Bucks defeat Nets in Game 7 to reach Eastern Conference Finals

Milwaukee Bucks beat Brooklyn Nets 115-111 in a thrilling game late Saturday to reach the Eastern Conference Finals.

Giannis Antetokounmpo finished with 40 points and 13 rebounds to lead the Bucks to an overtime win in Game 7.

Khris Middleton posted a double-double with 23 points, 10 rebounds while Brook Lopez contributed 19 points and Jrue Holiday had 13.

For the losing side, Kevin Durant was impressive with 48 points as James Harden finished with 22 points, nine rebounds and nine assists.

The Bucks will face either Philadelphia 76ers or Atlanta Hawks in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Game 7 between the 76ers and Hawks will be played in Philadelphia on Sunday.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish president says Turkey to leave COVID-19 behind ‘soon’

Turkey will overcome the COVID-19 pandemic soon with its mass vaccination campaign, said the country’s president on Sunday.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan attended an online event to mark Father’s Day and answered questions of young people across Turkey.

Responding to a question on the pandemic and when it will end, Erdogan said Turkey has been ahead of other countries in everything from health services to public safety since the beginning of the outbreak.

“At a time when supplying vaccines was very difficult, we are running a fast vaccination schedule thanks to the connections we have made in a timely manner. We have some setbacks, but we also overcome these delays. We are in good shape right now. I hope we will overcome this calamity soon,” he said.

Erdogan said the domestic vaccination studies are continuing and the target is to start production by September-October.

“Currently, the rate of infection has dropped seriously. But we need to decrease this rate further. The number of cases is around 5,000 per day. We think this is too much. The number of daily deaths is around 50. We don’t want this either,” Erdogan said.

“It is our hope that we will both decrease the number of cases to double digits and decrease the number of deaths to single digits,” he said adding vaccination is the greatest tool to achieve that.

“We are also good at importing vaccines and we will continue to do so, rapidly,” he added.

Responding to a question on anti-vaxxers, Erdogan called for respecting science, saying: “It’s impossible to deny science.”

“Every individual of our nation should know that they have an opportunity to access vaccines that billions of people in the world have not been able to reach,” he said.

“It is the responsibility of scientists to develop the vaccine and make it applicable to humans. Our duty is to use the vaccine developed by the best experts in their fields, while respecting science. We cannot exclude ourselves from a process that encompasses the entire population of the world,” he added.

Turkey on Saturday has lowered the COVID-19 vaccination eligibility age to 30.

Over 41.34 million doses of coronavirus vaccines have been administered since the country launched a mass vaccination campaign in mid-January. More than 26.96 million people have received their first doses, while over 14.38 million have been fully vaccinated as of Sunday, according to the Health Ministry data.

Source: Anadolu Agency

UPDATE – Libya reopens coastal road connecting east, west

The Libyan government on Sunday reopened the main coastal road linking Libya’s east and west.

“Today, we will close a page on the suffering of the Libyan people. We will take a new step in building, stability, and unity,” Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh tweeted on the reopening of the Misrata-Sirte road.

He said the reopening of the road will bring Libyans together “to build and work for the development and prosperity of the country.”

The coastal road is an important trade route that has been closed since renegade general Khalifa Haftar’s militias launched a failed offensive to capture the capital Tripoli in 2019.

Earlier Sunday, Abdel-Hadi Darah, a spokesman for the Sirte-Jafra Operations Room, told Anadolu Agency that the road will be reopened to give time to Haftar to pull out Russian mercenaries.

“We agreed to open the Misrata-Sirte road, alleviate the suffering of the citizens, and give the second party [Haftar] a deadline to withdraw the Russian Wagner mercenaries,” he said.

Wagner mercenaries that support Haftar’s forces are stationed in Sirte and its airport.

Darah, however, did not specify how long the strategic road will remain open.

On Oct. 23, the UN announced a permanent cease-fire agreement between Libya’s warring rivals during its facilitated 5+5 Libyan Joint Military Commission talks in Geneva.

The agreement also called for the withdrawal of all mercenaries from Libya within three months of its signing. The deadline expired on Jan. 23.

Libya has been torn by civil war since the ouster of late ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

Source: Anadolu Agency

UPDATE – 1st annual meeting of Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Turkey held ‘successfully’

Turkey held a “successful organization” for the first annual meeting of the Antalya Diplomacy Forum (ADF) with full in-person participation, said the Turkish foreign minister on Sunday.

Speaking at his closing speech of the three-day high-level event, Mevlut Cavusoglu said it became one of the first and biggest international events during the pandemic and it was held under compliance with all health measures.

Around 8,000 PCR tests were conducted each day of the event.

“I think it will be a model for events of this scale in the future,” Cavusoglu added.

Thanking all participants “who enriched this forum with different perspectives,” he said: “Our goal during the forum was not to repeat the spoken words, not to repeat what is known. We wanted to go beyond our ‘speech notes’ in terms of diplomacy.”

Antalya Diplomacy Forum has seen a high turnout from the leaders and foreign ministers of different countries, with Cavusoglu holding more than 50 bilateral meetings. A total of 11 heads of state and government, 45 foreign ministers, and attendance at ministerial level were part of the forum, according to the minister.

“This means that one out of every five foreign ministers in the world was here,” he said.

Additionally, the event was attended by about 60 representatives of international organizations and high-level personalities, many Turkish and foreign guests from the business and academic world, and 256 young people in total, including undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral students from more than 50 universities.

Two leaders’ sessions, 15 panels, 25 side events, including ADF Talks, and two youth forums were organized.

Noting that today “most of the problems that occupy the global agenda are experienced in the Mediterranean Basin,” where the forum took place, Cavusoglu said there is room for all voices and all ideas in the region.

“Today it is in our hands to turn the Mediterranean into a sea of ​​friendship,” he said. “For this, we need innovative diplomacy and new approaches.”

“We hope that the Antalya Diplomacy Forum will be a place where everyone who seeks creative solutions to international problems can take part. Hopefully, Antalya Diplomacy Forum will become a long-term platform,” he concluded.

– Operation, security of Kabul airport ‘very important’

Regarding reporters’ questions on the Kabul International Airport, Cavusoglu said: “The operation and security of this airport are very important for Afghanistan, it is Afghanistan’s gateway to the world.”

“It is important not only for Afghanistan but also for the survival of all diplomatic missions there, including Turkey,” he continued.

Emphasizing that it is not an obligation that Turkey will undertake alone, the minister said Turkey needs support from important countries, allies, but above all from Afghanistan itself.

“The Afghan administration also wants Turkey to stay here,” he said. “We have always said that we will stand by Afghanistan and we will be in Afghanistan as long as Afghanistan needs it.”

Turkey, whose forces in Afghanistan have always been of noncombatant troops, is reported to have offered to guard Hamid Karzai International Airport as questions remain on how security will be assured along major transport routes and at the airport, which is the main gateway to the capital Kabul.

– Turkey’s healthy tourism program sets example for world

Welcoming Russia’s recent decision to resume full-scale air traffic with Turkey, Cavusoglu said Turkey’s healthy tourism measures and certification process “set an example to the world.”

The air traffic will start by Tuesday.

Last year about 2 million Russian tourists visited Turkey despite the pandemic and Turkey expects a higher number this year, according to the minister.

He recalled that Turkey’s case numbers fell sharply from around 60,000 to 5,000 with the latest coronavirus measures and many European countries started to lift restrictions against Turkey while others considering such a move as well.

– Greece should stop ‘manipulations’

After the ongoing tensions in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean for a while, Cavusoglu said Turkey restarted consultative talks with Greece.

Referring to the both president- and foreign-minister-level meetings held between the two countries, he said: “I hope that this determination and sincerity will continue for both sides.”

Cavusoglu also urged the Greek side to “give up provocations” during the summer such as carrying out drills in the Aegean during the tourism season as it is agreed on. He also referred to other “provocative steps”Greece often takes, such as violating the disarmament status of the islands.

– Customs Union agreement negotiations with EU should restart

Cavusoglu said the negotiations on the modernization of the 1995 Customs Union agreement should start at the upcoming EU summit.

Turkey does not know how many rounds of negotiations there will be, he said, reminding that last time there were three.

“But it needs to start again,” he added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey collects over 4,555 cubic meters of mucilage from sea in last 12 days

Over the past 12 days, Turkish sea cleaning teams have collected a total of 4,555 cubic meters (160,858 cubic feet) of mucilage from the Sea of Marmara, said the country’s environment and urbanization minister on Sunday.

Updating on the efforts to clear out the mucilage, also known as sea snot, Murat Kurum said on Twitter that the operations were conducted at 278 locations.

Noting that the collected mucilage has been sent for disposal, Kurum said Yalova, Kocaeli, Bursa, Tekirdag, Istanbul, Balikesir and Canakkale are among the provinces where most of the mucilage has been cleared.

Mucilage is an overgrowth of microscopic algae called phytoplankton caused by rising seawater temperatures due to global warming, stagnant water, and pollution.

On June 6, Turkish authorities announced a 22-point action plan to clear it out.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Refugees worried by Kenya’s plans to close 2 camps

Hundreds of thousands of refugees in Northern Kenya’s Kakuma and Dadaab refugee camps are frightened about their future after being told by the government that they must return to their homes by next year, which they had fled some years ago due to terrorist attacks and calamities such as drought and famine.

They are still haunted by the horrific scenes back home, as well as their long, perilous, and risky escapes from terrorists, militants, and gunmen on their way to Kenya.

Hermand Mamadou fled Congo with his family in 2016, and while his village was not under attack at the time of his escape from a militant-controlled area, people were restless and in a state of fear and panic.

“I knew there was no turning back when I took that first step outside my house. I could hear the guns, screams, and explosions from neighboring villages. I knew that if I didn’t run, my son and wife would be next,” he recalled.

Mamadou, a former accountant turned gold broker, approached his neighbor, and demanded around $200.

“I asked my neighbor, Eltnoh Victorie, for $200 to use as transportation,” 56-year-old Mamadou remembers, adding: “I told him you can have everything that I have left behind, including my livestock.”

After getting the money, he said, he did not waste any time and jumped on his motorbike and fled the village. He drove for as long as he could until he ran out of fuel. But at least he was far from his hometown.

And it was not until he made it to Kenya’s Kakuma refugee camp, where he learned of the deaths of many people from his village, including his neighbor, that he noticed what had happened.

Mamadou and others who have fled pain, misery, and torture in their home countries have found refuge in the Kakuma refugee camp.

– Dadaab refugee camp

Many have taken protection in Kakuma, while some have begun to rebuild their lives about 500 kilometers (310 miles) away in the Dadaab refugee camp. Others, who arrived in the 1990s established businesses, while some were engaged as professional workers in their fields.

Asylum seekers have brought with them a rich culture and expertise, which has benefited Kenya’s host communities.

Mamadou has learned since arriving in Kakuma that the Kenyan government intends to close the two camps and repatriate the refugees.

“It’s very sad that they’re returning us to the same places we escaped from,” he said pessimistically, fearing that they “will be killed as the places aren’t yet safe.”

“They’re even worse than when they left them,” he said, adding that sending them during the pandemic is a bad decision that he hoped the Kenyan government will reconsider.

According to the UN refugee agency, a majority of refugees and asylum seekers in Kenya are from Somalia (54%). Other major nationalities are South Sudanese (24.6%), Congolese (9%), and Ethiopians (5.8%).

As of the end of January, people of concern from Sudan, Rwanda, Eritrea, Burundi, Uganda, and other countries accounted for 6.8% of the overall population of 508,033.

Almost half of the refugees in Kenya (44%) reside in Dadaab, 40% in Kakuma, and 16% in urban areas (mainly Nairobi), alongside 18,500 stateless people.

“Many people are being killed right now in areas where we used to live,” said Kofi Negasi, an Ethiopian refugee. “You may find reports about it in newspapers, on the radio, and even on television. Instead of sending me back to Ethiopia, I’d rather they kill me and bury me here.”

Yuusuf Liban, a Somali refugee, said the area near where he used to live in Somalia is still rife with militancy and insecurity due to al-Shabaab terrorist activities.

“I pleaded with them not to return us to the hostile environments. Drought and famine will certainly kill us if (not) the terrorists. We don’t want to see the camps close down,” Liban remarked.

The Kenyan government gave the UN refugee agency a 14-day deadline on March 24 to come up with a plan to close the Dadaab and Kakuma refugee camps.

Kenyan Interior Minister Fred Matiang’I said in a statement that he has provided Commissioner Filippo Grandi a timeline for the closure of the Kakuma and Dadaab refugee camps by June 30. The process, planned to begin on May 5, 2022, will be expedited by a government team and UN refugee agency experts.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) quickly responded to the ministry, saying that evicting the refugees from the Dadaab and Kakuma camps, which have populations of 218,873 and 196,666 registered refugees, respectively, will be catastrophic.

– World Refugee Day

As the world marks World Refugee Day, many refugees, like Yuusuf Liban, Kofi Negasi, and Hermand Mamadou, are calling on the international community to intervene to save their lives. They also urged the Kenyan government to keep the camps open.

In November 2016, Kenya announced plans to close the Dadaab refugee camp, citing it as a security threat to Kenyans.

Kenya alleged that al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Shabaab terrorists who attacked Garissa University in 2015, killing over 140 students, were aided by sympathizers from the Dadaab refugee camp, citing this as the primary reason for the camp’s closure.

The Kenyan government’s plan to close the refugee camps, which house over half a million people, mostly Somali refugees, was temporarily halted by the Kenyan High Court on April 8.

In a statement, Human Rights Watch said: “Kenya needs to maintain asylum and consider allowing refugees at long last to integrate. They could start by opening up, not closing, the camps and allowing those forced to live there freedom to move.”

The Human Rights Watch also asked donor governments to provide financial support and resettlement opportunities that can keep a glimmer of hope alive for those living in the camps.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish president marks Father’s Day

The Turkish president on Sunday commemorated Father’s Day, an annual day of honoring fatherhood and paternal bonds.

“I congratulate all our fathers who have supported their families for a lifetime and mobilized all their means, time and savings for the future of their children,” said Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Twitter.

“I commemorate all our fathers and elders, especially our martyrs, who passed away to the hereafter, with mercy.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey’s support helpful to Gagauz Autonomous Region in Moldova: Governor

Turkey’s support for business and development areas is very helpful for the Gagauz Autonomous Region, the governor of Moldova’s autonomous Gagauzia region said Saturday.

“Our peoples are very close. We speak one language, we understand each other,” Irina Vlah told Anadolu Agency on the sidelines of Antalya Diplomacy Forum.

“Turkey has always been with us, they have helped us a lot,” Vlah said while expressing gratitude to Turkey for its support since the region gained autonomy.

Turkey has carried out projects in the region and Moldova, including building kindergartens and nurseries, she said.

Besides the Moldovan and Russian languages, she underscored the importance of teaching Gagauz Turkish in kindergartens.

“We want our children to know these languages, understand people and speak our mother tongue. That’s why we need to protect our language,” she said.

She said she invited Turkish business leaders to Moldova and the Gagauz Autonomous Region every time she visited Turkey. “I think we should open new workplaces together. Gagauz people should work and win.”

She expressed hope that Turkey and the Gagauz Autonomous Region will produce more projects.

Gagauzia is an autonomous region in the Eastern European country that is home to a mostly Gagauz population — an Orthodox Christian, Turkic community.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Climate refugees ‘seeking asylum’ in international law

Although the number of people fleeing lands because of climate change-related effects has increased, neither climate refugees nor environmental migrants and environmentally displaced people are considered legal persons under international law.

They are not legal persons as part of international law as they are not recognized in the 1951 Refugee Convention.

But the debate on the issue has become more visible among academics, human rights advocates and environmental organizations as the negative effects of climate change are becoming more frequent and intense amid concerns that it will force more and more people to leave their homes in the near future.

Sumudu Atapattu, executive director of Madison Human Rights Program at the University of Wisconsin (UW), who is an academic at UW Law School, told earlier Anadolu Agency that climate refugees or environmental migrants are “entitled to the minimum protection accorded under international human rights law.”

Referring to the undefined status of climate refugees in comparison with other migrants, she highlighted that there is no grounded terminology. “There is neither terminology nor legal framework to govern those who cross an international border due to consequences related to climate change,” she said.

And so, they are not mentioned when World Refugee Day is marked.

Designated by the UN in 2000 to honor refugees around the globe, World Refugee Day is celebrated annually June 20 to raising awareness of the situation of refugees.

– International law on environmental migration

The Geneva Convention on Refugees is a legal framework that governs those who seek refuge in another country and since one has to establish persecution, it cannot apply to climate refugees.

Along with the Geneva Convention, the Task Force on Climate Displacement, established by the Paris Agreement, refers to migration and human mobility concerning climate change as well as recommendations for integrated approaches to avert, minimize and address displacement related to the adverse impacts of climate change but no grounded terminology specifically regarding climate refugees.

Experts warn that when considering small island countries and poor countries, such as Bangladesh, where more than 200 million live less than one meter above sea level, defining climate migration or environmentally displaced people as part of international regulations on refugees is an urgent issue that requires decisive steps to be taken.

During a leaders’ summit, NATO discussed the fight against climate change for the first time. It made clear the current dangers of climate change to the world and especially in the near future.

“NATO will increase awareness by monitoring and tracking climate change much more closely, and invest in better research, data sharing, and analysis. It will accelerate its adapting to continue to operate in all conditions, including extreme heat and cold, rising sea levels, and natural disasters,” it noted in its 2030 agenda.

Mentioned in 2018 by a World Bank’s report was that unless urgent climate action is taken, the regions of sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and Latin America could be dealing with a combined total of more than 140 million internal climate migrants by 2050.

Another sobering report on the issue revealed by the UN in April warned of disasters linked to climate change effects on worsening poverty, hunger and access to natural resources, stoking instability and violence.

Following evaluations, a report by the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, noted that extreme weather events-related causes have forced more or less an excess of 21 million people annually to move since 2010.

“Weather-related crises have triggered more than twice as much displacement as conflict and violence in the last decade,” said UNHCR.

Considering the statistics, warnings of experts and the ever-increasing effects of climate change, it would not be a surprise to see important legal changes made on climate refugees, environmental migrants and environmentally displaced people in the near future.

Source: Anadolu Agency