The English website of the Islamic magazine - Al-Mujtama.
A leading source of global Islamic and Arabic news, views and information for more than 50 years.
Players have taken a knee, unfurled slogans and demanded tougher action only to find European soccer remains infested with racism.
But on Tuesday, at the end of a year of striking gestures against racial injustice and discrimination worldwide, elite players of the Champions League took the extraordinary step of refusing to continue playing in Paris after a match official was accused of using a racist slur.
In a show of solidarity, the players from Paris Saint-Germain and Istanbul Basaksehir left the field and didn’t return until Wednesday night, when play resumed with a new referee team.
Before the match restarted Wednesday, the players took a knee in unison as the Champions League anthem played, while some — including PSG star Neymar — raised a fist. PSG won the game 5-1, with Neymar scoring three of his team's goals.
"The walk off by both Basaksehir and PSG together lays down a marker in Europe," Piara Powar, executive director of the Football Against Racism in Europe anti-discrimination network, told The Associated Press. "Many players are fed up with half measures to tackle racism and are more prepared than ever to exercise their right to stop a match.”
The flashpoint came 14 minutes into Tuesday night's game when referee Sebastian Coltescu of Romania was accused of using a racial term to identify Basaksehir assistant coach Pierre Webo, who is Black.
An enraged Webo demanded an explanation for the slur, repeating at least six times: “Why you say Negro?”
"You are racist,” Basaksehir coach Okan Buruk declared to Coltescu. “Why when you mention a Black guy, you have to say ‘This Black guy?’” added Basaksehir substitute Demba Ba, who is Black.
The exchanges were broadcast live around the world from soccer's biggest club competition at PSG's Parc des Princes. While racism at soccer games has typically come from the stands, the match Tuesday was played without fans because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the lack of a crowd made the comments clear to hear.
Dismissing any attempts to excuse Coltescu's language, French Sports Minister Roxana Maracineanu said Wednesday that “pointing at someone by their (skin) color is unacceptable and inexcusable" and praised the players.
"It’s unprecedented and sends a strong signal also to soccer institutions,” she said.
Powar, of the anti-discrimination FARE network, said there was no question the comment was racist.
“Our colleagues at the Romanian state anti-discrimination organization have confirmed it is racist in Romanian to refer to a player by using his race as an identifier," said Powar, whose group helps UEFA, the Champions League competition organizer, prosecute discriminatory acts like Tuesday’s incident .
“There is no ambiguity. This incident shows the need for much better training of match officials. Unintentional racism is still racism," Powar said.
Sports teams in the United States have also made their voices heard during a year of national reckoning against racial injustice in America. A Milwaukee Bucks boycott of their NBA playoff game this summer against the Orlando Magic to protest the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man in their home state, cascaded into a wave of similar protests across the American sports scene.
The NBA postponed that game and two others in the playoff series, while three WNBA, five Major League Soccer and three Major League Baseball games were called off as athletes acted in solidarity with the Bucks’ players.
Meanwhile, the persistent racism infesting European soccer was on show again Wednesday in England, where a lower-league match was played with limited fans.
In the fourth division, Exeter City reported a suspected discriminatory comment by a fan toward a visiting player from Northampton Town. The referee spoke to the players and managers, and the game continued.
Earlier this year in Portugal, Porto striker Moussa Marega tried to walk off the field in February after being the target of racist abuse from fans in a game against Guimarães and demanded to be substituted. But he faced attempts by his own teammates and opposing players to prevent him from leaving the field.
The referee then gave Marega a yellow card for refusing to continue in the game — the type of action that dissuades players from walking off.
The Romanian referee who was in charge of the game in Paris on Tuesday — Ovidiu Hategan — was in the same role for the 2013 Champions League game when Manchester City player Yaya Toure complained about the lack of action against monkey noises he heard from CSKA Moscow fans.
“If officials cannot set the standards by their own behavior," Powar said, “they cannot be relied on to deal with racism on the pitch or in the stands.”
Players might now feel more emboldened to leave the field after seeing the largely positive reaction to what happened Tuesday in Paris.
“What they’ve done was very good from both sides to support those who were in the incident,” said Japhet Tanganga, a defender with Premier League club Tottenham, who is Black.
But the dismissive response from Jorge Jesus, the coach of Portuguese club Benfica, reinforced why activists face ongoing challenges trying to change attitudes.
“This is very fashionable today, this racism thing,” he said. “Anything that can be said about a Black man is always a sign of racism. The same thing can be said about a white man, but then it’s no longer a sign of racism. There is this wave being implanted in the world.”
Kuwait Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah on Tuesday re-appointed Sheikh Sabah Al-Khalid Al-Sabah as prime minister.
The move comes two days after Sheikh Sabah submitted his government’s resignation in a procedural step following parliamentary polls, Arab News reported.
The country’s ruler accepted the premier’s resignation before reassigning him to form the upcoming government.
Sheikh Nawaf who took over the leadership of the Gulf state in September after the death of his brother, also asked Sheikh Sabah to nominate members of a new cabinet.
The new cabinet would have to be approved by the Emir, according to a decree carried on state media.
A helicopter carrying six people, including its crew, crashed in the French Alps, authorities said late Tuesday.
The prefecture of the Savoie department said a Service Aérien Francais (SAF) helicopter crashed around 7 p.m. at an altitude of 1,800 meters (5,905 feet).
The helicopter, including four members of SAF, a private company, crashed in the town of Bonvillard.
Authorities were alerted to the incident by the pilot, who managed to eject himself.
It is difficult to locate the wreckage of the helicopter due to fog, it stressed./aa
Despite the Ethiopian government’s deal with the UN, humanitarian access to Ethiopia’s Tigray region “is still significantly constrained,” an aid group said Tuesday.
“Children, women and men in Tigray have now borne the brunt of this conflict for more than a month without any emergency assistance from outside the region,” Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), said in a statement.
He stressed that people in the region “can no longer be made to wait.”
“Aid must not be left at a standstill. We have been standing ready to deliver food, emergency shelter and other essential materials for weeks, and we expected this deal [between the Ethiopian government and the UN] to clear the way,” Egeland said.
“We strongly urge all authorities in Ethiopia, as well our UN partners, to avoid any further lags and urgently permit humanitarian deliveries, so that we can get help to people who urgently need it.”
Last week, Ethiopia’s government said it had signed a humanitarian access deal with the UN to coordinate essential supplies for Tigray.
An estimated 41,000 Ethiopians fled to Sudan after the government launched an operation against the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) on Nov. 4.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed declared the end of military operations in the region on Nov. 28 after the fall of the regional capital, Mekelle./aa
At least 25 suspects were arrested across Turkey for alleged links to the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), the group behind the 2016 defeated coup, security sources said on Tuesday.
Nine suspects, including four wanted fugitives, were apprehended in the Mediterranean province of Antalya, said the sources, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
One of the nine suspects was taken into custody, while three were released on bail and two were set free on a court’s order.
The remaining three were handed over to police departments of cities where they are facing investigations.
In the northwestern Kirklareli, Edirne, and Tekirdag provinces, 16 active-duty soldiers were arrested for suspected links to FETO.
A colonel was among six suspects apprehended in Kirklareli, while six more, including a major and a captain, were arrested in Tekirdag, the sources said.
The remaining four suspects were rounded up in Edirne.
The suspects in Kirklareli and Edirne are accused of communicating with “covert imams” – senior FETO members – by pay phone.
FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016, which left 251 people martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.
Ankara also accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police and judiciary.
Since the coup attempt, tens of thousands of FETO suspects have been arrested, including many in the armed forces, police, judicial system, and education sector./aa
TEHRAN
Iran has arrested some people believed to be involved in the assassination of nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, an official said on Tuesday.
Security agencies have identified “the parties that ordered the assassination and arrested some of the perpetrators,” Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, special aide to Iran’s parliament speaker on international affairs, told a local news channel.
The official did not give any number or details about the arrests, telling Iran’s Al-Alam TV that the relevant authorities will announce more information.
Fakhrizadeh, 63, who headed the research and innovation at Iran’s Defense Ministry, was killed on the outskirts of the capital Tehran on Nov. 27.
Top Iranian leaders, including President Hassan Rouhani, have accused Israel of orchestrating the assassination and vowed retaliation.
He is the fifth prominent Iranian nuclear scientist to be killed since 2010, with Tehran pointing the finger at Israel for all the attacks./aa
JUBA, South Sudan(AA)
Turkey’s state-run aid agency on Tuesday donated welding equipment and materials for a vocational training program for prisoners in South Sudan.
Equipment donated by the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA) included 100 welding rods, 240 grinding discs, 280 cutting discs, welding goggles, hammers, and sheet metal, officials said at a handover ceremony in the capital Juba.
The materials and equipment will be used for a three-month training course on welding for 30 inmates.
“We believe that it is important to help inmates reintegrate into society and to equip them with necessary skills for the job market,” said Mustafa Kemal Akbulut, Turkey’s deputy chief of mission for political and economic affairs.
“We are sure that this project will have a huge impact on the lives of these people after they complete their time in prison.”
He said Ankara will continue to support all sorts of development projects in South Sudan.
“Turkey, with all of its institutions, has supported the government and the people of South Sudan since the country’s independence in 2011,” said Akbulut.
“We believe that the people of South Sudan deserve the best and Turkey stands ready to help them and the government of South Sudan.”
Lt. Gen. Michael Malou, director of Juba Central Prison, said the donation by TIKA will prove invaluable for the vocational training program.
Stressing that helping inmates reform their lives was a collective responsibility, he urged other local and international organizations to follow Turkey’s example and play their part in such programs.
Turgut Gazigil, deputy coordinator for TIKA in Juba, was also present at the occasion.
France has shown the most "abnormal and aggressive behavior" when it comes to violating international law, a top Turkish official said Tuesday.
Omer Celik, spokesperson for the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party, said the recent resolution passed in France to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as a separate entity was "null and void."
The motion passed by the French National Assembly last Thursday calls on the French government to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh -- an internationally recognized Azerbaijani territory -- as a separate republic.
It also calls on France and its European partners to re-evaluate Turkey's membership process to the EU due to Ankara's role in the recent conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia.
Addressing a party meeting in the capital Ankara, Celik said the move showed the mentality of the French state.
He stressed that the resolution, despite its symbolic status, was a provocative action that violates international law.
"European democracy owes Turkey," he said, adding that any thoughts of sanctions "are an abdication of reason."
Celik urged the EU to act with caution and rely on its diplomacy, saying that the threat of sanctions should not be used.
Karabakh conflict
Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.
Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from Armenian occupation during the clashes that erupted on Sept. 27 this year.
The fighting ended after a Russian-brokered deal on Nov. 10, with the truce seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose forces have been withdrawing from the freed territories in line with the agreement./aa
A total of 53 irregular migrants were held in eastern Turkey, local authorities said on Tuesday.
The gendarmerie captured the irregular migrants in Bitlis during a regular traffic control in the town of Adlicevaz, the provincial governorate said in a statement.
A suspect who allegedly organized the illegal travel of the migrants was taken into custody.
The irregular migrants will be transferred to the provincial migration office./aa
Turkey's benchmark stock index ended Tuesday increasing 0.75% to close at 1,339.89 points.
After starting the day at 1,334.22 points, Borsa Istanbul's BIST 100 index climbed 9.99 points from 1,329.90 points at Monday's close.
On Tuesday, the BIST 100 hovered between 1,331.63 and 1,348.30 points -- 47 stocks on the index rose, 50 fell and three were flat compared to the previous close.
Closing the day with a market value of some 992.5 billion Turkish liras ($126.6 billion), the benchmark index posted historic high daily trading volume of 28.5 billion Turkish liras ($3.7 billion).
Shares of petrochemical firm Petkim, glass maker Sise Cam and iron/steel producer Kardemir saw the highest trading volumes.
Stocks of a pharmaceutical warehouse Selcuk Ecza Deposu registered the best performance, up 9.99%, while shares of Petkim suffered the most, losing 4.12%.
One ounce of gold sold for $1,846.00 by market close, up from $1,832.50, according to data from Borsa Istanbul's Precious Metals and Diamond Markets.
The price of Brent oil was $48.35 per barrel as of 6 p.m. local time (1500GMT) on Tuesday, with a daily range of $48.12 to $48.94./aa