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ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia
At the end of a tough farming season, Ethiopian farmer Leila Mohammed was looking ready to harvest her millet crop with a sense of pride.
As she was drafting plans and calculating profits, she saw gigantic swarms of locusts like a cloud approaching the fields. All her efforts of waving a piece of cloth to beating steel plates to drive the swarm away failed. Within minutes all the hard labor of months and money she had invested to grow crops were ruined by little monsters.
Residing in Somali province, 50 kilometers (31 miles), north of the regional capital Jijjiga, Mohammed with his six children is looking at a bleak future and starving days ahead.
Ethiopia: Worst locust outbreak in 25 years
“They have destroyed my crop. I do not know what to do. We have lost food and battle against desert locusts,” she told Anadolu Agency.
She recalls that it was like a giant tornado flying high in the sky. Then they lost heights, starting descending and devastated crops.
The region has seen a second such attack from insects last weekend during the current farming season.
“Just last week, this area was sprayed with chemicals and the swarms got paralyzed. But look at them, they have come again to destroy whatever little had been left,” said Siba Aden Mohammed, a local official serving at Awbare district of Fafen zone.
While moving around, telling devastation is visible. Farms, where crops like millet, wheat, and chickpea were standing tall and awaiting harvest are empty, with farmers cursing their luck in desperation.
A vast blanket of dark brown winged insects has covered huge tracts of farmlands. As farmers try to remove them, they fly but soon return to sap the last grain of crop left in the field.
According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), since January, swarms of desert locusts have damaged over 200,000 hectares of cropland in Ethiopia affecting the food security of millions of people.
Aerial spray
Feared throughout history, locusts look like ordinary grasshoppers with big hind legs, white and blue limbs. They form enormous swarms that spread across regions, devouring crops, and leaving serious agricultural damage in their wake. Farmers say, while sitting in the field, they can feel the force of their push.
“The new swarms have destroyed eight Kebeles [farmers’ localities]. All standing crops have been lost entire standing at six localities of Jabsa, Shil Asley, Aladere, Wogera Adle, Keleroek, and Gez Obele,” said Siba.
Early morning, when locusts are most active, an aircraft had dropped insecticides to kill them. But farmers say, it had little effect on the swarm.
“It did not seem to affect this time unlike a week ago when the aerial spray had killed the locusts. The government is trying its best, sending aircraft, sprays, and experts. But it looks nothing is working,” he said.
Driving along with the croplands on a paved road, one can see farmers burning the grass to create smoke, to signal aircraft to spray chemicals at these places.
Farmers were expecting a good yield this year. “If not for the locusts, the crops were in very good condition and they were ripening soon to be harvested,” added Siba.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Abdi Aden Abdi, director of Crop Production and Protection Department in Somali province said so far 36 districts, out of 93 districts have been affected by locusts.
“We have employed six helicopters and a couple of fixed-wing aircraft to spray insecticides. But new swarms are showing up from neighboring Somaliland, as well as from other regions in Ethiopia to devastate more and more farmlands," he said.
Assessing damage
Busy with attempts to save crops from insects, Abdi said, they have not yet assessed crop loss and its cascading effects on food security and hunger.
“Our priority right now in getting rid of the locusts and saving crops that have not been touched so far from the invasion,” he said when asked about the assessment and effects of crop destruction on the lives of people.
The Somali region is Ethiopia’s second-largest regional state in terms of geography after the Oromia regional state, which is the largest and also most populous.
According to Abdi, a committee of experts including central and state officials as well as representatives of FAO would soon to assess the damage.
Slows pace of the economy
Experts fear that locust swarm will hit the country’s GDP figures immensely. Expecting a good agriculture yield, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed had last month projected 6.1% growth for the current financial year.
Since agriculture contributes to a lion’s share in the GDP, its slowing down is expecting to have cascading effects on overall economic progress.
Agriculture experts say, the swarms originating in Yemen are affecting the East Africa region. According to the FAO, locust swarms can range from less than one square km to more than 1,000 sq km.
Each square kilometer of a swarm can have from 40 million-80 million locusts, says an FAO official.
An adult desert locust consumes food equaling roughly to its weight -- about two grams every day. That means that even a small swarm of insects will eat food consumed by six elephants, 20 camels, or 35,000 people every day, according to the FAO official.
Despite putting up all efforts, agriculture officials said the problem is far from over. Abdi said the scary fact is that new swarms are mating and laying eggs, producing ground for new swarms./ aa
ISTANBUL
Turkish authorities arrested 21 people on Wednesday over their suspected links to the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), the group behind the 2016 defeated coup in Turkey, security sources said.
Istanbul Police Department's teams for Anti-Smuggling and Organized Crimes conducted simultaneous operations across seven Turkish provinces and arrested 19 suspects, said a source, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
The suspects are accused of using ByLock, the terror group’s encrypted smartphone messaging app, and being “covert imams” – the senior FETO members – plotting infiltration of the Turkish armed forces, it added.
Separately, two people, including a former judge, suspected of links to FETO were nabbed in northwestern Edirne province when they were trying to escape to Greece illegally, another source said.
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
VIENNA
A heroic Turk hurled himself into a hail of bullets in Vienna Monday night, risking his life to save both an injured women and a police officer from terrorist attack.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency Tuesday, Recep Tayyip Gultekin said he was hoping to sit in a cafe with his friend Mikail Ozen that fateful night, before a new coronavirus lockdown came into effect.
But when he saw a woman injured by the terrorist attack, he jumped in to move her out of harm’s way, heedless of the risk he would certainly face.
After taking the woman to a safe spot, Gultekin himself was in the line of terrorist gunfire, and took a bullet to the leg.
After speaking to the police and aiding an elderly woman in shock due to the attack, he saw a police officer also injured by the terrorists, and again moved to help, despite his own bullet injury.
“Other policemen were watching, I shouted at them for help, but they didn't do anything.
“I said to Mikail, we’ll handle this,” he related.
After reaching the injured officer, they carried him to an ambulance, said Gultekin: “I was holding him from his back, and Mikail was carrying his feet.”
The officer had been injured between the abdominal cavity and calf and lost a lot of blood, Gultekin said.
The paramedics wanted to take Gultekin to a hospital but he refused because there were many people suffering injuries, he added.
Later, after making his way to the hospital, doctors told Gultekin the bullet pellet might have to stay in his leg as removing it might cause problems.
‘Terror is terror everywhere’
Saying that he lives in Austria and makes his living here, Gultekin said: “The police who were injured were my police. The people injured were my people. I give my condolences to the Austrian state and hope the injured people make a quick recovery.”
He added: “If the same thing happens tomorrow, I wouldn’t hesitate to save people. I don’t want to see discrimination between Muslims, Jews, or Christians. Terror has no place in these religions. Terror is terror everywhere.”
At least four people died and 22 more were wounded in the terror attack in Austria’s capital on Monday night, authorities confirmed.
The injured include a police officer, according to the Vienna Police Department.
Speaking at a news conference in Vienna, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said the assailant, who was killed in a police operation last night after the attack, was a sympathizer of the Daesh/ISIS terror group.
“We have not yet found any evidence indicating a second attacker,” he said, adding that the investigation was still ongoing.
The minister urged people to exercise utmost caution.
Authorities have confirmed that the 20-year-old assailant was known to police, as he was arrested last year for attempting to travel to Syria to join terror group Daesh/ISIS.
Local media identified him as Kujtim F., who had both North Macedonian and Austrian citizenship.
He was released from jail in December due to his young age.
Austrian police arrested 14 suspects on Tuesday after raids to more than a dozen locations across the country.
'Keep helping them'
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan conveyed his get-well wishes to Gultekin via video conferencing, and received information about his health.
"We are proud of you," Erdogan said.
"Keep helping the Austrians. They may not understand us, but we do. For we love the creations because of the Creator; we do not discriminate people based on their religion or sect. We said that just being human is enough for us and we continue on this path," he added.
Noting that Muslims in Austria have faced lots of difficulties, Erdogan said: "To them, you have no sin other than being a Muslim. But for us, being a Muslim is the most important source of pride. For one thing, we have fought the biggest fight against terrorism and we continue to do so."
"I am sure that you will be the representative of goodness, peace and grace wherever you are. I thank you on behalf of my nation, my family and myself," he said.
Erdogan also spoke with Ozen and Ahmet Gultekin, the father of Recep Tayyip Gultekin.
Communications Director Fahrettin Altun also hailed the young men on Twitter.
"Two Turkish immigrants, Recep Tayyip and Mikail, risked their lives to help survivors of last night’s terror attack and saved a police officer’s life. Next time you hear a white fearmonger talk about immigrants and their values, remember them. For actions speak louder than words," Altun said.
Earlier, Ozan Ceyhun, Turkey’s ambassador in Vienna, hailed the brave young men on Twitter, linking to an Austrian press account of their deeds: “Heroes of the Vienna attack: two men rescued injured police officers.”
In a Twitter post, Nikolaus Meyer-Landrut, the EU ambassador to Turkey, also thanked the two heroes for their help to the injured.
Quoting Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu’s tweet on Gultekin and Ozer, the ambassador said: “Mr. Minister, we thank Turkish citizens Recep Tayyip Gultekin and Mikal Ozer for helping those injured in the attacks in Vienna and congratulate them.”
“We are ready to fight against all racist attacks together in cooperation,” he added./aa
RAMALLAH, Palestine
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh late Tuesday condemned raids by Zionist forces on the homes of Palestinian Bedouins in the occupied West Bank.
The raids on the eastern side of Tubas destroyed 11 houses Monday, leaving at least 85 people homeless including 35 children, according to Shtayyeh.
He demanded the international community to prevent Zionist’s destruction in areas where Bedouin communities live and provide protection of Palestinians from violations.
Shtayyeh said it is another violation of international law and the destruction of the possibility of a foundation of an independent Palestinian state within 1967 borders.
He said the latest attack occurred when the entire world is focused on the US presidential elections and the raid carries the purpose of covering up crimes by Zionist forces.
The West Bank, including East Jerusalem, is viewed as occupied territory under international law, making all Jewish settlements there illegal./aa
ISTANBUL
The mamamatik, an automatic food machine developed by a Turkish company, will help collect recyclable wastes and feed stray animals at the same time, according to the company’s chairman.
Mehmet Akay said because of a curfew imposed in Turkey to curb the coronavirus, stray animals had difficulty finding food.
Noting that stray animals get sick because they cannot find enough water and food and especially young ones often lose their lives, Akay said for this reason, his company developed the machine to meet the nutritional needs of animals.
He said the main aim was the collection of recyclable wastes.
"While doing this work, we thought of contributing to the nutrition and water needs of our dear friends on the street. Our main purpose here was to engrain an environmental awareness and love for animals, especially among our youth and children. We believe that we have achieved this with the mamamatik," said Akay.
“Plastic, glass and metal boxes thrown into the mamamatik are turned into water and food for our dear friends,” he said.
Akay said the company installed 55 mamamatiks in Istanbul and 20 in other provinces for now, allowing stray animals to be fed very easily.
Akay said animals on the street started to recognize the mamamatiks and can be seen near the machines when they get thirsty and hungry.
Project aims to reduce waste imports of Turkey
Akay underscored that the project is intended to reduce waste imports, which is a serious problem in Turkey.
"It takes hundreds of years for a plastic bottle to disappear in nature and also causes major pollution problems in the environment. Instead of throwing those plastics into nature, we throw them into machines and recycle them," he said.
He added that the goal is to install machines all over Turkey, contributing to recycling and feeding animals./aa
ABUJA, Nigeria
A fire at a refugee camp in northern Nigeria left at least 7,200 people without shelter, authorities said early Wednesday.
A total of 1,200 tents were burned in the fire at the camp in Gajiram village in Borno state, according to Yabawa Kolo, an official from Nigeria’s Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).
The camp includes those who escaped the violence of the Boko Haram terror group.
Kolo said the government sent humanitarian aid to the camp’s residents.
Five children were killed and 7,457 people lost their tents in a fire last year at a refugee camp in Borno state.
Around 3 million people have been displaced in more than a decade of terror activities by Boko Haram.
Scores of civilians are still trapped in remote communities and are unable to flee because of a lack of security on roads.
The violence, which has killed more than 30,000 people, has spread to neighboring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a military response./aa
ABUJA, Nigeria
At least 75 members of the Boko Haram terrorist group were killed in operations in northeastern Nigeria, the Defense Ministry said Tuesday.
Security forces conducted land and air operations in areas of Borno state, the epicenter of the insurgency in the country, against Boko Haram between Sept. 28 and Oct. 31, according to Acting Director of Defense Media Operations Brig. Gen. Benardo Onyeuko.
He said along with the killings, shelters were destroyed and four armored vehicles of the terror group were seized.
But many wounded terrorists managed to escape, he said.
Around 3 million people have been displaced in more than a decade of terror activities by Boko Haram.
Scores of civilians are still trapped in remote communities and are unable to flee because of a lack of security on roads.
The violence, which has killed more than 30,000 people, has spread to neighboring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a military response. /aa
KAMPALA, Uganda
Ugandan opposition presidential candidate and popular singer Bobi Wine was arrested Tuesday after handing in his nomination papers to the election commission and successfully being certified as a candidate in next year’s polls.
Police used a hammer and broke the windows of his vehicle and forcefully dragged him out before bundling him into their vehicle amid violent scuffles between the police and his supporters.
Since Wine expressed his presidential ambitions, the police and military have repeatedly arrested him and beaten and detained his supporters.
Authorities frequently accuse Wine of planning rallies that could disrupt public order, which he denies.
The 38-year-old is running against Yoweri Museveni, 76, who has ruled Uganda for 34 years, making him Africa’s third longest-ruling president behind Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang (1979-present) and Cameroon’s Paul Biya (1982-present).
Museveni is accused of increasingly using the armed forces to assert his authority.
Uganda has the world’s youngest population, with over 78% below the age of 30, according to the State of Uganda’s Population Report 2013. Being in his 30s, Wine has built up a following among Uganda’s younger voters, especially poor urban dwellers.
He was later returned to his home on the outskirts of the capital Kampala, where he addressed a cheering crowd.
“We now enter the most critical phase of our liberation struggle. The authority I have is the same authority you have. Don’t give up,” he said.
Uganda has never witnessed a peaceful transfer of power since its independence from British colonial rule in 1962./aa
ANKARA
Several Muslim countries along with Tunisia’s Ennahda movement and the head of Egypt’s Al-Azhar institution on Tuesday condemned yesterday’s terrorist attack near a synagogue in the Austrian capital Vienna.
Ahmed al-Tayeb, the Grand Imam of Al-Azhar -- the highest seat of Sunni Muslim learning -- said in a statement that "killing one soul is as if killing all of humanity and the human right to life is one of the highest purposes in all laws."
In Tunisia, the Ennahda movement, the largest parliamentary bloc, condemned the attack and called for "uniting international efforts to combat the scourge of terrorism, which does not exclude a country."
In a statement, the movement stressed that it "appreciates the positions of governments and officials and all voices stressing that these terrorist attacks are performed by extremist criminal groups that have nothing to do with Islam and Muslims."
Austria’s Interior Ministry announced that investigations revealed that the perpetrator of the attack was “a supporter of the terrorist organization ISIS” but no party has claimed responsibility.
Meanwhile, Iraqi Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed al-Sahaf said: "We offer our condolences to the government and people of Austria and we stress Iraq's position that rejects terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.”
Sudan said that "while offering sincere condolences and sympathy to the families of the victims, we express our full solidarity with the Austrian government and people.”
Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry condemned "all terrorist acts" and expressed "its sadness and pain for the deaths of innocent victims as a result of terrorist acts.”
Egypt’s Foreign Ministry also strongly condemned the terrorist attack and expressed its solidarity with the government and people of Austria.
Its statement stressed Egypt’s "categorical rejection of all forms of violence and extremism and its demand for the necessity of intensifying international efforts to confront terrorism."
Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Ministry also condemned the attack and expressed its "solidarity with Austria in taking all measures to maintain security and protect against extremist tendencies and acts of terrorism and violence in all their forms."
Jordan’s Foreign Ministry meanwhile expressed its strong condemnation and denunciation of the terrorist crime and its solidarity with Austria in the face of blind violence and terrorism targeting the country's stability.
The Foreign Ministry of United Arab Emirates also condemned and rejected all forms of violence and terrorism which aim to destabilize security and stability and contradict religious and humanitarian values.
At least four people died and 17 others were wounded in the terrorist attack, authorities confirmed.
The wounded include a police officer, according to the Vienna Police Department./aa
SRINAGAR, Jammu and Kashmir
A group of mainstream political parties in Jammu and Kashmir on Tuesday rejected India's controversial legal changes allowing outsiders to buy non-agricultural land in the disputed region.
The seven-party alliance, jointly called People's Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD), dubbed the Oct. 26 order of the Indian Interior Ministry allowing Indian nationals who are not residents of Jammu and Kashmir to buy non-agricultural land in the region as bizarre attempt to distort facts, weave lies and mislead people.
The statement said that the real object of the repeal of the basic land laws and the massive amendments to the other laws is to push in and implement the agenda of effecting "demographic change and disempowering" the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
"The laws now introduced through amendments by Indian Government are not only against people of Jammu and Kashmir but undemocratic, unconstitutional and backward looking with only aim to disempower people and change the demography," it read.
Until Aug. 5 last year, when India stripped Jammu and Kashmir of its autonomous status and divided it into two centrally ruled territories, outsiders could not buy property or apply for government jobs. Since then, the Indian government introduced laws that made it easier for outsiders to become residents of the region and eligible for government jobs.
Pro-people act undone
The political alliance also called the earlier land laws of Jammu and Kashmir region the most progressive, pro-people and pro-farmer in the entire Indian subcontinent.
The statement said that the Jammu and Kashmir region was the first in the country to implement the concept of land to tiller by enacting Big Landed Estates Abolition Act, 1952, followed by Agrarian Reforms Act, 1976, restricting the land holding to twelve and half acres and ending the exploitative practice of absentee landlordism, and whosoever calls it archaic, would be guilty of ignorance of the history of Jammu and Kashmir.
"It is because of the timely land reforms that no starvation deaths occur in Jammu and Kashmir, no farmer suicides have been ever reported from Jammu and Kashmir and everyone in Jammu and Kashmir has available three fundamental necessities food, clothing and shelter, the position that is now sought to be reversed by making massive assault on the land law regime," the statement added.
Earlier many political leaders had come out openly against the amendments to the land ownership laws, calling it repressive measures used against the residents of the region.
"Unacceptable amendments to the land ownership laws of J&K. Even the tokenism of domicile has been done away with when purchasing non-agricultural land & transfer of agricultural land has been made easier. J&K is now up for sale & the poorer small land holding owners will suffer," Omar Abdullah, former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, had said.
Disputed region
Kashmir, a Muslim-majority Himalayan region, is held by India and Pakistan in parts and claimed by both in full. A small sliver of Kashmir is also held by China.
Since they were partitioned in 1947, New Delhi and Islamabad have fought three wars -- in 1948, 1965, and 1971 -- two of them over Kashmir. Also, in Siachen glacier in northern Kashmir, Indian and Pakistani troops have fought intermittently since 1984. A cease-fire took effect in 2003.
Some Kashmiri groups in Jammu and Kashmir have been fighting against the Indian rule for independence, or for unification with neighboring Pakistan.
According to several human rights organizations, thousands have reportedly been killed in the conflict since 1989./aa