Staff

Staff

ISTANBUL

Jordan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, and Algeria announced more coronavirus fatalities and cases on Thursday as they continued efforts to contain the disease. 

Palestine

As many as 1,704 people tested positive for COVID-19 in Palestine, bringing the total to 145,422.

Some 17 new virus-linked deaths pushed the tally to 1,364, while the number of people who recovered from the disease rose to 119,938.

Iraq

In Iraq, a total of seven people died in the past 24 hours, pushing the nationwide fatality count to 12,744.

With 1,127 new infections, the overall caseload rose to 588,803, including 527,341 recoveries.

Saudi Arabia

Some 11 more deaths and 189 new cases were recorded in Saudi Arabia, bringing the count to 361,725 infections, 6,159 deaths, and 352,608 recoveries.

Jordan

In Jordan, 29 people died while another 1,707 got infected, pushing the total to 283,690 cases and 3,681 deaths.

As many as 2,338 patients also regained health, bringing the total recoveries to 254,496.

Libya

The National Center for Combating Diseases in Libya registered six deaths, 846 cases, and 905 recoveries.

Cases rose to 97,192, including 1,399 deaths and 67,661 recoveries.

Algeria

Algeria’s Health Ministry announced nine more deaths, taking the country’s death toll to 2,705.

The ministry said 458 new cases were identified in the last 24 hours, taking the country’s tally to 97,007.

A total of 64,777 people have recovered.

A prominent female rights activist was gunned down in Afghanistan on Thursday as a string of such attacks continue to cause panic in the war-ravaged country.

The country’s Interior Ministry confirmed Fareshta Kohistani was targeted in the Kohistan district of Kapisa province by unknown gunmen riding a motorcycle.

District Governor Hamza Khan told Anadolu Agency Fareshta’s bother was also killed in this attack that took place in the Deh-e-Nau area located at a distance of around 120 kilometers (74.5 miles) from the capital Kabul.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

A day earlier, Mohammad Yusuf Rasheed, the head of the leading electoral watchdog Free and Fair Election Foundation of Afghanistan, was gunned down in Kabul.

Figures compiled by the country’s Civil Society Forum and the Human Rights Defenders Committee suggest 23 rights defenders and civil activists lost their lives in such targeted assassinations this year so far.

Aziz Rafii, the chairman of the forum, told a press conference in Kabul on Thursday that most of these activists have been killed by Taliban insurgents in insecure provinces.

At least five people, including four doctors of Afghanistan's main prison facility, were killed in a bomb blast in the capital Kabul on Tuesday.

There has been no claim of responsibility for these attacks as a string of identical targeted assaults have rocked the war-ravaged nation amid stalled peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban in Qatar.

The talks are aimed at ending the nearly two-decade-long conflict following a landmark peace deal between the US and the Taliban inked earlier in February that calls for the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Afghanistan./aa

Turkish security forces seized a large cache of illegal drugs as part of nationwide counter-narcotics operations, authorities said Thursday.

In the eastern province of Van bordering Iran, police teams found over 220 kilograms (485 pounds) of heroin in two different vehicles; a car and a truck.

While one driver was arrested, police continue their search for two more fugitive suspects.

Acting on a tip-off, Istanbul police raided a warehouse in Gaziosmanpasa district. In the raid, over 285 kg (628 lbs) of marijuana and at least 45,000 ecstasy pills were confiscated.

Police teams also detained three suspects and seized a pistol./aa

Violence, flooding and displacement has pushed at least a million children in South Sudan to the brink of starvation, Save the Children, a leadng humanitarian organization for children, has said.

In a statement late Wednesday, it warned of a devastating large-scale hunger crisis among children in the Eastern African country.

"New data shows a dramatic increase in food insecurity that has pushed one million children to the brink of starvation – as well as projections that this figure will rise by 13% in the first half of next year," it said.

Patrick Analo, Save the Children’s Acting Country Director of South Sudan, said: “This perfect storm of hunger, floods, violence and displacement has created a crisis in which children are suffering the most. Children have witnessed unimaginable acts of violence committed against their loved ones. Thousands have been separated from their families and are now at risk of exploitation and abuse."

South Sudan also has one of the highest child mortality rates in the world with more than 90 children out of 1,000 dying before the age of five, according to the nonprofit.

Analo called on the country's Transitional National Government of Unity to protect children who are affected by conflict through political intervention.

Last week, the UN and other aid agencies said they will be scaling up food assistance in South Sudan in the coming months with the aim of saving more than 7 million lives./aa

The only school in Paris which allowed students of all faiths the liberty to wear religious symbols -- headscarves for Muslims, kippahs for Jews, and crucifixes for Christians -- was shut down on claims of practicing separatism.

The action on Nov. 23 under the French government’s ongoing campaign to "fight against radical Islam" taken against Meo High School, a private non-contractual educational institute, has left the future of 110 students in limbo in the middle of the academic year.

The decision came days after President Emmanuel Macron’s October speech to tackle “Islamist separatism” in which he promised greater supervision of schools. According to Macron, a political-religious project deviating from the Republic’s values was materializing in France through indoctrination, and this was reflected in the “removal of children from public schools, community sporting, and cultural activities under the pretext of religious teachings.”

The Macron administration’s counter-radicalization strategy involving surveillance by the judiciary, intelligence, and other state agencies “to combat Islamism and communities withdrawing into themselves” has since 2017 caused the closure of 212 cafe/bars, 15 places of worship, four schools, and 13 charity and cultural establishments. Within this year, authorities have carried out 400 checks and ordered 93 closures.

The functioning of Meo High School was outlawed as part of this strategy.

“It is completely absurd and outright discriminatory to say we are separatists because we allow students to display religious signs,” Hanane Loukili, the director of the school, told Anadolu Agency.

The school has decided to appeal and challenge the false claims in a tribunal.

School targeted over claims of separatism

The school was scrutinized three times, starting in January, for "routine inspections" related to safety standards of its building and administrative workings. The authorities following every visit submitted investigative reports to a criminal court in Paris. They noted the presence of foreign teachers allegedly teaching without authorization.

Loukili refuted the claims of the authorities, saying Algerian and Tunisian origin teachers had worked as school instructors for over three years in France and their information was declared to the Rectorate of Paris in charge of the Academy of Paris under which the school functions.

But what shocked her was a joint press release issued by the Justice Ministry and Paris police on Dec. 9 claiming that the school was being closed based on "the Cell for the Fight against Radical Islam and Community Withdrawal of Paris" and controls were imposed on the school “with the aim of protecting children and young people”.

The note added that authorities had initiated action against Loukili for running a private school despite administrative opposition and criminal proceedings against two foreign national teachers suspected of being "leaders".

“It then became clear to me that our school was being targeted for [claims of] separatism and not over reasons of safety or administrative technicalities. It’s because we allowed students with headscarves and religious symbols,” she said.

Loukili said that in the last five years of its operation, the school has proudly followed secular credentials following a government-approved educational syllabus. It did not teach any religious studies. But its decision to permit teaching staff and students to wear religious symbols was wrongly misconstrued by some to deem it as a "Muslim school", she added. A majority of the school’s students are Muslims, with at least 40% of girls donning headscarves.

She said the decision to not discriminate against students publicly practicing their faith was taken because no school in the capital region of Paris admitted them.

“Public display of religious symbols is a sensitive topic in France,” she added. “There is a lot of discrimination and harassment against students who choose to exhibit it. As a result, many choose homeschooling or drop out of public schools. We wanted to help such students, support them, and push them in their development,’’ she said. 

Students react to closure

The school’s unique nature attracted students like Ihsane R., who quit her Muslim school to enroll two years ago. The 17-year-old, who wears a headscarf and is majoring in geopolitics, aspires for higher studies in international development and work at the UN someday.

Ihsane explained that ambitious students like her in France have two choices: either join a public school where headscarves are now allowed or attend a private religious school which does not offer specialized subjects like geopolitics. The options boil down to either following faith-based practices and losing out on quality education or vice versa.

She said Meo High School was an exception for “being tolerant, having an openness of mind and offering programs based on national education”.

On Nov. 23, when the school’s premises were flooded with policemen and inspection authorities in the middle of an afternoon class, finally with a notice to close down the school, a number of students broke down in shock, fear, anger, and sadness.

Ihsane, however, decided to respond to the "injustice" by launching an online petition demanding Macron to immediately reopen the school and save the future of 110 students.

“To close our school is to undermine freedom of education and, above all, to destroy years of work and sacrifice,” the petition said.

Francis Boudvillain, a parent of a student at the school, said the action against the school was "unacceptable and racist in nature". He said schools of other religious groups, including Catholics, Protestants, and Jews, also follow dress codes, but there was an undue focus only on Muslims.

“We don’t have a problem with separatism. If indeed it is to protect from terrorism, then targeting a school this way is a wrong attempt,” he said./aa

Oil prices increased on Thursday over a fall in US oil stocks and a decline in the US first-time jobless claims, as both signal a possible oil demand and economic rebound.

International benchmark Brent crude traded at $51.42 per barrel at 0642 GMT for a 0.35% increase after closing Wednesday at $51.24 a barrel.

At the same time, American benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) traded at $48.28 a barrel for a 0.33% increase after ending the previous session at $48.12 per barrel.

A decline in US crude oil inventories last week is driving the upward trend in oil prices, signaling a rebound in crude demand in the US, the world's largest oil consumer.

Commercial crude oil inventories in the US dropped by 600,000 barrels last week relative to the market expectation of a 3.2 million-barrel draw. A surprise drop in gasoline stocks was also seen with a fall of 1.1 million barrels to 237.8 million barrels.

Further buoying bullish oil prices, the US first-time claims for unemployment benefits last week fell by 89,000 from last week to 803,000, marking its lowest level in three weeks, a sign that the job market is beginning its rebound from the coronavirus pandemic.

However, oil prices are still under pressure due to a new, potentially more infectious variant of the novel coronavirus, as investors fear oil demand could remain weaker for longer.

The UK announced last week a fast-spreading new strain of the COVID-19 in southern England.

While the World Health Organization requested that countries redouble their health measures in light of the new strain, several countries shut their borders and some others stopped flights with the UK.

According to data from Johns Hopkins University on Thursday, the number of cases worldwide has now reached over 78.7 million.

The US still tops the number of cases above 18.4 million, while cases in India now total over 10.1 million, and Brazil follows with over 7.3 million cases./aa

The Ethiopian prime minister on Thursday said forces had been deployed to the western Benishangul-Gumuz region following an assault by a rebel group killing more than 100 civilians. 

‘’In order to solve the root cause of the problem a necessary and coordinated force has been deployed,’’ Abiy Ahmed tweeted. "I call on the public to support the all-rounded actions of the government.’’

The attack occurred in the village of Bekoji in Bulen county in the Metekel zone, an area inhabited by multiple ethnic groups.

The Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said the region's fragile security needs to improve. ‘’The region's security force and structure must be improved to fully protect the wellbeing of the public,’’ the statement said, calling for the perpetrators to be brought to justice.

The attack came a day after Abiy, who came into power in 2018, the military chief of staff and other senior federal officials visited the region to urge calm.

The western region that borders Sudan, where Ethiopia's $5 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile is located, has seen several ethnically motivated massacres in which hundreds of ethnic Amharas were killed.

Meanwhile, the Ethiopian army claimed to kill 42 rebels involved in the massacre, according to the state-run Ethiopian News Agency.

Separately, security forces have been fighting rebels in the northern Tigray region for more than six weeks./aa

ANKARA(AA) 

The Turkish navy successfully conducted a submarine defense rocket fire drill as part of submarine defense training, the country's National Defense Ministry said on Thursday.

The ministry in a Twitter statement said Turkey's TCG BODRUM corvette successfully fired the rocket in the Aegean Sea on Dec. 22.

With only two years to go until the next presidential elections in France, President Emmanuel Macron is conducting a nationalistic foreign policy in a vain attempt at preventing his voters from defecting to the Gaullist center-right and far-right Marine Le Pen. Macron’s hardline is visible domestically in new policies to counter Islamic extremism following the beheading last month of French history teacher Samuel Paty by a Chechen-born terrorist. Macron’s hardline abroad is evident in military posturing and support for Christian countries in conflict with Muslim states.

Macron seeks to project France as a great power, and with the UK out, the center of Europe. He has warned that NATO is in danger of experiencing a “brain death,” [1] called for an independent European security force, and supported a reset of relations with Russia.

An undiplomatic exchange between Macron and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spiraled over new measures to combat Islamic extremism in France. France has come into conflict with Turkey over Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Greece, and Azerbaijan. French warships and airplanes sent to support Greece and Cyprus exacerbated tensions further with Turkey.

The Macron Doctrine’s nationalistic foreign policy is biased against Islamic states, therefore undermining France’s chances of mediation in ethnic and military conflicts. Worst still, the Macron Doctrine’s nationalistic foreign policy sends conflicting signals about whether France supports ethnic separatism or the principle of the territorial integrity of states.

France has been a long-time member of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), set up in 1995 to resolve the three-decade-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. The Azerbaijani region of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding regions were occupied by Armenia in the early 1990s. A 44-day war in September-October of this year led to Azerbaijan taking back all of its territories except northern Nagorno-Karabakh whose fate will be decided in the future.

France is also a member of the Normandy Format, which was set up to assist the Minsk Protocol of the OSCE to discuss steps towards a peace process in Ukraine’s eastern region of the Donbass where a war has raged for the last six years.

In the Minsk Group, France supports Armenian ethnic separatism in Nagorno-Karabakh, a position that flouts Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. Meanwhile, in the Normandy Format and Minsk Protocol, France supports Ukraine’s territorial integrity and opposes separatism.

Macron is thus sending signals that he picks and chooses with regard to the values he supports. Little wonder that Azerbaijani and Ukrainian policymakers are distrustful of France’s commitment to the principle of the territorial integrity of states. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also said that Macron supports the occupation of Azerbaijani lands.

France has openly taken the side of Christian Greece and Armenia against Muslim Turkey and Azerbaijan over conflicts in the eastern Mediterranean and the Nagorno-Karabakh frozen conflict in the south Caucasus. Although France is one of the supposed guarantors of impartiality in the Minsk Group, Macron has never hidden his support for Armenia. [2] Last month, the French Senate called for the recognition of the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh with the Azerbaijani parliament [3] responding by demanding that France be removed from co-chairmanship of the Minsk Group. French politicians, such as the late former President Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, for example, [4] have long supported Russia’s annexation of Crimea, on the other hand.

Macron openly supports Armenia, saying, “France reconfirms its future friendship with the Armenian people in view of our close human, cultural and historic ties. We are on Armenia’s side in this dramatic context.” Macron’s and other French politicians’ support for ethnic separatism sends a signal that they cannot be trusted in the Normandy Format to defend Ukrainian territorial integrity, either.

France’s support for Armenia puts Macron in the same camp as Russia and Iran. Armenia has been a member of the Russian-led economic, political, and security integration in Eurasia since the early 1990s. In 2013, Armenia withdrew from the EU’s Eastern Partnership Association Agreement and joined Russian President Vladimir Putin’s Eurasian Economic Union.

Iran, fearful of its large Azerbaijani minority, backs Armenia and Russia in the south Caucasus. Iran assisted mercenaries of the PKK, designated as a terrorist organization by the US and EU, to fight on Armenia’s side in the recent war with Azerbaijan.

France’s nationalistic foreign policy alignment with Christian Greece, Cyprus, and Armenia has led to a further plummeting of relations with Turkey and personally between Macron and Erdogan. Macron has condemned Turkey for using “warlike rhetoric” and for being “reckless and dangerous” in encouraging Azerbaijan, calling upon Erdogan to end “provocations in the region”.

French experts [5] believe France should instead be taking a more impartial and neutral stance to encourage dialogue rather than hostility in the Mediterranean and reaching an agreement with Turkey. Turkey, an important ally in the fight against terrorism and Islamic extremism, was wrongly excluded from the chairmanship of the Minsk Group, which was dealing with a conflict in Turkey’s backyard.

After years of France being AWOL and taking no interest in Nagorno-Karabakh, leaving a vacuum Russia was only too willing to fill, Macron threatened Turkey with EU sanctions for supporting Azerbaijan. Macron seemingly believes post-Brexit that France speaks on behalf of the EU. Brussels though would be reluctant to adopt sanctions against Azerbaijan which had after all only re-taken its sovereign territory. This had been envisaged through negotiations by the 2009 Minsk Groups ‘Madrid Principles’ but had never been implemented because of Armenian intransigence.

Macron is seeking to be more nationalistic domestically and internationally than his Gaullist and far-right opponents. The French president should at the very least clarify whether France supports ethnic separatism or the principle of the territorial integrity of states; he can’t have it both ways. /aa

By: Taras Kuzio

It's not often that the Treasury Department and Iowa State University are dealing with the same security problem.

Such is the breadth of what's known as the SolarWinds hack, named for a Texas-based company that was used as a staging ground for an espionage campaign so widespread that experts say we're only beginning to understand who was affected and what was stolen. Treasury is trying to figure out how many senior officials' email accounts were monitored. Iowa State has decommissioned servers to check whether hackers got in.

Around the world, at least hundreds, but more likely thousands or tens of thousands of organizations — including companies, schools, think tanks and, notably, every major government agency — have been working frantically to see whether they've been affected by the suspected Russian hacking campaign and, if so, how much access the hackers had.

It's not rare for companies or government agencies to suffer security breaches. The campaign has drawn some comparisons to China's 2014 hack of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, which stored the private information of nearly all government employees, including undercover agents. But experts say the SolarWinds hack is unique in its scope, potentially the largest spying operation against the U.S. in history — and it ran without being noticed for nine months.

"The issue is we don't know how big this is, and at the same time it could be the biggest ever," said Sergio Caltagirone, the vice president of threat intelligence at the cybersecurity company Dragos, which is helping industrial and manufacturing companies deal with the hacking campaign and its fallout.

Only a handful of organizations, including the cybersecurity company FireEye and three federal agencies — the departments of Commerce, Energy and Treasury — have admitted having been seriously affected. But the cybersecurity industry is aware of "a little over 200" compromises, Caltagirone said, with the number all but guaranteed to grow.

"Most organizations still lack the basic visibility to even assess whether they were compromised or not," Caltagirone said. "We know we are undercounting the victims here. We know that for a fact."

The campaign is so broad because the hackers pulled off a textbook "supply-chain attack." Instead of breaking into individual organizations, many of which have robust cybersecurity measures, the hackers — widely believed to be Russia's SVR intelligence agency, although most Trump officials have publicly pointed the finger only at Russia — breached SolarWinds, based in Austin, Texas, a company that has an enormous customer base.

Unlike some of Russia's nosier agencies, like the FSB, which is accused of poisoning Russian dissidents, or the GRU, which hacks and leaks material to disparage Russia's opponents, the SVR is known for its methodical, long-term intelligence-gathering operations.

SolarWinds provides software that helps large organizations manage their computer networks, and it is thus given automatic permission to be in those networks without raising alarms. In March, the hackers implanted malicious code into the company's regular software updates, the company and a government investigation found, creating a potential back door into any of the company's tens of thousands of customers.

While the question of who was affected is still open, SolarWinds said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had informed 33,000 customer organizations that they had been infected and that it could narrow the suspected number of actual victims only to under 18,000.

While SolarWinds has released an update of its software, the hackers' nine-month head start means they are likely to have built additional entry points into the networks they deemed important, said Neil Jenkins, the chief analytic officer at the Cyber Threat Alliance, a cybersecurity industry group, and a former senior cybersecurity official at the Department of Homeland Security.

"As soon as you get into a network, you're going to set up other potential back doors and ways to get in, in case the original way you got in closed," Jenkins said. "So just because you closed the SolarWinds intrusion doesn't mean you've solved the problem."

The range of victims extends beyond SolarWinds' extensive customer base. The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, which is leading the government's technical response to the hacking campaign, has warned that the same hackers may have infected victims by other means.

The hackers' lead time and extraordinary access mean victim organizations will have to choose between two unpleasant options: spending significant resources hunting through their computers in the hope that they can eradicate the hackers' footholds or rebuilding their networks from scratch, said Suzanne Spaulding, the former head of what is now CISA and currently the director of the Defending Democratic Institutions project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank.

"I think we'll be at least months trying to figure out the full scope and scale of this," Spaulding said. "And at least months trying to recover, trying to get the adversary out or abandon ship and rebuild securely.

"This is not an adversary that goes away when detected," she said. "They fight to maintain their persistent presence, and we'll be doing battle, I suspect, for a while."

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