Turkiye’s Erdogan voices worries of NATO, Russia clash

US president Joe Biden speaks during the opening session of the NATO summit on July 10, 2024 in Washington. (AP)
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Updated 11 July 2024
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Turkiye’s Erdogan voices worries of NATO, Russia clash

  • Turkish leader’s comments come as NATO leaders huddled in Washington

ISTANBUL: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday that any possibility of a direct confrontation between Russia and NATO was “worrying,” the official Anadolu news agency reported.

Erdogan’s comments came as NATO leaders huddled in Washington and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Russia was planning “response measures” to contain the “very serious threat” from the alliance.

“The possibility of a direct conflict between NATO and Russia is undoubtedly worrying,” said Erdogan, who is in Washington for a NATO summit. “Any steps that could lead to this outcome should be consciously avoided.”

Erdogan spoke a day after NATO allies announced they had started transferring F-16 jets to Ukraine while stepping up promises to Kyiv on eventual membership in the alliance, at a 75th anniversary summit clouded by political uncertainties in the United States.

On the eve of the summit, Russia fired a barrage of missiles on Ukraine, killing dozens, including in Kyiv where a children’s hospital was heavily damaged.

Peskov, in comments published by Russian news agencies also said the Western military alliance, which is holding a summit in Washington this week, was now “fully involved in the conflict over Ukraine.”

A member of NATO, Turkiye has sought to balance ties between its two Black Sea neighbors Russia and Ukraine since Moscow’s full-scale invasion.

Ankara has sent drones to Ukraine while shying away from Western-led sanctions on Moscow.


Man shot and killed in ambush outside Philadelphia mosque, police say

Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage. (AFP file photo)
Updated 3 min 58 sec ago
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Man shot and killed in ambush outside Philadelphia mosque, police say

  • No suspect has been arrested and a motive wasn’t known

PHILADELPHIA: A man was ambushed, shot and killed while outside a North Philadelphia mosque Tuesday afternoon, police said.
Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small said at a media briefing that surveillance footage shows the victim, a 43-year-old man, walking with another male to the Al-Aqsa Islamic Society when the shooter runs up behind them and starts firing shots at the victim, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
Small said the shooter kept firing at the victim even after he was on the ground. The shooter then fled the parking lot in a vehicle.
“Clearly an execution-type homicide,” Small said.
Small said responding officers found the unresponsive victim lying in the parking lot with gunshot wounds to his head, chest and torso. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.
No suspect has been arrested and a motive wasn’t known. The person with the victim was not hurt, Small said. The victim’s name hasn’t been released.
Seventeen spent shell casings were found in the parking lot from a large-caliber semiautomatic weapon, Small said.
Police were talking to witnesses and reviewing other surveillance footage.

 


Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed

Updated 40 min 15 sec ago
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Vance praises a key leader behind Project 2025, a conservative effort Trump has disavowed

Ohio Sen. JD Vance, Donald Trump’s running mate, praised the vision of Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts in the foreword of a forthcoming book that could conflict with the Trump campaign’s effort to distance itself from Heritage’s Project 2025 transition effort.
The Associated Press obtained a copy of the foreword to Roberts’ forthcoming book “Dawn’s Early Light” on Tuesday, the same day of a shakeup at Project 2025, which has become an important election-year issue as Democrats and others argue that the nearly 1,000-page vision it set out is extreme.
“Never before has a figure with Roberts’s depth and stature within the American Right tried to articulate a genuinely new future for conservatism,” Vance writes in his foreword. “The Heritage Foundation isn’t some random outpost on Capitol Hill; it is and has been the most influential engine of ideas for Republicans from Ronald Reagan to Donald Trump.”
Vance’s words, which echo Roberts’ frequent calls to tear down US institutions entirely to start anew, show the overlap between Trump’s closest allies and the people fueling Project 2025.
Still, Vance spokesman William Martin distanced Vance and the Trump campaign from Project 2025 in a statement on Tuesday.
“The foreword has nothing to do with Project 2025. Senator Vance has previously said that he has no involvement with it and has plenty of disagreements with what they’re calling for,” Martin wrote in an email. “Only President Trump will set the policy agenda for the next administration.”
Trump’s top aides have repeatedly criticized organizers of Project 2025 for what they say is a false impression that the transition effort is associated with the campaign. After Tuesday’s shakeup at Heritage, Roberts is now leading Project 2025 operations directly.
The book, scheduled to be published on Sept. 24, outlines a vision for what its publisher calls ” a peaceful ‘Second American Revolution’.” Its subtitle is “Taking Back Washington to Save America,” though earlier descriptions of the book listed it as ” Burning Down Washington to Save America.”
The publisher’s description says it identifies institutions that conservatives need to build or to take back, adding that some are “too corrupt to save.” Among those it lists are Ivy League colleges, the FBI, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the Department of Education and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Also, on Tuesday, Paul Dans, who had directed Project 2025, left the Heritage Foundation amid continued criticism of the plan. Roberts said his departure came after the project completed what it set out to do.
In his foreword, Vance calls for something more than removing bad policies of the past, but instead to “rebuild.”
“We need an offensive conservatism, not merely one that tries to prevent the left from doing things we don’t like,” Vance writes.
As Vance wraps up, he quotes Roberts as saying that when twilight descends and a person hears wolves, “You’ve got to circle the wagons and load the muskets.”
“We are now all realizing that it’s time to circle the wagons and load the muskets,” Vance adds. “In the fights that lay ahead, these ideas are an essential weapon.”
DNC spokesman Alex Floyd said in a statement that Vance’s language “echoes the same dangerous rhetoric we’ve heard from him and Donald Trump for years.”
Vance also writes about things he and Roberts have in common, including difficult upbringings, influential grandparents, and the Catholic faith. He also writes about parenthood, which has been a contentious issue for him recently after an interview resurfaced where he said Democrats running the country are “childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable, too.”
In the book, he praises the idea that we should “encourage our kids to get married and have kids,” and teach them that marriage is a sacred union, ideas that he says come from “the old American Right that recognized — correctly, in my view — that cultural norms and attitudes matter.”


Drone attacks kill at least six on Mali-Algeria border

Updated 3 sec ago
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Drone attacks kill at least six on Mali-Algeria border

  • “The drones killed at least six civilians Tuesday — among them Sudanese, Nigeriens and Chadians,” a local official said after the attack

BAMAKO: Drone attacks killed at least six civilians Tuesday in a northern Mali town where the military and its Russian allies recently suffered heavy losses fighting separatist rebels, local officials and separatists told AFP.
The Malian army said Tuesday that it had launched an aerial attack in coordination with Burkina Faso’s military at Tinzaouatene near the Algerian border.
The army said the attack had been carried out under the collective defense mechanism of the recently-formed Confederation of Sahel States, which unites the military regimes of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.
“The drones killed at least six civilians Tuesday — among them Sudanese, Nigeriens and Chadians,” a local official said after the attack.
Another official accused armed forces and the Russian fighters of killing 10 people in the attack.
Separatist spokesman Mohamed Elmaouloud, told AFP that “drone fire from the Malian army accompanied by Wagner (Russian fighters) targeted civilian gold miners working in a mine near the Algerian border.”
He added there had been “dozens of deaths, mainly Nigerien Hausa and Chadians.”
A Malian source told AFP that “the drones targeted and hit a pick-up transporting terrorists and their weapons,” without giving further details.
The Malian army and Wagner acknowledged a serious setback in the region on Saturday, taking heavy losses in fighting against separatist rebels and jihadists.
The Malian army on Monday said it had suffered a “large number” of deaths, in a rare admission.
The CSP-DPA alliance, a mainly Tuareg separatist coalition, claimed a major victory over the army and its Russian allies at the weekend following three days of intense combat around Tinzaouatene.
The Al-Qaeda-linked group Jama’at Nusrat Al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM) also claimed it had attacked an army convoy and Wagner mercenaries just south of Tinzaouatene.
JNIM said it killed 50 Russians and 10 Malians, though AFP could not verify the claims.
The Wagner group on Monday likewise admitted severe losses, including a commander.
The West African nation’s military leaders, who seized power in a 2020 coup, have made it a priority to retake all of the country from separatists and jihadist forces.
At the same time, the junta has broken off its military alliance with former colonial power France and turned to Russia for support.
 

 


UK police arrest Egyptian man following migrant boat death

Migrants picked up at sea attempting to cross the English Channel from France are escorted ashore at the marina in Dover.
Updated 30 July 2024
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UK police arrest Egyptian man following migrant boat death

  • The NCA said it had detained a 29-year-old Egyptian national in Manston, southern England, on Monday and questioned him on suspicion of facilitating illegal immigration

LONDON: The UK's National Crime Agency (NCA) on Tuesday said its officers had arrested a man in connection with a small boat Channel crossing that led to the death Sunday of a woman in France.
The NCA said it had detained a 29-year-old Egyptian national in Manston, southern England, on Monday and questioned him on suspicion of facilitating illegal immigration.
He was then bailed pending further enquiries.
The woman died trying to cross the Channel from France to Britain on an overcrowded boat.
French authorities were alerted that the vessel was in trouble in the early hours of Sunday and the woman was recovered and airlifted to hospital but later died.
The boat continued on its journey to the UK, and arrived into Dover carrying around 40 people.
"This tragedy demonstrates how dangerous these crossings are," said NCA Branch Commander Mark Howes.
"Working with partners we remain determined to do all we can to target, disrupt and dismantle the criminal networks involved in organised immigration crime," he added.
It was the seventh migrant death in the Channel since July 12 and the French maritime prefecture said there was a "new phenomenon" of would-be migrants dying from the crushed conditions in boats rather than from drowning.


Afghan refugees evacuated to UK to be reunited with relatives left behind, government says

Updated 30 July 2024
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Afghan refugees evacuated to UK to be reunited with relatives left behind, government says

  • ‘It is our moral duty to ensure that families who were tragically separated are reunited and not left at the mercy of the Taliban,’ says immigration minister
  • Close relatives of refugees who were relocated to the UK under the Home Office’s Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme are eligible to apply

LONDON: The UK government is expanding the Home Office’s Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme so that refugees from Afghanistan who were evacuated to Britain can finally be reunited with close family members who were left behind.
It means Afghans separated from their relatives in the chaos during the withdrawal of Western forces from Kabul in 2021 can now apply to join them in Britain, The Independent newspaper reported on Tuesday.
“It is our moral duty to ensure that families who were tragically separated are reunited and are not left at the mercy of the Taliban, which is why I have expanded ACRS so that those who were left behind can be resettled in the UK,” said the immigration minister, Seema Malhotra.
“Afghans did right by us and we will do right by them, ensuring our system is fair and supports those most at risk and vulnerable.”
Close relatives of refugees who were relocated to the UK under the scheme, which was introduced to help vulnerable and at-risk people, will be eligible to apply. Nearly 6,500 people have come to the UK under the scheme so far, including women’s rights activists, journalists and prosecutors.
Relatives who qualify include spouses and partners, and children who were under the age of 18 at the time of the evacuation. The parents and siblings of children who traveled to the UK without them are also eligible.
The previous, Conservative government had faced calls from MPs to expand ACRS before the general election in July in which the Labour Party swept to power in a landslide victory. The Conservatives initially pledged to accept 20,000 refugees over five years as part of the Home Office scheme to help vulnerable Afghans after the Taliban takeover. But several MPs complained that the relocation process had been slow following the initial evacuation.
“It’s been almost three years since the evacuation of Kabul and yet there remains an urgent need to ensure that those who assisted our efforts in Afghanistan by upholding democracy, freedom and human rights, often at huge personal risk to themselves and their families, can be reunited,” Malhotra said.
Charities and rights groups welcomed Tuesday’s announcement. Refugee Council CEO Enver Solomon said it was “hugely welcome” and added: “Over the last three years we’ve worked with many families who were torn apart in the chaos of evacuating Kabul. They will now have a way to be safely together again thanks to the swift action that has been taken by the government.
“For the children who have been apart from their parents for far too long, we know this will be life-changing.”
Gunes Kalkan, head of campaigns for Safe Passage International, said: “Families have been waiting nearly three years for a long-promised way to reunite. This will be life-changing for the parents and children who have been separated all this time.”