Trkiye’s current account balance posts $1.88B surplus in September

Trkiye’s current account balance posted a $1.88 billion surplus in September, after running deficit for two months, the country’s Central Bank announced on Monday. The gap shifted from an upwardly revised $357 million deficit in August and $3.02 billion in September 2022, the bank’s data showed. The gold- and energy-excluded current account recorded a $7.12-billion surplus in the month, the bank said. The goods deficit amounted to $3.66 billion in September, while the services sector saw a net surplus of $6.25 billion in the month. Under the services sector, travel had a net inflow of $5.03 billion in September. In January-September, the current account balance run a $40.84 billion deficit, widening from $38.21 billion in the same period last year.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

Israel’s military chief admits failing to protect Jewish settlements on Oct. 7

Israeli Army Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi admitted Sunday that the military failed to protect Jewish settlements near the Gaza Strip during the surprise attack launched by Hamas on Oct. 7. Halevi made the remarks during a meeting with municipal leaders from southern Israel, the Yedioth Ahronoth daily reported. ‘We are aware of the failure. We failed to protect the communities. We did not prepare for such a scenario,’ he said. “We will study everything, and we will learn our lessons. We are determined to complete the mission and to destroy Hamas.’ Israel has been carrying out relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip — including on hospitals, residences and houses of worship — since the Palestinian group Hamas launched a cross-border attack on Oct. 7. Since then, the number of deaths in the ongoing Israeli attacks has surpassed 11,100, including more than 8,000 women and children, the government media office in Gaza said on Sunday. The Israeli death toll is nearly 1,200, according to official
figures.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

Palestinian health minister appeals to Red Cross to press Israel to stop attacking Gaza

Palestinian Health Minister Mai Al-Kaila sent an urgent distress call on Sunday to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to press Israel to stop its attacks on the Gaza Strip. The move came as she held an emergency meeting with the ICRC’s delegate in Jerusalem and its health affairs coordinator. “Hundreds of patients and wounded are threatened with death at any moment as a result of the bombing and besieging of hospitals, the power outage, the running out of fuel, medicines and medical supplies, and the lack of the minimum necessities of life in them,” Al-Kaila said according to a Health Ministry statement on Facebook. She reviewed “the catastrophic health situation in the Gaza Strip and the attacks on the health system, where 23 hospitals out of 35 have completely stopped working and the occupation forces are besieging many hospitals and preventing entry or exit from them for medical staff, paramedics and patients.” Al-Kaila said that “citizens in the Gaza Strip are living in tragic health
conditions, as there is no safe place and there are no conditions for survival such as water, food, safety and healthcare. On top of that are the Israeli bombings which have led to the deaths of more than 11,000 people, the wounding of 27,000 citizens, and the loss of about 3,000 more.’ She once again called on all international and human rights institutions and organizations to “stand up to their responsibilities in order to stop the Israeli aggression and immediately allow the entry of health support and fuel to hospitals and allow patients to go for treatment outside the Gaza Strip, as well as the entry of volunteer medical teams into the Gaza Strip as well as water and food.” Israel has been carrying out relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip — including on hospitals, residences and houses of worship — since the Palestinian group Hamas launched a cross-border attack on Oct. 7. Since then, the number of deaths in the ongoing Israeli attacks has surpassed 11,100, including more than 8,000
women and children, the government media office in Gaza said on Sunday. The Israeli death toll is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

Renewed fighting raises fears for peace in DR Congo, wider region

Recent renewed fighting between Congolese government forces and M23 rebels demonstrates the continued worrying threat posed by insecurity in the east, according to analysts.

It comes at a time when the main thrust of political activity in Congo is focused on general elections scheduled for December.

The clashes involve the M23 rebels on one hand, a pro-government armed group calling itself, Wazelendo, and the Congolese army on the other.

Since 2021, the M23, one of several armed groups fighting in eastern Congo, captured swathes of territory in North Kivu province.

In the latest clashes, fighting has been reported in and around the M23-controlled area of Masisi Territory of North Kivu Province near the border with Rwanda and Uganda, after six months of fragile calm.

The East African Community Regional Force has urged the warring parties to revert to a cease-fire agreement brokered by regional leaders.

Col. Guillaume Ndjike Kaiko, spokesman for the governor of North Kivu province, claimed that the Congo
lese army continues to observe the cease-fire on the instructions of the heads of state of the sub-region, but ‘it has a duty to protect its initial positions and to protect the population.’

Two protagonists hold the key

Political observers and analysts said the renewed clashes present a deeply worrying development, which does not bode well for regional diplomatic efforts to resolve the long-running conflict.

‘The chances of peaceful resolution of this conflict remain in the hands of the two protagonists, and this needs to be resolved through a sincere dialogue between the two belligerents, but also through genuine political will by Kinshasa and its neighbors to de-escalate the conflict and to address all the root causes of the conflict,’ Louis Gitinywa, a Rwandan-based political analyst told Anadolu.

Within the framework of the International Conference of the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), Angola has been facilitating talks between the parties that allowed the adoption of the Luanda Roadmap on the pacificat
ion process of eastern Congo.

Under the framework of the Luanda Roadmap, the M23 rebels were ordered to withdraw from occupied areas to the camp and start a disarmament and reintegration process.

Angola is the African Union mediator on M23 committed to deploying a contingent of troops to ensure the safety of M23 elements in the cantonment centers.

While it is unclear how the peace process will play out, Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi’s recent remarks about the rebellion suggest the government is getting ready for a military solution.

Almost 200,000 residents have been driven out of their homes since Oct. 1 in Rutshuru and Masisi territories, north of Goma, according to the UN.

Optimism about peaceful end

Angolan Foreign Minister Tete Antonio said renewed fighting ‘complicates the peace process’ but there is still hope for the restoration of peace through a dialogue process led by Angolan President Joao Lourenco.

‘It is a complicated process, but there is hope and optimism about finding peace in t
he DR Congo and the entire Great Lakes region through dialogue,’ Tete told Anadolu.

Leaders of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) are expected to meet at an extraordinary summit Nov. 4 in Angola to assess the security situation in eastern Congo.

Gitinywa, a constitutional lawyer, believes a lack of honesty by the Kinshasa government presents a challenge to the conflict.

‘I think the major challenges remain Kinshasa’s ‘war mongering’ approach to the conflict that has created a long and deep distrust amongst the belligerents even across its regional partners,’ he said.

‘Kinshasa never demonstrates a sincere political will and willingness to resolve this crisis through dialogue, as it has always tried recourse to military solutions as well as putting the blame either on the UN mission (MONUSCO) or on regional partners (Rwanda and Uganda).’

The government in Kinshasa accuses Rwanda of backing the M23, a charge Kigali denies.

Strengthening militias?

David Egesa, a security analyst based in Ug
anda’s capital Kampala, warned that if armed groups back Kinshasa against M23, it might help in the short term but could also strengthen militia groups.

‘DR Congo might discreetly allow the militia to work together against M23. But such a twisted game could, in the longer term, embolden the militias … it’s a dangerous situation,’ he said.

Egesa believes Kinshasa’s talk of pursuing military action will only go so far as prolonging the conflict and will have a greater effect on the civilian population than the M23.

Gitinywa said Kinshasa should address the root causes of the conflict by uprooting and demobilizing the different armed groups that have been operating in eastern Congo.

He also urged the government in Kinshasa to ‘ensure free, fair and non-violent elections, reform the DRC security and justice sector, and tackle the endemic corruption.’

The renewed fighting should ‘certainly cause deep concern for the region which is playing a lead role in efforts led by Angola to restore peace through amicab
le resolution of conflict,’ said Raphael Nkaka, a governance expert based in Rwanda’s capital of Kigali.

‘It is worrying that people have to die whenever politics fails to settle differences,’ he said.

Gitinywa sees the recent escalation of the conflict and violations of the cease-fire between M23 and the Congolese army as ‘provoking a tactical move’ by Tshisekedi to postpone general elections on grounds of insecurity across several regions of the country.

But Tshisekedi assured that the election in December would have to take place.

The clashes in eastern Congo come after Tshisekedi called for a speedy withdrawal of the UN mission in the country.

On Oct. 30, the UN said the number of internally displaced people within Congo had reached a record 6.9 million due to escalating violence.

In North Kivu, up to 1 million residents have reportedly been displaced due to the conflict with the M23.

Young Palestinians mostly shot in abdomen, legs: Doctors Without Borders

Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), a French humanitarian healthcare organization, said on Sunday that the majority of the young Palestinians it received at Jenin Hospital in the West Bank had life-threatening bullet wounds in their abdomens and lower thighs.

“Most of the patients we receive have been shot in the abdomen and legs,” Dr. Pedro Serrano, head of the hospital’s intensive care unit that is supported by MSF or Doctors Without Borders, said in a statement posted on the social media platform X.

‘Some have had their liver and spleen shattered, while others have severe vascular injuries,’ Dr. Serrano added.

‘We had one very sad case of a guy who was walking just outside the hospital entrance when he was shot in the head by a sniper,’ he added, noting that ‘the violence is ongoing and most patients we receive have life-threatening injuries.’

Turkish president welcomes Arab-Islamic summit resolution proposing denuclearization conference

Trkiye’s president on Sunday welcomed the Arab-Islamic summit resolution proposing to hold a denuclearization conference in the region due to Israel’s nuclear weapons.

“For the first time, we are proposing a ‘Denuclearization Conference’ in the region due to Israel’s nuclear weapons,” Erdogan told reporters aboard the presidential plane on his way back from the Saudi capital Riyadh, where he attended the Arab-Islamic Extraordinary Summit on Saturday.

The resolution “condemned the hateful, extremist and racist acts and statements made by ministers in the Israeli occupation government, including the threat by one of the ministers to use nuclear weapons against the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip, being a serious threat to global peace and security, which requires supporting the conference to establish a zone free of nuclear weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East, held within the framework of the United Nations and its objectives to confront this threat.”

Last Sunday, Israeli Heritage Minister A
mihai Eliyahu, a member of the far-right Otzma Yehudit party, told Israeli media that dropping a “nuclear bomb” on the Gaza Strip was “an option.”

Erdogan said that the issue of denuclearization is very important in terms of revealing which actors are supporting Israel.

‘All the topics we planned before going to the summit were included in the final text. The (resolution) text contains many action points, that have never been said before, that define (Israeli) settlers as terrorists and even produce geostrategy,’ he added.

‘Now, it is of great importance that both the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League came together and took this step (resolution) because this is the first time in the history of the two organizations that such a meeting took place,’ he added.

For the resolution, he said they used a phrase called ‘breaking the siege,’ adding: ‘An action-oriented definition was introduced rather than the diplomatic definition.’

Underlining the importance of the ‘break the siege’ articl
e in the resolution, he said it requires the immediate entry of Arab, Islamic, and international humanitarian aid convoys containing food, medicine, and fuel into the Gaza Strip.

As there are shortages of fuel, water, and food, Erdogan said that the most important country that needs to be involved is the US, which has an influence on Israel.

‘Gaza is, first of all, the land of the Palestinian people. The US needs to accept this. If (US President Joe) Biden has the approach of saying ‘No, this is the land of the occupying settlers or Israel, rather than the land of the Palestinian people’, we can’t reach an agreement,’ he added.

Regarding French President Emmanuel Macron’s approach, Erdogan said Macron first fully supported Israel and visited the country, but now he has changed his rhetoric.

Israel has launched relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip, including hospitals, residences, and houses of worship.

At least 11,100 Palestinians have been killed, including 8,000 children and women.

The
Israeli death toll is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Number of Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza surpasses 11,100

The number of deaths in the ongoing Israeli military attacks on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7 has surpassed the grim figure of 11,100, including more than 8,000 children and women, the government media office in Gaza said on Sunday.

The media office in a statement said: ‘Due to the targeting of hospitals and the prevention of entry of any of the bodies or wounded, the Ministry of Health was unable, on Saturday, to issue accurate statistics for the numbers of dead and injured during the past hours.’

‘We recall that the occupation (forces) committed more than 1,130 massacres, and the number of casualties reached more than 11,100 dead, including more than 8,000 children and women, and the number of wounded was more than 28,000,’ it said.

The previous toll, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza on Friday, was 11,078 dead, including 4,506 children, 3,027 women, and 678 elderly people, as well as 27,490 injured.

Ashraf Al-Qudra, a spokesman for the Gaza Ministry of Health, said on Saturday that all hospita
ls in northern Gaza are out of service, with the exception of Baptist Hospital, which offers limited services.

The Israeli death toll is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Turkish security forces capture so-called bomb expert of Daesh/ISIS terror group in Istanbul

Turkish security forces captured a so-called bomb expert of the Daesh/ISIS terror group in Istanbul, security sources said on Sunday.

In a joint operation, police and the Turkish National Intelligence teams captured the suspect, identified only by the initials A.J.A. in Sultanbeyli district of the city, said a source on condition of anonymity.

The suspect was involved in training terrorist group members on explosive-making, which they used in the terror attacks in Syria and Iraq, it added.

Police seized five indigenous bombs containing SIM cards and other devices for exploding them through remote controls, as well as digital propaganda materials and organizational documents.

The suspect, whose procedures at the police station were completed, was arrested by the court on duty.

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.

Israeli forces kill another Palestinian in West Bank, death toll rises to 186

Another Palestinian was killed by Israeli army fire in the West Bank on Sunday, taking the death toll in the occupied territory since Oct. 7 up to 186, the Health Ministry said.

In a statement, the ministry said: ‘Montaser Muhammad Amin Saif, 34, was shot Sunday by the Israeli occupation forces in the village of Burqa north of Nablus.’

The Israeli forces stormed the town of Burqa, and searched several homes, according to the official Palestinian news agency Wafa.

Tensions have been high across the West Bank since the fighting broke out on Oct. 7 between Palestinian groups and Israel in Gaza.

Israel has launched relentless air and ground attacks on the Gaza Strip, including hospitals, residences, and houses of worship.

At least 11,078 Palestinians have been killed, including 4,506 children and 3,027 women.

The Israeli death toll is nearly 1,200, according to official figures.

Sofia Opera Ballet House performs in Istanbul

Over 2,000 people applauded a performance of Giacomo Puccini’s Tosca staged by the Sofia Opera and Ballet at the Ataturk Cultural Centre in Istanbul on Saturday.

The event was a highlight of the Sofia Opera and Ballet’s gala tour, themed “Bulgaria Congratulates Trkiye: Happy Centenary of the Republic!” Bulgarian News Agency reported.

The Bulgarian and Turkish national anthems played in unison as the performance began amid cheering by the attendees of the event.

Trkiye’s Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy said in a statement that he “wholeheartedly congratulates the team of the Sofia Opera and Ballet, who made the production a reality.”

Notable attendees included business representatives such as Chairman of Trkiye-Bulgaria Business Council Zeki Saribekir, Chairman of the Bulgarian Turkish Chamber of Commerce and Industry Governing Board Burhan Nemutlu, members of the Bulgarian community led by Dimitar Yotef, and Consul General of Bulgaria in Istanbul Vassil Valchev.

Bulgarian Ambassador to Tr
kiye Angel Cholakov welcomed the guests and noted that the selection of this opera is connected to the founder of the Republic of Trkiye, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

Cholakov described Ataturk as a “great statesman, visionary, reformer, and friend of Bulgaria, who also had a deep appreciation for opera.”

The money earned from the event will go to those affected by the Feb. 6 earthquakes, called the “Disaster of the Century,” with Kahramanmaras as the epicenter.

The tour, under the auspices of the first ladies of Bulgaria and Trkiye, Desislava Radeva and Emine Erdogan, respectively, is a symbolic journey through time, following Ataturk’s cultural legacy in Sofia.

One of Ataturk’s favorite operas

“Floria Tosca” role was performed by Radostina Nikolaeva, “Mario Cavaradossi” by Kostadin Andreev, and “Baron Scarpia” by Ionut Pascu in the opera directed by Plamen Kartalov.

The opera’s musical direction is led by Sunay Muratov, a dual citizen of Bulgaria and Trkiye.

Tosca, one of Ataturk’s favorite operas, was fre
quently attended by him during his tenure as a military attache in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, from 1913 to 1915.