionist authorities and settlers were escalating “their attacks against the Palestinians, their property and holy sites to achieve their goal of Judaizing Jerusalem and isolating it from its Palestinian surroundings.”
“(Israel) is seeking to annex area C under (Israeli) control in the West Bank under the Oslo Accord and empty it from the Palestinian presence,” the ministry said.
It called on the international community and rights groups to take the necessary steps “to halt (Israeli) assaults and impose sanctions on (Israel).”
On Feb. 5, the ICC ruled that it has jurisdiction regarding crimes in the occupied territories in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
SRINAGAR, Jammu and Kashmir
Two former chief ministers of the disputed Jammu and Kashmir region said on Sunday they were locked up in their homes by authorities.
“We get locked up in our homes with no explanation. It’s bad enough they’ve locked my father [a sitting member of parliament] and me in our home, they’ve locked my sister and her kids in their home as well,” Omar Abdullah, who served as the region's chief minister from 2009 to 2015, tweeted.
He also shared a picture of a bulletproof police truck stationed outside his home at Gupkar, where the power elite of the region resides.
His father, Farooq Abdullah, was the chief minister of the erstwhile state thrice in 1982-84, 1986-90, and 1996-2002.
Kashmir is held by India and Pakistan in parts and claimed both in full. Since they were partitioned in 1947, the two countries have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir. Some groups have been fighting against Indian rule for independence, or unification with neighboring Pakistan.
“The move is arbitrary and condemnable," Imran Nabi, the spokesman for the National Conference party, told Anadolu Agency. We were not informed of this "incomprehensible action," he added.
The police, however, said in a statement that in the wake of the second anniversary of the Feb. 14, 2019 highway bombing, in which 40 Indian soldiers were killed, they had received “adverse inputs” and the “movement of VIPs and protected persons has been discouraged and all concerned were informed in advance not to plan a tour today.”
In the run-up to Aug. 5, 2019, the day India scrapped the region’s political autonomy, hundreds of pro-India and pro-freedom politicians and activists were either jailed or detained in their homes. Omar and Farooq were released in March 2020.
Nayeem Akhtar and Sartaj Madni, former ministers of the People’s Democratic Party, besides other top party functionaries, are currently under detention./aa
Three PKK terrorists in northern Iraq were neutralized by Turkish drones, according to the Turkish National Defense Ministry on Sunday.
“3 PKK terrorists spotted in the Gara region in northern Iraq... trying to escape with a paramotor were neutralized by our UAVs,” the ministry said on Twitter.
The total number of terrorists neutralized in the region has reached 53, it added.
Turkey launched Operation Claw-Eagle 2 on Feb. 10 to prevent the PKK/KCK and other terror groups from re-establishing positions used to carry out cross-border terror attacks. The operation was completed on Sunday.
Operations Claw-Tiger and Claw-Eagle were initiated last June to ensure the safety of Turks, and Turkey's borders.
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 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa
Bangladesh on Sunday began relocating another 3,000 Rohingya refugees to a remote island, despite opposition from the UN and rights groups.
It is hosting more than a million Rohingya Muslims at cramped makeshift camps in Cox’s Bazar, which is considered the world’s largest refugee settlement. Most have fled violence following a military crackdown in Myanmar's Rakhine state in 2017.
The refugees will reach Bhasan Char by Monday, Mohammad Shamsud Douza, additional commissioner of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation, told Anadolu Agency. "It is part of a plan to gradually shift around 100,000 refugees."
The island, where 7,000 refugees have already been moved, is said to be flood-prone. Rights groups have been calling for the process to be suspended before a complete feasibility report on the habitability and protection of the island has been carried out.
"The refugees are afraid of being isolated," Ro Nay San Lwin, co-founder of the UK-based Free Rohingya Coalition, told Anadolu Agency over the phone. "The relocation can hamper their repatriation to Myanmar."
Their repatriation is already uncertain following the Feb. 1 military coup in Myanmar.
Meanwhile, the government claims the island is safe and is also planning a visit of foreign diplomats to inspect the arrangements worth $350 million, i.e. 1,400 big cluster houses four feet above the ground with concrete blocks, 120 multi-story cyclone shelters, etc./aa
A massive fire engulfing most of Afghanistan's Islam Qala dry port with Iran is estimated to inflict financial losses worth at least $50 million, officials confirmed on Sunday.
Jailani Farhad, a spokesman for the provincial governor, told Anadolu Agency that the fire at the Islam Qala Port was finally contained by the Herat fire brigade in cooperation with the Iranian fire brigade.
He said damage assessment and investigations into the reason behind the fire were underway.
Speaking to media representatives at the site of the fire, Governor Syed Abdul Waheed Qitali said last night no lives have been lost, but a number of individuals sustained fire burns, and are under treatment. He thanked the Iranian fire brigade for helping with efforts to control the blaze.
Meanwhile, Younus Qazizada, the head of the Herat Chamber of Commerce and Investment, has estimated that at least 500 oil tankers have been completely burnt, while the financial losses inflicted by the fire could be around $50 million.
The massive fire broke out on Saturday afternoon with visuals circulating on social media showing towering flames engulfing a large area in one of the busiest dry ports of land-locked Afghanistan.
Afghanistan relies on imported petroleum products from Iran and the Central Asian states that are usually brought to the country from the Islam Qala Port./aa