Anadolu Agency
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Anadolu Agency
FEAR OF $30 A BARREL HAUNTS OIL-DEPENDENT ECONOMIES CHINA: BURGLAR WHO LEAVES SORRY LETTERS CAUGHT SLEEPING FOUR DEAD AS REFUGEE BOAT SINKS OFF TURKISH COAST Falling prices impact major oil producing countries’ budg- A burglar who left a series of apology letters after breaking Four children have drowned off the west coast of Turkey af- ets, while OPEC members continue to raise output into apartments in northern China has been captured after ter a boat carrying refugees sank Wednesday, officials said. Due to a 65 percent fall in prices since mid-2014, econo- being spotted sleeping on the 11th floor of a building. The fatalities included three babies, the Turkish Coast mies of oil producing countries that are highly dependent The Hong-Kong based South China Morning Post report- Guard said. The 15-meter day tripping vessel was packed on oil sales for revenues are likely to be affected next year ed Tuesday that the suspect was caught sleeping on a land- with refugees seeking to reach the Greek island of Kos if prices reach $30 a barrel. Goldman Sachs announced in ing in Hubei province, before it took policemen six hours when it sank in Bodrum Bay, Provincial Governor Amir January this year that it anticipated oil prices would fall to apprehend him when he climbed outside between the Cicek said. The coast guards saved 60 from the sea near the as low as $30 per barrel due to oversupply and low global 10th and the 11th stories. “Please don’t blame the security small Turkish island of Kara Ada, including three women demand. >>ECONOMY guards, they have it tough,... >>WORLD and five children.... >>TURKEY Daesh not representing Islam, Turkish PM says Thursday December 17, 2015 Davutoglu says extremists no more represent Islam than racists represent Christianity Daesh does not represent Islam, Turkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Tuesday in a speech to NGOs and dignitaries in Bulgaria. “We came from a tradition that [people] lived in peace together with everyone,” he told his audience in capital Sofia. Groups such as Daesh does not represent Islam any more than racists represent Christianity or Bulgaria, he added, calling for societies to stand against both. “Positive Turkish-EU relationship is essential. It is essential not just for the two parties but [for] the region as a whole,” he added. >MORE DETAILS New law allows Russia to overturn human rights rulings Putin approves law allowing court to declare international court decisions unconstitutional President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday approved a law giving Russia’s Constitutional Court the power to overrule international human rights law if it contradicts the constitution. The law would allow the Russian court to overturn decisions made by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and follows a 2014 decision by the Strasbourg-based court that Russia should pay 1.87 billion euros ($2.09 billion) to shareholders of the defunct Yukos oil company. In July, the Constitutional Court decided that judgments of the ECHR could not be implemented if they contradict Russia’s constitution. The decision also said the constitution would take priority over international law. Human Rights Watch noted that the change could have widespread consequences and threaten pending Rus- sian cases at the ECHR. The group noted that Russia is a signatory to the Vienna Convention, which prohibits countries from invoking domestic law to justify failure to implement a treaty, and the change would “bring much uncertainty and opacity to the domestic legal system” and further hinder Russia’s international relations. Iraq’s Kurdish ruling party slams terrorist PKK group KDP accused KCK of causing trouble for the Kurdish people and questioned its goals. “Why do you not solve your problems with Turkey if you do not have enmity against it?” KDP said. KDP added that KCK’s policies are wrong and cause instability in regions where the Kurdish people live. KDP said the terrorist PKK group Turkey to get 3 billion euros for refugees within year EU minister says ‘privileged partnership’ short of full EU membership no longer on agenda Turkey will receive 3 billion euros ($3.27 billion) from the EU within the next year to spend on Syrian refugees, Turkey’s EU minister said Wednesday. Volkan Bozkir said Turkey is negotiating with the EU on how to spend the money. “We want to decide in our own where to spend it. Talks are underway about that,” he said at a meeting of Anadolu Agency Editor’s Desk in Ankara. The minister, who also acts as Turkey’s chief negotiator with the EU, said the suggestion of “privileged partnership” status for Turkey was no longer an option. Germany had previously suggested Turkey could adopt this model instead of full EU membership. Under the EU-Turkey deal for Syrian refugees, Turkey has also been promised visa-free travel for its nationals within Europe. Bozkir said Turkey is expected to introduce 72 “adjustments” before this can be implemented. >MORE DETAILS ruined hundreds of Kurdish villages, forced residents to flee their homes and prevented the Kurdish Regional Government from providing services in the affected areas. The PKK – designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S. and the EU –renewed its armed campaign against the Turkish state in the aftermath of the July 20 suicide bombing in Suruc that killed 33 activists. In response, the Turkish government has been conducting an extensive anti-terrorism effort by bombing PKK camps at home and in northern Iraq, including the Qandil Mountain, and by striking Daesh in Syria. >MORE DETAILS Structure of Turkey’s ‘parallel state’ revealed Security sources detail how units within ‘parallel state’ organization operate Several details regarding the structure and operational methods of the “parallel state” or Gulen movement have been revealed by Turkish security sources. The parallel state, known also by the initials FETO/PDY, designates a clandestine group of Turkish bureaucrats and senior officials, allegedly embedded in the country’s institutions, including the judiciary and the police. Since early 2014, investigations into the parallel state have seen hundreds of civil servants, including police and public prosecutors, arrested or reassigned. According to the details gathered by Anadolu Agency from security sources, the organization’s structure consists of several top-level units, some of which are responsible for collecting money, others for appointing members to key positions within the state. Decisions taken by these units are reportedly communicated to other members through religious leaders that the organization calls “imams”. Whether the members obey the decisions taken by the units or not is monitored by dedicated “supervisors”. A separate set of teams are reportedly in charge of selecting members for the organization and allegedly arranging where they will stay, appointing them to high positions in state institutions and organizing their social life. In addition, other groups are allegedly set up to interfere in court trials.. >MORE DETAILS Thursday PARTLY CLOUDY 3 °C Friday PARTLY CLOUDY 4 °C US says Russia ‘behaving unprofessionally’ in Syria Secretary Carter says they want all anti-Daesh partners to focus on terrorism Russian forces have been behaving unprofessionally in Syria, U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Tuesday. In remarks made during his visit to the Incirlik Airbase in southern Turkey near the Syrian border, Carter said: “They [Russia] said they came to fight against Daesh, but they struck the opposition forces. They are behaving unprofessionally. It has to be changed.” Russia began air operations in Syria on Sept. 30 with the aim of supporting the embattled regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. While the Kremlin says the airstrikes target the Daesh militant group, some members of the western NATO alliance believe Russia is targeting groups opposed to Assad, including some that enjoy U.S. and Turkish support. Carter said that the U.S. hoped Moscow would do the right thing on the Syrian issue. “But I am not sure if they will do or not,” he added. He said that the U.S. remains focused on doing more in the fight against Daesh and urged other Nuclear watchdog closes Iranian weapons probe countries to do the same. On Monday, U.S. President Barack Obama said he was sending Carter to the Middle East to work with coalition partners “on securing more military contributions” to the fight against Daesh. Carter also met pilots and military personnel at the base where nearly 400 U.S. soldiers serve in the anti-Daesh mission. He hailed the U.S. soldiers for their effort and self-devotion. Turkey opened the Incirlik Airbase in August and began strikes on Daesh targets inside Syria in late August after Turkey and the U.S. finalized a deal on Turkey’s involvement in air operations against the militant group. >MORE DETAILS Ukrainian lawmaker says Russia oppressing Crimean Turks International Atomic Energy Agency finds no credible indication of nuclear weapons program since 2009 Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party accuses PKK of creating problems for Kurdish people Iraq’s Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) strongly criticized the political wing of the terrorist PKK terrorist group, the Group of Communities in Kurdistan (KCK). “KDP is used to statements by KCK that aim to undermine its reputation,” KDP, which is headed by Kurdish President Masoud Barzani, said in a Tuesday statement. WEATHER / ANKARA The world’s nuclear watchdog on Tuesday announced the end of its investigation into Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons program. The declaration by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which found no evidence of Iran trying to develop nuclear weapons in the last six years, paves the way towards lifting UN, EU and U.S. sanctions against Iran. IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said Iran’s weapons program had not gone beyond “feasibility and scientific studies” and the acquisition of technical equipment. He added: “The agency has no credible indications of activities in Iran relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device after 2009.” The possibility of lifting sanctions was agreed between Iran and world powers in Vienna in July and hinged on the IAEA’s findings. Amano said the next step would be to implement the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action ( JCPOA) signed between Iran and the P5+1 countries - the U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany. “Much work lies ahead of us. All parties must fully implement their commitments under the JCPOA,” Amano said. “Considerable effort was required in order to reach this agreement. A similar and sustained effort will be required to implement it.” Iranian officials welcomed the announcement. “Finally, after 12 years... the issue of military dimensions of Iran’s nuclear program now belongs to history,” Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said, according to Tasnim news agency. In Washington, Secretary of State John Kerry welcomed the decision, saying it set the stage for the full implementation of the nuclear accord. “The focus now appropriately moves toward full implementation of the JCPOA and its enhanced verification and transparency regime,” he said. However, he warned it would not preclude a future investigation “if there is reason to believe Iran is pursuing any covert nuclear activities in the future, as it had in the past”. Meanwhile, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said the JCPOA will begin to be implemented within three weeks. The IAEA called on Iran to continue to cooperate over access to nuclear facilities. >MORE DETAILS Mustafa Dzhemilev says Russia stepped up persecution after downing of Russian plane by Turkey Russia has been persecuting Turks living in Crimea since the downing of a Russian warplane, a Ukrainian lawmaker said Tuesday. “Russia has initiated wild anti-Turkism,” Mustafa Dzhemilev said. “It is putting families of Turkish marriages in Crimea into exile and oppressing businessmen.” Ahead of the Fed, interest rate hike due on Wednesday Although all of the targets set by the Federal Reserve for an interest rate hike have not been met, the central bank is expected to raise interest rates by 0.25 percent on Wednesday – the first rate increase in seven years. The benchmark federal funds rate is expected to go from 0.25 percent to 0.50 percent. The move by the Federal Open Market Committee, which will make the decision, is forecast by a vast majority of economists despite moderate growth and low inflation in the U.S. Over the last 12 months, the inflation rate has reached just 0.5 percent annual rate in November, according to a report by the Labor Department on Tuesday. The Fed’s target for inflation is close to 2 percent. >
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Anadolu Agency
members to key positions within the state.
Decisions taken by these units are
reportedly communicated to other
members through religious leaders
that the organization calls “imams”.
Whether the mem...
Anadolu Agency
Under the EU-Turkey deal for Syrian refugees, Turkey has also been
promised visa-free travel for its nationals within Europe. Bozkir said
Turkey is expected to introduce 72
“adjustments” before thi...