Israeli forces arrest 55 Palestinians in West Bank

RAMALLAH: The Israeli army arrested 55 Palestinians in various areas of the West Bank on Sunday, bringing the total number of detainees since last weekend to 455, according to the Palestinian Prisoners Club.

“Israeli forces arrested 55 Palestinians from cities and towns in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem,” club spokesperson Amani Farajneh told Anadolu.

The Israeli army has arrested more than 455 Palestinians since Oct. 7, coinciding with the start of the Israeli war on Gaza, Farajneh added.

There was no comment from the Israeli authorities on the group’s statement.

An Anadolu correspondent also monitored an arrest campaign carried out by the Israeli army in the Al-Amari refugee camp near Ramallah in the West Bank.

Israel has a total of 5,800 Palestinians detained its prisons, according to the Prisoners’ Club.

In a dramatic escalation of Middle East tensions, last weekend Israeli forces launched a sustained and forceful military campaign against the Gaza Strip, a response to a military offensive by the Palestinian group Hamas in Israeli territories.

The conflict began when Hamas initiated Operation Al-Aqsa Flood against Israel, a multi-pronged surprise attack including a barrage of rocket launches and infiltrations into Israel via land, sea, and air.

Hamas said the operation was in retaliation for the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and Israeli settlers’ growing violence against Palestinians.

The Israeli military then launched Operation Swords of Iron against Hamas targets within the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s response has extended into cutting water and electricity supplies to Gaza, further worsening the living conditions in an area that has endured a crippling siege since 2007, as well as ordering over 1 million Gazans in the northern strip to evacuate to the south.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

Israeli forces arrest 55 Palestinians in West Bank

RAMALLAH: The Israeli army arrested 55 Palestinians in various areas of the West Bank on Sunday, bringing the total number of detainees since last weekend to 455, according to the Palestinian Prisoners Club.

“Israeli forces arrested 55 Palestinians from cities and towns in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem,” club spokesperson Amani Farajneh told Anadolu.

The Israeli army has arrested more than 455 Palestinians since Oct. 7, coinciding with the start of the Israeli war on Gaza, Farajneh added.

There was no comment from the Israeli authorities on the group’s statement.

An Anadolu correspondent also monitored an arrest campaign carried out by the Israeli army in the Al-Amari refugee camp near Ramallah in the West Bank.

Israel has a total of 5,800 Palestinians detained its prisons, according to the Prisoners’ Club.

In a dramatic escalation of Middle East tensions, last weekend Israeli forces launched a sustained and forceful military campaign against the Gaza Strip, a response to a military offensive by the Palestinian group Hamas in Israeli territories.

The conflict began when Hamas initiated Operation Al-Aqsa Flood against Israel, a multi-pronged surprise attack including a barrage of rocket launches and infiltrations into Israel via land, sea, and air.

Hamas said the operation was in retaliation for the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and Israeli settlers’ growing violence against Palestinians.

The Israeli military then launched Operation Swords of Iron against Hamas targets within the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s response has extended into cutting water and electricity supplies to Gaza, further worsening the living conditions in an area that has endured a crippling siege since 2007, as well as ordering over 1 million Gazans in the northern strip to evacuate to the south.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

1 Israeli killed in missile fired from Lebanon

ANKARA: At least one Israeli was killed and three others were injured on Sunday by an anti-tank missile fired from Lebanon into a northern settlement, according to the Israeli Broadcasting Corporation.

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed that “the deadly attack from Lebanon at the northern town of Shtula was an anti-tank guided missile,” according to the daily Times of Israel.

The Israeli army also said that “it shelled the source of the fire with artillery.”

Another anti-tank guided missile was also fired at a military position on the northern border, the army added.

Over the last week tension has flared along the Israeli-Lebanese border, with Israeli forces and the Hezbollah group exchanging fire multiple times in the deadliest confrontations since a month-long war in 2006.

The tension arose last weekend, when Israeli forces launched a sustained military campaign against the Gaza Strip in response to a military offensive by the Palestinian group Hamas in Israeli territories.

The conflict began when Hamas initiated Operation Al-Aqsa Flood against Israel, a multi-pronged surprise attack including a barrage of rocket launches and infiltrations into Israel via land, sea, and air.

Hamas said the operation was in retaliation for the storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and Israeli settlers’ growing violence against Palestinians.

The Israeli military then launched Operation Swords of Iron against Hamas targets within the Gaza Strip.

Israel’s response has extended into cutting water and electricity supplies to Gaza, further worsening the living conditions in an area that has endured a crippling siege since 2007, as well as ordering over 1 million Gazans in the northern strip to evacuate to the south.

Source: EN – Anadolu Agency

Larnaca used as stopover for UK repatriations from Israel

A UK Government-arranged flight out of Tel Aviv, carrying 18 British nationals, landed in Larnaca in the early hours of Saturday.

A Foreign Office spokesperson said that a UK charter flight left Israel, with further flights expected to leave in the coming days, ‘while commercial options are limited’.

According to British reports, the aircraft used for this repatriation flights was an Airbus 400M, provided by the Royal Air Force, as the commercial airline originally contracted to execute repatriation flights from Israel has been having difficulties arranging insurance.

Cypriot sources confirmed that among the evacuees were eight people with dual Cypriot and British citizenship.

Another flight organised by the UK Government may arrive tonight in Larnaca, the sources added, noting that Cyprus could be used by the British as a ‘complimentary route’ for repatriation flights if and when such a need arises.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Antiquities Department works to protect cultural heritage, Deputy Minister says

The Department of Antiquities works systematically to protect our cultural heritage, Deputy Minister of Culture, Dr. Vassiliki Kassianidou, said addressing a conference, which was held on Saturday in Nicosia.

“One of the most important aspects of the Cyprus issue, which emerged after the Turkish invasion of 1974, is the systematic looting and trafficking of the cultural heritage in the Turkish-occupied territories and the efforts made for conservation and restoration,” underlined Kassianidou.

She also pointed out that the Department of Antiquities of the Deputy Ministry of Culture “works systematically with the aim of protecting and preserving our religious and cultural heritage, through the United Nations”, which – as she said – is done “within its capabilities, in a situation which it does not control, due to the continued occupation, which does not allow the exercise of effective control over the areas occupied by Turkey.”

Kassianidou added that the Department of Antiquities “continues almost daily to declare ancient monuments in the occupied territories, which it did not stop doing even after the Turkish invasion of 1974.”

“The very important work of the Bicommunal Technical Committee for Cultural Heritage is also worth mentioning, which has preserved dozens of occupied monuments, saving them from certain destruction,” she concluded.

The 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus and the subsequent occupation of the island, has heavily affected Cyprus’ cultural heritage.

According to the Department of Antiquities, 197 ancient monuments are registered in the occupied part of the island, based on the Cyprus Antiquities Law, while the procedure was left incomplete for hundreds of other monuments and archaeological sites due to the Turkish invasion.

Museums in occupied Cyprus have been looted, while ecclesiastical icons, frescoes and mosaics have been removed from churches and in many cases have been traced in Europe’s illegal antiquities trade markets and in auctions around the world.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Polish director defiant as pre-election attacks about migrant film reach fever pitch

Polish film director Agnieszka Holland said her new film, The Green Border, which shows non-European migrants’ experiences on the Polish-Belarusian border, is helping to treat Poles with historical trauma.

‘When I had a meeting with an audience in Poland, not only were the people crying and giving standing ovations, but the conversations afterwards were a bit like collective psychotherapy,’ she said. ‘I didn’t expect that the reaction of the audience could be so high, that people could be shaken and moved by the film and at the same time elevated.’

Ahead of Sunday’s pivotal parliamentary elections, the film has become part of a divisive and ugly election campaign.

While she has been backed by the Federation of European Screen Directors after harsh government reactions and got the Special Jury Prize for the film at the Venice Film Festival, Holland was forced to take on 24-hour security protection when in Poland for the film’s Sept. 22 release,

‘There could always be some dangerous person who takes the propaganda to heart. In fact, the only person who did come at me was a local politician in Bialystok,’ she said.

A nuanced picture

Holland’s two-and-a-half-hour black and white film is divided into several sections, each looking at the crisis from a different angle.

We see a Syrian family led by parents Amina and Bashir and an Afghani teacher, Leila, who joins them at the border. The second section follows one of the guards, Jan, whose pregnant wife sees a viral video in which he beats refugees. In the third, we see Julia, a Polish woman who rescues Leila from a swamp behind her house.

Minsk to blame?

After Belarus opened its borders in late 2021 to migrants and refugees wanting to cross into the EU, thousands of men, women and children made the dangerous crossing into Poland.

Human Rights Watch accuses Belarusian authorities of manufacturing the crisis. There have been reports of migrants being given planks to cross rivers and taxis carrying ladders to straddle the 5-meter (15-foot) fence.

But, as Amnesty said, there are people who have been subjected to violence on the Polish side as well. Locals who try to help are also often followed by soldiers and their homes searched and some activists from the volunteer group, Grupa Granica, have been detained for allegedly helping migrants cross the border into Poland.

Official figures said more than 50 people have died in swamps and bogs since September 2021, though migrant groups said the real number is much higher.

Government attacks

The film touched a raw nerve with Poland’s ruling right-wing, anti-immigrant coalition government.

The Polish government led by the Law and Justice (PiS) party has since 2015 opposed all migrant entry into the EU. When the first wave of refugees came over the Belarus border in August 2021, the government talked of refugees from outside Europe as ‘dirty’ and ‘disease-ridden,’ and spoke of ‘terrorists,’ ‘sexual perverts’ and ‘criminals’ crossing the border.

President Andrzej Duda in a televised interview repeated the WWII slogan’ ‘Only pigs sit in the cinema,’ used to refer to Poles who frequented cinemas during Nazi wartime occupation.

Poland’s government has said it will broadcast a ‘special clip’ in cinemas before screenings of the film to inform viewers of its ‘many untruths and distortions.’

‘Those who make such films and who support them, those who receive them well, are essentially Putin’s army,’ said PiS president Jaroslaw Kaczynski.

“This is a lampoon, a disgusting, disgusting lampoon,” he said.

According to Kaczynski, Holland fits into the history of ‘her community … an environment that comes from the Polish communist party, from people who served Stalin, who was exactly the same genocide as Hitler,” he said. Holland is the grandchild of Holocaust victims.

“The same tone we experienced in 1968, when Poland’s remaining Jews were forced to leave the country, is there in what he says,” said Holland.

The nationalist Polish association of communism and secular Jews, both before, during and since the end of communism in 1989, is a familiar and often used rhetorical device that places Holland within a milieu — a ‘community’ — that is effectively, by virtue of its ethnicity, claimed to be anti-Polish.

‘Polish services have been successfully defending the border against illegal immigrants sent by Lukashenko and Putin, storming it for two years. Now they also have to deal with the slanderous theses of the creators of the film,’ added Kaczynski.

PiS said the film is a preparation for tearing down the fence on the Belarusian border and pushing Warsaw to agree to the EU’s relocation of refugees.

The party has long attacked those whom it sees as a form of internal dissidence from the patriotic line. It has sued US-Polish historian Jan Gross and others for claims that Poles were complicit or actively engaged in the murder of Jews in WWII.

Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki was equally furious. ‘They show our people as idiots and bastards, Poles as primitives. They are trying to destroy our good name as those who opened their hearts and doors to over two million Ukrainians,’ he said.

Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro said he would not withdraw remarks likening Holland to a Nazi propagandist. When Holland threatened to sue him, the minister said it was more important how he is judged by God than by a court. He added that he too had not watched the film.

Working against the opposition?

However, some believe the film may represent a political gift for PiS in a country where nearly 70% of voters evaluate the Border Guard positively.

One of the main slogans of the PiS campaign, ‘Security,’ is associated not only with Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, but with strong anti-immigrant rhetoric and the situation on the Polish-Belarusian border combines both threads.

Despite the damage done to the so-called visa scandal, which undermined the main axis of the campaign, PiS has not missed any opportunity to refer to the negative effects of the EU’s open borders policy.

But Holland is not convinced by this line of reasoning. ‘I think the film was needed. That the people didn’t want to be lost in the narrative that everything is fine and that we can speak only in the narrative of elections,’ she said.

‘I have the feeling, not solid data, that the opinions of people are shifting from supporting the government to being very skeptical about what they say,’ she added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Cyprus could meet 40% of its needs from solar power by 2030, IRENA Chief tells CNA

Cyprus has the potential to meet 40% of its energy demand through solar power by 2030, Director-General of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Francesco La Camera said in an interview with Cyprus News Agency (CNA). IRENA chief also stressed the importance of interconnectivity of the energy grids of different countries, especially in the Mediterranean, in order to meet the demand and to balance the system.

La Camera said that IRENA has been working with Cyprus and also assessing the potential of the country in its transition to renewable energy. He noted that besides solar energy, Cyprus could also have offshore wind or interconnectivity with other Mediterranean countries.

‘We have estimated that 40% of energy can come from solar by 2030 because there’s a very good perspective,’ he said.

He also stressed that Cyprus was part of the Mediterranean Initiative MED9, which aims to make the Mediterranean a hub for green energy in the future and that IRENA has been working with Cyprus towards that goal.

He also emphasised the importance of modernising and strengthening the grid infrastructure and implementing specific policies to push renewables further in Cyprus, particularly considering the European Union framework.

‘Storage is part of the tools we have to ensure more interconnectivity and flexibility within the grid. So is the connection with the other Mediterranean countries, which also a prospect in the medium term. So there are many things that could be done together,’ he said.

Regarding better integration of renewables into the grid, La Camera highlighted the importance of energy storage. He mentioned that storage technologies offer flexibility and interconnectivity, which can be achieved through local systems and cross-border collaborations. For instance, he discussed the Euro-Asia Interconnector project, connecting Israel, Cyprus, and Greece, as a means to enhance interconnectivity and balance energy distribution at a lower cost.

He stressed the need for physical infrastructure, workforce training and institutional capacity development in the country.

Renewables to address energy price volatility

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The Director-General of IRENA, stressed also the crucial role of renewable energy in addressing the challenges posed by fluctuating energy prices and enhancing energy stability and affordability.

La Camera pointed out that the recent spike in energy prices is a sign that fossil fuel reliance is coming to an end. As he said, the traditional energy system based on fossil fuels was increasingly unable to support sustainable development and often leaded to uncertainties, as witnessed in recent months. He highlighted that the transition to renewable energy was vital for reducing costs and providing greater energy stability.

La Camera emphasised that renewables are “the most cost-effective way of generating electricity globally, making them a convenient and affordable choice for consumers.”

Additionally, he pointed out the need for transition from centralised fossil fuel-based systems to decentralised renewable energy systems.

“The centralised systems based on fossil fuels were not very resilient to shocks, primarily because they had only a few actors in the market. Transitioning to renewables means that, more or less, everyone can produce renewable energy. This shift will lead us from a centralised to a decentralised energy system,” he explained.

IRENA’s Role in advancing renewable energy

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La Camera said that IRENA’s primary mission, was to support and promote the deployment of renewable energy. As he said, the agency has been producing knowledge and data on renewables, including their costs and capacities. This information, he noted, has been crucial in helping countries align with the goals of international agreements like the Paris Agreement.

IRENA’s efforts also have led to the proposal to triple installed renewable energy capacity, which has gained support from the G7. The agency, said La Camera, plays a significant role in building consensus on global targets for renewables at events like the upcoming COP28 in Dubai.

‘So we are building consensus to include global targets for renewables as part of the outcome of COP28 to be held in Dubai. This constitutes an important area of our work. The other one is facilitating the funding for renewable energy projects,’ he said.

He explained that they were creating partnerships with stakeholders, funds, companies, and banks. This collaboration, as he said, has successfully supported financing for projects in various regions, including Kazakhstan and Africa.

Challenges and barriers in the transition to renewables

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La Camera outlined several common challenges that hinder the global transition to renewable energy, including physical infrastructure in order to modernise and connect energy grids, implement supportive policies and legal frameworks for renewable energy, develop institutional capabilities to promote renewable energy and the need for skilled workforce in the renewable energy sector.

He emphasised that these challenges are universal and apply to all countries, highlighting the need for changes in university curricula to prepare the workforce for the evolving energy landscape.

Especially for Europe, he stressed the need for strengthening and modernising its grid system to be more interconnected, in order to ensure flexibility and also as an instrument to balancing system. He said that Europe has not yet put into the grid all the potential of North Sea and the Baltic Sea and that the grids of the Mediterranean were still not connected to Europe. He also referred to improvements, giving the example of the alignment between Portugal, Spain, France, Germany.

‘There’s no doubt that interconnection is the future’, he said.

La Camera also noted that various renewable energy technologies, including solar, wind, geothermal, hydro power, and green hydrogen, all have promising roles to play. The suitability of each technology, as he said, depends on the specific characteristics and resources available in a region. He stressed that a mix of these technologies, combined with energy storage solutions, interconnectivity, and modernisation of energy infrastructure, will be essential to building a resilient and sustainable energy system.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Demonstration in solidarity with Palestinians planned in Paris banned

A demonstration in Paris, which was planned for Sunday in solidarity with the Palestinian people amid ongoing conflict with Israel, was reportedly banned.

According to local media reports, the Paris Police Department banned the demonstration on the grounds that it posed a “risk of disturbing public order.”

While local authorities allowed demonstrations in support of Israel in different cities, they banned demonstrations in support of Palestine in Lyon, Marseille and Paris this week on the same grounds.

Thirteen people were detained in Strasbourg, France after participating in a pro-Palestinian demonstration on Friday.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Over 130 additional NATO troops arrive in Kosovo

More than 130 additional troops from Romania have arrived in Kosovo to further reinforce NATO’s Kosovo Force (KFOR) peacekeeping mission, the alliance said on Saturday.

The troops arrived on Friday, NATO said in a statement, adding that the stationing was made in addition to 200 British soldiers deployed earlier this month.

“The deployment of these additional troops comes after the violent attack on Kosovo Police on 24 September and increased tensions in the region,” the military alliance said.

It added: “These deployments are a prudent step to ensure KFOR has the forces it needs to fulfil its UN mandate to maintain a safe and secure environment and freedom of movement for all people in Kosovo.”

Under UN Security Council Resolution 1244, NATO has led a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo since 1999. Currently, KFOR has more than 4,500 troops contributed by 27 NATO allies and partners.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Trkiye ‘rejects, condemns’ attacks targeting civilians in Palestine

Trkiye ‘rejects and condemns’ attacks targeting ‘innocent civilians’ and causing their death in Palestine, said the country’s foreign minister on Saturday.

‘I would like to emphasize once again that we invite Israel to adhere to international law and human values,’ Hakan Fidan said in a joint news conference with his Egyptian counterpart Sameh Shoukry in Cairo.

Israel, he said, ‘should have peace not only with Arab countries but mainly with Palestinians.’

Fidan reiterated Trkiye’s two-state solution for the conflict, saying that the Palestinian issue could be resolved with the establishment of a Palestinian state.

He said that Trkiye will continue to send humanitarian aid to Gaza as the ongoing conflict with Israel rages.

About the evacuations, Fidan said there are almost 300 Turkish citizens with dual nationality in Gaza and 30 of them have so far been evacuated.

For his part, Shoukry said that Egypt and Trkiye share a common vision on the importance of efforts to overcome serious humanitarian impacts of the conflict on Palestinians.

‘Shift of the conflict between Palestine and Israel towards military operations arose due to failure to achieve legitimate rights of Palestinians,’ he said.

Fidan is on a two-day official visit to Egypt at the invitation of Shoukry.

During his visit, Fidan also met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock.

The visit comes as hostilities between the Palestinian resistance group Hamas and Israel have entered their second week, with the embattled Gaza Strip bordering northeast Egypt facing Israeli airstrikes, a cutoff of basic utilities, and an order for over 1 million residents to evacuate their homes in the north and go to the south.

Trkiye has so far sent three planes with humanitarian relief to an Egyptian airport in the hope of sending them to neighboring Gaza.

Source: Anadolu Agency