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BERLIN
At least four people were killed and 22 more were wounded in a terror attack in the Austrian capital, an official said on Tuesday.
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./aa
BERLIN
Authorities in Austria are treating a series of shootings in the capital Vienna as a terrorist attack, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said Monday evening.
“I can confirm that this is an apparent terror attack,” Nehammer told ORF television, adding they believe several gunmen were involved.
“Unfortunately, several people were injured,” he said.
Gunmen armed with rifles targeted people in six different locations in the city center, Austrian police confirmed on Twitter.
At least one person has been killed and several others seriously injured, including a police officer.
One suspect was shot and killed by the police.
A major police operation was underway in the capital, with the police urging citizens to stay inside and keep away from public places.
"Shots fired in the Inner City district – there are persons injured – KEEP AWAY from all public places or public transport – don't share any videos or photos!" the Vienna police said on Twitter./aa
MUGLA, Turkey
The Turkish Coast Guard rescued 18 asylum seekers who were pushed back by Greek coastal authorities into Turkish waters off the Aegean coast, a security source said Monday.
The coast guard was dispatched to the area and took the migrants to the Turkish shore in the Marmaris district of Mugla via a coast guard boat, said the source, who asked not to be named due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
After reaching the shores, they were transferred to the provincial migration office.
Turkey has decried the Greek pushbacks as illegal and risky for migrants' lives.
Turkey has been a key transit point for asylum seekers who want to cross to Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution.
Earlier this year, Turkey opened its gates to irregular migrants, accusing the EU of failing to keep promises under a 2016 migrant deal.
Turkey hosts nearly 4 million Syrians, more than any other country in the world./aa
PARIS
A mosque in northern France suffered an Islamophobic attack in which a pig's head was left in the Muslim house of worship, said mosque officials on Monday.
The head was found in the Grand Mosque in the city of Compiegne in Oise, where restoration work is being done, the Turkish-Muslim umbrella group DITIB in Compiegne said in a statement Monday.
Condemning the incident, the mosque management filed a complaint.
The French Council of the Muslim Faith also denounced the incident, and expressed solidarity with the mosque management and the community.
The development comes amid rising anti-Islam rhetoric in France following controversial statements by President Emmanuel Macron.
Claiming Islam is a "religion in crisis," he defended blasphemous cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, leading to international condemnations, protests, and calls to boycott French-made products./aa
ANKARA
Turkey's exports will grow stronger every day as the country enters a new era despite the coronavirus pandemic, a top official said Monday.
"We're taking firm steps forward in our economic transformation journey with the goal of more production and employment and more exports," Treasury and Finance Minister Berat Albayrak said on Twitter.
Albayrak pointed out that in October, exports rose 5.6% compared to the same month last year and 8.3% compared to last month, reaching $17.3 billion.
"Thus, we reached the highest monthly export figure in our country's history, the ratio of exports to imports reached the highest level in 2020 with 87.9%," he said.
Data from the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), as well as production and new orders figures in the manufacturing industry, have been increasing for five months in a row, and this increase accelerated in October with the help of new export orders, he added.
The PMI data for the manufacturing sector rose to 53.9 in October from 52.8 in the previous month.
Turkey's PMI for the manufacturing sector is seen as an important gauge in tracking the health of the sector, with values below 50 points showing contraction while those above indicate expansion.
"The data indicate that the V-type recovery that started in the third quarter of the year continues in the last quarter of the year as well," he said.
Firms are increasing employment to support production, he said, adding that the employment generation rate in the sector reached its highest level since February 2018.
The increase in production that comes with employment indicates that the growth in the industry is sustainable and permanent.
Albayrak also said that there continue to be positive developments in domestic production, with more than half of automobile and light commercial vehicle sales in September produced domestically for the first time in 20 years.
This rate at the end of 2017 was 35.6%, Albayrak said, adding: "With the support provided by the competitive exchange rate, new records are expected to be broken in the share of domestic automobile sales in total sales for the rest of the year."
Noting that this February inflation was 12.37%, before the pandemic struck, Albayrak said: "Despite the cost pressure created by the effects of the pandemic, inflation is still below this level.
"Our goal in 2021 will be to reduce inflation to the single digits."/aa
ANKARA
US whistleblower Edward Snowden and his wife Lindsay Mills are applying for Russian citizenship, Snowden said on Monday.
The pair applied for citizenship in order to not be separated from their son, who is expected to be born at the end of this year.
“After years of separation from our parents, my wife and I have no desire to be separated from our son. That's why, in this era of pandemics and closed borders, we're applying for dual US-Russian citizenship,” Snowden said on Twitter.
“Lindsay and I will remain Americans, raising our son with all the values of the America we love – including the freedom to speak his mind. And I look forward to the day I can return to the States, so the whole family can be reunited,” he added.
Snowden’s lawyer Anatoly Kucherena announced the pregnancy on Thursday, saying the child will be granted Russian citizenship by birthright.
Earlier, Kucherena said that Snowden was granted a termless residence permit in Russia on Oct. 22.
Former US National Security Agency contractor Snowden, who leaked thousands of documents detailing a long-term surveillance program by the American government, was given asylum in Russia in 2013.
In 2014, Snowden's long-term girlfriend Mills joined him in Russia, and in 2017 they got married./aa
BAKU, Azerbaijan
The leader of a far-right French group says he has joined Armenian ranks in Nagorno-Karabakh to fight Azerbaijanis.
Self-described fascist Marc de Cacqueray-Valmenier, leader of the far-right Zouaves Paris (ZVP), posted a photo of himself on social media in a military uniform with an automatic weapon.
The ZVP is a pro-violence, neo-Nazi group.
French daily Liberation reported that De Cacqueray-Valmenier also went to Ukraine last year, and admires the far-right ultranationalist Azov group.
His participation means that after terrorist outfits such as the YPG/PKK, European far-right groups have also started fighting alongside Armenia.
Albert Mikaelyan, a soldier who was taken captive by Azerbaijani forces liberating the country’s territories, last month confessed that PKK terrorists were fighting in Armenian forces’ ranks in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is recognized as part of Azerbaijan.
In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and the European Union – has been responsible for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants. The YPG is the PKK's Syrian branch.
Relations between the ex-Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Upper Karabakh, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh.
Fresh clashes erupted on Sept. 27, and since then 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. Multiple UN resolutions also call for the withdrawal of the invading forces.
Thousands of South Sudanese are facing a humanitarian crisis, including a heightened risk of hunger, malnutrition, and disease after months of armed conflicts and floods, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned Monday.
"Months of conflict followed by torrential rains have created a deepening humanitarian crisis in which communities now face a heightened risk of hunger, malnutrition and disease in South Sudan's Central, Western and Eastern Equatoria states," the ICRC said in a report on the East-Central African country.
"We believe there are many people who are living in the bush who need urgent assistance," Amro Ibrahim, the ICRC's head of sub-delegation in the Equatorias, was quoted as saying in the report.
"We call on all parties to the conflict to respect their obligations under international humanitarian law to prevent human suffering and ensure the protection of civilians and their property," he said in reference to fighting between the National Salvation Front (NAS) and the South Sudan People's Defence Forces, as well as between NAS and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-in-Opposition.
"Families and communities impacted by the conflict, heavy rains and floods are in urgent need of assistance as they are unable to meet their basic needs such as food, clean drinking water, shelter and health services," said the report.
Amid all that, healthcare services -- already limited in rural communities in South Sudan -- "are more inaccessible due to continuing insecurity related to the conflict. Displaced families remain at risk of malaria, malnutrition, water-borne diseases and other health related challenges," the report said.
The ICRC added that this humanitarian crisis is taking place amid the COVID-19 pandemic, whose restrictions "limit the ability of humanitarian organizations to freely move and assist the most vulnerable at a time when access to these services remains critical."/aa
ANKARA
Via video link, a top Ukrainian diplomat and the head of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) on Monday discussed the situation of persecuted Muslims in the occupied Crimean Peninsula.
“It was a pleasure to speak with Secretary-General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation [OIC] Yousef bin Ahmad Al-Othaimeen,” Emine Dzheppar, Ukraine’s first deputy foreign minister, said on Twitter.
“Elaborated on violations by Russian occupants of the rights of Crimean Tatars-Muslims in Crimea, and on Crimean platform which is aimed at consolidating Int'l efforts to free Crimea. I also renewed our application for obtaining Ukraine of observer's status at the Organisation,” she added.
Russian forces entered the Crimean Peninsula in February 2014, with Russian President Vladimir Putin formally dividing the region into two separate federal subjects of the Russian Federation the following month.
Since then, Crimean Tatars have continued their struggle for Ukraine's territorial integrity against Russian occupation.
Crimea's ethnic Tatars have faced persecution since Russia's takeover of the peninsula, a situation Turkey has decried.
Turkey and the US, as well as the UN General Assembly, view the annexation as illegal.
Breathing quickly in the thin mountain air, my colleagues and I set down our equipment. We’re at the base of a jagged outcrop that protrudes upwards out of a steep gravel slope.
The muffled soundscape of the spectacular Himalayan wilderness is punctuated by a military convoy roaring along the Khardung-La road below. It’s a reminder how close we are to the long-disputed borders between India, Pakistan and China which lie on the ridgelines just a few miles away.
This area also contains a different type of boundary, a narrow sinuous geological structure that stretches along the length of the Himalayan mountain range. Known as a suture zone, it’s only a few kilometers wide and consists of slivers of different types of rocks all sliced together by fault zones. It marks the boundary where two tectonic plates fused together and an ancient ocean disappeared.
Our team of geologists traveled here to collect rocks that erupted as lava more than 60 million years ago. By decoding the magnetic records preserved inside them, we hoped to reconstruct the geography of ancient landmasses – and revise the story of the creation of the Himalayas.
Sliding plates, growing mountains
Tectonic plates make up the surface of Earth, and they’re constantly in motion – drifting at the imperceptibly slow pace of just a few centimeters each year. Oceanic plates are colder and denser than the mantle beneath them, so they sink downward into it at subduction zones.
The sinking edge of the ocean plate drags the ocean floor along behind it like a conveyor belt, pulling the continents toward each other. When the entire ocean plate disappears into the mantle, the continents on either side plow into each other with enough force to uplift great mountain belts, like the Himalayas.
Geologists generally thought that the Himalayas formed 55 million years ago in a single continental collision – when the Neotethys Ocean plate subducted under the southern edge of Eurasia and the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates collided.
But by measuring the magnetism of rocks from northwest India’s remote and mountainous Ladakh region, our team has shown that the tectonic collision that formed the world’s largest mountain range was actually a complex, multi-stage process involving at least two subduction zones.
Magnetic messages, preserved for all time
Constant movement of our planet’s metallic outer core creates electric currents which in turn generate Earth’s magnetic field. It’s oriented differently depending where in the world you are. The magnetic field always points toward the magnetic north or the south, which is why your compass works, and averaged over thousands of years it points toward the geographic pole. But it also slopes downward into the ground at an angle which varies depending on how far you are from the equator.
When lava erupts and cools to form rock, the magnetic minerals inside lock in the direction of the magnetic field of that location. So by measuring the magnetization of volcanic rocks, scientists like me can determine what latitude they came from. Essentially, this method allows us to unwind millions of years of plate tectonic motions and create maps of the world at different times throughout geologic history.
Over multiple expeditions to the Ladakh Himalayas, our team collected hundreds of 1-inch diameter rock core samples. These rocks originally formed on a volcano active between 66 and 61 million years ago, around the time that the first stages of collision began. We used a hand-held electric drill with a specially designed diamond coring bit to drill approximately 10 centimeters down into the bedrock. We then carefully marked these cylindrical cores with their original orientation before chiseling them out of the rock with nonmagnetic tools.
The aim was to reconstruct where these rocks originally formed, before they were sandwiched between India and Eurasia and uplifted into the high Himalayas. Keeping track of the orientation of the samples as well as the rock layers they came from is essential to calculating which way the ancient magnetic field pointed relative to the surface of the ground as it was over 60 million years ago.
We brought our samples back to the MIT Paleomagnetism Laboratory and, inside a special room that’s shielded from the modern-day magnetic field, we heated them in increments up to 1,256 degrees Fahrenheit (680 degrees Celsius) to slowly remove the magnetization.
Different mineral populations acquire their magnetization at different temperatures. Incrementally heating and then measuring the samples in this way enables us to extract the original magnetic direction by removing more recent overprints that might hide it.
Magnetic traces build a map
Using the average magnetic direction of the whole suite of samples we can calculate their ancient latitude, which we refer to as the paleolatitude.
The original single-stage collision model for the Himalaya predicts that these rocks would have formed close to Eurasia at a latitude of around 20 degrees north, but our data shows that these rocks did not form on either the Indian or the Eurasian continents. Instead, they formed on a chain of volcanic islands, out in the open Neotethys Ocean at a latitude of about 8 degrees north, thousands of kilometers south of where Eurasia was located at the time.
This finding can be explained only if there were two subduction zones pulling India rapidly toward Eurasia, rather than just one.
During a geologic time period known as the Paleocene, India caught up with the volcanic island chain and collided with it, scraping up the rocks we eventually sampled onto the northern edge of India. India then continued northward before ramming into Eurasia around 40 to 45 million years ago – 10 to 15 million years later than was generally thought.
This final continental collision raised the volcanic islands from sea level up over 4,000 meters to their present-day location, where they form jagged outcrops along a spectacular Himalayan mountain pass.