Germany voices support for ECOWAS’s efforts to resolve Niger crisis

Germany on Friday voiced support for diplomatic efforts by regional countries to resolve the crisis in Niger after a recent coup overthrew the civilian government.

“The united stance of West African bloc ECOWAS and the African Union, in these crucial days, is a clear sign of support for democracy in Niger and beyond,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in a statement.

“We support African efforts to restore constitutional order in Niger and acknowledge that the states in the region will use all diplomatic means to do so,” Baerbock added.

She urged the military junta to respond positively to mediation efforts and demanded the immediate release of the country’s ousted President Mohamed Bazoum and his family.

“The coup plotters must expect harsh consequences should anything happen to them,” she said.

Leaders in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on Thursday said that they would “keep all options on the table” for a peaceful resolution of the crisis and ordered the activation of an ECOWAS standby force to restore the constitutional order in Niger.

Bazoum was ousted on July 26 in a military coup led by Gen. Abdourahamane Tchiani, the former commander of Niger’s presidential guard.

Source: Anadolu Agency

ECOWAS defense chiefs to meet next week as possible Niger intervention looms

The defense chiefs of West African nations intend to meet next week to discuss whether to use force against Niger’s military junta, which seized power in coup last month, an official told Anadolu on Friday.

“ECOWAS defense chiefs plan a meeting next week,” said Amos Lungu, spokesman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), after the bloc activated a standby force for possible military action to restore Niger’s ousted President Mohammed Bazoum.

The directive was issued by ECOWAS to its committee of defense chiefs at its second extraordinary summit in Nigeria’s capital Abuja on Thursday.

The West African bloc said, however, that it would continue exploring diplomatic approaches to convince the coup leaders to return the country to constitutional government.

It also resolved to sustain sanctions against Niger until the coup leaders restored Bazoum. The US, France, and the majority of African nations have also expressed support for ECOWAS’s efforts in resolving the crisis.

Bazoum was ousted on July 26 in a military coup led by Gen. Abdourahamane Tchiani, the former commander of Niger’s presidential guard, and has reportedly been held hostage at the presidential palace in the capital Niamey.

Nigeria, also a member of ECOWAS and Niger’s southern neighbor, also imposed sanctions, cutting off its supply of power to the country in a bid to apply pressure on the junta.

Nigeria supplies 70% of power to Niger.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Europe fighting floods, wildfires simultaneously, says global body

Europe has been fighting natural disasters in the form of floods and wildfires simultaneously, which are causing massive damage to forests and the loss of several lives, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said on Friday.

The Scandinavian region and particularly Norway are struggling with violent winds, downpours, and landslides due to Storm Hans, said Andreas von Weissenberg, the head of IFRC’s Regional Health, Disaster, Crises, and Climate Unit in Europe.

“More than 5,000 people were evacuated in Hans-hit Norway,” von Weissenberg said during the weekly news conference, adding that the Norway Red Cross has notified that this is a first-time situation with multiple emergencies occurring simultaneously.

Two-thirds of Slovenia was impacted by rains, he said, adding that “the floods are the worst disaster Slovenia has known since its independence in 1991, which killed people, destroyed bridges, roads, and houses, causing approximately pound 500 million ($548.2 million) in damage.”

Meanwhile, rains and landslides in northwestern Georgia have claimed the lives of 20 people, he added, while 1,400 people have been evacuated in Portugal, where wildfires have damaged 7,000 hectares (17,297 acres).

Source: Anadolu Agency

Borsa Istanbul jumps at weekly close, hitting record level

Trkiye’s benchmark stock index ended Friday at a record high close of 7,714.38 points, soaring 3.67% from the previous close.?

Starting the day at 7,453.42 points, Borsa Istanbul’s BIST 100 index gained 272.88 points from Thursday’s close.

The lowest value of the index during the day was 7,397.63, while its daily high was 7,720.97.

The total value of BIST 100 was around 6.5 trillion Turkish liras ($241.7 billion) by market close.

The daily trading volume was 145.9 billion Turkish liras ($5.39 billion).?

Some 99 stocks gained value, while one lost.?

The price of an ounce of gold was $1,951.45, while Brent crude oil sold for $86.90 per barrel as of 5.55 p.m. local time (1455GMT).

The US dollar/Turkish lira exchange rate was 27.0500, the euro/lira exchange rate was 29.7190, while a British pound traded at 34.4190 Turkish liras.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Morning Briefing: August 10, 2023

Here’s a rundown of all the news you need to start your Thursday with, including, assassination of Ecuador’s presidential candidate, last week’s deadly shipwreck off the coast of Italy, US restrictions in China, and dissolution of Pakistan’s parliament. TOP STORIES Ecuador presidential candidate assassinated days before elections Ecuador presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio was shot dead Wednesday while leaving a campaign rally in the capital Quito. The attack took place at 6.20 p.m. (2320GMT) as he was leaving the Anderson School. He was struck by three bullets by the gunman. Villavicencio, 59, a journalist, was competing to fill the spot to be left early by current President Guillermo Lasso in elections on Aug. 20. He had built his campaign around the fight against corruption and organized crime. Dozens of migrants dead in shipwreck off coast of Italy At least 41 migrants are believed to have died in a shipwreck in the central Mediterranean last week after departing from Tunisia, Italian prosecutors and local media said on Wednesday. Four survivors told rescuers they were traveling on a boat carrying about 45 people, including three children. The boat left the Tunisian port last Thursday, but sank within a few hours after being hit by a big wave. The survivors were rescued by a cargo ship, transferred to an Italian coast guard vessel, which disembarked them in Lampedusa on Wednesday. US to restrict technology investments in China US President Joe Biden signed an executive order Wednesday to curb some of its investments in China’s technology sector. Multiple US officials who briefed reporters on the directive ahead of its public release said it is narrowly tailored to prohibit US firms from funding investment in Chinese firms that develop advanced technologies sensitive to national security. Specifically, it will prohibit US investment in Chinese firms that develop semiconductors and micro electronics, quantum information technologies, and certain artificial intelligence systems. Pakistani president dissolves parliament on advice of prime minister Pakistan’s President Arif Alvi on Wednesday dissolved the country’s parliament on the advice of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, the President’s Office said. Alvi signed the advice half an hour after it was sent by Sharif on late Wednesday night, paving the way for a caretaker setup that will hold general elections. Sharif will continue to serve as acting prime minister until the caretaker premier takes oath. NEWS IN BRIEF Niger’s junta accused French troops of breaching the country’s airspace and plotting to destabilize the West African nation. The Sudanese government threatened to end the UN mission in the war-torn country if Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ envoy briefed the Security Council, the US said Wednesday. Trkiye’s National Security Council called for preventing acts that target Islam under the “guise of freedom of expression, at the presidential complex on Wednesday.? Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Tehran resumed its operations earlier this week after more than a seven-year hiatus, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency reported on Wednesday. At least 56 people were injured on Wednesday after a powerful explosion rocked a Russian optical plant outside the capital Moscow, authorities said. Around 152 people have lost their lives in the northeastern state of Manipur since the deadly ethnic clashes broke out in the state in May, said the Indian government on Wednesday. Firefighters on Wednesday recovered 11 bodies from the burned remains of a care home in northeastern France after a fire swept through it. The new COVID-19 variant of interest EG.5 represents a “low risk” to public health on a global scale, the World Health Organization said on Wednesday. Bangladesh has reported 12 deaths from the dengue virus and a record number of hospitalizations in the last 24 hours due to infections contracted from mosquito bites, the health authority said. SPORTS UAE-based football club Emirates signs Andres Iniesta United Arab Emirates-based Emirates Football Club announced Wednesday that they have signed Andres Iniesta. The 39-year-old Spanish legend will play for the club until the end of the 2023-2024 season. Four-time Champions League winner Iniesta is regarded by many as a Barcelona and Spanish football legend. Burnley forward Wout Weghorst joins Germany’s Hoffenheim on loan Burnley’s Dutch forward Wout Weghorst on Wednesday joined German Bundesliga club Hoffenheim on loan. Weghorst, 31, previously played for Dutch clubs Emmen, Heracles, AZ Alkmaar, and Germany’s Wolfsburg. In 2022, Trkiye’s Besiktas signed Weghorst on loan from Burnley, but after the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar, he temporarily moved to Manchester United. BUSINESSand ECONOMY EU countries see soaring olive oil prices amid extreme heat ???????Olive oil production decreased in southern Europe due to extreme hot weather and drought, sending prices soaring. EU countries provide two-thirds of the global production and also produce 900,000 tons of table olive. Spain is the biggest producer. Its production was nearly 1.8 million tons five years ago but decreased to some 663,000 tons in the 2022-2023 harvest season. Sony’s PlayStation 5 sales soar 37% to 3.3 million from April – June Sales of the Sony’s PlayStation 5 gaming console jumped 37.5% annually to 3.3 million units in the April -June period of 2023, according to a financial results statement released Wednesday. Sony sold 2.4 million units in the same period in 2022, which the company refers to as its first quarter on fiscal year 2022.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Russia says it thwarted Ukrainian drone attacks on Moscow, Crimea, Kaluga

Russia on Thursday said it thwarted drone attacks conducted by Ukraine on the Moscow and Kaluga regions, as well as Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014. ‘Tonight, over the territory of the Kaluga and Moscow regions, as well as the city of Sevastopol, attempts by the Kyiv regime to carry out terrorist attacks by unmanned aerial vehicles were thwarted,’ said a statement by the Russian Defense Ministry. Two drones flying toward the capital Moscow were destroyed by Russian air defense systems over Kaluga’s Maloyaroslavetsky district and Moscow’s Odintsovsky district, the statement added. ‘Near the city of Sevastopol, two UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) were hit by on-duty air defense systems, another nine were suppressed by electronic warfare and, having not reached the target, crashed in the Black Sea,’ the statement further said. It added that no casualties or damages were reported. Ukrainian authorities have not yet commented on the attack, and independent verification of Russia’s claim is difficult due to the ongoing war.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Palestinian killed by Israeli army in West Bank

A Palestinian man was shot dead by the Israeli army in the occupied West Bank on Thursday, according to the official Palestine TV. The victim died of a serious injury he sustained during an army raid in Zawata town, west of Nablus city. Since the beginning of this year, the West Bank has been witnessing repeated Israeli army raids and settlers’ attacks on Palestinian cities and towns.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Cooperation between Cyprus & Jordan to be strengthened, ministers pledge

The excellent cooperation on defence and security issues between Cyprus and Jordan was praised by the Ministers of Defence, Justice and Agriculture during a ceremony at the Andreas Papandreou air base in Paphos on Thursday to thank Jordan for its assistance in extinguishing the recent fires in Cyprus. In addition to referring to the good level of bilateral relations, they said that cooperation on firefighting issues will be strengthened, noting the creation of a regional aerial firefighting station, promoted by the two countries. In his remarks at the ceremony, Minister of Defence, Michalis Giorgallas expressed his sincere thanks to Jordan, for its support and valuable help. ‘As you know Cyprus and Jordan have a robust military defence cooperation and we are working toward the establishment of an airborne fire station here in Cyprus’, the minister said, adding that he looks forward to seeing all present as personnel in this station. In statements on the sidelines of the ceremony, the Defence Minister said Cyprus and Jordan have a very good cooperation on issues of security and defence, adding that during President Nikos Christodoulides’ recent visit to Jordan an agreement to create an airborne fire station base was signed. Already, he added, the first actions towards the EU to financially contribute to this goal have been made. He also said that Jordan and Cyprus are two forces in the region as regards participation and contribution to regional issues. One of them is the fight against fires, he said, noting that “this cooperation, which was strengthened with the participation of the Jordanians in our effort, will continue and will be to the benefit of other countries in the region in terms of dealing with fires and the impact of climate change.’ In her remarks, Justice and Public Order Minister Anna Koukkides-Procopiou thanked the Jordanian delegation noting the Fire Service is under the ministry’s jurisdiction. ‘What makes Cyprus safer is having a good team on board” she said referring to the firefighters “and we have a good team on board. I was glad to hear this from your side this morning how effective our firefighting teams have been. But on the other hand, we also need good allies so I would like to thank you once more on behalf of the government for your efforts to be with us as quickly as possible and to operate with us side by side as effectively as possible.’ She said she hoped the remaining of the summer will be quieter adding ‘if there is any need rest assured, we will be by your side.’ Minister of Agriculture, Rural Development and the Environment, Petros Xenofontos, thanked the Jordanian charge d’affaires for Jordan’s immediate assistance to help in firefighting. ‘Your mission and your participation to firefighting protect human lives, protect houses, our forests are valuable. Thank you very much for what you have done in these five days in Cyprus.’ In remarks, Jordan’s charge d’affaires, Walid Al Qazaz, said the presence of the Jordanian firefighters here in Cyprus is a clear testament to the strong relationships Jordan has with Cyprus . ‘We have good relationships that cover almost all areas, we have strong cooperation, we have exchanges of visits at all levels, his excellency the President of Cyprus visited Jordan earlier this month, his majesty [King Abdullah II of Jordan] visited Cyprus in December 2021’ adding that many agreements and MOUs have been signed. ‘We are always standing by the side of our friendly Cypriot neighbours. We hope we don’t see the wild fires again but in case it happens again, be sure that we are by the side of our Cypriot neighbours and friends.’ At the same time, he said ‘the uncontrollable fire in Cyprus and before in Greece, Portugal, Canada, Algeria and many other places in the world, send a new wake up call to humanity that we might fight against climate change and make every effort possible to reverse course’. In his speech, he said the gathering ‘is very relevant as it comes on the heels of a challenging period and a hard time where approximately ten square km of forest and rural lands have been charred by wild fires’. Referring to President Christodoulides’ recent visit and King Abdullah II’s visit in December 2021, he said several agreements and MOUs have been signed while the two countries also cooperate on a trilateral level with Greece. He praised the Cypriot firefighters’ for their competence and self-sacrifice. ‘This has led to contain and put out the huge fires in a record time with zero human casualties. Thank you and long live the Jordanian-Cypriot friendship’, he added.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Unsafe disposal of medicines poses risks, experts tell CNA

Disposing of unused or expired medicines in the waste bin or down the drain poses risks, the Environment Department and Dr Nikolas Dietis, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Cyprus School of Medicine, told CNA, stressing the need for raising awareness among the public and proper management of these substances. According to a study published last year, 200 multiclass contaminants of emerging concern (CECs), including 168 medicinal products and transformation products (TPs), 5 artificial sweeteners, 12 industrial chemicals, and 15 other compounds were investigated in influent and effluent wastewater samples collected from 5 wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) located in Cyprus. The Department of the Environment calls on members of the public to take the medicines for proper management, in their primary packaging, at the appropriate collection points, currently the Green Points. The Department of Environment, in response to a question from CNA on the impact on the environment of discarding drugs together with household waste, said that, unused or expired medicines discarded in the waste bin, end up in landfills, together with household waste. It also noted that, in many households, this pharmaceutical waste is disposed of in the toilet and it ends up in the sewage system or the ground. These practices pose the risk of the active substances of the drugs returning to humans through the food chain, it said, adding that the presence of active substances in the environment has a direct impact on ecosystems and especially on fish through the polluted water that ends up in the sea or other bodies of water. ‘Based on the above, the rational management of waste pharmaceutical products becomes imperative in order to prevent any environmental impacts that may be caused by their reckless disposal’, it said. Dr Dietis told CNA that this was ‘a major issue’ being discussed a lot worldwide and especially in Europe, noting that, as the years go by, the production of waste related to medicines is increasing to a great extent. He referred to the guidelines of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), noting that the main factors that greatly increase the impact on the environment is expired drugs, drugs no longer used by patients due to a change in treatment, but also because the packages produced by pharmaceutical companies contain more pills than patients need. Dr. Dietis said that it was necessary to inform the public about the correct disposal of medicines, but also that there should be a check on the proper management of this waste from hospitals, health centers, nursing homes, and also in farms, with regard to medicine given to animals. He noted that producers were also part of the solution, and that at least for local drugs, local pharmaceutical companies should work with the State to regulate the packaging of drugs and reduce the number of pills in some cases. He noted however that for this, a study was needed for each drug separately. He suggested that the State creates a medicine collection system with bins in hospitals, health centers, nursing homes, and even in neighbourhoods, next to those for the recycling of other materials, as is the practice in some other European countries, he noted. Regarding producers’ responsibility, he said that they could organise drug collection campaigns at central points in cities, noting that such campaigns in Europe led to the collection of a lot of material that would otherwise have been thrown away. Dr Dietis also said that, all around the world, people can take expired medicines at the pharmacy, but that pharmacists must also be supported on how to do this correctly and in an organised manner. ‘There must be a coordination, to support pharmacists on how to do it correctly so as to inform citizens as well,’ he noted. Disposal/management —————– In terms of what the public can do as regards disposing of medicines, the Department for the Environment referred to the Regulations on Waste published last Mach in the Government Gazette, and more specifically on the management of pharmaceutical household waste, that provide that wholesale sellers or manufacturers of pharmaceutical products, will have to create a collective system for the management of the waste of pharmaceutical products of domestic origin. This means that a network of collection points will be created, where members of the public will be given the opportunity to return, free of charge, to accessible collection points such as pharmacies, in their basic packaging, their pharmaceutical waste, which will then be taken for proper management to licensed facilities, it added. Due to the presence of active substances in pharmaceutical products of domestic origin, the Environment Department said, members of the public are advised not to discard them in the garbage and drains, but to take them for proper management in their primary packaging to the appropriate collection points, that currently, and until the installation of the collection network, are the Green Points. Dr Dietis noted that, at the Shakolas Educational Center for Clinical Medicine at the University of Cyprus, they have been collecting medicines at the entrance of the Faculty, to use for research purposes. He said that, there is a special bin at the entrance of the building, noting that, they sort them out themselves and put the ones they don’t want in special bins which then the University takes for destruction. 200 contaminants of emerging concern in waste water treatment facilities in Cyprus ———————- According to a study by academics from the University of Cyprus as well as universities from Greece, the United Kingdom and China, published last August in the academic journal, ‘Science of the Total Environment’, 200 multiclass contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) encompassing 168 medicinal products and transformation products (TPs), 5 artificial sweeteners, 12 industrial chemicals, and 15 other compounds were detected in influent and effluent wastewater samples collected during 7 consecutive days from 5 wastewater treatment plants located in Cyprus. The study with the title ‘Multiclass target analysis of contaminants of emerging concern including transformation products, soil bioavailability assessment and retrospective screening as tools to evaluate risks associated with reclaimed water reuse’, notes, among other things, that considering that the effluent of WWTPs is either discharged to the aquatic environment (e.g., surface waters such as lakes and rivers) or is reused in agricultural applications (e.g., crop irrigation), ‘it is of utmost importance’ to identify and quantify CECs in these facilities. It also notes that since the presence of CECs in soil and/or crops may have adverse effects on the environment and human health, a greater understanding of these challenges may enhance and facilitate the policy making process. The authors of the study were Vasiliki G. Beretsou, Maria-Christina Nika, Kyriakos Manoli, Costas Michael, Qian Sui, Lian Lundy, D. Michael Revitt, Nikolaos S. Thomaidis and Despo Fatta-Kassinos, from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Nireas-International Water Research Center, of the University of Cyprus, the Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, the State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Environmental Risk Assessment and Control on Chemical Process, of the East China University of Science and Technology, the Shanghai Institute of Pollution Control and Ecological Security, and Middlesex University.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Cyprus and Lebanon pledge to support each other in fire response

Cyprus is standing by Lebanon and vice versa, pledged the ministers of Defence, Agriculture and Justice, during a gathering in Larnaca to thank the neighbouring country’s assistance in airborne means during the fires last week in Limassol district. The ceremony was held at the Joint Rescue Coordination Center organized by the Defence Ministry and in the presence of the ministers of Defence, Justice and Public Order and Agriculture, Rural Development and the Environment. In his remarks, Defence Minister Michalis Giorgallas said that “through difficult moments and operations, Cyprus’s relationships with its neighbours are strengthened. This was also the case with the fire in Limassol, and the response of the Lebanese Government to assist the Cypriot Republic further enhanced the relationship between our countries”. He added that “in the same way, when Lebanon needs it, Cyprus will stand by Lebanon and its people”. Minister of Agriculture, Rural Development, and Environment, Petros Xenofontos, stated that “the presence of friends from Lebanon was certainly very significant, as it reinforced the aerial resources in combating the recent fire. We thank them and wish them a safe journey back to their country.’ Minister of Justice and Public Order, Anna Koukkides-Procopiou, noted that “we are here to thank the crews from Lebanon, the team of pilots and technicians. I believe that it is very important to strengthen the bonds of friendship with our neighbours, and this ceremony demonstrates both the usefulness of good neighborly relations and helps us deepen and expand them even further.” Attache of the Lebanese Embassy in Nicosia, Queen Maryl Salame Ghayadi referred to the continuous co-operation between Cyprus and Lebanon, and said that now there was cooperation concerning the fire fighting. She said ‘I am very proud of the Lebanese army who did this mission over here’ and added that ‘Lebanon is always next to Cyprus as Cyprus is always next to Lebanon’.

Source: Cyprus News Agency