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A group of approximately eight people entered Cafe Istanbul, a restaurant serving customers for eight years in Beverly Hills, at about 9 p.m. and started throwing tables and chairs around. The attack caused material damage to the restaurant. A customer with the initials F.T., who preferred not to disclose their name due to safety concerns, was in the restaurant and escaped through the backdoor during the attack.
“A group entered the restaurant while I was sitting in with my family inside. They started to attack, and we tried to protect ourselves. We sheltered in a building nearby after escaping from the backdoor, where we called the police,” F.T. said.
F.T. noted the police who were dispatched to the area after the assault said that an investigation within the scope of a hate crime will be launched.
Turkey’s Los Angeles consul general, Can Oğuz, said the restaurant had previously informed authorities about threats.
“These attacks remind us of the assassinations of our diplomats in Los Angeles in the 80s. I urge all Turkish citizens to closely follow this case,” he noted.
In the 1970s and 1980s, a total of 31 Turkish diplomats and their family members were killed around the world by the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA).
After Azerbaijan started a military operation to liberate the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region in September, Armenians have mounted attacks against Turkish citizens abroad. Last month, members of the Armenian community wounded four Turkish citizens while demonstrating on the A-7 motorway, connecting France’s Lyon and Marseille./ DS
VIENNA(AA)
A Palestinian immigrant, who helped a wounded police officer during Monday’s terrorist attack in Vienna, recalled the night of the rampage.
Osama Joda, 23, who moved to Austria eight years ago, told Anadolu Agency as to how he risked his life to help the police officer who was shot by a gunman in Vienna’s city center.
He was working at a fast-food restaurant in Schwedenplatz square when the incident took place.
When he and his friend heard the gunshots, Joda said, they tried to get to a safe place during which the terrorist came very close to them, and therefore he hid behind a tree.
Noting that there was no police officer around when the attacker started shooting, Joda said: “I saw the assailant behind the tree and tried to speak to him in Arabic. I told him that I am a Palestinian and Muslim, but he did not listen to me and continued shooting. He fired at least 20 shots.”
He said that two police officers arrived shortly afterward and the terrorist went into hiding.
The officers were unprepared, Joda said, adding the gunman shot one of them before they could take action.
“The police officer fell to the ground and was seriously bleeding,” he said.
“At that moment, I wanted to help the injured police officer by showing up from behind the tree where I was hiding, but the other officer told me to go to a safe place,” he recalled.
Help by Turkish men
Joda said that he did help the officer anyway by moving him to a close-by bench and gave him first aid.
An ambulance arrived later, but the paramedics were in shock and could not approach the injured police officer, he said, adding that this is when two Turkish young men rushed to the site and took the injured policeman to the ambulance, he added.
The Vienna Police thanked Joda by honoring him with an honorary medal.
“I am a Palestinian Muslim, the two Turks who came to help the police were also Muslims, we are proud of what we did,” he said.
“Terror has no religion. This is not Islam; we did not learn such a religion from our prophet, and our family did not teach us such a religion.”
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Vienna Mayor Michael Ludwig thanked Joda for his help.
At least four people were killed and 17 more were wounded in the terror attack that shocked Austria.
Austrian Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said the assailant, who was later killed by the police, was a sympathizer of the Daesh/ISIS terror group.
The 20-year-old was known to police as he was arrested last year for attempting to travel to Syria to join the terror group.
He was released from jail in December, due to his young age.
Local media identified him as Kujtim F., who had both North Macedonian and Austrian citizenship.
ANKARA
Italy on Thursday reported 455 new deaths from the novel coronavirus, the highest single-day spike since early May, local media reported.
The country also registered 34,505 cases over the past 24 hours, the highest daily case count since the beginning of the pandemic, according to Italian news agency ANSA.
The total number of infections in Italy rose to 824,879, while the death toll reached 40,192.
Gianni Rezza, the Health Ministry’s prevention chief, said some 99 people were admitted to intensive care units on Thursday making total of 2,391.
Rezza said some 220,000 swab tests were conducted over the past day and the percentage of positive swabs was more than 10%.
He said today’s numbers are not a "good sign."/aa
Nearly 800 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank have been left homeless by Israeli demolitions so far this year, the Israeli nongovernmental organization (NGO), B'Tselem said, the highest annual tally since 2016, the year the organization began collecting such data.
The statement came as Israel's army demolished the homes of nearly 80 Palestinian Bedouins in the occupied West Bank, in a rare operation targeting an entire community at once. Late Tuesday, Israeli bulldozers razed the village, including tents, sheds, portable toilets and solar panels, near Tubas in the Jordan Valley.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh accused Israeli troops of having "completely demolished the village of Homsa al-Baqia, leaving around 80 people homeless." The Jordan Valley falls in the West Bank's Area C that is fully controlled by Israel's army, which has occupied the West Bank since 1967.
"The wiping off of a whole community at once is extremely rare, and it seems like Israel was making use of the fact that everyone's attention is currently set elsewhere to move forward with this inhumane act," B'Tselem said in a statement sent to Agence France-Presse (AFP), referring to the U.S. presidential election.
In a separate statement B'Tselem said that "while the world deals with the coronavirus crisis, Israel has devoted time and effort to harassing Palestinians instead of helping ... residents living under its control."
Israel justifies the demolition of Palestinian homes by saying the structures lack building permits, despite the fact that Israel does not provide such permits to Palestinians. Moreover, Israel orders Palestinians to demolish their own homes or pay the demolition price to the municipality if they refuse to tear them down. Palestinians as well as the international community consider Israeli demolition politics in the occupied territories illegal./aa
An Uighur man who claimed to have been forced to inform on fellow Uighurs to Chinese authorities has been hospitalised in a serious condition after being shot in Istanbul, Turkish media reported on Tuesday.
Yusufujrang Aimaitijiang had gone outside to get cigarettes when he was shot twice on Monday evening, the private news agency DHA reported.
Mr Aimaitijiang suffered injuries to his shoulder and arm while the gunman escaped, the DHA report said.
Members of Turkey's Uighur community said Mr Aimaitijiang was also known as Yusupjan Emet and Yusuf Amat.
Using the name Amat, he told Al Jazeera in February 2019 that he was forced to inform on fellow Uighurs by China.
"My role was to feed information to officials. I reported on everything people did - what they ate, drank, what they did in private in their homes, whether it was friends or relatives, I shared it all," Amat said.
He said he started spying in 2012 because his mother was taken hostage, and officials tortured her and threatened to keep her unless he agreed to cooperate.
He claimed he had been sent to spy abroad between 2012 and 2018 in countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan and Turkey, Al Jazeera reported.
He added that Beijing has "countless" such informants across the world, some of whom also abduct Uighurs and bring them back to China.
There are around 50,000 Uighur refugees in Turkey, which has linguistic and cultural connections with the Uighurs.
Many have fled a crackdown on Uighur Muslims in northwest China, where camps and prisons have been used against them in the Xinjiang region.
Beijing says they are vocational centres aimed at combating extremism.
ATHENS
Three members of the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO) were arrested late Wednesday after being caught with fake Greek identity cards in the capital Athens.
According to the local Ekathimerini newspaper, the suspects were discovered during a random stop-and-search encounter with officers of a motorcycle-riding unit.
It said that during questioning at Athens’ Security sub-directorate, the suspects claimed that they fled Turkey because they were being persecuted for being supporters of the US-based cleric Fetullah Gulen.
Two of the men said they were former government workers, a claim that was confirmed by police.
FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016 in which 251 people were martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.
Turkey accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police and judiciary./aa
HAKKARI, Turkey
At least three construction workers in southeastern Turkey were martyred in an attack by PKK terrorists, the National Defense Ministry said Wednesday.
The ministry said in a statement that two of the workers succumbed to their injuries after being taken to a hospital.
According to the ministry, the PKK/KCK targeted the construction workers with missiles and long-barreled weapons in Derecik district of Hakkari province.
The site of the attack was subjected to intense firing from the air and land and operations were launched to arrest the terrorists, it said.
Later in the day, the ministry said five terrorists responsible for the attack were neutralized in Semdinli district in Hakkari.
Turkish authorities often use "neutralized" in statements to imply the 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
WASHINGTON
Twitter suspended the account of Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov on Wednesday without providing a reason.
According to the microblogging site’s rules, the company aims to serve the public conversation.
"Violence, harassment and other similar types of behavior discourage people from expressing themselves, and ultimately diminish the value of global public conversation.
"Our rules are to ensure all people can participate in the public conversation freely and safely," it said on its website.
The move came amid an ongoing conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Upper Karabakh region, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh.
Since clashes erupted on Sept. 27, Armenia has repeatedly attacked Azerbaijani civilians and forces, even violating three humanitarian cease-fires since Oct. 10.
While world powers have called for a sustainable cease-fire, Turkey has supported Baku's right to self-defense and demanded the withdrawal of Armenia's occupying forces./aa
GAZA CITY, Occupied Palestine
The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate said on Wednesday that Israel has killed more than 46 Palestinian journalists since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000.
This came in a rally staged outside the UN headquarters in Gaza Strip on the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists.
Tahseen al-Astal, the deputy head of the syndicate, called on the UN to assume its responsibilities in protecting journalists and prosecuting the perpetrators of Zionist crimes against Palestinian journalists.
"The Syndicate counts annually between 500 and 700 [Israeli] occupation attacks and crimes against Palestinian journalists and it's time for these crimes to stop and to hold accountable those who committed them and those who issued the orders," al-Astal said.
He stressed that the Israeli violations against journalists "aim to silence and prevent the factual press image from being conveyed to the world."
Zionist entity has a long history of targeting journalists. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists have documented 17 confirmed instances of journalists killed in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory since 1992. Of these, 15 journalists have been killed by Israeli fire.
The year 2014, when Israel carried out its last major onslaught against the blockaded Gaza and killed over 2,200 Palestinians, was the bloodiest year for journalists in Palestine.
PARIS
Insulting cartoons published by the Charlie Hebdo magazine about Prophet Muhammad and Islam are similar to those drawn about Jews in the 1930s in far-right or German Nazi magazines, said a French sociologist.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Raphael Liogier, professor at the Institut d'etudes politiques d'Aix-en-Provence, said cartoons published by the magazine are violent toward Muslims.
"I believe these cartoons are violent,” Liogier said.
“There is something in common between Jews in the 1930s and what is done to Muslims today. These cartoons are similar to those drawn about Jews in the 1930s in far-right or German Nazi magazines,” he added.
On his thoughts about French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent anti-Islam remarks, Liogier said Macron’s liberal program which enabled him to get elected shifted to anti-Islam over the years.
“Especially since October last year, Macron's ideology has shifted to anti-Islam. A populist atmosphere has been created in the country with the politics Macron has recently followed. Macron's ministers shifted to anti-Islamic and far-right politics,” said Liogier.
“Macron is influenced by his circle and wants to show that he is concerned about problems with Islam in the country. Macron needs to show that he has a problem [with Islam] as the elections are approaching,” he added.
Liogier warned against a climate of generalized suspicion toward the country's Muslim population.
“Nobody speaks about the attacks carried out by far-right organization Generation Identitaire in France. They are well organized in Europe,” he said.
“While organizations like these are ignored, the focus is on the wrong places. This is the result of a paranoid mentality,” Liogier added.
A man who was shot dead by police in the French city of Avignon after accosting passers-by is suspected of belonging to an anti-Muslim, far-right group, local media reported on Friday.
Initial reports on last week's attack in Avignon in local and international media falsely claimed that the suspect was an “Islamist” who shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is great) in the street.
Police sources told French daily Le Figaro that the suspect had been undergoing psychiatric treatment and was believed to be a member of the far-right group Generation Identitaire.
However, prosecutors ruled out terrorism as a possible motive.
Generation Identitaire is the French branch of anti-migrant, xenophobic group Generation Identity, which has attracted young people through social media, exploiting fears over refugees and terrorism.
Its leading members have propagated white supremacist ideas and anti-Muslim and racist conspiracy theories.
Last month, President Emmanuel Macron accused French Muslims of “separatism” and claimed Islam is "a religion in crisis all over the world."
Tensions further escalated after a schoolteacher was murdered in retaliation for showing his students offensive cartoons on Prophet Muhammad during a class on freedom of expression.
Macron paid tribute to the teacher and said France would "not give up our cartoons."
Insulting cartoons by Charlie Hebdo were also projected on buildings in a few cities.
The attack in Nice is one of four acts of terror or potential terror that occurred on Thursday. Two others happened in the French cities of Avignon and Lyon and one in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia at the French consulate.
Macron has called the attack in Nice an act of "Islamist terror". Prime Minister Jean Castex moved France to an emergency level anti-terrorism plan Thursday as a result of the attacks.
Earlier this year, the magazine republished cartoons insulting Islam and the Prophet Muhammad.
Several Arab countries, as well as Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan, have condemned Macron’s attitude toward Muslims and Islam.(AA)