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.
ISTANBUL
The Turkish-made Common Aperture Targeting System (CATS) camera was tested on Thursday to equip TB2 armed unmanned combat aerial vehicles.
TB2, developed by UAV producer Baykar, shot a test target by using CATS cameras, produced by the Turkish defense giant Aselsan, Baykar tweeted on Friday.
The armed UAV successfully shot the target with MAM-L missile, manufactured by another Turkish defense firm Roketsan.
In October, Canada announced that it has suspended arms export permits to Turkey over allegations that it is using Canadian technology in the military conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh.
Following Canada's move, Turkey's Defense Industries Presidency announced that the Turkish defense industry is proceeding on its way, regardless of embargo decisions./aa
COLOGNE, Germany(AA)
A mosque in the German town of Hufingen on Friday received an Islamophobic letter.
The letter sent to Aqsa Mosque said: “Islam belongs to neither Germany nor Europe” and “We’ll erase Islam and Islamism from Germany,” according to the Turkish-Muslim umbrella group DITIB.
Hakan Tasdemir, head of DITIB in Hufingen, said the letter had left them saddened and deeply concerned.
He added that the mosque has been operational since 1996 and it was the first such incident they have reported.
Tasdemir went on to say they have informed the authorities and an investigation has been launched.
ISTANBUL
Turkey dismissed Murat Uysal as central bank governor early Saturday and replaced him with former finance minister Naci Agbal, who was until now the head of the Strategy and Budget Presidency.
Agbal headed the finance ministry from 2015-2018 and left his post to Berat Albayrak, the current minister.
Ibrahim Senel, deputy head of the Strategy and Budget Presidency, was also appointed new head of the agency, according to a presidential decree issued in the Official Gazette.
Murat Uysal was appointed governor of the bank in July 2019, after former governor Murat Cetinkaya was dismissed.
Former Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci was also appointed to the Economic Policies Committee./ aa
ANKARA(AA)
Earthquake survivors have been receiving various help from across Turkey, days after a powerful tremor hit the country’s Aegean region.
Since the magnitude-6.6 quake hit Izmir province last Friday, ordinary citizens in different cities have shared what they have with survivors in an effort to meet their needs.
Turkey’s disaster management agency, AFAD, state officials, non-governmental organizations and institutions and citizens, including children, have tried their best to extend a helping hand to survivors.
Municipalities, volunteers, associations, students, teachers and doctors have exhausted efforts to relieve the pain of those who lost loved ones, houses and other possessions.
In Aydın, one municipality allocated nearly $6,000 from its budget to prepare aid boxes for what AFAD identified as the needs of victims.
Similarly, a group of friends in Izmir gathered their savings and donated almost $600 to help survivors.
Izmir Metropolitan Municipality launched a campaign, “One Rent One Home,” and collected more than $115,000 in less than 24 hours.
Furthermore, in Istanbul, cooperation shopping website Trendyol and the Turkish Educational Foundation (TEV), raised nearly $12,000 to support quake-affected students at all levels of education.
Two siblings who survived an earthquake in Elazig, in eastern Turkey, decided to send savings they collected in the last 10 months to those who might need it in Izmir.
And secondary school students from Bartin province in the Black Sea region emptied their piggy banks and pooled the money to send help to Izmir’s survivors.
Also, telecommunication companies, banks, associations, municipalities and various institutions launched campaigns to help victims.
Communication company Turkcell created a special “Hero Campaign” for AFAD workers. It includes 10,000 minutes to talk, 20 GB internet package and 5,000 SMS, or short messaging service.
The company also established six mobile charging stations in areas most affected by the quake with a free speech and internet package for customers in the disaster zone to meet immediate needs. In addition, children were presented with plush Emocans toys -- characters created by Turkcell.
Kuveyt Turk, one of the leading participation financial institutions in Turkey, postponed financing installments and credit card payments for three months without receiving additional dividends to support customers who were victims of the earthquake.
The Private Kindergartens Association, with participation from young students and their families, started the "I send toys to my brothers and sisters" campaign throughout Turkey after a young teacher who was rescued from the debris with her student in Izmir asked for children’s toys.
The general president of the association, Murat Kus, said the group is preparing to establish a long-term psychological support system to make it easier for citizens affected by the quake to overcome traumas. "Our team of psychologists of 250 people has already been established. We are also meeting with Turkcell and Vodafone. People who need support will be able to see our psychologist they want through a single number. We want to make it regular for a year,” he said.
Meanwhile, as part of cooperation initiated by Ronesans Holding Group Company, Ronesans Real Estate Investment with the Turkish Association of Psychologists (TPD), children in Izmir are provided with therapy support by special psychologists to address their concerns and improve their psychological condition.
The "Emotion Sharing House" project intends to enable children to more easily overcome earthquake traumas and adapt to their normal lives, eliminate psychological damage that may occur and increase their ability to cope with anxiety.
Also, in the Black Sea region of Turkey, Trabzon Metropolitan Municipality launched the “Trabzon shares its bread” campaign and sent 5,500 loaves of bread to survivors.
Similarly, Fenerbahce Sports Club, one of the leading sports clubs in Turkey, sent a truckload of nearly 5,700 products, including winter clothes to Izmir, as well as masks, toys and stationeries.
Help did not end with the anecdotes mentioned.
Perhaps, more importantly, there were heart-warming letters written by children and adults.
One letter by a young girl started: “Dear friend,” and was full of emotion.
“I call you my friend because I don’t know your name but I felt the pain of the earthquake in my heart with you. I know exactly how it feels,” she said in the letter. “Almost nine months ago, we have gone through the same fears. When you are together, all wounds heal.”
Another girl wrote: “The earthquake you're experiencing is not a small thing. Imagine how much weight you have on you. You’re stuck in a tiny place, you're waiting for a light like that. Just don't lose hope, because there's always hope.”
The earthquake
The death toll from last week’s quake stands at 114, according to authorities.
As many as 137 victims are still receiving treatment while 898 have been discharged from hospitals, the AFAD said.
A total of 1,621 aftershocks -- 44 with a magnitude greater than 4.0 -- have rattled Izmir, Turkey’s third-largest city and home to more than 4.3 million residents, the agency said.
Turkey is among the world's most seismically active zones and has suffered several devastating earthquakes, including the magnitude-7.6 tremor in Marmara in 1999.
IDLIB, Syria
A child was killed in regime artillery shelling of civilian areas Friday in Syria's northwestern Idlib province, according to the White Helmets civil defense agency.
The group said regime attacks killed a four-year-old girl when the regime targeted the city center of Ariha province in the southern countryside.
Turkey, Russia and Iran announced in May 2017 an agreement to establish a de-escalation zone in Idlib, as part of the Astana talks on Syria.
Despite subsequent understandings that were concluded for the cease-fire in Idlib, the most recent of which was last January, regime forces and their allies continued attacks on the region.
Since January 2019, attacks have killed more than 1,800 civilians and displaced an excess of 1.94 million people who fled to relatively calm areas close to the Turkish border.
On March 5, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russia's Vladimir Putin announced a cease-fire agreement in Idlib, which took effect the next day./aa
ANKARA
Aspirin will be probed in UK trials as a possible treatment for the coronavirus, the University of Oxford’s RECOVERY trial announced Friday.
“From today, aspirin will be investigated in the world’s largest clinical trial of treatments for patients hospitalised with COVID-19. The Randomised Evaluation of COViD-19 Therapy (RECOVERY) trial is taking place in 176 hospital sites across the UK, and has so far recruited over 16,000 patients,” read a statement from RECOVERY.
The common anti-inflammatory drug will be tested for use in patients for blood clotting complications.
“Patients with COVID-19 are at higher risk of blood clots forming in their blood vessels. Platelets, small cell fragments in the blood that stop bleeding, seem to be hyperreactive in COVID-19 and may be involved in the clotting complications,” said the statement. “Since aspirin is an antiplatelet agent, it may reduce the risk of blood clots in patients with COVID-19.”
Peter Horby, co-Chief Investigator of the trial, said the drug may be beneficial because it is safe, accessible and inexpensive.
“We are looking for medicines for COVID-19 that can be used immediately by anyone, anywhere in the world. We do not know if aspirin is such a medicine but we will find out,” he said.
Aspirin is widely used as a blood thinner for conditions such as heart attacks, strokes and pre-eclampsia in pregnant women, said Martin Landray, who co-leads the trial.
“Enrolling patients in a randomised trial such as RECOVERY is the only way to assess whether there are clear benefits for patients with COVID-19 and whether those benefits outweigh any potential side effects such as the risk of bleeding,” he said.
Other investigations are continuing in the RECOVERY trial including “Azithromycin (a commonly used antibiotic), Tocilizumab (an anti-inflammatory treatment given by injection), Convalescent plasma (collected from donors who have recovered from COVID-19 and contains antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 virus), REGN-COV2: An investigational anti-viral antibody cocktail produced by Regeneron.”/aa
ANKARA
Turkish writers, academics, journalists and lawyers have called for a common consensus against PKK violence and terrorism.
In a statement on Friday, the group called for a “life without violence, terror, blood or weapon” in Turkey.
Among the signatories of the statement are writer Ertugrul Baser, Professor Edibe Sozen, Professor Erdal Baykan, journalist Ahmet Tezcan, Professor Erol Goka, educator Serdar Kaya, journalist and author Guldali Coskun, journalist Halime Kokce, lawyer Safa Mursel and sociologist Ercan Sen.
The call came after three construction workers were martyred in an attack by PKK terrorists in southeastern Turkey earlier this week.
Turkish National Defense Ministry said on Wednesday that five terrorists responsible for the attack were neutralized.
Turkish authorities often use "neutralized" in statements to imply terrorists in question surrendered, were killed or captured.
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
RAMALLAH, Occupied Palestine
At least three Palestinians were injured Friday by Zionist forces in the occupied West Bank, a Palestinian group said.
Clashes erupted between Zionist soldiers and Palestinian activists in the town of Kafr Qaddum, north of the West Bank.
The soldiers used tear gas and live and plastic bullets to disperse a demonstration against illegal Jewish settlements and Israel’s barrier in the occupied West Bank, Murad Ishtivi, a coordinator for the Popular Resistance Committee, told Anadolu Agency.
The protesters pelted stones at the soldiers, he added.
Tens of Palestinians fell ill after inhaling the tear gas, he said.
ANKARA
Burkina Faso, Nigeria, South Sudan and Yemen are seriously expected to “soon slip into famine” if conditions there undergo any more deterioration in coming months, the World Food Program (WFP) said on Friday.
Citing a new report released by the Agriculture Organization of the UN (FAO) and the WFP, the latter warned the four countries face acute food insecurity.
“Parts of the population in the four hotspots of highest concern are already experiencing a critical hunger situation, with the report warning that escalations in conflict as well as a further reduction in humanitarian access could lead to a risk of famine,” WFP said.
The UN agency voiced that the four countries are not the only ones, as “another 16 countries are at high risk of rising levels of acute hunger.”
The countries included Venezuela, Haiti, Afghanistan, Syria, Lebanon, Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Mali, Niger, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Zimbabwe.
“An acute food insecurity levels are reaching new highs globally, driven by a combination of factors, “ the WFP said.
“A toxic combination of conflict, economic decline, climate extremes and the COVID-19 pandemic” is driving people further into the emergency phase of food insecurity, the WFP said.
“We are at a catastrophic turning point. Once again, we face the risk of famine in four different parts of the world at the same time. When we declare a famine it means many lives have already been lost. If we wait to find that out for sure, people are already dead,” Margot van der Velden, WFP director of emergencies, said.
“The aim of the Hotspots report is to inform urgent action that can be taken now to avoid a major emergency – or series of emergencies – in three to six months from today,” WFP said./aa
WASHINGTON
The US on Thursday “strongly” condemned an attack by the PKK terrorist group on Peshmerga security forces in Iraq’s northern Kurdish region.
Washington remains “steadfast” in its support for Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) “in their efforts to root out terrorism,” State Department Deputy Spokesperson Cale Brown said in a statement.
“We extend our sympathy and condolences to the families of those killed and injured in these attacks,” said Brown.
The US-listed terror group attacked Peshmerga forces in Duhok province Wednesday morning, killing one and injuring two others, according to the Rudaw news agency.
The KRG in northern Iraq said the PKK terrorist group's attack on the region's forces crossed a “red line.”
On Monday, the former president of the region, Masoud Barzani, called for preventing the PKK terrorist group from imposing its will on the region./aa