Turkish president to visit Northern Cyprus, Azerbaijan in first foreign trip after reelection

Reelected late last month, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will pay his term’s first foreign visits to the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) and Azerbaijan, adhering to a long-held tradition of Turkish leaders.

On Monday, Erdogan will travel to the TRNC, where he will meet with President Ersin Tatar and Prime Minister Unal Ustunel.

They are expected to discuss developments in the Eastern Mediterranean and possible future steps on the Cyprus issue.

Following meetings, Erdogan and Tatar are expected to hold a joint news conference.

Erdogan will visit Azerbaijan the following day, where he will meet with President Ilham Aliyev.

He and Aliyev will discuss bilateral relations and cooperation, as well as regional and international developments.

Erdogan won a presidential runoff election on May 28, securing 52.18% of the vote, while opposition candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu got 47.82%, according to official results.

After attending oath-taking and inauguration ceremonies in the capital Ankara, Erdogan unveiled his new Cabinet on June 3.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Daesh/ISIS’ so-called Mosul judge remanded by Turkish court

Four suspected Daesh/ISIS members were remanded in custody in Istanbul on Saturday, including a senior member of the terror group in Iraq’s northern Mosul region, local authorities said.

Jalal Ismael Ahmed Ahmed, believed to be the so-called Mosul judge of the terrorist organization, was among the four suspects, who were detained along with three others in an earlier anti-terror operation, the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office announced.

The four were brought before a criminal court and subsequently remanded, it added.

In 2013, Trkiye became one of the first countries to declare Daesh/ISIS a terrorist organization.

The country has since been attacked by the terror group multiple times, with over 300 people killed and hundreds more injured in at least 10 suicide bombings, seven bomb attacks, and four armed attacks.

In response, Trkiye launched anti-terror operations at home and abroad to prevent further attacks.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Cautious calm prevails in Khartoum as cease-fire takes effect

Cautious calm prevailed in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum on Saturday as a one-day cease-fire between Sudan’s warring rivals came into effect.

The cease-fire, mediated by US and Saudi mediators between the army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary group, came into force at 6 a.m. local time (0400 GMT).

According to local residents, sounds of artillery and shelling disappeared in Khartoum with the application of the cease-fire deal.

“We hope that calm will continue and the war will come to an end,’ a local resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Anadolu.

Previous cease-fire deals between the two rivals were repeatedly violated, with the two sides trading accusations for the violations.

Nearly 1,000 people have been killed and thousands injured since fighting between the army and the RSF first erupted on April 15, according to medics.

A disagreement had been fomenting in recent months between the army and the RSF over the paramilitary group’s integration into the armed forces, a key condition of Sudan’s transition agreement with political groups.

Sudan has been without a functioning government since October 2021, when the military dismissed Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok’s transitional government and declared a state of emergency in a move decried by political forces as a “coup.”

Sudan’s transitional period, which started in August 2019 after the ouster of President Omar al-Bashir, had been scheduled to end with elections in early 2024.

*Writing by Ikram Kouachi

Source: Anadolu Agency

Montenegrins to elect lawmakers Sunday

Voters in the Western Balkan nation of Montenegro will go the polls Sunday to choose the members of their next legislative assembly in snap parliamentary elections.

Fifteen coalitions and parties are competing for seats in the 81-person parliament in the country’s sixth general election since the country transitioned to a multi-party system in 1990.

According to data from the State Election Commission, more than 542,000 registered voters will be eligible to cast ballots at 1,038 polling stations across the nation on Sunday.

The early general election was called by former President Milo Djukanovic in the face of a no-confidence vote against the government, led by Prime Minister Dritan Abazovic.

It may finally bring a stable administration after almost three years of constant political turbulence, with two governments ousted, including one led by the Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) that was voted out in August 2022, led at the time by Djukanovic.

Sunday will be the first time that the pro-Western DPS, which had been in power for decades, will be competing in an election without Djukonavic, who was the leader of the party for years but resigned as chairmanship on April 6.

The DPS is part of the Together bloc, along with its traditional ally, the Liberal Party (LP), the Albanian Coalition, and the Social Democrats.

This will also be the first time that the Europe Now party, led by Jakov Milatovic, who won the second round of the country’s presidential election on April 2, is participating in general elections.

Reports have shown the centrist Europe Now ahead in the polls since Milatovic’s success in the presidential election, though it is not expected to gain enough seats in parliament to form a government on its own.

Fifteen electoral lists are competing, about half of which are made up of parties that cleared the country’s 3% electoral threshold to gain seats in the August 2020 parliamentary elections.

The frontrunners are Europe Now and the opposition Together bloc, led by the DPS.

The Bosniak Party (BS); Croatian Civic Initiative (HGI); Justice for All Movement; Socialist People’s Party (SNP)-Democratic Alliance (Demos); People’s Coalition; Reversal Movement; Movement for Changes; Yes, We Can! – For Civic Montenegro; Together Coalition; Aleksa and Dritan Coalition; and the Albanian Forum Coalition are the other contenders.

Reports show the Bosniaks, Albanians, and Croats will play a decisive role in Montenegro’s EU path, which has been at a standstill since 2020.

The economy is in focus for voters and the election campaigns as the next government has to deal with high public debt and EU reforms.

Official data shows Montenegro’s public debt is %70.77 of gross domestic product (GDP), while annual inflation is at 15%.

Political crisis

The process of forming a new government, which started after the administration of former Premier Abazovic failed last year’s confidence vote, has since devolved into political crisis.

Abazovic’s government caused controversy after signing a “fundamental agreement” with Serbian Orthodox Church Patriarch Porfirije to give the church “official status” in Montenegro.

While pro-Serbian parties proposed lawmaker Miodrag Lekic to form a new government, Djukanovic refused to give him a mandate on the grounds that he did not fulfill necessary conditions.

Lekic later got the mandate to form a government after the passage of a law that restricted presidential powers on government formation, but fell short of the majority support he needed in parliament.

EU membership creeping away

Polls suggest that no party or coalition will be able to form a government on its own, with concerns rising that another unstable administration could raise new obstacles in Montenegro’s increasingly distant prospects for EU membership.

Voters, on the other hand, want a government without “crises” and a country steadily advancing toward the EU.

General elections are held every four years, according to Montenegrin law, and a party must surpass the 3% electoral threshold to enter the legislature.

According to a 2011 census, Montenegrins and Serbs form the most biggest ethnic groups in the country, followed by Bosniaks, Albanians, Romanians, Croats, and smaller ones.

Source: Anadolu Agency

We are ready for the resumption of the Cyprus talks, President stresses

President of the Republic Nikos Christodoulides has stressed that the Greek Cypriot side is ready for the resumption of the Cyprus talks, noting that there are circumstances that are being exploited through efforts so as to break the deadlock and resume the Cyprus talks.

In statements on Saturday on the sidelines of the Annual Pancyprian Conference of the Cyprus Union of Bank Employees, the President reiterated his proposal for a more active EU role in the efforts to resume the talks, saying that the efforts of the Greek Cypriot side are focused on restarting the dialogue.

Commenting on journalist’s remark that while there was a de-escalation of the tension between Turkey and Greece, with the cessation of overflights of Turkey in the Aegean, the Turkish President will be paying a visit to the occupied territories of Cyprus, President Christodoulides said that “indeed, especially after the earthquakes in Turkey and possibly because of the elections in the country, we saw a different approach from Turkey’s side, we also saw a new climate being created in the relations between Athens and Ankara”.

The Turkish elections are now over, he said, adding that what the Greek Cypriot side expects as regards the Cyprus issue is to see concrete results for resuming the Cyprus talks “and that is where our efforts are focused”.

He noted that following the elections in Turkey, Cyprus is in contact with European capitals, with heads of EU member states, as well as with the EU institutions, “to see how this proposal, this new approach that we have put on the table of discussions for the need for the EU to have a more active, leading role, can proceed, because we believe that the EU has all those incentives to lead to a mutually beneficial state of affairs through the solution of the Cyprus issue”.

The President of the Republic referred to milestones, saying that the European Council is taking place at the end of June, while before that, the NATO Summit will take place, where there will be discussions on the sidelines.

“What we expect is to create conditions, which will lead to the breaking of the impasse and the resumption of talks. We will all be judged through developments, through specific actions,” he pointed out.

The President was also invited to comment on political analysts’ opinions who say that now there are strong governments in Turkey, Greece and Cyprus and thus chances of resolving the Cyprus issue. “These are three important facts and at the same time there is one more fact, which is the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the destabilising tendencies that are being created, the EU’s reaction to the Russian invasion of Ukraine”.

There are some facts, he said, that Cyprus is using in its efforts, which should lead to results.

He expressed hope that there will be an outcome, adding that everything will be judged by the result towards the direction of breaking the impasse and resuming the talks.

“We are ready,” the President stressed, adding that “I can say this with absolute certainty, with absolute awareness of what I am saying, with very specific proposals that we have shared to some extent with EU member states that we have asked to mediate or have a leading role in the direction of the EU”.

Invited to comment on a joint exercise of Turkey-Poland-Spain and the pseudo-state, the President said that representations have been made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He said that it was an exercise by Turkey, in which the other states had participated, while Turkey had also invited the pseudo-state.

“It’s not the first time it’s happened. It is for this reason that we ask the states that are invited to participate in Turkey’s exercises, exercises that it sometimes organises within the framework of NATO, to be particularly cautious and to investigate beforehand who else will participate, because it is one of the Turkish efforts to allegedly upgrade the status of the pseudo-state”, he concluded.

Cyprus has been divided since 1974, when Turkey invaded and occupied its northern third. Repeated rounds of UN-led peace talks have so far failed to yield results. The latest round of negotiations, in July 2017 at the Swiss resort of Crans-Montana ended inconclusively. The pseudo-state in the occupied territories of Cyprus is recognised only by Turkey.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

4-time Champions League winner Clarence Seedorf expects ‘big fight’ in 2023 final

Through the years, the Champions League has been marked by epic moments, unforgettable games, fantastic goals, and iconic players, with midfield legend Clarence Seedorf holding a special place in the competition’s history.

One of the most successful players in European football’s top club event, the former Dutch midfielder is the only footballer to have won the trophy with three clubs: Ajax (1995), Real Madrid (1998), and AC Milan (2003 and 2007).

His achievement in the tournament is a testament to his skill and versatility, making him a key asset to the teams he’s played on with his technical ability and tactical knowledge.

After retiring from playing in 2014, the Suriname-born star managed several clubs, including Milan and Deportivo La Coruna.

Seedorf is now in Istanbul to watch this season’s Manchester City-Inter Milan final match, set to be played Saturday in the Olympic Stadium at 1900 GMT.

The 47-year-old participated in the Champions Festival – a four-day event at the Yenikapi Event Space in the city’s historical Fatih district.

Legendary players came together for the “Ultimate Champions Tournament” ahead of the Champions League Final.

“It is special to be here. I think that, like all the finals, I expect always a big fight technically, physically. I don’t think that it’s going to be very different this time,” Seedorf told Anadolu as he shared his expectations on the final showdown.

He added that it was not easy to predict which side would have the upper hand in Saturday’s game.

“I think they have a different way of playing. But they’re both very capable of winning the final.”

‘Happy moment, amazing event’

Istanbul will be hosting its second Champions League final.

The first was at the same stadium in 2005 between AC Milan and Liverpool. It was famously remembered as one of the most remarkable comebacks in the competition’s history.

AC Milan took a 3-0 lead in the first half but proved unable to stop a resurgent Liverpool in the second half, scoring three goals in just six minutes.

Liverpool lifted the trophy after defeating AC Milan 3-2 on penalties after the game ended 3-3. The match became known as the “Miracle of Istanbul.”

Seedorf was part of Milan’s 2004-2005 squad but was subbed off in the 86th minute of the final.

He visited Trkiye many times after the tragic final in 2005.

“It is just nice to be part of the Champions League final, which continues to bring people together. It’s a happy moment. This is an amazing event,” he said.

He added that following the twin earthquakes that jolted southern Trkiye on Feb. 6, he is happy the country is hosting the game for people to enjoy.

The best players have always distinguished themselves in this tournament, Seedorf said.

“It’s a dream for every kid to win the Champions League final. The best players have participated in this competition and still, they are,” he added.

“It is the most important cup for club football until today.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ukraine to receive $20M in humanitarian aid from UK

The UK announced Saturday that it will contribute £16 million ($20.1 million) to meet broad needs in Ukraine, particularly those affected by the collapse of the Kakhovka dam.

In response to escalating demands, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said in a statement that the amount would assist civilians, including 32,000 people directly affected by flooding, as well as those on the front lines and displaced populations.

The money will consist of £10 million for the Red Cross Movement, £5 million for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and £1 million for the International Organization for Migration, it said.

Additionally, the UK is supplying rescue boats, community water filters, water pumps, and waders, the statement said, and added that the equipment is slated to arrive in Ukraine “next week.”

The announcement of aid came as water levels in Kherson continue to rise, with flooding spreading to other towns along the Dnipro River.

“Flooding from the destruction of Kakhovka dam is having an untold impact on over 32,000 people living in Kherson, and thousands more in the surrounding area,” said James Cleverly, the foreign, commonwealth and development secretary.

“We will continue to stand by Ukraine in dealing with this terrible incident,” Cleverly added.

This aid package brings the UK’s total economic and humanitarian support to Ukraine to £1.5 billion.?

Early this week, an emergency was declared on both sides of the Kakhovka dam in southern Ukraine’s Kherson region after it burst – one side is controlled by Russia and the other by Ukraine.

Russia and Ukraine traded blame over the blast, which destroyed part of the dam that supplied water to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant and Crimea, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish president receives UEFA chief in Istanbul for talks

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday received UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin in Istanbul for talks.

The Turkish presidency shared no further information on the closed-door meeting at Ataturk Airport.

The meeting came ahead of the UEFA Champions League final between Manchester City and Inter at Istanbul’s Ataturk Olympic Stadium.

In April, Ceferin was reelected unopposed as UEFA’s president for another four-year term.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish president receives FIFA chief in Istanbul

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday received FIFA President Gianni Infantino in Istanbul for talks.

The closed-door meeting at Ataturk Airport came ahead of the UEFA Champions League final match between Manchester City and Inter at Istanbul’s Ataturk Olympic Stadium.

In March, Infantino was reelected president of FIFA for four more years after running unopposed at the congress of world football’s ruling body.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ready to provide aid to North Korea, says Red Cross

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Saturday said the organization was ready to provide humanitarian assistance to North Korea whenever Pyongyang reaches out for aid.

Olivier Ray, the ICRC’s director for mobilization, movement and partnerships, said they were in contact with the Red Cross Society of North Korea and ready to resume aid projects suspended in 2020 due to COVID-19.

“As of today, the ICRC does not have access to the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) due to the COVID-related restrictions that the government has imposed since 2020,” Ray told Seoul-based Yonhap News Agency during an interview.

In March, UN experts warned that North Korea’s self-isolation since the COVID-19 pandemic “further aggravated the suffering” of its people.

Elizabeth Salmon, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in North Korea, officially the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, urged the international community to pay “urgent” attention to deteriorating access to food, medicine, and health care in the country.

Despite declaring victory against COVID-19 in August last year and lifting all restrictions across nationwide, Pyongyang has yet to allow international humanitarian groups in the country to provide aid.

“But we remain in contact with the DPRK Red Cross Society, we have some information through that channel and we are ready to reengage whenever we have access,” Ray said.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry revealed in a report earlier this year that the number of North Korean defectors had fallen significantly in 2022, a decline that human rights activists believe was likely caused by the strict COVID-19 restrictions.

*Writing by Islamuddin Sajid

Source: Anadolu Agency