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Turkish security forces neutralized 226 terrorists in dozens of operations carried out over the last month, the country’s National Defense Ministry said on Sunday.
“The heroic Turkish Armed Forces carried out a total of 43 operations, including eight large-scale and 35 medium-scale, at home and abroad over the past month,” the ministry said on Twitter.
It said a total of 226 terrorists were neutralized in the operations, without specifying their affiliations.
Turkish authorities use the term “neutralize” to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.
Noting that Turkey’s counter-terrorism efforts will continue until the last terrorist is neutralized, the ministry said operations ongoing day and night./aa
Turkey will never give up freedom of the press, said the nation’s president on Sunday, stressing that journalists should fulfill their duty of informing the public accurately and contributing to democracy.
In a message marking Jan. 10 Working Journalists' Day, which has been celebrated since 1961 to honor the rights of journalists, Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Turkey will never give up freedom of the press, while ensuring it is not abused to spread propaganda against the country from within the country or abroad.
Stating that the media is an indispensable element of democracy for ensuring the public right to news, Erdogan said journalists have a democratic and moral responsibility to meet an important need for society.
Erdogan stressed that new media channels that offer news in the name of journalism should also follow professional principles and press ethics.
“In today's world where the speed of information has increased in a dizzying way, the understanding of accurate and honest reporting is more valuable than ever. Therefore, journalists also have a great responsibility in the struggle for truth against lies and disinformation,” he said.
Expressing his appreciation and gratitude to members of the press who made devoted efforts to fulfill their duties during the pandemic, Erdogan wished Allah's mercy for those journalists who lost their lives in the line of duty./aa
DHAKA, Bangladesh
At least one Rohingya refugee was killed and 10 others injured on Sunday in a gunfight between two rival factions in Cox's Bazar, a sprawling refugee camp in Bangladesh, an official and sources said.
"Some rival groups among Rohingya refugees are involved in a power struggle," Mahbub Alam Talukder, Bangladesh’s refugee relief and repatriation commissioner, told Anadolu Agency.
The deceased has been identified as 30-year-old Nur Hakim, and his body has been sent for autopsy, according to sources.
The injured, meanwhile, have been shifted to a camp-based medical facility run by Save the Children, they added.
Similar clashes have been witnessed in the past as well, and Talukder said, "we have asked the local administration to deploy more security forces."
Last month, Dhaka started relocating Rohingyas to a remote island in the Bay of Bengal. So far, at least 3,500 have been transported to Bhasan Char, an island said to be flood-prone.
The move has been criticized by the international community, which has urged Bangladesh to halt the move until a study is done on the habitability of the island. It has also been accused of moving them to the island against their will.
Currently, more than 1.2 million Rohingya refugees are living in Bangladesh’s makeshift settlements. At least 750,000 refugees fled Rakhine state after Myanmar forces launched a crackdown on the minority Muslim community in August 2017.
Many still reside in the neighboring country, where Aung Sang Suu Kyi returned to power in November 2020, without citizenship and voting rights.
Myanmar is facing genocide charges at the International Court of Justice./aa
19 Rohingya and a Thai woman accused of housing them have been arrested for illegal entry to Thailand, police said Saturday, as concerns grow about trafficking routes for the Muslim minority fleeing Myanmar.
The embattled Rohingya have long faced persecution in Myanmar, where they are denied freedom of movement and citizenship, and lack access to work, healthcare and schools.
A 2017 military crackdown in western Rakhine state sent almost 750,000 fleeing across the border to Bangladesh, while many choose to embark on treacherous journeys with human smugglers to reach Malaysia and Indonesia, sometimes going through Thailand.
Thai police said the latest trafficking operation was discovered this week when 19 Rohingya were found in a house in Bangkok's Don Mueang district.
"Police also managed to arrest one Thai woman in Pathum Thani province (near Bangkok) on the charge of providing shelter to the Rohingya," Colonel Kissana Phathanacharoen, the deputy police spokesman said.
The group was smuggled into Thailand overland from Rakhine state and was bound for Malaysia, said an immigration officer who declined to be named.
"They didn't know what kind of work they would find in Malaysia, they just wanted to get out of Rakhine," he said, adding that the Thai woman's husband – still at large – had promised them jobs.
Out of the 19 Rohingya, seven tested positive for coronavirus and are being treated, said the officer, while the rest are being kept in quarantine as a precaution.
Thailand was thrust into the international spotlight in 2015 during the so-called "boat crisis", which saw desperate Rohingya and Bangladeshi migrants stranded at sea and abandoned by their traffickers.
Police officers, a high-ranking general and several politicians were among scores convicted for their role in the trafficking network, which spilled into full view after officials found dozens of shallow graves in hidden camps near the Malaysian border.
Kissana said the latest discovery of the 19 Rohingya – along with the threat of the coronavirus spreading – has authorities worried.
"The chief of Thai police has expressed his concern over the issue of police being potentially involved with the smuggling scandal, so he has ordered subordinates to strictly follow the law," Kissana said.
Earlier this week nearly 100 Rohingya bound for Malaysia were arrested in a raid in Yangon. Authorities are still investigating if the smugglers are part of a wider network. – AFP
Over the past few decades, vacant and underutilized churches have become a familiar sight in American cities.
In some cases, a congregation or a religious governing body – say, a Catholic diocese – will sell the church to developers, who then turn them into apartments, offices, art galleries, museums, breweries or performance spaces.
But what about churches in neighborhoods that aren’t doing well, areas that are less attractive to developers looking to turn a profit?
In Buffalo, New York, two empty Roman Catholic churches have been converted – not into apartments or offices, but into other places of worship. One became an Islamic mosque, the other a Buddhist temple.
As an architect and historic preservation planner, I was drawn to this phenomenon. With the help of Enjoli Hall, who was then a graduate student at University at Buffalo, I interviewed those involved in converting the former churches.
With immigrant and refugee populations growing in post-industrial cities across the U.S., the conversion of vacant Christian churches into new places of worship can preserve historic architecture and strengthen burgeoning communities.
In Buffalo, a split between east and west
Buffalo has long been an immigrant gateway. From 1850 to 1900, the city’s population increased by over 700%. In 1892, over one-third of Buffalo’s residents were foreign born. Poles, Germans and Italians settled in the city, leading to a wave of church construction. In the 1930s, African Americans started migrating from southern US to the east side of the city.
But by 2010, the city’s population had dwindled to just over 260,000 people – less than half of what it was in 1950.
Nonetheless, Buffalo has recently been in the news for its efforts to overcome decades of population decline and disinvestment. In 2016, Yahoo News anchor Katie Couric, fascinated by Buffalo’s transformation, featured the city in her six-video series, “Cities Rising: Rebuilding America,” while The New York Times detailed the changes taking place in some of the city’s neighborhoods.
This public attention, however, has mainly focused on the West Side neighborhoods, which have experienced the bulk of investment and population growth. Neighborhoods in Buffalo’s East Side continue to face tremendous challenges of poverty, crumbling infrastructure and abandoned houses.
According to the 2015 American Community Survey, these neighborhoods are now predominantly African American. But they’ve also become home to immigrants from South Asia, along with resettled refugees from Vietnam, Central Africa and Iraq.
During community clean-up events or flower plantings, it’s not uncommon to see members of Temple Beth Zion, Westminster Presbyterian Church and the mosque Masjid Nu’Man working side by side.
A closer look at two faith-to-faith conversions
Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia famously switched from a Christian church to a mosque in 1453.
The same sort of conversions have been taking place in Buffalo’s East Side. Many former Catholic churches have, over the years, been converted into other denominations – Baptist, African Methodist Episcopal and Evangelical – to accommodate the area’s African American community.
But several former Christian churches in Buffalo’s East Side also now serve as sites of worship for other religions. Two mosques, Bait Ul Mamur Inc. Masjid and Masjid Zakariya, used to be Saint Joachim’s Roman Catholic Church and Holy Mother of Rosary Polish National Catholic Church, respectively.
And two other formerly vacant churches that the Catholic diocese was struggling to sell were eventually sold. One, Queen of Peace Roman Catholic Church, was converted into a mosque, Jami Masjid. Another, Saint Agnes Roman Catholic Church, became a temple, the International Sangha Bhiksu Buddhist Association.
For my study, I interviewed those involved in the conversion of these two Catholic churches to learn more about how they were successfully adapted.
In Islam, for example, there’s a wariness about idolatry. So those involved with Jami Masjid removed the stained glass windows, statuary and iconography, along with the pews, Stations of the Cross and the altar. Volunteers painted over the ecclesiastical murals by local artist Josef Mazur and carpeted the entire floor so worshipers could pray on the floor, per Islamic custom.
The structural elements of the church, however, all remained the same – including the wooden trusses, doors and the adjoining buildings.
Today, the mosque offers camps for children and runs a school on the premises. The neighborhood residents – not all of whom are Muslim – have been largely appreciative of the new facility, especially the new playground on the premises.
The Buddhist temple, on the other hand, made very little changes to the interior, aside from removing the Stations of the Cross and the altar. The priest, Bhiksu Thich Minh Chanh, replaced the statuary with large Buddha statues. But the pews are still there, save for a few rows in front that were removed and carpeted for prayer services.
The neighbors in the immediate vicinity – some of whom had attended services at St. Agnes – told us that they were sad that their church was gone. But most were happy that, at the very least, it continued to be used as a place of worship, as opposed to lying vacant, or worse, being demolished. Even with the neighborhood’s support, the temple has been vandalized several times; clearly, not everyone is happy with the conversion.
Other cities, like Cincinnati and Detroit, are also grappling with the issue of empty and underused churches. Each, like Buffalo, has growing immigrant populations.
Buffalo has shown how faith-to-faith church conversions can be a win-win situation for everyone involved: The diocese gets to sell a redundant property, immigrants can acquire a property that will strengthen their community, and the city builds its tax base by attracting new residents to the area.
The Conversation
Ending an embargo against Qatar by Gulf countries is preparation for US Middle East policies in a post-Donald Trump era and a step to close ranks against Iran, according to experts Friday.
And Turkey caused political design projects by the UAE-Saudi axis in the region to fail by standing by Qatar during the embargo.
Al-Ula, Saudi Arabia, hosted a Gulf Summit on Tuesday that saw the announcement of the end of a crisis that had continued since 2017 between Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt.
It drew attention to Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani who was embraced by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman upon arrival in Saudi Arabia to attend the annual Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) summit.
After the summit, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud said diplomatic ties between Qatar and four Arab states were completely restored and lifted the blockade.
Ending the embargo on Qatar is an important development
Zekeriya Kursun, the dean of Literature Faculty at Istanbul-based Fatih Sultan Mehmet Vakif University, told Anadolu Agency that ending the embargo is an important development for Turkey and countries in the region.
Kursun said after the 2016 US presidential elections, Middle East policies were reshaped, according to Trump, Gulf countries adapted to these policies and an existing partial alliance was broken at that time and Qatar was blockaded.
He stressed that one of the most important reasons for the blockade by Saudi Arabia and the UAE is to use the region's resources and opportunities in favor of the US and create a block against Iran.
"Failure of UAE and Saudi Arabia to achieve success in Yemen made it necessary to get closer to Qatar and lift the 3-year blockade," he added.
He said ending the crisis is an important development and if relations are developed rationally in the process, they will advance in a good direction.
New era could be shaped by Iranian threat
Cengiz Tomar, the vice-chancellor of the Ahmet Yesevi International Turkish-Kazakh University, said preparation for the Joe Biden era has begun in the Middle East and the Gulf and he indicated it could be shaped by the Iranian threat.
The Iranian threat will be one of the most important issues in the Biden period, according to Tomar. "Therefore, I think that the Gulf countries have made such an agreement to determine a conjuncture accordingly."
Noting that abandoning the policy of isolating Turkey pursued by Egypt, Israel and some Gulf countries, he said: “The recent developments in the Saudi Arabia-Turkey relations is a concrete reflection of it. This summit is an extremely important and positive development for both Turkey and Qatar. Turkey won an important ally in the Gulf by also supports Qatar, like Azerbaijan.
Saudi Arabia anxiously awaits Iran election results
Tuncay Kardas, director of the Middle East Institute at Sakarya University, stressed that the failure of the embargo policy is due to the inability of Saudi Arabia and its allies to stand behind their decisions.
"Qatar specifically eased economic and strategic effects of the embargo by increasing interaction with actors like Turkey and the US," said Kardas.
"There are Iranian elections on June 8, and if the conservatives are victorious, Iran's regional military activism may increase. This activism had been relatively stagnant for four years because of the Trump USA. Saudi Arabia anxiously awaits the election result, " he noted.
He said Saudi Arabia and its allies know well that the nuclear agreement would be revived between the West and Iran during the Biden era. "Iran can profit many strategic benefits, especially economic, from the nuclear agreement."
Trump's senior adviser Jared Kushner pushed Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and regional allies into a normalization agreement with Qatar before the US presidential change date Jan. 20, he said.
Lifting blockade is result of global, regional changes
Necmettin Acar, the Head of the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences of Mardin Artuklu University, said lifting the blockade was a result of global and regional changes.
Pointing out a challenging process awaits young leaders of the UAE-Saudi axis, Acar said, "lifting this blockade can be interpreted as an attempt to work in harmony with the Biden administration and to correct their deteriorating image in the West."/aa
ANKARA - After Twitter permanently suspended US President Donald Trump's account, the social media platform became the focus of debate about policies of freedom of expression and neutrality, which Twitter has always propagated, reflect the truth.
The social media platform founded by Jack Dorsey and his friends in March 2006, kept the debate going during the US presidential election and after Trump's suspension.
Users around the world accuse social media companies with a certain power, such as Twitter, of "being non-state actors" and "censorship."
While the company claims it advocates freedom of expression and acts with the mission of protecting public conversations, it casts a shadow on the discourse of freedom of expression for all with an ambivalent attitude toward different countries and individuals, especially Trump.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who condemned Twitter's decision to suspend Trump’s account, said such censorship cannot be applied to anyone.
Shannon McGregor, at the Department of Journalism and Media at the University of North Carolina, said the company made the move to win favor with the incoming Joe Biden administration.
Many who supported Trump also reacted to Twitter's decision.
- US among countries that use Twitter the most
The company, which is headquartered in San Francisco, California, has 4,800 employees worldwide and has 340 million users globally, with the US, Japan, UK and India among the top countries using the platform.
Dorsey, known for his anti-Trump attitude, became the focus of controversy with his decision to ban political ads on Twitter in 2019. That drew attention to Dorsey given the fact that it came before the political campaign for the US presidential elections.
Dorsey before the presidential elections, however, admitted it was wrong to block news by the New York Post newspaper that wrote about Hunter Biden's work in Ukraine.
On the other hand, Dorsey's personal account was hacked in 2019 and it was found to contain racist and immoral posts made from that handle.
Trump supporters protesting Congress’ certification of Biden’s presidential win clashed Wednesday with police, eventually breaching the Capitol building and making their way to the Senate floor.
At least five people were killed, including one woman shot by Capitol police.
Trump is accused by many of inciting supporters to halt Congress' ability to confirm Biden's election victory./aa
GAZA CITY, Palestine(AA)
Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh on Saturday hailed Gulf reconciliation as a major step that serves the Palestinian cause.
This came in a message sent by Haniyeh to Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
"Hamas sees this [Gulf] reconciliation as an important step in promoting joint action towards serving the Palestinian cause amid challenges posed by the [Israeli] occupation, Judaization and termination,” Haniyeh said in his message.
Haniyeh went on to hail Saudi efforts toward healing the Gulf rift “as part of the kingdom’s historic role in serving the issues of the nation”.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt signed a reconciliation deal on Tuesday during the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) summit to end more than three years of feud with Qatar.
The deal resulted in Saudi Arabia and UAE opening its airspace and land and sea border to Qatar.
TRIPOLI, Libya(AA)
Libyan authorities on Saturday discovered a new mass grave in the city of Tarhuna, 90 kilometers (56 miles) northeast of the capital Tripoli, likely committed by militias of retreating warlord Khalifa Haftar.
“Four bodies were exhumed from the grave in Alrabet 2 project area in the city,” Lutfi Tawfiq, the director of the General Authority for Research and Identification of Missing Persons, told Anadolu Agency.
Tarhuna city was a previous stronghold for al-Kani militia affiliated with Haftar.
According to Libyan official sources, Haftar’s forces and affiliated militias committed war crimes and acts of genocide in the period between April 2019 and June 2020.
Since June, following the defeat of Haftar’s forces in the western areas of Libya, the Libyan government found around 300 dead bodies in mass graves in Tarhuna and south of Tripoli.
The Libyan government has been battling Haftar’s forces since April 2019 in a conflict that has claimed thousands of lives.
On Oct. 23, the warring parties agreed on a cease-fire under UN mediation to pave the way for a political dialogue and settlement. However, Haftar militias have regularly breached the cease-fire.
The Gambian anti-narcotic authorities seized nearly three tons of cocaine in the capital Banjul on Friday, the largest arrest in the history of the West African country.
Some 2.9 tons of cocaine stuffed in 118 bags was shipped from the Port of Guayaquil in Ecuador through Algeciras in Spain via Maersk Line Shipping Company, Ousman Saidybah, spokesperson for the Drug Law Enforcement Agency of the Gambia, told Anadolu Agency.
The bags of the shipment disguised as industrial salt arrived in Banjul on Jan. 1. Police arrested Gambian national Sherif Njie whose name was used as the contact person for the shipment.
However, the anti-narcotic agents said the shipment belongs to Banta Keita, a French national of Gambian descent who resides in a Gambian affluent neighborhood of Fajara, some 18 minute-drive from Banjul.
“Sheriff Njie is currently in custody, helping in the investigation while the hunt for Banta Keita continues,” said Saidybah.
The confiscated drug has a street value of $88 million.
The Gambia has been used as a transit route for South American hard drugs bound for Europe and other destinations. Saidybah said their initial findings suggest the shipment is not destined for the Gambia.
“This seizure is yet another confirmation that The Gambia like other West African states continues to be a storage and transit route for cocaine by international organized criminal groups,” he added./aa