4 PKK terrorists surrender to Turkish security forces

Four members of the terrorist group PKK surrendered to Turkish security forces on Saturday, according to the country’s Interior Ministry.

In a statement, the ministry said the terrorists were convinced to surrender by the gendarmerie and police forces.

The family of one of the surrendered terrorists had been part of a group in the eastern Diyarbakir province protesting the abduction or forcible recruitment of their children by the PKK, the statement added.

Holding the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), which the government accuses of terror ties, responsible for the abduction of their sons and daughters, the families have been protesting outside the party’s local office in the Diyarbakir province for about three years.

One of the terrorists took part in the group in 2013-2015 and was active in nearby Syria and Iraq, the statement said.

It said the number of terrorists that have been convinced to surrender rose to 136, while the number of protesting families reunited with their children reached 31.

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

*Writing by Dilan Pamuk in Ankara

Source: Anadolu Agency

Manchester City leaves Arsenal in the dust, 5-0

Manchester City smashed Arsenal 5-0 in the English Premier League match on Saturday.

City took the lead early, with Turkish-German midfielder Ilkay Gundogan scoring in the 7th minute at Manchester’s Etihad Stadium.

Spanish winger Ferran Torres made it 2-0 in the 12th minute.

The Gunners went down to 10 players as midfielder Granit Xhaka got a red card in the 35th minute for his challenge to Joao Cancelo.

Gabriel Jesus scored the third goal for Man City in the 43rd minute, ending the first half 3-0.

But the Cityzens did not play it safe in the second half, as Rodri scored his team’s fourth goal in the 53rd minute.

Ferran Torres’ second goal of the match made the final scoresheet in the 84th minute, and Manchester City defeated Arsenal 5-0.

The match left Man City in fourth place with 6 points in the English Premier League, far ahead of Arsenal at number 19.

This match marks the worst start for Arsenal in their 128-year Premier League history.

Source: Anadolu Agency

SunExpress carries over 3M passengers so far in 2021

Turkish-German joint venture SunExpress has served more than 3 million passengers so far in 2021, the airline said on Saturday.

Following a rocky period on aviation sector last year due to the coronavirus pandemic, “the total number of passengers carried by SunExpress jumped 43% year-on-year,” it revealed in a statement.

The company’s seat occupancy rate – passenger load factor – reached 85% by rising flight frequency to Turkey’s holiday destinations, as well as adding new destinations to its network after travel restrictions were eased.

Based in Turkey’s sunny Antalya on the Mediterranean coast, SunExpress was founded in 1989 as a joint venture of Turkish Airlines and Germany’s Lufthansa.

Source: Anadolu Agency

International hot air balloon festival starts in Cappadocia, Turkey

A three-day international hot air balloon festival kicked off in Turkey’s picturesque Cappadocia region on Saturday.

Dozens of hot air balloons have brightened up the skies above Cappadocia, a charming touristic hub famed for its fairy chimneys in Turkey as part of the second edition of the international festival, which has been organized by Pasha Balloons, one of the hot air balloon companies operating in the central Nevsehir province.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Halis Aydogan, chairman of Pasha Balloons, said that besides hot air balloons in the region, some others from Spain and Portugal also participated in the festival.

“There is quite a lot of interest. We expect the festival to continue in the best way possible for three days. Cappadocia is the place where the most balloon flights take place in the world,”Aydogan added.

In 2022, he said, they aim to hold the festival with more participation from abroad.

Nida Olcar, who travelled from the western Kutahya province to participate in the event, said she enjoyed watching the mesmerizing image balloons have created in the sky.

The festival will continue with an evening concert and a light show of hot air balloons.

Cappadocia is a UNESCO World Heritage site famous for its chimney rocks, hot air balloon trips, underground cities, and boutique hotels carved into the rocks. It is one of Turkey’s most important touristic regions.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Manchester City unveil statues of Silva, Kompany

Manchester City on Saturday unveiled statues of club legends David Silva and Vincent Kompany at the club’s Etihad Stadium.

The statues made their debut in a specially commissioned video on the club’s website and social media accounts.

Built of welded pieces of galvanized steel, the statues were created by award-winning sculptor Andy Scott.

The statues will be illuminated at night with blue-tinted lighting.

Both Belgian defender Kompany and Spanish midfielder Silva contributed to the most successful era in Manchester City’s 127-year history, playing there for 11 years and 10 years respectively, mostly in the 2010s.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Ater 57 years, Istanbul’s iconic Greek Orthodox orphanage set for restoration

An event at Istanbul’s historic Buyukada Greek Orthodox Orphanage, which has been closed since 1964, called for cooperation to launch a massive restoration project for the iconic building.

Speaking at the event on Friday, Patriarch Bartholomew I, the Istanbul-based leader of many of the world’s Orthodox Christians, said that the Fener Greek Orthodox Patriarchate is working to restore the building, also known as Pringipos Greek Orthodox Orphanage, despite all the technical and economic difficulties.

For restoration, “we wish to reach out to state authorities, municipalities, non-governmental organizations, and all Istanbul lovers to get their support,” said Bartholomew, who hosted the event.

“Only with the strength to come out of such a comprehensive cooperation, this problem can be solved and the orphanage can be brought back to Istanbul, which is described as the queen of cities,” he said.

The cultural and architectural richness of the orphanage, dubbed the largest wooden structure in Europe and the second one in the world, can be transferred to the future following the restoration, he said.

Stressing the iconic building’s architectural features, Bartholomew said that it was the “conscientious duty of everyone” to end the dissolution process that the orphanage has experienced in the last decades.

The building was constructed by Istanbul-born architect Alexander Vallaury in 1898 as a hotel but later was bought by the wife of a Greek banker, Eleni Zarifi, who later donated the building to the Patriarchate which operated it as an orphanage.

In 1964, the building was evacuated due to “the risk of fire and the lack of security for the children,” according to the project’s website. In 2018, Europa Nostra, a pan-European federation for cultural heritage, placed the building on the list of the seven most endangered heritage sites in Europe.

Turkey to do its best to raise building up

The event to promote the ongoing process for the historic building gathered experts and diplomats as well as intellectuals including Turkey’s Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk in the garden of the now almost demolishing building, located in a forested area atop of a hill on Buyukada, the largest of Princes’ Islands off the coast of Istanbul.

While details of the technical progress of the future restoration were explained to the public, it also was announced that a possible workshop, especially to clarify the function of the historic building, with broad participation would be held in the coming months.

For his part, Ahmet Misbah Demircan, Turkish deputy minister of culture and tourism, said: “We solved the problems related to minority foundations under the leadership of our President (Recep Tayyip Erdogan).”

In 2008, under new legislation passed by Turkey’s Justice and Development (AK) Party, reforms allowed minority groups to buy and renovate their properties.

Stating that the iconic building is a first-degree protected area, Demircan said: “A workshop invitation is also made about how it will be used.”

“In this process, we will try to do our part and do our best to raise (the building) up,” he pledged.

Preliminary work completed

Laki Vingas, the orphanage’s restoration project coordinator, said that the preliminary work for the restoration has been completed.

Vingas explained the short-term goals of the project as “to present the temporary support measures for the preservation” of the pre-restoration building to Turkey’s monuments committee which regulates such restoration projects.

He also underlined the importance of “organizing a workshop with the participation of experts in September or October on determining the function of the building” as well as “identifying financial opportunities for the restoration.”

Nazim Akkoyunlu, deputy general manager at BIMTAS, a company run by the Istanbul Municipality that carries out preliminary works of restoration project, told the crowd a team of 30 people worked in the field for 45 days.

Sharing 3-D photographs from the building, Akkoyunlu said: “Unfortunately, 50% of the roof is destroyed, all of it is damaged. Some 60% of the fourth floor has collapsed, and 40% of the third and fourth floors are broken.”

“Floor beams have lost 60% of their load-bearing capacity throughout the building,” he explained. “A protective cover system and support elements should be placed so that the building does not undergo a demolition process.”

After 57 years, Istanbul’s iconic Greek Orthodox orphanage set for restoration

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkey’s 3 biggest cities fall under low-risk category of coronavirus

Turkey’s top three metropolitan cities fell under the category of low-risk provinces as the most recent COVID-19 infections rates revealed on Saturday.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca shared the latest weekly infection rates data for COVID-19 across the 81 provinces for Aug. 14 to 20.

Revealing a fall in the weekly infection rates in Istanbul, which is home to nearly one-fifth of the country’s population, the data showed that the number of cases per 100,000 people was 147.73 in the metropolis, down from 181.96 last week.

The capital Ankara registered 176.38 cases per 100,000 people, a fall from 199.55 a week earlier, and it was 46.24 in the Aegean province of Izmir, down from 49.81 last week.

The northern Rize province on the Black Sea region topped the list with 538.1 cases per 100,000 people and was followed by eastern provinces of Bingol, Batman and Bayburt, and Aksaray in central Turkey.

“Herd immunity is possible through solidarity,” he said, urging people to get vaccinated.

Koca had announced on Thursday that there was no province left with high risk of COVID-19 infection across Turkey.

Turkey has administered more than 92.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines since it launched a mass vaccination campaign in January, according to the latest official figures.

It has entered a new normalization phase in July amid a nationwide fall in virus cases and an expedited vaccination drive, lifting almost all virus-related restrictions.

Since December 2019, the pandemic has claimed nearly 4.48 million lives in 192 countries and regions, with over 215.49 million cases reported worldwide, according to the US’ Johns Hopkins University.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Spot market natural gas prices for Friday, August 27

The trade volume of Turkey’s spot natural gas market decreased by 28.4% to 5.3 million Turkish liras on Friday, Turkey’s Energy Exchange Istanbul (EXIST) data showed on Saturday.

Total trade on Thursday amounted to 7.4 million liras.

On Friday’s spot market, 1,000 cubic meters of natural gas cost 2,160 liras, while the cumulative natural gas trade volume amounted to 2.46 million cubic meters.

Turkey received 144.51 million cubic meters of pipeline gas on Friday.

US$1 equals 8.34 Turkish liras at 1104 GMT on Saturday.

Source: Anadolu Agency

German foreign minister to visit Turkey on Sunday

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas will pay a working visit to Turkey on Sunday, according to the Turkish Foreign Ministry.

“During the meetings, bilateral relations and Turkey-EU relations, as well as regional issues, particularly the developments in Afghanistan will be discussed,” said a ministry statement.

Turkey and Germany have both been busy evacuating their citizens from Afghanistan, as well as Afghans who worked with them, ahead of next Tuesday’s deadline, while also planning for a new era with the Taliban leading a government in Kabul.

Source: Anadolu Agency