Tatarstan hosts “Modest Fashion Day” as part of Kazan Forum 2023

A total of nine Russian and foreign designers presented their collections Saturday during the “Modest Fashion Day” in Tatarstan’s capital city of Kazan.

The event was organized on the sidelines of the 14th International Economic Summit: “Russia-Islamic World: Kazan Forum 2023,”, to which Anadolu Agency is the global communications partner.

Designers include Abzaeva, Gapanovich, HADAMI, SAHARA, Su.Su, UMMAYA from Russia, Aida KaumeNOVA from Kazakhstan, SANET / Keewa from Indonesia and Senegal Fashion Show: Couleur Afrique, Touty, Kamal Raw, Edg.mery, Sidy Counda, Al Gueye.

‘Modest fashion’ refers to a trend in modest clothes due to women’s spiritual and stylistic preferences for reasons of faith, religion or personal beliefs.

Modest fashion presents economic opportunities around the globe for manufacturers, providing an alternative trend for populations of Muslim women and those that prefer modest clothes for various reasons.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey’s soft-spoken Kemal Kilicdaroglu takes on powerful Erdogan

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, 74, is in the fight of his career.

He has mounted the strongest opposition challenge to Turkey’s most powerful man, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, since he took power more than 20 years ago, but still fell short of his rival in the first round.

His chances are looking slim in the 28 May run-off vote, but Turkey’s mild-mannered opposition leader has assured supporters they have victory in their grasp.

“The will for change in the society is higher than 50%,” he insisted.

The former civil servant is the very antithesis of Turkey’s grandstanding, powerful president.

His trademark gesture for the election was initially a heart-shape gesture with his hands. But ahead of the run-off vote he has adopted a more strident tone, banging his fists on the table and raising his voice.

Seeking to capture the nationalist vote, he has highlighted his pledge to send home 3.5 million Syrian refugees within two years and accused his rival of allowing 10 million refugees into Turkey.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu was perhaps not the most obvious candidate for six opposition parties to unite behind as their best chance of victory.

He has lost several elections since he took charge of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) in 2010, when his predecessor was forced out because of an extra-marital affair.

And yet Kemal Kilicdaroglu is a highly experienced politician. He was elected in 2002, the same year Mr Erdogan’s ruling AK Party came to power.

He has survived a string of violent attacks, earning the reputation of being one of Turkey’s most-targeted politicians, and wore a bullet-proof vest at his final rallies ahead of Sunday’s vote.

In his 13 years as leader, he has broadened his party’s appeal and “embraced all the different colours in the country”, as he puts it.

He posted on social media a series of videos from his modest kitchen, often addressing young voters on highly sensitive issues such as being a Kurd or a minority Alevi, as he is.

In a soft tone, he reached out to voters by saying that he would unite all of Turkey’s different strands of society.

The CHP charts its origins back to Turkey’s modern secular founder Kemal Ataturk.

It was long considered close to the military, which has overthrown the government four times since 1960, and was always seen as a hardline party on the issue of dividing church and state. After the military coup in 1980, for example, it supported the ban on headscarves at schools and public services.

Born in December 1948, Kemal Kilicdaroglu – pronounced Kilitch-daro-lu – was the fourth of seven children brought up by a housewife and civil servant in the eastern city of Tunceli. He comes from an Alevi family – a distinct Islamic sect, and religious minority in mostly-Sunni Turkey.

He was a star student at the many schools he attended as his family following his father’s job around Turkey and later studied economics at Ankara University.

He spent years as a civil servant in Turkey’s financial bodies and won a reputation for weeding out corruption as director of the overarching Social Security Institution.

After seven years in parliament, he was selected to run for one of Turkey’s most powerful and prestigious roles, the mayor of Istanbul. Although he lost the race, he won praise for his campaign and became a very credible runner-up for the CHP with 37% of the vote.

Within a year of that success, the leader of the CHP resigned after a secret video tape emerged of an affair – and Mr Kilicdaroglu unexpectedly found himself as prime candidate for the job.

Initially he refused to run for the leadership, not wishing to take advantage of a scandal. But his stance softened and he won the race by a landslide.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan was by now at the peak of his power, becoming Turkey’s most successful modern-era prime minister by winning almost half the vote for his Justice and Development or AK Party in 2011 elections.

The CHP came a distant second, but increased its vote by five percentage points. Its leader has since struggled to go beyond winning a quarter of the vote, engulfed in party politics.

But in his 13 years in charge he has led a quiet revolution within the party. He has tried to make peace with the Islamists through gestures like attending Iftar dinners to break the fast during Ramadan, and has erased the party’s old militaristic codes.

“When I first met him, I thought that he was not a revolutionary leader but an evolutionary one,” said former party colleague Melda Onur.

“He locks on to his target, sticks to it with incredible serenity, and by the end you’re convinced. He is very decisive when he thinks that is the right thing to do.”

That is why she believes it took him 13 years to reshape his party and secure its backing to run for the presidency.

True to his background, he has also maintained strict financial discipline. “He is very careful about not spending any extra for anything unnecessary,” said close associate Okan Konuralp.

In time he introduced religious figures, Kurdish activists and women’s rights activists to the party – to prove to Turkish society that the CHP has changed.

“The CHP has a very male dominant structure, he couldn’t pull down that wall completely but he likes to work with women,” said Ms Onur.

One party colleague told the BBC he never raised his voice.

“Sometimes things drive us crazy and we cannot help but scream. Even then, Kilicdaroglu keeps his calm,” he said.

The moment anyone enters the room, he stands up and shakes hands, never talks to people sitting behind the desk, and never interrupts anyone, his colleague said.

This soft-spoken nature coupled with a passing physical resemblance to the former Indian leader have even given rise to his nickname Gandhi Kemal.

As has his peaceful response to physical attack.

He was punched twice by a visitor in parliament in 2014 while about to give a speech to his party’s MPs. Despite suffering a bruised cheek and eye, he called on colleagues to keep calm: “The path to democracy is full of obstacles.”

In 2016, his convoy was attacked by a missile by the Kurdish militant group the PKK and then the following year he escaped an attempted bombing by the militant Islamic State group.

He survived an attempted lynching in 2019 at a soldier’s funeral. As he came under attack he was taken to a nearby house where a woman urged the crowd to burn it down.

When police ushered him to safety he said afterwards: “These attempts cannot stop us.”

But it was after the failed 2016 coup that Kemal Kilicdaroglu’s reputation spread beyond Turkey.

As President Erdogan cracked down on dissent, arresting and sacking thousands of Turks seen as linked to the coup plotters, the opposition leader launched a “March for Justice”, walking 450km (280 miles) from Ankara to Istanbul.

Despite the success of his march, he chose not to challenge for the presidency the following year, waiting another five years to seize his chance.

It then took him months to convince other opposition parties to back his bid. The CHP has better speakers, and arguably higher-profile figures who won the race for mayor in Istanbul and Ankara.

But with his main rival at his weakest, party colleagues felt this was their leader’s moment.

“I have never heard a word of hatred from his mouth. He could be angry with someone but keeps calm and then forgives that person easily,” said Okan Konuralp.

Source: BBC

Italy’s flood-ravaged region still on red alert

Italy’s northern Emilia-Romagna region, hit by torrential rains earlier this week, is still on red alert for extreme weather as its struggling population tries to recover from the worst floods in about a century.

Heavy rainfall, which came after months of scorching drought, pushed more than 20 rivers out of their banks and caused up to 300 landslides in the highly-populated region, killing at least 14 people and leaving tens of thousands displaced.

Dozens of cities and small towns were pummeled by rivers of mud, forcing people to leave their homes as rescuers kept searching for the missing ones.

In the Ravenna area, a rescue helicopter crashed on Saturday during efforts to fix the local electric grid, wounding at least four people, according to reports.

The heavy death toll and devastation in the area, which includes damage worth billions of dollars in the agricultural and business sectors, has sparked a new political controversy around the response by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government.

The premier, who has called an emergency Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, is now expected to return earlier than planned from the ongoing G-7 meeting in Japan, where world leaders including US President Joe Biden expressed their solidarity and readiness to help Italy.

Over the past few days, environmental experts have highlighted how such extreme weather events are becoming more frequent in Italy, underlining the need for immediate actions.

Civil Protection Minister Nello Musumeci warned earlier this week that Italy has to dramatically rethink its flood protection measures nationwide, stressing that ‘everything must change’ and that the key going forward would be ‘prevention.’

Source: Anadolu Agency

Londonderry woman dies in Buncrana crash

A 21-year-old woman who died after being hit by a Garda (Irish police) patrol car in County Donegal was from Londonderry.

She has been named locally as Rebecca Browne from Galliagh.

The incident happened at 03:15 BST on Sunday at Ludden, near Buncrana.

No one else was injured in the collision.

Father Michael McCaughey from the Parish of the Three Patrons in Derry visited Rebecca’s family in their home on Sunday evening.

“I met Rebecca’s mother, father, brother and the wider family circle,” he said.

“They are heartbroken and acknowledged just how much Rebecca was loved.”

Donegal councillor Rena Donaghey told RTÉ she believed the young woman had been with a friend in Buncrana for the weekend.

A garda spokesperson said the collision has been referred to the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission.

Gardaí are appealing to anyone with information about the incident to contact them.

Source: BBC

Germany investigating suspected poisoning of exiled Russian women: Report

German police are investigating the possible poisoning of two exiled Russian women in Berlin, local media reported on Sunday.

The women attended a conference by Russian Kremlin critic Mikhail Khordorkovsky in Berlin at the end of April, according to German newspaper Welt am Sonntag.

A case has been opened by the Berlin State Criminal Police Office, the report said, without giving any further details.

An earlier report by Russian investigative media outlet Agentstvo identified one of the women as Natalia Arno, an activist and head of the Free Russia Foundation.

In a social media post, Arno complained of ‘strange symptoms’ and ‘acute pain,’ expressing suspicion that she may have been poisoned by ‘some nerve agent.’

Arno said she immediately returned to the US and sought medical help.

The other woman was a journalist who recently left Russia, according to Agentstvo.

It said her symptoms may have started before the April 29-30 event in Berlin.

She went to the Charite University Hospital in Berlin, where Russian opposition politician Alexey Navalny was treated for poisoning in August 2020.

Western countries and Navalny himself blamed Russia for the poisoning, a claim denied by the Kremlin.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Christian Brothers accused of engaging in ‘slave trade’

A 74-year-old County Limerick victim of child sex abuse by Christian Brothers has accused the congregation of having been engaged in the “slave trade”.

Tom Wall was just three when he was sent by court order to an industrial school in the village of Glin after his unmarried mother left a mother-and-baby home in nearby Newcastle West.

Industrial schools were established in the mid-19th Century and often run by religious orders to care for neglected, orphaned or abandoned children.

The Christian Brothers opened their first school in 1802 to provide education and help the poor.

In 2009, they issued an apology, following a damning public inquiry into child abuse in Catholic-run institutions in the Republic of Ireland.

The congregation said it accepted the findings of the Ryan Commission “with shame” and was “deeply sorry for the hurt” it had caused through abuse and its failure to respond to abuse allegations.

Mr Wall, who remained a pupil at Glin until he was 16, worked for the brothers for another seven years until the order decided to leave the area in 1973.

He said he asked the brother in charge to be allowed to keep some of the documents that he had been asked to burn, as a personal memento of his years there.

He is adamant that the brother agreed to his request.

Mr Wall, who has written about his sexual abuse from the age of eight to 15, says the documents he kept include evidence of “slavery”.

Those who left the school at around the age of 16, he added, were “booked out” to “masters” for three years as indentured labour.

Indentured or unpaid labour was more common in the past than it is now.

“They are not allowed to marry; they are not allowed to go to the cinema; they must not divulge their master’s secrets; they cannot absent themselves from their masters,” he continued, quoting from a 1902 contract which the BBC has seen.

“Their wages for the first three years have to go to the Christian Brothers in Glin. It’s a total slave trade.”

At that time, British rule extended over the whole of Ireland.

Order wants records back

The Congregation of the Christian Brothers disputes that Tom Wall was allowed to keep the documents in 1973 and is seeking their return.

The order said it wants the records for its archive.

Its leader in Ireland, Brother Edmund Garvey, said: “The European Province of Christian Brothers neither had nor has any vested interest in seeking the return of the Glin documents for any reason save to ensure that our archives are complete as the documentation contains important family history, which we believe would be helpful in assisting any inquiries from former residents.”

He said the brothers would have no objection to the original papers being donated to a university or the Irish state.

But Mr Wall responded: “Any organisation involved in child abuse and rape shouldn’t hold records of child abuse and rape.”

He said that among the items he burned include written attempts by family members to contact children.

He added that his own mother tried to contact him four times.

The issue of the ownership of the documents is set to be decided in a civil court case in Limerick.

After he left the brothers’ employment, Mr Wall worked for 40 years at Glin Castle, where he was head gardener for Desmond FitzGerald, the last Knight of Glin, a member of the aristocratic Anglo-Norman FitzGerald dynasty.

The castle and grounds are now owned by the late knight’s eldest daughter, Catherine, who is married to the English actor Dominic West.

Source: BBC

Trkiye strongly condemns far-right Israeli minister’s Al-Aqsa raid

Trkiye on Sunday strongly condemned Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir’s storming of the Al-Aqsa Mosque complex in occupied East Jerusalem.

‘We strongly condemn the storming of Al-Haram Al-Sharif on 21 May by the Israeli Minister of National Security under the protection of Israeli security forces in clear breach of the international law,’ the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a written statement.

Ben-Gvir, a far-right figure known for his anti-Palestinian views, forced his way into the flashpoint site early Sunday under Israeli police protection.

In a video message from the Al-Aqsa courtyard, he claimed Israel’s ownership of the complex, saying ‘we own Jerusalem and all the land of Israel.’

Ankara called on Israel to ‘act responsibly, and to put an end to all kinds of provocative actions violating the historical status of Al-Haram Al-Sharif that is based on the international law.’

‘It is in no way acceptable that Israeli Government members challenge the historical status of Al-Haram Al-Sharif in this manner and commit inflammatory and fascistic actions,’ the Turkish ministry added.

Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay also condemned the move. In a tweet, he urged Israeli authorities to respect the legal status of Al-Aqsa and ‘to end these actions as soon as possible.’

Ibrahim Kalin, the Turkish presidential spokesman, slammed Ben-Gvir’s ‘provocative and unlawful act,’ terming it ‘unacceptable.’

‘We will continue to oppose all attempts to change the religious and legal status of the Al-Aqsa Mosque complex,’ he said on Twitter.

This was the second time Ben-Gvir has entered the complex since becoming national security minister in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government last December.

He previously force his way into the site on Jan. 3, days after taking office, becoming the first serving Israeli minister to enter the mosque in five years.

Last November, Israeli President Isaac Herzog warned in a leaked audio that ‘the whole world is worried’ about Ben-Gvir’s far-right views.

Since 2003, Israel has allowed settlers into the flashpoint compound almost on a daily basis with the exception of Fridays and Saturdays.

For Muslims, Al-Aqsa represents the world’s third-holiest site. Jews call the area the Temple Mount, saying it was the site of two Jewish temples in ancient times.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem, where Al-Aqsa is located, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War.

It annexed the entire city in 1980, a move never recognized by the international community.

Source: Anadolu Agency

White theatergoers urged to stay away from all-black production

The Theater Royal Stratford East in London has said that white visitors should not attend an upcoming production of ‘Tambo & Bones’ in order to create a “safe, private” space for an “all-black-identifying audience” to attend a play which examines race relations issues in the United States.

The so-called ‘Black Out’ performance of the play, which is scheduled to take place in July, is intended to foster a “purposeful creation of an environment in which an all-black-identifying audience can experience and discuss an event free from the white gaze,” according to promotional material associated with the production.

However, Festus Akinbusoye, the UK’s first-ever black police and crime commissioner has “strongly urged” the theater to cancel its ‘Black Out’ event.

“Society is richer and stronger when an understanding of each other’s cultures and stories are shared and heard,” Akinbusoye said in comments published by The Telegraph on Saturday. “I believe the ‘Black Out’ concept runs contrary to this education and enrichment ethos.”

Akinbusoye’s comments were endorsed “100%” by Samuel Kasumu, the former race adviser for the UK government who has launched his candidacy for next year’s mayoral elections in London.

‘Tambo & Bones’, which opened in the United States in 2022 to lukewarm reviews, examines 300 years of African-American history through the lens of its two protagonists: Tambo, a businessman, and Bones, who is characterized as a hustler. Throughout the course of the production, the pair start as minstrels before becoming rappers and finally members of the ‘Black Lives Matter’ social justice movement.

Matthew Xia, the director of the play, said of the play in a press release this month that it was “imperative” that ‘Black Out’ performances be held in order for black theatergoers to “experience productions that explore complex, nuanced race-related issues’’ in a “private and safe space.”

The Theater Royal Stratford East has also indicated that it will resist altering its upcoming schedule due to the backlash. “We have chosen to embrace this initiative for one performance, during the play’s month-long run, as a space for black audiences to experience the play as a community,” a spokesperson for the theater said, according to The Telegraph on Saturday.

Source: Russia Today

Israeli gov’t convenes inside Al-Buraq Wall tunnels of Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa

The Israeli government held its weekly meeting on Sunday inside the Western Wall [Al-Buraq Wall] tunnels of Al-Aqsa Mosque complex in occupied East Jerusalem.

The meeting, headed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, was held inside the tunnels to mark the anniversary of Israel’s occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967.

“For the sake of the unity of Jerusalem, we must continue to maintain this government,” Netanyahu said at the start of the meeting.

Sunday’s meeting was the first to have been held inside the tunnels adjacent to Al-Aqsa complex since 2017.

It came shortly after far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir forced his way into Al-Aqsa Mosque complex on Sunday, in his second such intrusion since he joined the Netanyahu government late last year.

Al-Aqsa Mosque is the world’s third-holiest site for Muslims. Jews call the area the “Temple Mount,” claiming it was the site of two Jewish temples in ancient times.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem, where Al-Aqsa is located, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. It annexed the entire city in 1980, in a move never recognized by the international community.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Moscow warns of fallout from F-16 deliveries to Kiev

If Western countries decide to send F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine, it could backfire on them, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Grushko warned on Saturday.

Speaking to TASS news agency, Grushko noted the West’s continual “movement up the escalation ladder,” following reports by several US media outlets that Washington would not stop its allies from sending modern fighter jets to Kiev, which remains locked in conflict with Moscow.

“We see that Western countries are sticking to the escalation scenario. It is fraught with colossal risks for themselves,” he said.

Grushko noted that despite the assistance of Western countries, Russia “has all the necessary means to achieve its goals” with regard to the military operation in Ukraine.

On Friday, NBC reported that the US and its allies plan to provide Ukraine with F-16s, though this does not mean that the aircraft would be supplied directly by Washington. Several other outlets also claimed that the administration of US President Joe Biden would not block its allies from transferring the jets to Kiev.

A day later, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan stated that Washington would support a joint program to train Ukrainian pilots on modern jets such as F-16s, adding that “we will work with our allies to determine when planes will be delivered, who will be delivering them, and how many.”

He also said that the jets would only be used for defensive purposes and would not venture into Russian territory. “The Ukrainians have consistently indicated that they are prepared to follow through on that,” he claimed.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova slammed his remarks, describing them as “an imitation of law-based behavior.” She added that Washington lacks any legal or moral grounds to make these assertions, which are “false and misleading from the very beginning.”

Zakharova said the US is doing this “under the guise of some kind of pseudo-humanitarian principle” in order to achieve its own goals.

“Everyone understands perfectly well that the United States is waging a hybrid war against the entire region… We are talking not only about a stand-off with our country, but also about using the Ukrainian people’s territory to achieve their objectives,” she added.

Source: Russia Today