Rohingya in Bangladesh frustrated with lack of formal education

Amid mounting frustration, Rohingya rights groups and experts have called on the Bangladesh government to provide refugees with formal education, which is essential for their reintegration and repatriation to Myanmar.

Local rights groups estimate that over half of the 1.2 million refugees stationed in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh are children and youths. More than 700,000 Rohingya fled in 2017 after a military-led crackdown in Rakhine state in which villages were razed, women raped and thousands killed.

Although Rohingya children between the ages of six and 14 have been included in the non-formal education programs initiated by the government and other non-profit organizations, a majority is not a part of any initiative, according to Cox’s Bazar CSO-NGO Forum.

“There is no formal education for our children. We want education for the future of our next generations and reintegration in the society after repatriation,” Khin Maung, the founder of the Rohingya Youth Association, told Anadolu Agency. He resides in Cox’s Bazar.

“Our first priority is to return to our motherland with full rights and dignity, we don’t want to live as refugees anymore.” Rohingya do not have citizenship rights in Myanmar.

Ro Nay San Lwin, co-founder of the UK-based Free Rohingya Coalition, said Bangladesh thinks the Rohingya will stay if they are given their due rights.

“This is not true. We belong to Myanmar. We will definitely go back to Myanmar once the situation changes,” he said.

Louise Donovan, a communications officer at the UNHCR office in Bangladesh, said “further livelihoods and skills training opportunities would provide refugees with a sense of purpose, autonomy and dignity while they are in Bangladesh, while preparing them for reintegration when conditions allow them to return to Myanmar.”

CR Abrar, a professor of international relations at Dhaka University, said Bangladesh should provide formal education to refugee children in line with the Convention on the Rights of the Child, of which Bangladesh is a signatory.

“It’s our responsibility to provide them formal education for their reintegration, and if we don’t want them to be a burden on our shoulders,” he said. “Funds will come from donor agencies. We need a policy.”

He said informal education is good but is not serving the purpose of sustainable reintegration and repatriation to Myanmar.

The government, meanwhile, says it is working toward that goal, but refuses to provide certificate-based education offered to other citizens.

Md Delwar Hossain, the head of Myanmar wing at the Bangladesh Foreign Ministry, told Anadolu Agency that “Rohingya children and youth must be provided education under a curriculum allied with Myanmar and their language so that it can be easy to avail Rohingya’s demand of Myanmar citizenship.”

“In January 2020 we got a draft policy following meetings with a UN agency concerned for child education, but it was not comprehensive enough to go ahead. We asked them to come up with a complete plan, and are still waiting to hear from them,” the official added.

Bangladesh and Myanmar signed an agreement in 2017 for the repatriation of the Rohingya, but to no avail. The situation drastically changed after a military coup in Myanmar on Feb.1.

Dhaka has now called on the international community, including the UN, for support and involvement on the matter. Experts say the UN can also help in introducing a globally-recognized education certificate for the Rohingya.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish navy much stronger with indigenous anti-ship missile

The Turkish defense industry took another important step to meet the needs of the armed forces with domestic and national products with the Atmaca anti-ship missile.

According to information obtained by Anadolu Agency, the missile, one of the most important weapons in surface warfare, was produced to decrease Turkey’s dependence on foreign sources, meet the needs of the Naval Forces Command and develop a deterrent weapon with national resources.

Atmaca, which has a range of 220 kilometers (137 miles) on paper, proved that it can reach 250 kilometers (155 miles) in shooting tests.

It has the ability to update targets and cancel missions with a data link. It can change the target after being thrown and can be directed at another target.

Due to its advanced 3D route planning feature, different actions such as passing over islands and circling them can be performed in a complex area.

It can carry out different time over target, simultaneous time over target and target firing (salvo).

Atmaca can meet multiple missiles at the same time as it can perform autonomous speed control.

It has an important ability to navigate from the water surface. It sails at an altitude of 5 meters (26 feet) in many flights and shots below 3 meters (10 feet).

More than 20 shootings have been carried out by Atmaca. Continuous improvement has been achieved in testing since November 2016.

Turkish weapons manufacturer, Roketsan, touts Atmaca as a high-precision, long-range, surface-to-surface, precision strike anti-ship missile which can be integrated with patrol boats, frigates and corvettes and is expected to replace the US-made Harpoon missile.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Over 2.62B coronavirus vaccine shots given worldwide

Over 2.62 billion doses of coronavirus vaccines have been given worldwide so far, figures compiled by Our World in Data, a tracking website, showed on Sunday.

China leads the global count with over 1.1 billion jabs, followed by the US with 317.17 million.

India has administered 276.69 million shots, Brazil 86.47 million, the UK 73.76 million, Germany 65.74 million, France 47.71 million, and Italy 45.57 million.

Turkey ranks ninth on the list with over 41.34 million doses given, followed by Mexico, Spain, Indonesia, and Russia.

The country with the most doses administered by population is the United Arab Emirates, with 144.89 doses per 100 people.

Most COVID-19 vaccines are administered in two doses, so the number of shots given is not the same as the number of individuals fully vaccinated.

Since December 2019, the pandemic has claimed over 3.86 million lives in 192 countries and regions, with more than 178.27 million cases reported worldwide, according to the US-based Johns Hopkins University.

The US, India, and Brazil remain the worst-hit countries.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Libya to reopen coastal road connecting east, west

The main coastal road linking Libya’s east and west will be opened Sunday to give time to renegade general Khalifa Haftar to pull out Russian mercenaries, a Libyan military spokesman said.

“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,” Abdel-Hadi Darah, a spokesman for the Sirte-Jafra Operations Room, told Anadolu Agency.

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

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

Rocket attack targets military base housing US forces in Iraq

A rocket attack on Sunday targeted the Ain Al-Asad Air Base which houses US forces in Iraq’s western Anbar province, according to the Iraq Defense Ministry.

A ministry statement said an investigation has been launched to uncover those behind the Katyusha rocket attack from the direction of the capital Baghdad.

An Iraqi army officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the rocket fell in the vicinity of the base.

No injuries or damage were reported and no group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack.

Ain Al-Asad base is located in the Al-Baghdadi district, 90 km west of Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province. It is the largest military base for US forces in Iraq and was visited by former President Donald Trump on Dec. 26, 2018.

Over the past months, military bases housing US forces in Iraq have been targeted with missile attacks and Washington has often accused armed factions loyal to Iran of being responsible.

Currently, there are around 3,000 troops, including 2,500 US forces, fighting in the anti-Daesh/ISIS coalition.

Iraqi political forces have called for the withdrawal of the US troops from the country under a parliamentary decision issued on Jan. 5, 2020.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Can future generations of Palestine and Israel learn to see each other with empathy?

Israel’s growing violence, dehumanization, and aggression towards Palestinians have deflated prospects for peace in the region, but even so, there may still be cause for hope, according to renowned neuroscientist and biologist Robert Sapolsky, who has spent years studying the thorny topics of racism, inequality, and stubborn conflicts.

In an exclusive interview with Anadolu Agency, Sapolsky explained the insights psychology and behavioral biology can offer into the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

Sapolsky, a professor at California’s Stanford University, has spoken and written extensively about the neurobiology of violence, exploring history and science to help us make sense of human behaviors at both their worst and best.

Despite being in deep into writing a new book, he graciously agreed to an interview, saying he thinks about the plight of Palestine “a lot – it’s heartbreaking how bad the situation is there.”

Asked about whether he sees any hope of bringing peace to the occupied territories of Palestine, he sounded a pessimistic note, saying: “It seems like an unsolvable situation from the standpoint of mutual hatred by now, (with) the cumulative amount of pain.”

But on the other hand, he also cited the notoriously intractable problem of Northern Ireland – which cost countless lives over the decades of “the Troubles” and the centuries prior – as one reason for possible optimism.

“If you had asked me the same question in 1990 about Northern Ireland, I would have said the same thing (about hopes for peace),” he explained.

“It was at that point 40 years into an absolutely impossible heartbreaking situation of hatred, domination, retributive violence, and back and forth, and somehow they managed to do it,” he said, meaning how they eventually reached a peace deal, in 1998, with the Good Friday Agreement.

But around 1990, nearly a decade before the deal, Northern Ireland seemed fully as hopeless as the Palestine-Israel situation, he said, adding that he is trying to understand what happened there to make peace possible, and whether this success could be replicated elsewhere.

For example, he said, now there is a whole generation of young people in Northern Ireland who “have no idea what it means to have a British soldier come and force them to lie on the ground” and demand to know the contents of their pockets – a common occurrence before 1998.

“That’s history,” he said. “Twenty-five-year-olds there and everyone younger never experienced that – 300 years of England crushing Ireland and Northern Ireland. There’s 25-year-olds for whom it’s just history books or it’s something that your parents will get agitated and angry (about).”

– ‘Us’ and ‘them’

According to Sapolsky, the neurobiological lesson for this conflict might be like the classic story of “good news and bad news.”

From the standpoint of neurobiology, he said, “It is virtually guaranteed that we divide the world into ‘us and them’.”

“We do it in a fraction of a second, under the control of various hormones.”

Just like our primate cousins, we split the world into friend and foe and act towards “them” in a way that is often terrible and very ingrained in us, he added, saying: “So that’s the bad news.”

But the good news is that over time, racism can be changed, and surprisingly easier than we might imagine.

Human beings have multiple categories of “thems” in our heads, said Sapolsky, and which category seems most important at any given point can shift in just a second.

“A lot of research suggests that race is not as fundamental of a category in our brains as one would often conclude. That’s good news there,” he said.

Environmental factors and context are also quite vital for analyzing the sources of aggression, he added.

According to his research, hormones, genes, childhood, and the culture people grow up in are all factors that shape the structure of our brains, and none of these are independent of the others.

What this adds up to is that it can be surprisingly easy to manipulate us and to create circumstances in which a “them” can turn into an “us.”

“Demagogues and dictators and sociopaths and (people) of that sort are very good at manipulating us to turning ‘us’ into ‘them’,” he said.

“And the really good ones historically at that are better than any psychologist or neurobiologist at understanding how to make us turn an ‘us’ into someone who hardly even counts as human,” he explained.

As we can be so easily manipulated, that same potential we have for the wrong hands changing our categories can also exist towards beneficial ends, he said.

He also said media has a huge impact on aggression, saying it can serve as a constant reminder of what we lack, reopening wounds that may have never fully healed.

“It is not so much (just) poverty,” he said, but instead any bad outcome “where you were being reminded of (it) every single day, and in much the same way,” living in a world where “every day at a checkpoint, you were being reminded of your circumstance.”

If every day you are “looking up the hill and what used to be your family’s vineyard and no longer is,” that can be a powerful reminder, he said, evoking an experience felt by many dispossessed Palestinians.

– Can future generations learn to see each other with empathy?

Asked whether resolution of the Mideast conflict depends on national leadership, Sapolsky decried the problem of short-sighted leaders, but added that the problem is larger than that, as years of oppression and violence have made a two-state solution seem more distant than ever.

“With each passing year (there’s) less interest in a two-state solution, less interest in anything like that, (and) a lot of that obviously has to do with Israel’s equivalent of Donald Trump, (Benjamin) Netanyahu, who has been a nightmare in terms of the impact that he has had,” he explained, citing the former US and Israeli leaders, both of whom have been democratically ousted since last fall.

“But it’s not just (Netanyahu), it’s not just the leadership, it’s just, with enough generations of hatred, it’s very hard to imagine anything other than that,” he said.

Sapolsky also said future generations on both sides may yet learn to see each other with empathy, but making this happen will not be easy, and will require the wheel of time to move forward.

“It may require almost everybody in both of those places who was alive now to be dead and gone for next generations to be able to do this, and it amazes me,” he said, again citing the effects of generational change in Northern Ireland.

Peaceful resolution can happen, but it will take an enormous shift, he explained.

He also pointed to the role of outside powers stirring up internecine conflict as a way to distract from the real sources of misery and deprivation.

“I’m very taken with how much of intergroup conflict is the outcome of a hidden third party setting it up in the first place, pitting one group of weak against another group of weak, and have them fight each other instead of recognizing who was really responsible,” he explained.

Such manipulation of the public is “always a good strategy for keeping the weak at each other’s throats instead of going after the actual enemy,” he added.

According to Sapolsky, the oppression of the West Bank by Israel has gone on for years now, but a deeper look shows that in fact it may be the last and possibly worst criminal act of three centuries of European colonialism, and one which future empathy holds a chance of setting right.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Officials from Balkan countries discuss relations with EU

Officials from Balkan countries discussed steps to improve relations with the EU and each other at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum in Turkey on Saturday.

During the “Common View of Neighbors: The Future of Europe” panel, Miroslav Lajcak, EU special representative for Kosovo-Serbia dialogue, said Europe is the most important partner of the Western Balkans and it provides significant support to the region in trade and investment.

Underlining that since the 2003 Thessaloniki Summit, where the EU presented the prospect of full membership to countries in the region for the first time, he said nation’s did not make great progress. Two countries were in the negotiation process, he said.

Since the EU has to deal with an economic crisis, refugee crisis and the coronavirus pandemic, the EU membership issue remains in the background and the process is in a “foggy period,” he said.

Highlighting that the EU expects a strong signal from countries in the region, he said: “The EU needs to make sure that every new member that will join the union will be functional.”

Sergey Lagodinsky, chair of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Commission, said Turkey’s EU membership process is quite complex.

“We encounter the same problems in the membership processes of smaller countries where the obligations they have to fulfill are less,” said Lagodinsky.

Lagodinsky said Turkey’s process has not been suspended. It is just pending, and some problems need to be resolved.

“The negotiation process with the EU is important not only to please the EU but also to achieve a society that can be proud of its membership,” he added.

Montenegrin Foreign Minister Djordje Radulovic said 80% of his country’s population supports EU membership.

Noting that membership is a technical process, not political, Radulovic said: “The Western Balkans are the heart of Europe, Montenegro and Albania are the heart of the Western Balkans.”

Albanian Foreign Minister Olta Xhacka said the “European dream” also contributes to regional cooperation and good neighborly relations.

Western Balkan countries are not the backyard of the EU, he said, adding events in the Balkans affect the EU.

Former Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta said six Balkan countries besides Croatia, Slovenia, Bulgaria and Romania, should the process to become members of the union.

“Western Balkan countries are part of Europe and the EU would be incomplete without the Western Balkan countries,” he said.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Coronavirus pandemic strengthens bond between Turkish fathers, children

Although the coronavirus outbreak has turned life upside down, it appears to have strengthened the relationship between fathers and their children.

In Turkey, four fathers told Anadolu Agency about their experience during the pandemic for Father’s Day.

“I have spent time with my family during the pandemic,” said Hikmet Yalcinkaya, a 32-year-old editor who has been working remotely for about a year and a half.

“Since I work from home, the time I can spend with my children has increased a lot and we try to benefit from this situation as positively as possible.”

Yalcinkaya believes the time has positively affected his family relationship in general. “I can easily say that the sharing of housework has increased and we can spend more time with each other.”

The father of two said he noticed the time he spent on social media. “Then, I tried to control this time. This allowed me to spend more time with my children.”

“When I compare the first day we started working from home with today, I think that the communication between us has improved a lot and this strengthens our child-father relationship.”

– ‘We have become active playmates’

Sales and marketing specialist Mustafa Kaya has been working at home for 15 months because of the virus.

The 37-year-old father who has two children said his family has not left home if it was not necessary. “We spent time at home playing games such as hide and seek and play dough shapes.”

He noted that he spent one to two hours playing with his children before the pandemic but the time has now doubled.

The pandemic benefited housewives the most because it was tiring for working fathers both physically and psychologically, he said.

“Children with endless energy spent a lot of time with the father, the communication between us has become very good, but I cannot say that it is easy for the father.”

“During the pandemic, we have become active playmates,” he added.

He said he had the opportunity to see how tired mothers become and could empathize more accurately.

“Thus, seeing how tolerant they treat children, I also forced myself to be more tolerant toward them.”

He noted that it also allowed him to understand how being an active playmate rather than a spectator in the parks can contribute to children’s development.

Kaya said the bonds between him and his children became stronger. “The feeling of witnessing what they learn, do something new every day was magnificent such as the first crawl and the first steps,” he said. “It is very enjoyable to learn to experience such firsts by experiencing them personally, not by your spouse’s phone call as in the office period.”

– ‘If my family smiles, I become the happiest father on earth’

Mustafa Cengiz said he was mainly caring for his family because he worked mostly at home.

Cengiz, 38, said he generally spent time sharing housework with his wife, including gardening.

“I tried to give every support to my wife when I was at home. We made the task distribution, and I did my duties to ease what falls upon my wife’s shoulders,” said Cengiz.

He also emphasized the importance of spending time with his two children during that time.

“The pandemic has been a really good opportunity for me to allocate more of my time for my family, to get to know them much better and to turn this problematic process into something that all of us benefited from,” he said. “I feel that the bond between me and my children has strengthened so much in the last year. Spending quality time, playing games and even just talking with them for hours were the things that I really enjoyed.”

His advice to fathers: “First of all, you have to support your wife, meet your daily tasks, and ease the weight on her. Doing so helps you spare more time for your children,” said Cengiz. “If my family smiles, I become the happiest father on earth.”

– ‘Sharing housework with your wife helps you create time for your child’

Omur Gokalp was mainly at home, working and spending time with his family during the outbreak.

“At first, it was really difficult for me to adapt to life mostly at home. Later on, I started to like it more than I expected,” the 35-year-old said, noting that if it was not for the pandemic, his family would not have had the opportunity to notice they are healthy and together, and appreciate it all.

“The pandemic helped us learn to live happily together,” he said. “I wasn’t aware of how my wife gets tired when she tried to deal with everything all by herself. But, now I know that I will always stand by her, and help her in every matter that I can from now on.

“Sharing housework will also help me and my wife to create more time for our child. So, as a father, I’m really happy that I stayed at home and strengthened my relationship with both my wife and my son.”

He also had suggestions for other fathers. “That home is yours, and if you make proper investments into your home-life, you will eventually start to feel like you are becoming a better person.”

“Before the epidemic, all that mattered for me was how much money I earned to meet our needs, but this process made me realize that all that really matters is my family, and family alone,” added Gokalp.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey out of women’s European basketball championship

The Turkish women’s basketball team were knocked out of the 2021 FIBA ​​European Women Basketball Championship on Sunday after losing to Belgium 63-61 in their latest Group C clash.

Quanitra Hollingsworth scored 16 points, while Melis Gulcan had 15 and Pelin Bilgic added 13 for Turkey at the Rhenus Sport venue in Strasbourg, France.

Turkey were also defeated by Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Slovenia in the first two matches.

Source: Anadolu Agency