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Three Turkish crew members who survived a pirate attack on a Liberian-flagged ship returned to Turkey early Saturday.
Fourth Captain Furkan Yaren, chief engineer Ilhan Suha Tatligul and greaser in the engine room Bahadir Yesilalan arrived at Istanbul Airport where they detailed their harrowing experience.
Yaren told reporters that he injured his leg in the attack and thanked Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and Transport and Infrastructure Minister Adil Karaismailoglu for their interest.
"I hope other friends will be able to get back to their families as soon as possible," he added.
"We started to wait for help by closing the safety gates. Then they separated us. I don't remember how many people they are. They took our friends. We moved the ship to a safe point," he said,
We gave the necessary information to authorities. We lost a friend and we are so sorry, said Yaren.
"I'm so glad to be reunited with my family," he said.
Meanwhile, Tatligul said they locked themselves in the helm station during the attack and the pirates shot at doors like in a horror movie.
"They hit the doors with a sledgehammer for hours. They kept trying for six, seven hours. At that time, our Azerbaijani colleague died. I fell from a height and was slightly injured. Then they took the other friends. They didn't take me because they couldn't find me. Then they fled, leaving two wounded," he said.
"Unfortunately, 15 of our friends were captured. There is not much to talk about. We should not upset their families any more or remind them of their pain," said Yesilalan.
In a pirate attack last week, 15 of the Mozart cargo ship's 19 crew members were abducted, while an Azerbaijani national was killed.
Following the attack, Mozart anchored Sunday at the nearby Port-Gentil, but with only three of its surviving crew members on board.
On Wednesday, an Istanbul-based firm that provides technical management services for the vessel, said all 15 crew members are in good health and uninjured.
"Boden Shipping communicated with the crew members of the container ship Mozart, which was hijacked off Sao Tome on Jan. 23, 2021," said a statement by the firm./aa
Turkey reaffirmed its support Friday for the legitimate struggle of the Turkish minority community in Western Thrace in Greece.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry posted a message of support on Twitter with reference to the January 29 Western Thrace National Resistance and Solidarity Day.
“Greece rejects to comply with ECHR’s decisions which favored the Turkish minority,” it said, citing the European Court of Human Rights.
“We will continue to stand with our kinsmen in their right struggle,” the ministry added as it hailed the Turkish minority’s struggle to make Greece recognize its ethnic identity that is Turkish.
Turkish minority in Greece and their struggle
In 1988, the Greek judiciary shut down several associations in Western Thrace which had "Turkish" in their names, by saying "there are no Turks in Greece.”
A march on Jan. 29 that year was convened to protest the decision.
It was the final straw. The Turkish minority lived through years of oppression which were tightened after Turkey intervened in Cyprus in 1974.
In those years, Turks in Western Thrace experienced significant difficulties in obtaining driving licenses and repairing or building new homes -- just two examples of the oppression.
On the second anniversary of the rally in 1990, far-right Greeks, in a spirit of revenge, attacked more than 500 shops belonging to Turks in Komotini and Xanthi and injured several people.
The event is described as a "mini-pogrom" by academics.
Today, associations with "Turkish" in their names are still banned in Western Thrace, although the ECHR ruled against Greece in 2008.
The Western Thrace region is home to 150,000 Muslim Turks./aa
The two coronavirus lockdowns in 2020 caused the French economy to suffer its worst economic marker since World War II, the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE) said Friday.
The gross domestic product (GDP) fell 8.3%, said the Paris-based bureau in a report on the first estimate of the economic effect of the fourth quarter.
The estimate is slightly better than the group’s earlier forecasts of a decline of 9% and 11% by the government.
The GDP was 5% below its level a year earlier (year-on-year change), whereas the year-on-year decline was 18.8% in the second quarter, it noted.
Due to lockdowns and curfews during October and December, GDP, in terms of volume, fell 1.3% owing to the loss in economic activity.
Household consumption expenditure also declined 5.4% as several non-essential businesses, shops and commercial establishments remained closed.
Foreign trade grew 0.9 points and offered signs of recovery as the sector saw improvements in exports like transport equipment and pharmaceuticals.
Overall, the report cited the total loss of activity was “much more moderate than during the first lockdown in March-May.” Because the impact was more felt on the demand side rather than on production, inventory changes contributed more than 0.4 points to GDP growth, compared to minus 1.7 in the third quarter./aa
LONDON
A spat between the UK and EU is brewing Friday regarding the bloc’s newly introduced export controls on the coronavirus vaccine flow to Northern Ireland.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the bloc must “urgently clarify” its intentions after the EU introduced controls on vaccines to be exported to Northern Ireland.
According to the EU’s decision, all vaccine suppliers, which have vaccine contracts with the bloc, will have to seek authorization on their exports.
The exports can be stopped if the EU sees them as a threat to the delivery of vaccines to citizens on time.
Downing Street warned the EU about counter action, expressing "concern" about the move to potentially stop the unimpeded flow of jabs into the region.
Northern Ireland’s First Minister Arlene Foster said the EU’s move was an "incredible act of hostility" that places a "hard border" between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic.
"The European Union has once again shown it is prepared to use Northern Ireland when it suits their interests but in the most despicable manner - over the provision of a vaccine which is designed to save lives,” Foster said. "At the first opportunity, the EU has placed a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland over the supply chain of the coronavirus vaccine."
Phone diplomacy
Telephone diplomacy among several leaders continued late Friday as Foster held talks with Johnson and Cabinet minister Michael Gove, calling for “robust action.”
Irish premier Michael Martin expressed concerns to European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen.
Gove talked to European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic to express the UK's concern regarding the decision.
A Downing Street spokesperson said Johnson had a "constructive discussion" with his Irish counterpart.
“The PM set out his concerns about the EU's use of Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol and what these actions may mean for the two communities in Northern Ireland," the spokesperson said.
Johnson also “stressed the UK's enduring commitment to the Belfast/Good Friday agreement and said the EU must urgently clarify its intentions and what steps it plans to take to ensure its own commitments with regards to Northern Ireland are fully honoured," according to a statement.
"The UK has legally-binding agreements with vaccine suppliers and it would not expect the EU, as a friend and ally, to do anything to disrupt the fulfillment of these contracts," the spokesperson added.
The EU’s action came following a vaccine shortage across member states as AstraZeneca, with which the EU has a 400 million dose order, delivered high numbers of doses to the UK.
The bloc invoked Article 16 of Brexit's Northern Ireland Protocol to stop the unfettered flow of inoculations from the EU to the region in a bid to stop the UK region from being used as a back door to the UK in vaccine flow.
Media reports in the UK suggested late Friday that the EU would soon withdraw Article 16.
Article 16 is a clause in the Northern Ireland Protocol, signed between the UK and EU as part of the Brexit Agreement, which gives power to the bloc to halt movement of goods between Northern Ireland and member states when it sees necessary./aa
US President Joe Biden extended Friday deportation protections for thousands of Syrians currently in the US.
The 6,700 eligible Syrian nationals are currently recipients of what is known as Temporary Protected Status, a program that allows migrants to live and work in the US as long as their country is not safe to live in. Their eligibility in the program has been extended through September 2022, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
The protections can be extended to nationals whose home countries have been affected by natural disasters, armed conflict or other extraordinary but temporary conditions.
Syria has been ravaged by a conflict that began in 2011.
The extension stands in stark contrast to former US President Donald Trump's immigration policies, which sought to curtail both legal and illegal migration to the US.
Biden is expected to roll out his wider immigration overhaul on Tuesday./aa
Portugal's parliament passed a law on Friday to legalize euthanasia, pending approval by the country's recently re-elected president.
The bill would legalize doctor-assisted suicide for Portuguese adults in situations of "extreme suffering and irreversible damage."
It would also require the person choosing to die to have the ability to make "free and informed" choices.
The bill passed with a large majority -- 136 lawmakers voted in favor, while 78 opposed it and four others abstained.
It is now in the hands of the country's center-right President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.
He has the option to approve the law, veto it or pass it to the Constitutional Court for review.
If vetoed, the Portuguese Parliament would be able to approve it on a second vote.
Portuguese Catholic Bishops released a statement Friday expressing their "sadness and outrage," while urging that the bill be brought before the Constitutional Court.
"It's absurd to legalize death [...] rejecting the lessons that this pandemic has taught us about the precious value of human life," said the statement.
Critics of the legislation also cite an article in the country's constitution describing human life as "sacrosanct."
If the law does pass, Portugal will become one of a handful of countries to legalize active euthanasia, joining the Netherlands, Canada, Colombia, Belgium and Luxembourg, as well as the state of Western Australia./aa
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The Coronavirus Pandemic caused 324,000 students to face difficulties in accessing their free education because they did not have a stable Internet connection in 2020. This, according to the Minister of Education, Gisselle Cruz, should force the country to think about an eventual declaration of the Internet as a 'human right' , so that it is managed as a common good and its access can be guaranteed for all people. This was indicated by the Minister in the middle of her second day of interpellation by the deputies in the Legislative Assembly, this past Monday.
'Just as this country advanced with the issue of water, electrification, telephony … we would have to make an effort as a country to be able to generate the Internet as a human right and hence free Internet. That is progress what the country has to do in the coming years, because really the manner in which we have been working seem to be not the necessary ways to obtain the necessary results, not only in education but also in the labor issue, in the quality of people's lives, which also goes through the possibility and quality of this access to technology', commented the official.
Cruz thus responded to questions from deputy José María Villalta, from the Broad Front (FA); who assured that, although the MEP counts that school exclusion only reached about 18 thousand students in the midst of the health emergency that cut off in-person classes since last March, the impact of the emergency on all those students should also be taken into account. They did not have the means to access virtual classes regularly or they had to assume high costs to do so in a precarious way.
'Formal bonding is one thing, because let's say the student maintained some kind of communication with the MEP, perhaps they received the food packages and perhaps they even received the self-taught guides, but because they did not have an Internet connection they were practically excluded from education,' said Cruz.
A follow-up of cases
The Minister of Education pointed out that the MEP followed up on all these cases, 324 thousand children and adolescents who did not achieve effective virtual processes. Along these lines, she commented that remedial plans were used for many of them, through other means of communication and television programs. However, she acknowledged that it was not possible to completely bridge the technology gap.
Costa Rica closed its schools and colleges since March 2020. Now, they will reopen their doors in a dual in-person and distance mode, the proportion of which will be defined according to the conditions of each educational center as of February.
Free education?
It was also regretted that the State failed in its task of providing free education, given that the digital connection implied new expenses for many households and exceptional emergency measures were not contemplated to mitigate its impact on the poorest households.
'I know that some actions were taken, such as trying to cover with 'Connected Homes', although we already saw that it was insufficient. I also know that these students were given a grade and made an evaluation, but it must be recognized that some of them did not have a single class in 2020. That is, students who do not have Internet at home could not go to school, so what did they do?'
'I believe that there the MEP and the State as such have failed, because they should have been more proactive because we cannot speak of education as a human right if the Internet is still conceived as a commercial service , of interest, as a business ( …) Being connected to virtual classes, in one hour of Microsoft Teams, it consumes an average of 1 GB of data consumption and the cheapest postpaid plan in Kölbi offers 5 GB; that is, it takes five hours', National Assembly legislators pointed out.
Enormous change
Faced with all this situation, the Minister recognized the weaknesses shown by the Pandemic; However, it was pointed out that all the students were evaluated in a timely manner and that now it will be necessary to apply leveling plans to correct the deficiencies in 2021. And the challenge will be enormous after 11 months in which the students spent most of their time at home and, many of them, without even continuous contact with the educational system.
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Authorities in Bangladesh sent a third group of Rohingya refugees to a newly developed island in the Bay of Bengal on Friday despite calls by human rights groups for a halt to the process.
The government insists the relocation plan is meant to offer better living conditions while attempts to repatriate more than 1 million refugees to Myanmar would continue.
On Friday morning, 1,778 refugees started their journey to the island of Bhasan Char in four navy vessels from the southeastern port city of Chattogram, after they were brought from crammed camps in Cox’s Bazar district, said M. Mozammel Haque, a commander of the Bangladesh navy.
He said a fourth batch would be sent to the island Saturday.
“Around 4,000 refugees have already been sent to the island since December, but we have the capacity of accommodating 100,000. The process will continue until we fulfill it,” he told reporters.
Haque said the refugees were being treated well on the island and they would have the option of generating income by rearing cattle or poultry and could also engage in making handicrafts.
He said they wanted them to contribute to the economy, but their repatriation to Myanmar is the ultimate goal.
“They will be checked by our doctors when they arrive today. They will be given food and accommodation properly,” he said.
While human rights groups criticized the move, the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina repeatedly said the refugees were moving to the island voluntarily under government management.
Authorities say the refugees were selected for relocation based on their willingness, and that no pressure was applied. But several human rights and activist groups say some refugees have been forced to go to the island, located 34 kilometers (21 miles) from the mainland.
The island surfaced only 20 years ago and was not previously inhabited. It was regularly submerged by monsoon rains but now has flood protection embankments, houses, hospitals and mosques built at a cost of more than $112 million by the Bangladesh navy.
The island’s facilities are designed to accommodate 100,000 people, just a fraction of 1 million Rohingya Muslims who fled waves of violent persecution in their native Myanmar and are currently living in crowded, squalid refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar.
International aid agencies have opposed the relocation since it was first proposed in 2015, expressing fear that a big storm could overwhelm the island and endanger thousands of lives. But the government said the human rights groups and the U.N. should understand its good intentions.
The United Nations also voiced concern that refugees are allowed to make a “free and informed decision” about whether to relocate. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have urged the government to cancel the plan.
DAKAR, Senegal
At least 750 pelicans have reportedly perished at a bird sanctuary in northern Senegal.
The 740 adult and 10 young pelicans died due to an unknown reason on Jan. 23 at Djoudj National Bird Sanctuary in the Saint-Louis region, according to local media.
The director of Senegal’s parks, Bocar Thiam, said the number of water birds at the sanctuary increased during the migration season, adding this is the first time they have encountered such a large number of deaths.
The cause of death is not due to a bird flu outbreak in Senegal earlier this month, Thiam added.
The park has been closed to visitors while an investigation is conducted.
Djoudj National Bird Sanctuary was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1981./aa
Unrest in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo has forced thousands of people to flee their homes in the past two years, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Thursday.
The humanitarian group said that because of the conflict, many people have found refuge on the other side of the border between North and South Kivu provinces, where they share limited resources and land with equally vulnerable communities.
“We heard that there was peace in Katasomwa, so we decided to come here,” MSF quoted Justin, a displaced person in this remote area of Kalehe Territory in South Kivu, as saying.
“Many people were killed along the way. Since we got here, in July, we have had trouble finding food. We are constantly under threat from heavy rain and the shelters we live in can burn down at any time. Our lives are miserable,” he said.
The arrival of displaced populations has been a challenge for the fledgling health system. The Katasomwa health post is run by motivated staff, but it lacks adequate means.
“Displaced women avoided coming to the health post because they have no money to pay for care,” said head nurse Esther Isabayo Benimana. “Many gave birth in the camp, and some died that way.”
MSF said it is responding to the dire health situation in the area by providing emergency medical assistance.
“We first concentrated on the groups with the highest death rates ─ mostly children under 15 and pregnant women,” said MSF emergency medical officer David Namegabe, adding maternal mortality in the area is very high.
Several rebel groups including the Ugandan Allied Democratic Forces are very active in eastern DRC.
The Pygmy ethnic group is also being targeted and has been subjected to discrimination.
MSF said Pygmy communities were forced out of the Kahuzi-Biega Forest, where they had been living for generations until the park became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The modus operandi of these rebels is atypical: peasants are killed with knives, generally in the evening in the bush, returning from the fields or in the village at nightfall.
The illicit exploitation of natural resources continues to be a root cause and driver of conflict in the east of the country, according to the UN.
Most of the militia groups have set aside their political demands and are involved in mineral trafficking./aa