Turkey: 23 PKK terrorists killed in southeast
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Turkey: 23 PKK terrorists killed in southeast
ENTRY TO ISTANBUL PHOTO AWARDS STILL OPEN NO PANIC IN EMERGING MARKETS AFTER RATE HIKE: EXPERTS International competition run by Anadolu Agency saw FOUR DEAD AS REFUGEE BOAT SINKS OFF TURKISH COAST There was no panic in emerging markets Thursday after the U.S. Federal Reserve raised interest rates late Wednesday. Emerging market stocks were sharply higher Thursday. Turkey’s Borsa Istanbul opened higher early in the day. The Shanghai Composite Index was up 1.45 percent on Thursday morning. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 0.5 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index gained 0.2 percent. The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI index improved 0.70 percent. Investors saw the market reaction as justified, given the Fed’s dovish approach to future rate increases. >>ECONOMY 12,000 applications last year The deadline for entries for the Istanbul Photo Awards, the international news and sports contest organized by Anadolu Agency, is Jan. 31. A combined $58,000 in prize money is available for the first, second and third placed photographer in each of four categories -- news single, news story, sports single and sports story -- and photo of the year. >>TURKEY Turkey stops more than 36,500 Syria-bound suspects Friday December 18, 2015 Terror suspects from at least 123 countries, interior minister says Turkey has stopped more than 36,500 terror suspects heading for Syria, Interior Minister Efkan Ala said Thursday. Most suspects were stopped from entering Turkey at the border while nearly 2,800 were arrested and later deported, Ala told Anadolu Agency’s Editors’ Desk meeting in Ankara. “Turkey has denied entry to 33,746 people from 123 countries suspected of joining terror activities in Syria,” he said. Ala added: “Turkey has detained and deported 2,783 suspects from 89 countries.” The minister did not indicate a time scale for the interventions. Turkey, which shares a 900 kilometer (560 mile) border with Syria, has been a transit point for foreigners trying to join groups such as Daesh. The Turkish authorities have stepped up efforts to stem the flow, improving security checks at ports, airports and crossings and reinforcing security on the Syrian border. Ala said Turkey exchanged intelligence with the suspects’ governments. Turkey: 23 PKK terrorists killed in southeast The U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security has been monitoring the social media accounts of those who apply to immigrate since early 2015, the country’s top homeland security official said Wednesday. Speaking during a press briefing, Jeh Johnson told reporters that his department has been scanning the social media accounts of individuals for almost one year before granting any immigration benefits. >>WORLD At least 23 PKK terrorists have been killed in ongoing anti-terror operations in Turkey’s southeastern Sirnak province within the last 48 hours, a security official said Thursday. The security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Anadolu Agency that security forces had killed 22 PKK terrorists in the Cizre district and another in Silopi district. Sirnak Governor Ali Ihsan Su told Anadolu Agency that the operations were ongoing in two districts of Sirnak province. “Curfew will continue for the security of life and property of our citizens,” said Su. Su announced a new curfew in Cizre and Silopi districts Monday. Many citizens have reportedly left the district before the curfew was imposed. The PKK - considered a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S. and EU - resumed its armed campaign in late July. Since then more than 200 members of the security forces have been martyred and around 1,700 PKK terrorists killed. >MORE DETAILS Turkey does not smuggle oil from Daesh: US official Most Daesh oil sold to black-marketeers, says Acting U.S. Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence The U.S. sees no evidence that the Turkish government is purchasing oil from Daesh, a senior Treasury official said on Wednesday. Speaking during a press briefing at the White House, the Acting Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Adam Szubin reiterated that the Turkish government was not involved in any oil smuggling with the group. “The preponderance of their (Daesh) sales, we believe, are happening at the well head, in a sense; in other words, they are selling to middlemen or black-marketeers, who are then, in turn, providing it to others,” Szubin said. However, he added that Daesh used the majority of its oil to fuel their own efforts and military acts in the territories they rule. Daesh is thought to earn millions of dollars per month from oil sales which they generate from the fields it controls in Syria and Iraq. Following the downing of a Rus- sian warplane that violated Turkey’s airspace near the Syrian border on Nov. 24, Russia announced sanctions against Turkey and President Vladimir Putin has alleged Turkish involvement in oil purchases from Daesh. Since then, the U.S. officials from all levels have been denying the claims. >MORE DETAILS UN chief: Syria peace Turkish lira holds must not be dependent after Fed rate hike Analysts say that emerging market currencies on Assad not expected to see rout Ban Ki-moon says it is ‘unacceptable’ to consider peace prospects in Syria to rest on fate of embattled president Depending on the fate of President Bashar al-Assad for the peace prospects to end the Syrian crisis is unacceptable, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Wednesday. “It’s up to [the] Syrian people, who should make a decision about the future of President Assad,” Ban told reporters during his end-of-the-year press conference in New York. “But, at the same time, I also believe that it is unacceptable that the whole Syrian crisis and the solution to this crisis has to depend upon just the question of the fate of one man. That’s not acceptable,” he added. The Syrian civil war, which started in March 2011 when the Assad regime responded to anti-government protests with a violent crackdown, has left more than 250,000 people dead, according to UN figures. >MORE DETAILS The Turkish lira held at 2.95 against the dollar on Thursday, following the movement of most emerging market currencies after the U.S. Federal Reserve raised interest rates late on Wednesday. Analysts said that a rout was not expected. “The Fed did what it had promised, and so markets were not shocked by the move,” explained Christopher Dembik, an economist with Saxo Banque in Paris. The Fed raised its federal funds rate to the range of 0.25 to 0.50 percent, from 0 to 0.25 percent. The central bank also committed to four more interest rate hikes in the coming year. The lira at first gained against the dollar, and reached to 2.92 after the announcement. USDTRY later returned to its Wednesday’s level of 2.95 in early morning trading on Thursday. The dollar also gained gradually against the South African rand, which fell 0.47 percent to 15.01. The Brazilian real also decline against the dollar from about 3.84 to about 3.89 on Thursday morning. Analysts at JPMorgan warned, however, that the dollar was headed higher against both major and emerging market currencies in the coming weeks. >MORE DETAILS Friday PARTLY CLOUDY 3 °C Saturday PARTLY CLOUDY 4 °C PKK violence forces thousands to flee homes in SE Turkey Thousands of people have moved to western cities because of PKK violence in the last five months >MORE DETAILS Operations against the terrorist organization PKK are ongoing in Sirnak province WEATHER / ANKARA Around 200,000 people in southeastern provinces of Turkey have fled their homes because of PKK’s terrorist activities unfolding in the region. Thousands of people -- includ- ing women and children -- have left their homes in Cizre and Silopi districts of southeastern Sirnak province; Sur, Silvan and Bismil districts of Diyarbakir province; and Nusaybin, Derik and Dargecit districts of Mardin province. The reason of their move is uncomfortable and unsafe life after the terrorist organization PKK has escalated its activities, including attacks on security forces, explosives planted on the streets, plus roadblocks and ditches on roads in the last five months. The PKK -- also considered a terrorist organization by the U.S. and EU -- resumed its armed campaign in late July. Since then more than 200 members of the security forces have been martyred and around 1,700 PKK terrorists killed... >MORE DETAILS Turkey Turkish PM hosting nearly reiterates Turkey’s right 2.5 million to defend airspace refugees During his visit to Bulgaria, Davutoglu asks world to notice ‘who is provoking who?’ as he explained the Nov. 24 events when a Russian jet was shot down Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has reiterated Turkey’s right to defend its sovereignty when an aircraft threatens its airspace. In remarks made on Bulgarian bTV network during his visit to Bulgaria on Wednesday, Davutoglu spoke about the downing of a Russian aircraft on Nov. 24 when it violated Turkish airspace despite repeated warnings. “We did not decide to take down a Russian plane, our decision was to only protect our own airspace,” he said. “Our air forces warned the Russian aircraft 10 times to avoid Turkish airspace. All of them [the warnings are] available in the records of the telecommunications of NATO countries. There is nothing to hide,” the premier said. “Turkey has the right to protect its own airspace. We did not know that it was a Russian plane. Given instructions were to protect Turkey. We did not know what the purpose of the unidentified aircraft that exceeded our airspace was. Maybe it was meant to bomb our land,” Davutoglu said. He added that if there was a provocation, then that provocation had been made by violators of Turkish airspace. He also asked others to see who in fact is provoking others. “Where did this incident occur? The Russian border? [or] the border of Russia-Syria? or on the border of Russia and Turkey? in which border? Who is provoking who?” He said also that one must not overlook the fact that Russians are not bombing Daesh, but civilians. “Let’s grant Russia’s claims that the Syrian regime invited them to support the war against terrorism, and therefore, since Russians are present there, they will carry out bomb attacks. But they are not bombing Daesh, they are bombing civilians. Ninety percent of the operation is against the civilians,” he said. He said that these civilians then come to Turkey as they escape the bombardment, from where they try to travel onward to Bulgaria and Europe. He asked Europe if they were ready to accept this. “Will Bulgaria accept this? Those people also go to Europe. Will Europe accept it?” >MORE DETAILS urkey is currently hosting nearly 2.5 million refugees, Deputy Prime Minister Yalcin Akdogan said Wednesday. The country, which has taken in 2.4 million Syrians since the war started in 2011, hosts the world’s largest refugee population. “As of today, 2,495,117 people were recorded by migration management,” Akdogan told journalists in Ankara. He added that 300,000 overseas students attended colleges and universities in Turkey. Russia aiming to drive Turkmen from Syria, says leader Russian airstrikes are systematically targeting the infrastructure of Turkmen areas of northwest Syria to prevent their return, a senior rebel commander said Wednesday. Ahmet Arnavut, who controls Turkmen forces in the Bayirbucak region, said Russia aimed to wipe out the Turkmen presence in Latakia province. “Within a month, Russia did what the regime could not since the beginning of the war,” he told Anadolu Agency. He added: “They are hitting vacant villages with bombers and helicopters. They are sending a message to Turkmen by destroying houses where no one lives - ‘There is nothing left for you here. Don’t think about returning’.” >
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Anadolu Agency
2,800 were arrested and later deported, Ala told Anadolu Agency’s Editors’ Desk
meeting in Ankara. “Turkey has denied entry to 33,746 people from 123 countries suspected of joining terror activitie...
Anadolu Agency
the question of the fate of one man.
That’s not acceptable,” he added.
The Syrian civil war, which started in
March 2011 when the Assad regime
responded to anti-government protests with a violent c...
Syria`s Assad admits sending weapons to PYD
“It is about a political process. If this process is agreed on, then I have the right to
run for elections like any other Syrian citizen… Anyway, it is early to talk about this,
because as you know...