Trkiye’s ill, disabled citizens vote from home

Officials from provincial election boards in Trkiye took mobile ballot boxes to the residence of citizens who could not step out to vote due to illness or disability in the country’s first-ever presidential runoff on Sunday.

In the southeastern province of Adiyaman, portable cabins were brought to the residence of 18-year-old Sumeyye Sahin by local officials. She was informed about the voting process.

Speaking to Anadolu, Sahin thanked the officials who came to her house and wished the nation good luck for the elections.

Elsewhere, 90-year-old Osman Erdil said he could not go out to vote due to old age related illness and thanked the officials who brought the ballot box to his residence.

The ‘mobile ballot box’ system was created for voters who are bedridden due to illness or disability.

Millions of voters started heading to the polls in Trkiye starting 8 a.m. local time (0500GMT).

A total of 191,885 ballot boxes have been set up for voters in the country.

Voters will choose between President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is seeking reelection, and the main opposition candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

Source: Anadolu Agency

EU, NATO urge Kosovo to de-escalate, not take unilateral, destabilizing steps

EU foreign police chief Josep Borrell Sunday said that the bloc and NATO have urged Kosovo authorities to de-escalate the tension in northern municipalities where ethnic Serbs live.

Borrell said he spoke with NATO’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg about the situation in the north of Kosovo.

‘We agree that Pristina must de-escalate and not take unilateral, destabilizing steps. (We) Appreciate the continuous good coordination between European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo EULEX and NATO’s Kosovo Force (KFOR) in ensuring a safe and secure environment,’ said Borrell.

Tension rose between Belgrade and Pristina on Friday after police in Kosovo clashed with local Serbs who gathered in front of the municipal building to block the newly elected ethnic Albanian mayor from entering his office.

Police in riot gear were deployed around the premises, along with the EU Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo and NATO Kosovo Forces personnel.

Stun grenades and tear gas injured at least 10 people after a police vehicle was set on fire and automatic gunfire was heard, according to media reports.

Serbia ordered its army Friday to advance to the border with Kosovo and urged NATO to stop the violence against local Serbs in Kosovo.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic urged the army and security forces to be combat-ready.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Anatomy of a Fall: French thriller wins Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or prize

French murder mystery film Anatomy of a Fall has taken the top prize at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.

Director Justine Triet won the Palme d’Or for her tense courtroom drama, which tells the story of a writer accused of her husband’s murder.

She becomes the third female director ever to win the prestigious prize, which was first awarded in 1955.

Her thriller stars German actress Sandra Hüller, who also stars in the Cannes runner-up, The Zone of Interest.

As she accepted the award, Triet slammed the French government over its response to recent pension protests.

“These protests were… repressed in a shocking way,” she said in her speech, after being presented with the award by Hollywood star Jane Fonda.

President Emmanuel Macron’s reforms of the pension system, which include raising the retirement age from 62 to 64, have caused huge protests in France.

Triet also criticised what she called the government’s “commercialisation of culture” – leading France’s Culture Minister Rima Abdul Malak to hit back, saying she was “gobsmacked” by the “unfair” comments.

The Grand Prix, the second-highest prize, went to British director Jonathan Glazer for The Zone of Interest, an adaptation of the late Martin Amis’s novel of the same name about a family living next to Auschwitz.

Meanwhile, the best actor award went to Japan’s Koji Yakusho for his role as a middle-aged Tokyo man who cleans toilets in Wim Wenders’ Perfect Days, and Turkey’s Merve Dizdar was named best actress for About Dry Grasses.

And Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung won best director for Pot-au-Feu, a love story starring Juliette Binoche and Benoît Magimel set in a 19th century French chateau.

The festival was one of the biggest in years for celebrity names on the red carpet – Hollywood legends Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Quentin Tarantino, Isabella Rossellini and Sean Penn all made appearances.

Harrison Ford also attended to receive an honorary Palme d’Or ahead of the screening of his new film, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.

The US star, 80, said he was “deeply moved and humbled” to be honoured with the award.

The Palme d’Or is the highest prize awarded at the festival and was introduced in 1955 by the festival’s organising committee.

Triet beat 21 other films in competition for the accolade, seeing off tough competition from new films by acclaimed directors including Wes Anderson and Ken Loach.

Source: BBC

No one lost in Sunday’s election: Trkiye’s communications director

ANKARA (AA) – All of Trkiye won in Sunday’s elections, Communications Director Fahrettin Altun said, amid President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s clear lead in the presidential runoff towards his reelection.

“He won in a way that no one lost. Under the leadership of our President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, we overcame the so-called insurmountable obstacles one by one,” Altun said on Twitter.

“There is no stop in the Century of Trkiye, we keep going,’ he added.

His remarks came amid Erdogan’s lead in the presidential runoff with 53.41% of the vote, while opposition candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu has 46.59%, with 75.42% of the votes counted, according to Ahmet Yener, chairman of the Supreme Election Council (YSK).

On May 14, no candidate won the required 50% in the first round, triggering the presidential runoff, although Erdogan took the lead with 49.52%. On that day Erdogan’s electoral alliance also won a majority of seats in parliament.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ukraine war: Kyiv hit by new massive Russian drone attack

Russia has carried out a new massive drone attack on Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

Kyiv’s mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said a man died when drone wreckage fell near a petrol station. A woman was injured.

Overall, Russia launched a record 54 so-called kamikaze drones on Ukrainian targets, 52 of which were shot down, Ukraine’s Air Force reported.

Russia – which launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022 – has stepped up its attacks on Kyiv, seeking to overwhelm the capital’s defences.

At least two high-rise buildings in different districts of the capital caught fire after being hit by falling drone fragments.

Kyiv officials also reported that warehouses in the southern Holosiyivsky district had been set ablaze.

More than 40 drones were downed over the capital overnight, Ukrainian officials said. This information has not been independently verified.

But President Volodymyr Zelensky praised the air defence and rescue services, saying: “You look up to destroy enemy missiles, aircraft, helicopters, and drones. Every time you shoot down enemy drones and missiles, lives are saved… you are heroes!”

Kyiv resident Anastasiia said that she was asleep at home when she was woken up by the sound of a drone flying “very close” to her window.

“I then saw a big flash of light inside the flat. At first it was yellow, then bright orange and then blinding white. It was so bright that I could not see anything in the flat,” she told the BBC, adding that it all went “very quiet” during the flashes and that the sound of the explosions came “two or three seconds after the flash. It was very loud, like thunder.”

“Those two or three seconds felt like a very long time,” she said. “The bright light was transformed into total darkness. I wanted to check if there was any damage. I could not understand what happened. I was in shock so I did not feel scared. I could not understand if I and my flat were OK.”

Anastasiia said she only realised she was still alive when she heard the sound of car alarms in the street. “When people read the news about drones being intercepted, this is what it means in reality. Then I went back to sleep until my friend brought me breakfast and I realised that we have to appreciate every moment of life.”

Some officials accused Russia of targeting Kyiv deliberately as residents prepared to celebrate Kyiv Day – the anniversary of the city’s foundation more than 1,500 years ago and a popular holiday before the war.

Earlier on Sunday, air raid alerts were activated in 12 regions of Ukraine, from Volyn in the north-west to Dnipropetrovsk in the south-east. There were also reports of explosions in the city of Zhytomyr, west of Kyiv.

In its recent attacks, Russia has been using so-called kamikaze drones as well as a range of cruise and ballistic missiles.

The frequency of the Russian attacks on Kyiv and elsewhere has been increasing as Ukraine steps up its preparations for a counter-offensive.

On Saturday, one of Ukraine’s most senior security officials told the BBC the country was ready to launch such an operation.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of the powerful National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine, said an assault to retake territory from President Vladimir Putin’s occupying forces could begin “tomorrow, the day after tomorrow or in a week”.

Ukraine has been planning a counter-offensive for months. But it has wanted as much time as possible to train troops and to receive military equipment from Western allies.

In the meantime, Russian forces have been preparing their defences in the seized regions of south-eastern Ukraine.

Drone attacks by both sides have been rising. Russia has been targeting not just Ukraine’s critical national infrastructure but also military targets.

In particular, Russia seems to be trying not only to deplete Ukraine’s stock of air defence missiles but also to damage the launch systems themselves.

In turn, Ukraine has been targeting key locations in parts of the country occupied by Russian forces. Those include command and control sites, logistical supply lines including oil storage centres. Ahead of Ukraine’s much expected counter-offensive, the tempo of military exchanges between both sides appears to be rising.

In recent weeks, Russia has blamed Kyiv for heavy artillery and mortar shelling on the region of Belgorod. On Sunday, Belgorod’s governor ordered all schools along the border with Ukraine and in Belgorod city to close for the summer with immediate effect.

Speaking to the BBC, Andrei Kelin, Russia’s ambassador to the UK, said his country had “enormous resources” and it was yet to “act very seriously”.

Warning that supplies of weapons to Ukraine risk escalating the war to levels not seen so far, he added: “Sooner or later, of course, this escalation may get a new dimension which we do not need and we do not want.”

Source: BBC

US court rules supervised release for suspect in Turkish House attack in New York

A US court on Saturday ordered supervised release for a suspect accused of attacking the Turkevi Center or Turkish House in New York City earlier this week.

Recep Akbiyik, 29, was charged with attempted robbery, terrorism, possession of weapons for a crime, making terrorist threats, criminal damage, and threatening.

The charges were read out to him through an interpreter in the New York City Criminal Court.

The judge has prohibited Akbiyik from approaching the Turkish House and its vicinity.

The hearing was adjourned until July 25.

The suspect was also referred to the Psychiatry and Neurology Department of Bellevue Hospital in New York in order to assess his mental condition.

On Wednesday, authorities identified Akbiyik as the primary suspect in the early Monday attack that damaged the building.

Video footage obtained by Anadolu shows an assailant smashing the windows of the building at 3.14 a.m. with a crowbar.

The suspect was taken into custody on Friday.

The center houses diplomatic offices, including Trkiye’s UN Mission and New York Consulate General.

Turkish authorities strongly condemned the attack and urged their US counterparts to provide necessary protection to ensure the safety of its diplomatic missions.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Why Australia decided to quit its vaping habit

“The horse has bolted now, they are addicted,” says Chris, a high school teacher in New South Wales.

He’s talking about students in his class, teenagers, who can’t stop vaping.

He sees the effect of the candy-flavoured, nicotine-packed e-cigarettes on young minds every day, with children even vaping in class.

“The ones who are deepest into it will just get up out of their seat, or they’ll be fidgeting or nervous. The worst offenders will just walk out because they’re literally in withdrawal.”

Those who are most addicted need nicotine patches or rehabilitation, he says, talking about 13 and 14-year-olds.

Earlier this month the government decided enough is enough and introduced a range of new restrictions. Despite vapes already being illegal for many, under new legislation they will become available by prescription only.

The number of vaping teenagers in Australia has soared in recent years and authorities say it is the “number one behavioural issue” in schools across the country.

And they blame disposable vapes – which some experts say could be more addictive than heroin and cocaine – but for now are available in Australia in every convenience store, next to the chocolate bars at the counter.

For concerned teachers like Chris, their hands have been tied.

“If we suspect they have a vape, all we can really do is tell them to go to the principal’s office.

“At my old school, my head teacher told me he wanted to install vape detector alarms in the toilet, but apparently we weren’t allowed to because that would be an invasion of privacy.”

E-cigarettes have been sold as a safer alternative to tobacco, as they do not produce tar – the primary cause of lung cancer.

Some countries continue to promote them with public health initiatives to help cigarette smokers switch to a less deadly habit.

Last month, the UK government announced plans to hand out free vaping starter kits to one million smokers in England to get smoking rates below 5% by 2030.

But Australia’s government says that evidence that e-cigarettes help smokers quit is insufficient for now. Instead, research shows it may push young vapers into taking up smoking later in life.

‘Generation Vape’

Vapes, or e-cigarettes, are lithium battery-powered devices that have cartridges filled with liquids containing nicotine, artificial flavourings, and other chemicals.

The liquid is heated and turned into a vapour and inhaled into the user’s lungs.

Vaping took off from the mid-2000s and there were some 81 million vapers worldwide in 2021, according to the Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction group.

Fuelling the rise is the mushrooming popularity of flavoured vapes designed to appeal to the young.

These products can contain far higher volumes of nicotine than regular cigarettes, while some devices sold as ‘nicotine-free’ can actually hold large amounts.

The chemical cocktail also contains formaldehyde, and acetaldehyde – which have been linked to lung disease, heart disease, and cancer.

There’s also a suggestion of an increased risk of stroke, respiratory infection, and impaired lung function.

Experts warn not enough is known about the long-term health effects. But some alarming data has already been drawn out.

In 2020, US health authorities identified more than 2,800 cases of e-cigarette or vaping-related lung injury. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found 68 deaths attributed to that injury.

In Australia, a major study by leading charity The Cancer Council found more than half of all children who had ever vaped had used an e-cigarette they knew contained nicotine and thought that vaping was a socially acceptable behaviour.

School-age children were being supplied with e-cigarettes through friends or “dealers” inside and outside school, or from convenience stores and tobacconists, the report said.

Teens also reported purchasing vapes through social media, websites and at pop-up vape stores, the Generation Vape project found.

“Whichever way teenagers obtain e-cigarettes, they are all illegal, yet it’s happening under the noses of federal and state authorities”, report author and Cancer Council chair Anita Dessaix said.

“All Australian governments say they’re committed to ensuring e-cigarettes are only accessed by smokers with a prescription trying to quit – yet a crisis in youth e-cigarette use is unfolding in plain view.”

In addition to the government’s move to ban the import of all non-pharmaceutical vaping products – meaning they can now only be bought with a prescription – all single-use disposable vapes will be made illegal.

The volume and concentration of nicotine in e-cigarettes will also be restricted, and both flavours and packaging must be plain and carrying warning labels.

But these new measures are not actually all that drastic, says public health physician Professor Emily Banks from the Australian National University.

“Australia is not an outlier. It is unique to have a prescription-only model, but other places actually ban them completely, and that includes almost all of Latin America, India, Thailand and Japan.”

‘We have been duped’

Health Minister Mark Butler said the new vaping regulations will close the “biggest loophole in Australian healthcare history”.

“Just like they did with smoking… ‘Big Tobacco’ has taken another addictive product, wrapped it in shiny packaging and added sweet flavours to create a new generation of nicotine addicts.”

“We have been duped”, he said.

Medical experts agree. Prof Banks argues that the promotion of e-cigarettes as a “healthier” alternative was a classic “sleight-of-hand” from the tobacco industry.

As such vaping has become “normalised” in Australia, and in the UK too.

“There’s over 17,000 flavours, and the majority of use is not for smoking cessation”, she tells the BBC.

“They’re being heavily marketed towards children and adolescents. People who are smoking and using e-cigarettes – that’s the most common pattern of use, dual use.”

Professor Banks says authorities need to “de-normalise” vaping among teenagers and make vapes much harder to get hold of.

“Kids are interpreting the fact that they can very easily get hold of [vapes] as evidence [they’re safe], and they’re actually saying, ‘well, if they were that unsafe, I wouldn’t be able to buy one at the coffee shop’.

But could stricter controls make it harder for people who do turn to vapes hoping to quit or cut down on tobacco?

“It is important to bear in mind that for some people, e-cigarettes have really helped. But we shouldn’t say ‘this is great for smokers to quit’, says Prof Banks.

“We know from Australia, from the US, from Europe, that two-thirds to three-quarters of people who quit smoking successfully, do so unaided.”

“You’re trying to bring these [vapes] in saying they’re a great way to quit smoking, but actually we’ve got bubble gum flavoured vapes being used by 13-year-olds in the school toilets. That is not what the community signed up for.”

Source: BBC

New Greek parliament sworn in only to be dissolved by Tuesday

The new Greek parliament, which came into being after the May 21 general election, was sworn in on Sunday evening.

The oath-taking ceremony of the 300 lawmakers took place in the historical parliament building in the capital city of Athens in the presence of President Katerina Sakellaropoulou and caretaker Prime Minister Ioannis Sarmas.

Speaker, and deputy speakers of the parliament will be elected on Monday.

However, it is expected that the new parliament will be dissolved through a presidential decree on Monday or Tuesday after it has been established that it is impossible to form a coalition government.

The second election is expected to be held on June 25, or July 2 at the latest.

With all the votes counted on May 22, the New Democracy (ND) party won 40.79% – twice the main opposition SYRIZA’s 20.07%. Socialist PASOK came in third at 11.46%, followed by Greek Communist Party with 7.23%. The far-right populist Greek Solution party came in fifth with 4.45%.

On May 22, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, also the leader of the ND party, returned the mandate, saying he wanted fresh polls for his New Democracy to form a single-party government.

On May 23, Alexis Tsipras, leader of the main opposition SYRIZA party, and Nikos Androulakis, leader of the social-democratic PASOK leader turned down the mandates pointing out the impossibility of forming a coalition government.

On May 24, Ioannis Sarmas, former president of the Court of Audit, was sworn in as the caretaker prime minister.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Portugal housing crisis: ‘I’ll have to move back in with mum’

“The landlady’s been chasing me since 2018, she says she needs the flat – now there’s an eviction notice.”

Georgina Simões is a carer at a nursing home in the Portuguese capital Lisbon. She earns just above the minimum wage.

Her rent, at €300 (£262) a month, is low by the city’s current standards. But she still has to work two jobs to afford it. And conditions at the property are poor – she can’t shower because water leaks into the neighbours’ flat.

“I don’t leave because when I look for houses my salary isn’t enough, even to pay rent. Rent prices are above the wages we have in Portugal.”

Georgina’s circumstances are far from unique. Average rent in Lisbon is now just over €2,000, while the minimum wage is about €760.

Portugal is currently grappling with a severe housing crisis, triggered by an increase in foreign investment in property and a lack of affordable new homes.

But it’s not simply an issue of supply. Researcher and activist Rita Silva, who helped set up the housing movement Habita, says there are “more houses than people, but prices don’t go down”.

She adds that the current crisis – which has sparked numerous campaigns pushing for more affordable housing – has spread across the country over several years following the financial crisis of 2008.

The case involving Georgina, the carer, is now in the courts, and she hopes to remain at her property for a further six months. Her lawyer is trying to buy her that time.

What happens if she loses, I ask.

“I’ll be out on the streets,” she says. “I don’t have a chance, I don’t know what will happen. I just need a roof to sleep under – I spend my life at work.”

Joelsy Pacheco, meanwhile, juggles two jobs as a nurse on average for 16 hours a day, working at an intensive care unit at one of Lisbon’s main hospitals as well as at an NGO.

“Most of my wages go on rent, not to mention bills, food, transport,” she says. “With just one job, it would be almost impossible.”

Her lease will end later this year, and she is worried her rent will rise.

“Where would I go next?” she asks. “It’s likely I’ll have to move back in with my mum, far away from work – and I’ll have to restructure my entire life.”

Earlier this year, Portuguese comedian and activist Diogo Faro unintentionally became one of the faces of the affordable housing movement, after posting a video on social media about soaring rent prices in Lisbon.

Soon, his inbox was flooded with messages.

“There are divorced couples who can’t move out because they can’t afford it, which I think is brutal. Older people that are choosing between paying rent or medication, so they’re shortening their lives to have a roof,” he says.

As he received more and more stories like these, the comic got together with a few friends and started the movement Casa é um Direito (Housing is a Right).

His and other housing movements planned a demonstration that drew more than 30,000 people to the streets of Lisbon. The protests then spread to other cities, such as Porto and Braga.

“We’ve called the protests A House To Live, because people are desperate. They want a house to rest, play with their kids, to live,” says Diogo Faro, who sees this as just the beginning of the fight.

Lisbon’s mayor Carlos Moedas has described the housing issue as “the biggest crisis in our generation”.

He made the comment in April, while launching the construction of a new affordable rent development in Entrecampos, which will provide 152 new homes.

Schemes have also been set up to help those unable to afford the high rental prices, with local authorities offering to pay a third of the cost, says Lisbon’s housing and development councillor Filipa Roseta.

A third of Lisbon’s historical centre is unoccupied, according to geographer and housing researcher Luís Mendes, and recent cases suggest the state is making the situation worse.

When a few shanty houses were destroyed in March, eight families were left homeless and had to be sent to emergency accommodation.

“We’re talking about rent prices in Lisbon that are higher than some of the richest areas of Berlin, for example, where there’s been a rent cap. Not to mention the difference in wages,” says Luís.

“In Lisbon there are areas where an 80 sq m house is €1,200 a month. Well, that’s the average salary of a Lisboeta [Lisbon resident]. So we’re talking about prohibitive amounts – I would even say obscene.”

He says factors leading to the country’s current housing crisis include what he refers to as “touristification” – when the rise in popularity of holiday rentals diverts homes from residential use to tourism.

Areas like the historical neighbourhood of Alfama, known as the home of the Portuguese musical genre Fado, now have 60% of their houses in short-term rental use.

“What are tourists going to see? Each other?” jokes Diogo Faro.

Then there are the government measures aimed at attracting foreign investment through tax-free schemes for investment funds, digital nomads, and – most of all – Portuguese Golden Visas.

“Golden Visas allowed investors from outside the EU to get a resident visa in Portugal to invest, and that would work as a way into the Schengen Area.

“Often they would redo a house, but it would still be empty. Many times those properties would then be sold time and time again, and that created a distortion on the housing market and is one of the causes of the housing crisis,” says Luís.

As part of a new programme for housing, the government is putting a stop to Golden Visas and short-term rentals permits, as well as limiting rent increases to 2%.

For most, though, it’s too little, too late.

Source: BBC

Iraq says electricity link with Jordan to start production on July 1

Iraq said that an electricity grid interconnection with Jordan will start production on July 1.

‘Production will start with a capacity of 50 megawatts in the first phase,’ Electricity Ministry spokesman Ahmed Moussa said in statements quoted by state news agency INA.

He said production had been scheduled to start in June but ‘was delayed due to weather conditions and arrangements on the Jordanian side.’

There was no confirmation yet from the Jordanian authorities.

Iraq generates some 19,000-21,000 megawatts, but the country’s actual need tops 30,000 megawatts, according to ministry officials.

For years, Baghdad has imported 1,200 megawatts of electricity from neighboring Iran to feed its local electric power plants.

Last year, Iraq signed a memorandum of understanding with Saudi Arabia for electricity interconnection between the two neighbors.

*Writing by Ikram Kouachi

Source: Anadolu Agency