Staff

Staff

ANKARA

Turkish forces neutralized 119 YPG/PKK terrorists in the past 30 days, Turkey’s National Defense Ministry said on Saturday.

A total of 53 terrorists were neutralized inside Turkey and 66 more in cross-border operations, Maj. Pinar Kara, spokesperson for the ministry, said at a news briefing.

Turkish authorities use the word “neutralize” to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.

Turkish security forces also destroyed 165 hideouts, caves, and weapons storages used by the YPG/PKK, crippling the terror group’s operational capabilities, the spokesperson said.

Syria situation

More than 400,000 refugees who had taken shelter in Turkey have returned to their homes in northern Syria, Kara said.

The repatriation of refugees was made possible thanks to improving security and living conditions brought about by Turkey’s diplomatic and military efforts, she added.

According to UN estimates, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced in Syria, which has been ravaged by a civil war since early 2011, when the Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protesters.

‘Turkey stands with Azerbaijan’

Armenia must withdraw from occupied Azerbaijani territory and send back the mercenaries and foreign terrorists it has brought to the region, the Defense Ministry spokesperson said.

Kara said Armenia was responsible for the flare up in violence since Sep. 27 and its forces continue to violate humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

“Turkey will continue to support our Azerbaijani brothers in their righteous cause,” she stressed.

Armenia occupied Upper Karabakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan, in 1991.

Some 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory has remained under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades, despite multiple UN resolutions, as well as international organizations, demanding the withdrawal of the occupying forces.

‘Turkey supports Libya peace talks’

Turkey will continue to support peace negotiations between Libya’s warring parties, Kara said.

She reiterated that Turkey’s backing for Libya’s legitimate government, the Government of National Accord, is in line with international law, and Ankara supports the country’s territorial integrity.

Libya's two main warring sides on Friday signed a permanent cease-fire agreement during ongoing talks in Geneva.

Stephanie Turco Williams, head of the UN Support Mission in Libya, hailed the development as “an important turning point towards peace and stability in Libya.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, however, said the deal “does not seem to be reliable.”

“The cease-fire agreement is not one at the highest level. Time will show how long it will persist at a lower level,” he said on Friday.

Referring to Armenia’s violation of the humanitarian truces in the Armenia-Azerbaijan clashes, Erdogan said: “I hope that doesn’t happen here and this [Libyan] cease-fire decision will be followed.”

Oruc Reis mission

The Defense Ministry spokesperson said Turkish forces are providing protection to the Oruc Reis drilling ship, which is exploring for energy reserves within Turkish territorial waters in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The ship’s current mission will continue until Oct. 27, Kara said.

“Turkey, as the country with the longest coastline in the Eastern Mediterranean, advocates for a fair distribution of resources with the consent of all relevant countries,” she added.

Post-coup action

Kara also shed light on the extent of the restructuring within the Turkish Armed Forces (TAF) following the defeated coup of July 15, 2016.

“After the defeated coup, around 103,000 new staff, including officers, non-commissioned officers, and professional soldiers were enlisted in the TAF,” she said.

FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated 2016 coup, 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

ISTANBUL

France's Islamophobic behavior as it grapples with the economic fallout caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic is similar to the widespread antisemitism that targeted Jewish people at the onset of World War II, according to analysts in Turkey.

The identification of Islam and the Muslim image with terrorism, along with the attacks on the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, 2001, in the US, increased Islamophobia in France as it did all over the world.

Another key event that helped trigger the rise of Islamophobia in France was the 2005 riots, when the accidental death of North African youths who fled police carrying out ID checks ignited a chain of protests in the country that went on for three weeks.

The January 2015 attack on the Charlie Hedbo magazine in Paris also stoked Islamophobia in the country.

It precipitated an increase in Islamophobic hate crimes in several European countries, especially France, where the attack had killed 132 people and was later claimed by the ISIS/Daesh terror group in November 2015.

Recently, two Muslim women were stabbed near the Eiffel Tower in France, while a violent woman complained to police about her husband -- who is Catholic -- for being a "radical Islamist." These events are considered by many as a manifestation of the negative perception of Islam and Muslims in the country.

Serhat Ulagli of Marmara University in Istanbul, as well as Ihsan Karli and Zeynep Benan Dondurucu of Kocaeli University in northwestern Turkey, discussed a recent bill on combating "separatist" ideas prepared by the administration of French President Emanuel Macron and an attempt to close Muslim associations and non-governmental organizations, amid the swelling wave of Islamophobic incidents across the country.

'Black mark'

In an interview with Anadolu Agency, Ulagli said Islamophobia, which has flared up again in France with the burning of a mosque in Lyon, the expulsion of 150 imams and rising hatred across the country, was disturbing.

"The view that radical, outdated small minorities that do not comply with any norms of Islam represent the entire Islamic geography is a great injustice and illusion. It is an unfair judgement to try to establish such images in the minds of societies. This negative representation produced by today's politicians is no different from Hitler's denigration of the Jewish community, making it look like they were responsible for every bad event that happened in the country," he said.

Ulagli argued that the view that "Islam is the intellectual source of disorder in developed countries" in the mainstream media and the political arena is a modern manifestation of the Crusader and Second World War ideologies of the past, mixed with globalism.

"With a population exceeding 7 million, the largest group after Christianity in France are undoubtedly Muslims," he said, underlining that Muslims were being marginalized from public life.

This hostility manifests in France both towards its domestic Muslim community, as well as adherents of the religion across the world, Ulagli added.

"It is imperative that Muslim societies develop social policies that protect personal rights. Otherwise, the West will be deprived of the rich heritage and bright future of rising Eastern culture. In the long run, France will take its place on the stage of history as a black mark on world policy," he said.

Hate crimes

Ihsan Karli identified economic, social and cultural reasons for Islamophobia in France.

"The ban on the use of headscarves by women in government in 2003 and the ban on wearing clothes that completely cover the face in public by the French parliament in 2010 increased the conflict between Muslim communities and French national identity. The aggressive news style of French right-wing media and the images they use played a decisive role in shaping Islamophobic perceptions. Both in the political arena and in the media, the targeting of Muslim citizens as elements that damage the security and integrity of the country has led to an increase in hate crimes committed against mosques and places of worship."

Karli warned that government attempts to close legal Muslim associations and groups only because they defend the rights of Muslim communities would further increase Islamophobia in the country, instead of reducing conflicts, and would fail to hinder the activities of radical groups.

Islamophobia replaces antisemitism

Zeynep Benan Dondurucu stressed that the actions taken against Muslims since the 2000s were, in essence, very similar to the anti-Semitism of World War II.

Dondurucu said: "Instead of Jews, this time Muslims are seen as responsible for the economic problems in the country and as elements that damage French national identity. This ideology is intended to restrict the freedom of worship and assembly of Islamic communities.

"This shows that when the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Rights of the Citizen was signed in 1789, the basic rights of life, freedom, security and resistance to oppression defended by the country only applied to its citizens with French identity."

She likened recent Islamophobic incidents in France to those before World War II, saying: "In 2020, as France tries to deal with economic problems just like the entire world due to the impact of the COVID-19 epidemic, the turmoil is causing the marginalization of citizens who do not coincide with the ideological French identity on the basis of race or religion, as before the World War II."/aa

ISTANBUL

Several Arab countries have condemned the French incitement against the Islamic religion and the Holy Prophet Muhammad, warning that these repeated insults fuel hatred among the peoples.


In recent weeks, French President Emmanuel Macron attacked Islam and the Muslim community, accusing Muslims of "separatism". He described Islam as a “a religion in crisis all over the world".


This coincided with a provocative move by Charlie Hebdo, a left-wing French magazine infamous for publishing anti-Islamic caricatures, which have drawn widespread anger and outrage across the Muslim world.


The caricatures were first published in 2006 by a Danish newspaper Jylllands Posten, sparking a wave of protests.


In a statement, the Secretary General of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Nayef al-Hajraf described Macron's statements against Islam as "irresponsible" and "cause to spread the culture of hatred among the peoples”.


"Such [French statements] come out at a time when efforts are underway to enhance tolerance and dialogue between cultures and religions,” al-Hajraf said in a statement.


Dhaifallah Fayez, a spokesman for Jordan’s Foreign Ministry, also voiced his country’s condemnation of republishing the offensive cartoons of the prophet by Charlie Hebdo on claims of freedom of expression.


“Such practices hurt the sentiments of around 2 billion Muslims and amount to an assault on religious symbols, beliefs and sanctities,” he said, going on to warn that such practices cause to fuel the culture of extremism and violence.


Kuwait’s Foreign Ministry also expressed resentment at the French republication of the anti-prophet cartoons.


A ministry statement warned that these insults will "ignite the spirit of hatred, violence and enmity, and jeopardize the international community's efforts to spread the culture of tolerance and peace among peoples of the world”./aa

KAYSERI, Turkey

The president of Turkey warned on Saturday that Europe was preparing its own end amid rising Islamophobia across the continent.

"Europe is preparing its own end with its front against Muslims," Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, addressing a meeting of his ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party at a stadium in the central province of Kayseri.

"If they aren't rid of this disease as soon as possible, it will collapse all of Europe from within," Erdogan added.

Erdogan's remarks came after French President Emmanuel Macron accused Muslims of "separatism" and described Islam as "a religion in crisis all over the world."

"What can we say of a head of state who behaves like this to millions of members of a different faith in his country," said Erdogan.

"First of all, [Macron needs] mental checks."

Erdogan: Macron needs mental checks

He asserted that European fascism had entered a new phase with attacks on the rights of Muslims, referring to a recent police raid on a mosque in Germany's capital Berlin that he had denounced on Friday.

The Turkish president also accused France for being complicit in Armenia's decades-long occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan taking back occupied land

During his speech, Erdogan underlined that Azerbaijan was retaking its land from Armenian occupation as fighting continued between the neighboring countries.

"I spoke with [Azerbaijan's president Ilham] Aliyev this morning," he said. "Now, our Azerbaijani brothers are marching towards the occupied territories. They have started to take them back."

Describing Turkey and Azerbaijan as "two states, one nation," Erdogan said: "We'll continue to give all kinds of support to the struggle to liberate the occupied territories of Azerbaijan."

Since clashes erupted on Sept. 27, Armenia has repeatedly attacked Azerbaijani civilians and forces, even violating two humanitarian cease-fires in the past two weeks.

Relations between the two former Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Upper Karabakh.

Four UN Security Council resolutions and two from the UN General Assembly, as well as international organizations, demand the withdrawal of Armenian forces from the occupied territory.

DHAKA, Bangladesh

Gambia has filed its case against Myanmar at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for the alleged genocide of the Rohingya in a move widely hailed by the Muslim minority group, as well as refugee host country Bangladesh.

Over 500 pages, the memorial submitted Friday also includes more than 5,000 pages of supporting materials, while Rohingya rights groups have urged Myanmar to immediately comply with earlier ICJ orders to prevent ongoing acts of genocide and preserve evidence of genocide against Rohingya Muslims.

On Jan. 23, 2020, the ICJ unanimously passed legally binding provisional measures requiring the Southeast Asian nation to take all steps within its power to prevent acts of genocide, including killings, affliction of serious mental or bodily harm and other acts listed in the Genocide Convention.

"Today [the memorial] is another step towards justice for Rohingya," said Matthew Smith, chief executive officer at civil rights group Fortify Rights, in a reaction, adding: "International accountability mechanisms, like the ICJ, are crucial, especially given that mass atrocity crimes continue against Rohingya and others in Myanmar."

An estimated 600,000 Rohingya remain in Rakhine State, Myanmar, where they face ongoing genocide, Fortify Rights said in a statement on Friday.

It accused Myanmar authorities of continuing to commit human rights violations against the Rohingya even after the provisional measures, confining more than 125,000 Rohingya in over 20 internment camps.

In November 2019, Gambia opened the case at the ICJ against Myanmar for failing to prevent or punish acts of genocide against Rohingya Muslims.

Myanmar will now file a counter-memorial at the ICJ on July 23, 2021, in response to Gambia's allegations.

Ro Nay San Lwin, rights activist and co-founder of the Free Rohingya Coalition, welcomed the move and urged the global community to extend support for Gambia.

"Despite the orders of the International Court of Justice, the Myanmar government and military continue its horrific persecution against Rohingya in Rakhine state. There is the continuation of armed conflict in Rakhine state. Rakhine and Rohingya villagers have been badly impacted," he told Anadolu Agency.

"Local authorities use COVID-19 as a pretext to persecute more. Many Rohingya have been killed amid fighting between the Myanmar military and Arakan Army. The Myanmar military is using Rohingya as human shields during the fight with Arakan Army," he said, asserting that Myanmar was not complying with the ICJ orders.

Mohammad Shamsu Douza, a Bangladeshi commissioner for refugee relief and repatriation, also welcomed Gambia's memorial, reassuring that Bangladesh would "provide all possible support to the case against the persecution of Rohingya people in the ICJ."

He also urged the international community to stand with Gambia to secure justice for the Rohingya to increase "pressure" on Myanmar to halt atrocities against the group and repatriate its roughly 1.2 million displaced members currently taking shelter in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh.

However, he added that "Bangladesh's ultimate target was the safe and dignified repatriation of Rohingya to their home country, Myanmar."/aa

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan slams French President Emmanuel Macron after the latter defended secular values in France

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday, October 24, slammed his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, over his policies toward Muslims, saying that he needed "mental checks."

"What can one say about a head of state who treats millions of members from different faith groups this way: first of all, have mental checks," Erdogan said in a televised address.

Macron's proposal to defend his country's secular values against radical Islam has angered the Turkish government, adding to a growing list of disputes between the French leader and Erdogan.

BEIJING (AP) — China’s foreign ministry said Friday it may decide not to recognize British-issued passports for Hong Kong residents in retaliation for London’s moves to open a path to citizenship for those holding the documents.

Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian said that Britain had “violated its promises” and “played up” the issue of the British National (Overseas) passports.

Britain said in May that it would allow holders of such passports extended stays and the possibility of citizenship, prompting thousands of Hong Kongers to rush to renew or apply for them as Beijing steps up restriction on political expression.

Hong Kong reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997 and the sides have increasingly feuded over civil rights in the territory. Britain accuses China of failing to live up to its pledges to maintain freedoms in the special administrative region, while Beijing says London is interfering in its internal affairs.

 

Differences have sharpened since China in June imposed a sweeping national security law on Hong Kong in response to months of anti-government protests last year. London suspended its extradition treaty with the territory and has offered political asylum to persons targeted under the new legislation.

“The British side violated its promises, insisted on going its own way and repeatedly played up the issue of BNO Passports," Zhao told reporters at a daily briefing.

“As the British side violated its commitment first, China will consider not recognizing the BNO Passport as a valid travel document, and reserves the right to take further measures," Zhao said.

More than 300,000 of Hong Kong's 7 million residents hold BNO passports, according to the U.K., more than double the number four years earlier. Those who qualify can apply for visas enabling them and their immediate family members to live and work in the U.K. and eventually apply for citizenship, the British government says.

However, they must show they have the means to support themselves in the U.K. for six months, and will not be entitled to public support.

If you thought those flimsy disposable plastic grocery bags represented most of our plastic waste problem, think again. The volume of plastic the world throws away every year could rebuild the Ming Dynasty’s Great Wall of China – about 3,700 miles long.

In the six decades that plastic has been manufactured for commercial uses, more than 8.3 billion metric tons have been produced. Plastics are light, versatile, cheap and nearly indestructible (as long as they don’t get too hot). These properties make them incredibly useful in an enormous range of applications that includes sterile food packaging, energy-efficient transportation, textiles and medical protective gear. But their indestructible nature comes at a cost. Most of them decompose extremely slowly in the environment – on the order of several hundred years – where they are creating a global epidemic of plastic trash. Its consequences for human and ecosystem health are still incompletely known, but are potentially momentous.

I am a chemist with experience in designing processes for making plastics, and I became interested in using plastic as a large, untapped resource for energy and materials. I wondered if we could turn plastic waste into something more valuable to keep it out of landfills and the natural environment.

A new way to use plastic waste

Plastics are made by stringing together a large number of small, carbon-based molecules in an almost infinite variety of ways to create polymer chains.

To reuse these polymers, recycling facilities could, in principle, melt and reshape them, but plastics’ properties tend to deteriorate. The resulting materials are almost never suitable for their original use, although they can be used to make lower-value stuff like plastic lumber. The result is a very low effective rate of recycling.

A new approach involves breaking the long chains down into small molecules again. The challenge is how to do this in a precise way.

Since the process of making the chains in the first place releases a lot of energy, reversing it requires adding a large amount of energy back in. Generally this means heating up the material to a high temperature – but heating up plastic causes the stuff to turn into a nasty mess. It also wastes a lot of energy, meaning more greenhouse gas emissions.

My team at UC Santa Barbara, working with colleagues at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Cornell, discovered a clean way to turn polyethylene into useful smaller molecules.

Polyethylene is one of the world’s most useful and most used plastic types. It is also one of the largest contributors to plastic waste. It represents a third of the nearly 400 million metric tons of plastic the world makes every year, for purposes ranging from sterile food and medical packaging, waterproof films and coatings, cable and wire insulation, construction materials and water pipes, to wear-resistant hip and knee replacements and even bulletproof vests.

How the new process works

The process we have developed does not require high temperatures, but instead depends on tiny amounts of a catalyst containing a metal that removes a little hydrogen from the polymer chain. The catalyst then uses this hydrogen to cut the bonds that hold the carbon chain together, making smaller pieces.

The key is using the hydrogen as soon as it forms so that the chain-cutting provides the energy for making more hydrogen. This process is repeated many times for each chain, turning the solid polymer into a liquid.

The chopping slows down naturally when the molecules reach a certain size, so it’s easy to prevent the molecules from becoming too small. We’re able to recover the valuable liquid before it turns into less useful gases.

A majority of the molecules in the recovered liquid are alkylbenzenes, which are useful as solvents and can easily be turned into detergents. The global market for this type of molecule is about US$9 billion annually.

Turning waste plastic into valuable molecules is called upcycling. Although our study represented a small-scale demonstration, a preliminary economic analysis suggests that it could easily be adapted to become a much larger-scale process in the next few years. Keeping plastic out of the environment by reusing it in a way that makes good economic sense is a win-win./ 

The Conversation

Contaminated water from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant contains a radioactive substance that has the potential to damage human DNA, a report by Greenpeace says.

The claim from the environmental campaign group follows media reports suggesting the government plans to release the water into the ocean.

Many scientists say the risk is low but some environmentalists oppose the idea.

The government has not yet responded to the Greenpeace report.

For years Japan has debated over what to do with the more than a million tonnes of water used to cool the power station, which went into meltdown in 2011 after being hit by a massive tsunami.

Space to store the liquid - which includes groundwater and rain that seeps daily into the plant - will fill up by 2022.

The government says most of the radioactive isotopes have been removed using a complex filtration process but one isotope, tritium, cannot be removed.

Last week Japanese media reported that the government had decided to start releasing the water into the sea from 2022. Under the reported plans, the water would be diluted inside the plant first in a process that would take several decades.

In its report Stemming the tide 2020: The reality of the Fukushima radioactive water crisis released on Friday, Greenpeace claimed the contaminated water contained "dangerous levels of carbon-14", a radioactive substance that it says has the "potential to damage human DNA".

The group accused the government of suggesting the water was "treated" giving the impression it "only contains tritium".

The government said no decision had been made, but observers think one could be announced by the end of the month.

Environmental groups have long expressed their opposition to releasing the water into the ocean. And fishing groups have argued against it, saying consumers will refuse to buy produce from the region.

However some scientists say the water would quickly be diluted in the vastness of the Pacific Ocean, and that tritium poses a low risk to human and animal health.

What happened in 2011?

On 11 March 2011, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake struck off the north-eastern coast of Japan, triggering a 15-metre tsunami.

While the back-up systems to prevent a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant survived the initial quake, further damage was inflicted by the tsunami.

As the facility's cooling systems failed in the days that followed, tonnes of radioactive material were released. The meltdown was the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986.

Around 18,500 people died or disappeared in the quake and tsunami, and more than 160,000 were forced from their homes.

Billions of dollars in compensation have already been paid to individuals and businesses affected by the disaster. Last month, a Japanese high court upheld a ruling ordering the government and the plant's operating company to pay a further $9.5m (£7.3m).

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan 

At least 18 unarmed and innocent Kashmiris have been killed in October and more than 40 others injured by Indian forces, according to the Pakistani Foreign Ministry. 

"In brazen manifestation of state terrorism, Indian occupation forces, in the past few days, martyred five more innocent Kashmiri youth during the so-called 'cordon and search' operations and fake encounters in Anantnag, Shopian, and Pulwama areas of IIOJK [Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir]," ministry spokesman Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri told reporters Thursday.

Forty young Kashmiris were severely injured due to "unprovoked" and indiscriminate use of live ammunition, pellet guns, and other military-grade weapons.

Chaudhri, while referring to a recent statement of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michele Bachelet, said she has once again called the human rights credentials of the current RSS-BJP [Rashtriya Swayamsevak Singh-Bharatiya Janata Party] regime into question by expressing concerns about the arrest of hundreds of human rights activists as well as restrictions on works of human rights bodies.

On Tuesday, Bachelet was cited as being concerned about the use of the  Foreign Contribution Regulation Act , which several UN human rights bodies have also said is vaguely worded and too broad in its objective, according to the UN News.

The act prohibits the receipt of foreign funds "for any activities prejudicial to the public interest."

"I am concerned that such actions based on the grounds of vaguely defined 'public interest' leave this law open to abuse, and that it is indeed actually being used to deter or punish NGOs for human rights reporting and advocacy that the authorities perceive as critical in nature,” Bachelet said, adding that even if authorities find “constructive criticism uncomfortable, it should never be criminalized or outlawed in this way."

Relations between the two South Asian nuclear powers' have further flared after India scrapped the special provisions of the state of Jammu and Kashmir in August 2019.

Between August 2019 to August 2020, more than 350 people, including civilians and Indian soldiers, were killed in clashes and search operations across the Indian-administered Kashmir, according to a new report by Islamabad-based think tank Institute of Policy Studies in collaboration with the Legal Forum for Oppressed Voices of Kashmir.

It said 75 civilians, 196 militants -- referred to as "freedom fighters" -- and 81 Indian soldiers and paramilitary personnel were killed during clashes, said the report.

Since August last year, authorities have detained or arrested between 16,000 and 17,000 people, including 662 political prisoners, it added.

Kashmir, a Muslim-majority Himalayan region, is held by India and Pakistan in parts but claimed by both in full. A small sliver of the region is also controlled 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.

Some Kashmiri groups have been fighting against the Indian rule for independence, or unification with Pakistan.

According to several human rights organizations, thousands have been killed and tortured in the conflict that flared up in 1989./aa

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