Turkey’s auto production sees strong recovery in January-May

Turkey’s automotive production, including light commercial vehicles, tractors, and automobiles, amounted to 532,441 million units in January-May, a sectoral report revealed on Monday.

The sector posted a strong recovery with a 28.2% increase year-on-year in the January-May period, after dramatic falls last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic measures.

Last year, the automotive production narrowed by 11% versus 2019 and decreased by 34% year-on-year in the first five months.

While the sector surpassed 2020 figures, it could not reach 2018 and 2019 figures yet, when the production was 712,022 and 625,946 units, respectively.

Passenger car production also soared by 22.7% to 353,580 in the same period.

On the sales side, the auto market, including light trucks and other vehicles, expanded by 73.8% compared to the same period last year, reaching 328,679 units in the first five months of this year.

Automotive industry exports soared by 37.3% to $12.29 billion during the same period.

The sector’s exports also increased by 18% to reach 391,070 units on a quantity basis year-on-year in the January-May period.

– Monthly figures

In May, Turkey’s automotive production — including all types of vehicles — increased by 31.2% on a yearly basis to reach 82,860 units.

The country’s exports increased by 16.8% to 51,873 units on a quantity basis and by 61.4% to $1.9 billion on a value basis versus the same month last year.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Armed attackers kill 12 in northwestern Nigeria

Suspected bandits have killed 12 people in the Rabah local government area of Nigeria’s northwestern Sokoto state, an official said Sunday.

The spokesperson for the Sokoto Police Command, Sanusi Abubakar, said several people were also wounded and the attackers have not been identified yet.

The West African nation recently banned motorcycles in several states to stem such attacks.

Northwestern Nigeria has been facing attacks by armed groups for a decade now.

The groups attack villages, steal livestock and frequently kidnap local people for ransom.

They have also stepped up attacks on schools, kidnapping students and teachers

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey remains as indispensable member of NATO for 69 years

As NATO allies gathered for a summit in Brussels this week, the key role that Turkey plays in the alliance is again in the spotlight, amid continuing security concerns in Syria and Turkey’s wider region.

Since becoming a NATO member in 1952 (just three years after its formation), Turkey has been one of the alliance’s biggest contributing partners, making its abilities and capabilities an integral part of the command and force structure of the alliance, with its second-largest army.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), founded on April 4, 1949, currently has 30 members and is headquartered in Brussels.

In 1952, to its 12 founding countries of Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Britain, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and the United States, NATO added Turkey.

This month NATO is marking its 72nd anniversary in Brussels with the attendance of heads of state and government.

The oft-cited cornerstone of the alliance is Article 5 of the NATO charter, which ensures collective defense — an attack against one member is an attack against all.

– Turkey ‘important ally’ for NATO

Through its military and advancing defense systems, Turkey remains as an “important is an important NATO ally,” as stated by the alliance’s secretary-general.

Previewing the NATO Summit in Brussels, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg stressed Turkey’s importance in an event jointly organized by NATO, the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) and the Brookings Institution.

“I think it’s also important to remember that Turkey is an important NATO Ally. You can just look at the map and realize the importance of these lands, the landmass of Turkey. And also the only country, the only NATO Ally that borders Iraq and Syria,” he said.

Stoltenberg also hailed the country’s infrastructure and airports in fighting against Daesh while also noting that “…Turkey played an important role in the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS and we continue to work closely with the NATO ally, Turkey, in stabilizing our southern neighborhood.”

He also underscored Turkey’s significance in dealing with the ongoing migrant and refugee crisis.

Since 2016, Turkey has launched a trio of successful anti-terror operations across its border in northern Syria to prevent the formation of a terror corridor and to enable the peaceful settlement of residents: Euphrates Shield (2016), Olive Branch (2018), and Peace Spring (2019).

– Turkey’s contributions

Turkey has been the international frontrunner in the fight against terrorism, especially against the terrorist YPG/PKK, Daesh/ISIS and FETO, the group behind the 2016 defeated coup.

In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terror organization by Turkey, the US, and the EU – has been responsible for the deaths of nearly 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.

The YPG is the PKK’s Syrian offshoot.

FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup of July 15, 2016, which left 251 people dead and 2,734 injured.

Turkey also accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police, and judiciary.

According to NATO’s Defense Expenditure of ally countries published on June 11, Turkey is among one of the top NATO allies giving sustainable support to the alliance mission through 445 military personnel.

With about $13.06 million, Turkey is among the top ten allies that have contributed the most to NATO’s defense expenditure in 2021. NATO also describes Turkey as a vital contributor to the Resolute Support mission with its 600-strong contingent in Afghanistan.

As part of the Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan, Turkey is one of the key actors along with the U.S., Germany and Italy.

Supporting operations under the NATO Mission Iraq (NMI), Turkey contributed with 25 staff personnel and a force protection unit of 61 men.

With 321 personnel, Turkey is a member of NATO’s Kosovo Force (KFOR) multinational peacekeeping force in the Balkans.

Turkey, which is the fifth nation that contributes most in the number of personnel among NATO allies, has assigned one battalion as Operational Reserve Battalion within KFOR on Sept.1, 2020.

A key partner of the alliance, Turkey hosts a radar base within the NATO Ballistic Missile Defense architecture in the town of Kurecik in its eastern Malatya province.

Turkey also opened its Konya Air Base for the use of NATO AWACS planes.

Turkey plays a leading role in the development of relations between NATO and its partners, especially in the Balkans, Caucasus, and the Middle East, and in the implementation of NATO’s open-door policy.

– NATO forces in Aegean, Black Sea

Turkey provides permanent naval assistance to NATO missions in the Aegean Sea, presenting surveillance, reconnaissance, and monitoring activities to prevent illegal crossings.

Turkey also supports Standing NATO Maritime Groups’ (SNMG) activities in the Black Sea and Aegean, which is included as part of NATO obligations.

Moreover, Turkey also hosts LANDCOM, NATO’s land command, in the Aegean coastal province of Izmir.

The NATO Rapid Deployable Corps – one of nine NATO land forces headquarters with high readiness level – is also stationed in Istanbul.

Turkey also took command of the Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) in 2021.

“Built around Turkey’s 66th Mechanised Infantry Brigade of around 4,200 troops, a total of around 6,400 soldiers will serve on the VJTF,” according to NATO.

Turkey’s latest armed vehicles, anti-tank missiles and howitzers have been allocated to the task force.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Kazakh president meets US special representative on Afghan peace

Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev on Monday discussed with Zalmay Khalilzad, the US special representative for reconciliation in Afghanistan, prospects of an “enhanced” bilateral relationship amid the withdrawal of US and NATO troops from the war-torn country.

Tokayev received Khalilzad, who arrived in Kazakhstan on a working visit.

“They discussed the prospects for the development of the Kazakh-US enhanced strategic partnership in the context of ensuring security and stability in Afghanistan, including in the light of the withdrawal of US and NATO troops from this country,” a statement by the Kazakhstan presidency said.

“This year we are marking the 30th anniversary of our Independence … the United States is a strong partner of Kazakhstan. We are good partners in so many areas, including trade and economic cooperation,” President Tokayev said.

Khalilzad expressed gratitude to Tokayev for the opportunity to meet in person and praised his role aimed at restoring stability in Afghanistan.

He shared his assessments of the current situation in Afghanistan, and US efforts on the intra-Afghan peace process, which is ongoing in Qatar since last December but has made little progress. The talks between the government in Kabul and the Taliban are aimed at ending the 19-year-long war, and decide on the road map for post-war Afghanistan.

President Joe Biden has announced that all US forces would withdraw from Afghanistan by Sept. 11, and NATO allies are following suit. Since then, there has been a surge in violence across the country.

According to the United States Central Command, the US withdrawal from Afghanistan is more than half done.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has said that allies are in an ongoing dialogue over the situation in Afghanistan.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Egypt upholds death penalty for 12 Brotherhood members over Rabaa events

Egypt’s court of appeal on Monday upheld the death penalty for 12 members of the Muslim Brotherhood convicted in the Rabaa sit-in case, according to state-run media.

The court upheld the death penalty against Abdel-Rahman el-Bar, Mohamed el-Beltagy, Safwat Hegazy, Osama Yassin, Ahmed Aref, Ihab Wagdy, Muhammad Abd al-Hayy, Mustafa al-Farmawi, Ahmed Farouk, Haitham al-Arabi, Muhammad Zanati, and Abd al-Azim Ibrahim, Middle East News Agency reported.

The court also reduced the sentence of 32 defendants from death to 25 years imprisonment.

Meanwhile, the case Essam el-Erian, a former Muslim Brotherhood leader, was terminated due to his death.

Monday’s ruling was against 45 defendants out of a total of 75 sentenced to death in previous preliminary rulings, human rights lawyer Osama Bayoumi said on Facebook.

In September 2018, the Cairo Criminal Court sentenced 75 defendants to death by hanging, including leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood Mohamed el-Beltagy, Essam el-Erian and Abdel-Rahman el-Bar.

On Aug. 14, 2013, the army and police forces dispersed two sit-in protests of supporters of the late Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi in Cairo, according to local reports.

Hundreds were killed when security forces violently dispersed the pro-Morsi protests in Rabaa al-Adawiya and Giza’s al-Nahda squares. Security forces also detained thousands of Morsi supporters in an attempt to quell the unrest that followed the 2013 military coup.

The dispersal came a few weeks after Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected leader, was deposed by the army following demonstrations against his one-year presidency.

Source: Anadolu Agency

US company Novavax says its COVID-19 vaccine is 90% effective

US pharmaceutical company Novavax on Monday said that its COVID-19 vaccine has an overall efficacy of 90.4% against the coronavirus.

Based on a study that included 29,960 participants across 119 sites in the US, the company said its two-dose vaccine demonstrated 100% protection against moderate and severe disease.

Against some coronavirus variants, which represented 82% of the cases, the vaccine efficacy was 93.2%, it added.

“These data show consistent, high levels of efficacy and reaffirm the ability of the vaccine to prevent COVID-19 amid ongoing genetic evolution of the virus,” Gregory M. Glenn, M.D., the president of Novavax’s Research and Development, said in a statement.

The company said it plans to file for regulatory authorizations of the vaccine in the third quarter of this year.

It estimates to reach a manufacturing capacity of 100 million doses per month by the end of the third quarter, and 150 million doses per month by the end of the fourth quarter of 2021.


Novavax joins other American pharmaceuticals — Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson — that provide vaccines for the US population.


More than 374 million doses have been distributed in the US with over 309 million administered as of early Sunday. So far, 143.9 million people, or 43.4% of the population, have received two doses, according to figures from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

An excess of 33.4 million cases have been recorded in the US since the start of the pandemic with almost 600,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University. Global cases stand at 176 million, while more than 3.8 million have lost their lives.
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Source: Anadolu Agency

Indian man who headed ‘world’s largest family’ dies

An Indian man from the northeastern state of Mizoram who is believed to have headed the world’s largest family, with 39 wives and 94 children, died Sunday at the age of 76, officials said.

Mizoram Chief Minister Zoramthanga, who uses only one name, announced the death of Ziona Chana, who was a resident of Baktawng Tlangnuam village, in a post on Twitter.

“With heavy heart, #Mizoram bid farewell to Mr. Zion-a (76), believed to head the world’s largest family, with 38 wives and 89 children,” he said.

Zoramthanga also said that Mizoram and Baktawng Tlangnuam have become major tourist attractions in the state because of the family.

Chana was the head of a religious sect called “Chana Pawl,” founded by his father in 1942, which allows polygamy.

According to officials, Chana, who also had a large number of grandchildren, died Sunday afternoon.

“He was taken to a private hospital in another district and as per the reports received, he passed away today,” Kumar Abhishek, the deputy commissioner of Serchhip district, told Anadolu Agency by phone.

Lal Thanhawla, former chief minister of Mizoram and a senior political leader from the Indian National Congress party, told Anadolu Agency: “His [Chana’s] demise is a very big loss to everyone…The family is very disciplined and there are a lot of things to learn from them.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish president meets Dutch premier at NATO summit

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan met Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on Monday on sidelines of the NATO summit in Brussels.

The two leaders met in a closed-door meeting​​​​​​​.

Before Rutte, Erdogan met his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

The Turkish leader is due to meet US President Joe Biden.

Source: Anadolu Agency

ANALYSIS – Children’s remains at Catholic school site and Islamophobic attack in Canada

The author is a faculty member at Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University. He specializes in hadith studies, the relationship between Jewish and Christian cultures, inter-religious and intercultural interactions, Orientalism-Occidentalism, theopolitics, anti-Islamism (cultural racism), and Islam and Muslims in Europe and the West.

ISTANBUL (AA) – The discovery of the remains of 215 children in the schoolyard of the Catholic Kamloops Indian Residential School, which operated until 1969 in the Canadian province of British Columbia, sparked outrage all over the world. Following this incident, a search was launched around all church-run boarding schools in Canada. Ground radar systems are scouring cemeteries and schoolyards of the 139 church-run boarding schools for unregistered graves of children. There are also 821 undocumented child deaths in church-run boarding schools in Alberta, according to reports.

In this context, it should be noted that this boarding school, which was one of the 139 institutions established in Canada towards the end of the 19th century, was founded in 1890 by the Catholic Church on behalf of the Canadian government in order to forcibly ensure the integration of native children with European immigrant children, then came under the control of the central government in 1969, and provided dormitory services to students in the region until it was closed in 1978. In this regard, 150,000 indigenous children in Canada, starting in 1874, were forcibly deprived of their family culture and placed in church houses in order to be integrated (actually assimilated) into the white culture. Many of these children were reportedly subjected to physical and sexual abuse, and were raped and kept malnourished; some of them even lost their lives due to the medical experiments conducted on them. Almost all of the 139 boarding schools across the country were run by the Catholic Church on behalf of the government. It is also reported that it is very difficult to exactly determine how many children attended these schools and how many of them lost their lives in these ways.

In addition, according to the information we have, between 1936 and 1944, Canada destroyed (or had destroyed) a large number of documents; the destroyed documents included information on more than 200,000 native families and were related to the church-run boarding schools, which represent one of the darkest periods of the country’s history. Moreover, the most important records on these children are held in the national archives of the Vatican and Canada, but the Vatican seems to have rejected the calls for the documents to be released.

It should also be noted that a group of lawyers in Canada have brought the case to the International Criminal Court (ICC) with the request that the Canadian government and the Vatican be investigated for committing crimes against humanity.

-The Vatican/Pope Francis have yet to apologize

The Pope, the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church, was the figure whose reaction to the incident was most anticipated and from whom an apology was expected. In fact, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reminded that the schools were under the supervision of the church and said that the Vatican should accept responsibility for the role it played in the running of the schools and apologize, a statement he repeated two weeks ago. Furthermore, after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (which was established in 2010 and completed its work in 2015) published a 4,000-page report on the country’s largest child abuse episode, Trudeau asked Pope Francis to apologize in the same year, and repeated his request during his visit to the Vatican in 2017, but he did not receive an answer from the Pope. Responding to Trudeau’s request in 2018, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops declared that the Pope could not personally apologize for the role that the Catholic Church had in how these boarding schools were run. On the other hand, the Canadian government apologized to the survivors of these schools in 2008, and a 2015 report identified the murdered children as victims of “cultural genocide”. Canada’s Minister of Indigenous Services Marc Miller previously stated that the Pope should apologize for what happened in the church-run boarding schools, saying, “I think it’s a shame that they haven’t done it yet, that it hasn’t been done so far.”

After these statements were made, Pope Francis remained silent for a long time; however, eventually, following a traditional Sunday prayer in the Vatican, he only said, without apologizing, that he was following the situation in pain and praying for the children who had died. The Pope’s being a Jesuit himself, that the sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents emerging in boarding schools that mainly belong to the Jesuits, especially in Ireland and Germany, as well as the fact that the Vatican has been ordered to pay compensation as a result of work done by investigation commissions must have also influenced the Pope’s reluctance to offer an apology. As we will discuss below, the case of sexual abuse and the discovery children’s remains are not novel situations at all.

As can be remembered, before Pope Francis’ first visit to Ireland in August 2018, 39 years after the previous one by a Pope, the sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents against children in Catholic churches and boarding schools had been discussed for some time, and the Pope was asked to resign. According to reports, Pope Francis had been aware of the child abuse incidents since 2013. Pope Francis has promised at every opportunity since assuming the Papacy that sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents in Catholic churches would be treated with “zero tolerance”, and that such incidents would never happen again; however, he did not, or has not been able to, keep his promises or take the necessary steps to reform a structure that has allowed for such incidents. This situation also gives rise to comments that the Pope is not “powerful” enough in the Vatican, that he is protecting the Jesuits who played a key role in the sexual harassment incidents because the Pope himself is a Jesuit.

– Sexual harassment – pedophilia incidents that led to Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation

The issue of sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents in church-run boarding schools, as well as the discovery of children’s remains, which has resurfaced in the wake of the Canada episode, has been debated for a long time. In fact, confessions have been made on this issue, and heavy accusations were leveled at Benedict XVI, the previous Pope. Many theories have been advanced as to why Pope Benedict XVI abruptly resigned, as those who have followed the matter will know, since the day he announced, quite unusually, that he would step down, since in the institution of papacy there is no such thing as relinquishing the duty or resigning. In this regard, it was also written at the time that charges that Pope Benedict XVI was covering up sexual harassment and pedophilia incidents at the time sparked the process of him becoming the first “retired” pope in Catholic history. It was even claimed that Benedict XVI had found out about an organized “homosexual” structure among some of his priests and cardinals. In fact, according to the “Vati-Leaks” documents, the Pope allegedly instructed three cardinals in the Vatican to conduct an investigation into this, and these cardinals then submitted their 300-page secret findings to him.

The scope of the sexual harassment scandal left the Vatican and the Pope at the time, Benedict XVI, in a difficult situation, because the issue had in some ways stretched to the Pope himself. In fact, according to a Der Spiegel article referring to a former graduate of the thousand-year-old boys’ boarding school that his older brother ran for 30 years, there were harassment incidents at the school prior to 1964-1994, when the Pope’s elder brother Georg Ratzinger was the director, and Georg Ratzinger also admitted that such incidents continued until the end of the 1970s. It is difficult to believe that the Pope was unaware of the incidents at his brother’s school. Furthermore, despite identical incidents occurring in Munich, while he served as Archbishop between 1977 and 1982, he did not take any action.

Pope Benedict XVI did not (or was unable to) take any serious action in response to the allegations that surfaced in many countries at the time, particularly Germany, Ireland, Austria, Australia, the Netherlands, Belgium, and the United States, and his efforts were limited to the establishment of “investigation commissions” in the relevant countries and the payment of compensation to the victims. Stepping down from his position was the most important step that Benedict XVI took in this regard as there could not be a “retired Pope”. In this regard, it is worth noting that Benedict XVI, who is currently living out his retirement in a Vatican monastery, is best remembered for two negative incidents: his “resignation” in response to sexual harassment allegations, and his description of Islam as a “religion of violence” and Prophet Muhammad as a “prophet of sword” in his birthplace of Regensburg, Germany, a year after taking office.

– Emergence of first cases in Ireland and Germany

With the exception of the cases in the United States, which involved large sums of compensation against the Catholic Church in 2007, the first sexual harassment cases in Europe were reported in Ireland. After it was revealed that priests and nuns affiliated with the Catholic church in Ireland sexually abused thousands of children, the church shielded the abusers by assigning them to different locations. This situation was kept hidden for nearly 50 years because of the “what happens here stays here” mentality. The Vatican condemned the situation in Ireland, where the incidents were first revealed, and ordered an investigation, stating that this was a “great sin” in a letter to the priests on the sexual harassment cases suddenly exposed after years of being hidden and could no longer be concealed.

The sexual harassment episode gained a new dimension when the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), a Christian religious order founded in France in the 16th century, broke out at Canisius College in Berlin, one of the most prestigious colleges in Germany. As soon as the complaints about the past that had been kept in the dark for whatever reason surfaced, they were relayed to the media by the victims of the incidents. The principal, who had been at the school since 1994, then issued a letter to former students for the first time in German history, apologizing to all victims; nonetheless, the offenders were not prosecuted due to the statute of limitations. It was eventually discovered that similar incidents had occurred at other boarding schools affiliated with the Jesuits and Catholics.

It should also be noted that about 15% of the priests and nuns in some Catholic church administrations in the US have been reported to have sexually harassed someone. In addition, it is reported that more than 10,000 sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents took place in Australia between 1960 and 2015, most of which were swept under the rug.

– Clerical celibacy debate

Due to the discovery of children’s remains in the yard of a boarding school in Canada, as well as recent sexual harassment and pedophilia-related incidents, clerical celibacy, an important part of clerical life in Catholicism that essentially goes against human nature, has been a topic of discussion for a long time. It is also stated in this context that the practice of (total) celibacy is not helpful for one’s mental health either. For example, Bishop Walter Mixa of Augsburg stated that it is “sexual corruption” and the “institution of clerical celibacy,” not the church or the clergy, that are to blame for pedophilia-related incidents. Anke Bisschops of the Faculty of Catholic Theology of Tilburg University in the Netherlands also advocates the abolition of the practice of “celibacy”. American Cardinal Raymond Burke likewise criticized the practice for corrupting people and leading to sexual harassment.

All of this essentially demonstrates the importance of a decree in the Qur’an and Sunnah that “there is no celibacy in Islam”. For, according to Islam, which is a natural religion, human beings have natural characteristics, attributes, needs and desires; a virtuous person is one who exercises moderation in all their actions and when satisfying their needs and desires. A moderate person, on the other hand, is one who has developed their innate abilities in such a way that they do not deviate into excessiveness or any radical deficiency, and has avoided disrupting balances by observing equity in all things. The perfect human being according to Islam does not choose to live alone in mountain tops, in caves or underground in order to be a good servant of God; instead, they live as an ordinary person among other people and do not take the path of celibacy or monastic practices. Let’s remember the following verse in the Qur’an: “… and monasticism they invented—We did not ordain it for them—only to seek God’s Contentment. Yet they did not observe it with proper observance…” (Surah al-Hadîd (Iron): 57/27).

However, while clerical celibacy is an essential element at play here, it would be unfair to conclude that sexual harassment and pedophilia-related crimes in Catholic churches are simply the result of clerical celibacy. We must note that the roots of the problem lie much deeper and involve administrative aspects, in addition to being closely linked to the Catholic “pastor/priest-nun” identity and education. In fact, while answering questions about the corruption and the sexual harassment scandals in the Vatican in 2017, Pope Francis said that [only] persons whose “emotional maturity is established” would be admitted to clergy training in order to prevent sexual harassment incidents, which he described as a “disease”. On the other hand, Christians-Catholics, who have slandered Prophet Muhammad throughout history due to his marriage to Aisha, now ironically face accusations of “sexual harassment” and “pedophilia”. We must also emphasize that the Western countries that immediately mobilize international institutions, and especially human rights organizations, in the face of such events involving Islamic countries and the Muslims, generally make efforts to conceal such events when they are about Judeo-Christians.

It is clear that all of these issues indicate a crisis situation for Catholics that necessitates radical decisions, and especially a reform of their understanding of clerical celibacy. Although it is difficult to predict what kind of measures will be taken as a result of the investigations into the latest incident in Canada, where Catholics are at the center of the controversy, it is certain that the Catholic denomination and belief system have suffered a major blow and have damaged their global reputation because of these events.

– Islamophobic attack on Pakistani family

On June 6, an Islamophobic attack killed four Muslims in Canada, which had already been rocked by the discovery of children’s bodies in a schoolyard. A minibus driver crashed into a Muslim family walking on the sidewalk, killing four of them, including a 15-year-old boy, and critically injuring another 9-year-old son. It was declared by the regional police chief that this attack was a planned and hate-motivated act committed for Islamophobic reasons. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated that he stands with Muslims, that Islamophobia has no place in their society and that this hatred is insidious and despicable, and must be stopped. Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, on the other hand, described the killing of the four members of a Pakistani Muslim family in Canada as an “act of terrorism”.

Turkish Presidential Spokesperson Ibrahim Kalin also emphasized the necessity of considering the issue as racism and a hate crime, saying that “This is the latest example of how fabricated fear would turn into hatred and how hatred into hostility and violence”. AK Party Spokesperson Ömer Çelik, on the other hand, argued that the attack was not a simple criminal act, but rather it was the promotion of Islamophobia, and said that the political-media language that gives too much impunity to hate crimes is the main culprit.

The attack was generally regarded in the Canadian, US and Western media as an ordinary criminal act/murder and not as a “terrorist attack”; whereas if a Muslim had carried out this attack, it would have been immediately dubbed “Islamic terrorism” without hesitation. Although the victims of this incident are a family of five of Pakistani origin, the target of this terrorist violence is Canada as a country and society as a whole. We might, perhaps, also argue that this anti-Islamic attack may have been planned with the intention of diverting attention away from the discoveries in a boarding school’s yard, which had pretty much dominated the country’s agenda. This attack has, once again, reminded us of the mosque shooting in Quebec City in 2017 carried out by racist perpetrator Alexandre Bissonnette, in which six people were killed and five were injured. Thus, it must be understood that Canada, which is regarded as one of the most livable countries in the world, where there is a strong emphasis on multicultural policies and there is even a ministry of immigration, is rapidly becoming a place with a growing number of anti-Islamic attacks, and that this is doing a great damage to Canada’s image.

In this respect, the real test of the “Canadian model”, which is the origin of philosophical literature on multiculturalism, is also with Muslims, just as it is in the West and Europe. We do not have much hope for the Vatican, but we do hope that Canada will promptly take steps to save its exemplary multicultural image of the past, both in terms of the remains of children in the boarding school’s yard and the Islamophobic attack.

Source: Anadolu Agency