Turkey’s communications director hails Azerbaijan’s Victory Day

Turkey’s communications director on Monday congratulated Azerbaijan on its first Victory Day, which commemorates the liberation of a key city in Nagorno-Karabakh from nearly 30 years of illegal Armenian occupation.

 

“Sharing the same sadness and joy, we have always walked shoulder to shoulder with the spirit of two states and one nation,” Fahrettin Altun said on Twitter, referring to the Turkish-Azerbaijani motto, “One nation, two states.”

 

“Last year today, this march was crowned with a blessed victory. Greetings to our Karabakh, which our Azerbaijani brothers liberated with a great spirit of resistance,” Altun added.

 

He also posted a video marking the importance of the day and strong ties between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

 

On Dec. 3, 2020, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev signed a decree establishing Victory Day on Nov. 8.

 

Shusha, Azerbaijan’s cultural and historical capital, was liberated last fall after 28 years of Armenian occupation.

 

During the 44-day conflict, which ended with a Russian-brokered truce in November 2020, Azerbaijan liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from Armenian occupation.

 

Relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan – the two former Soviet republics – have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

 

A joint Turkish-Russian center was established to monitor the post-war truce.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Pakistan crush Scotland, continue unbeaten run in T20 World Cup

Pakistan remained unbeaten at the cricket T20 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates, as they beat Scotland by 72 runs on Sunday to set-up a semi-final clash against Australia.

 

New Zealand also eased to an eight-wicket win over Afghanistan, eliminating pre-tournament favorites India. Black Caps will now face England in the semi-final.

 

Afghanistan were bowled out at 125 runs. Najibullah Zadran played a lone hand 73 off 48 balls to help his team reach a modest total.

 

Kiwi openers Martin Gutptill and Daryl Mitchell gave a steady start, taking singles and doubles with occasional boundaries.

 

Mitchell was the first causality – caught behind for 17 on an elusive delivery by Mujeeb Ur Rahman.

 

Right-arm off-spinner, Rashid Khan sent back Guptill bowled for 28 to bag his 400th wicket in T20 matches.

 

However, after losing two wickets, skipper Kane Williamson (40) and Devon Conway (36) put on an unbeaten 68-run partnership of 68 to propel the team home in 18.1 overs.

 

Trent Boult grabbed three wickets, and was the man of the match.

 

In the second contest, after winning the toss and electing to bat first, Pakistani openers Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan found themselves unable to hit freely in the initial overs due to spin wicket.

 

Rizwan, who had been consistent in the previous four fixtures, lost his wicket for 15 followed by Fakhar Zaman, who could score eight runs only.

 

Azam and Mohammad Hafeez continued to charge, and after 10 overs the duo took on the inexperienced Scot bowlers, sending ball to all corners of the ground.

 

Azam hit a glorious 66 off 47, while Hafeez scored 31 off 19 balls.

 

However, a 54-run inning off only 18 balls by all-rounder Shoaib Malik was the highlight of the match as he thumped six sixes. Pakistan finished 189-4.

 

Chasing a daunting 190-run target, Scotland’s top order played at a snail pace and made only 46 runs in first 10 overs as Pakistan’s pace battery continued to break small partnerships with regular intervals.

 

Richie Berrengton, however, produced a fine knock decorated with fours and sixes against Hassan Ali, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Haris Rauf.

 

His 54 runs off 37 balls gave Scotland to reach a respectable total of 117-6. Malik was declared the man of the match.

 

While England will play New Zealand in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday; Pakistan will face Australia on Thursday in Dubai.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Verstappen wins Mexican Grand Prix, extending F1 title lead

Max Verstappen earned his third career victory at the Mexico City Grand Prix and his ninth win of the 2021 season Sunday.

 

The Dutch driver for Red Bull Racing Honda created a 16.555-second gap between Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes and a 17.752-second gap between third finisher and teammate Sergio Perez at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.

 

The victory was crucial for Verstappen, who is currently at the top of the Drivers’ Standings with 312.5 points, while British driver Hamilton is in second spot with 293.5 points and Mercedes’ Finnish driver Valtteri Bottas is in third with 185 points.

 

Mercedes still lead the Constructor Standings with 478.5 points while Red Bull Racing Honda are only one point behind with 477.5 points and Ferrari are third with 268.5 points.

 

The next round in Formula One will be held in Brazil from Nov. 12-14.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Milan draw 1-1 with Inter in Serie A derby

AC Milan drew 1-1 with Inter Milan in a Serie A week 12 match Sunday.

 

Turkish midfielder Hakan Calhanoglu gave Inter an early lead with a penalty goal in the 11th minute at the San Siro stadium.

 

But AC Milan equalized just after six minutes with an own goal by Inter’s Dutch defender Stefan de Vrij.

 

Milan’s domination of the match led to several scoring chances for them in the second half but they missed them all.

 

AC Milan also missed the chance to climb to the top spot of Serie A and are in second spot in the table with 32 points. Leaders Napoli also have 32 points, while Inter Milan are in third spot with 25 points.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

China’s exports jump 27.1% in October

China’s exports soared by 27.1% year-on-year to surpass $300 billion in October, according to data from the country’s customs authority.

 

Imports totaled at $215.7 billion in October, surging 20.6% from the same month of last year, the General Administration of Customs data showed on Sunday.

 

The country posted a foreign trade surplus of $84.5 billion in October versus $66.8 billion a month ago.

 

China’s foreign trade surplus with its top trading partner, the US, fell to $40.7 billion last month, down from $42 billion in September, while trade with the EU totaled $29.5 billion.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Global markets to focus on Fed chief’s speech amid quiet data agenda

After a record-setting week driven by high risk appetite, global market sentiments will follow the US Federal Reserve chairman’s speech on Monday.

 

Jerome Powell will deliver the opening remarks at the Gender and the Economy Conference being virtually hosted by the Fed.

 

Analysts said comments from top central bank officials of developed countries, as well as inflation figures from the US and Germany, will be decisive in determining the direction of markets this week.

 

Euro area industrial production data will be also monitored this week.

 

It will be relatively quiet on the global data front on Monday as no major statistics are due to be released. ​​​​​​​

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Taiwanese chipmaker says didn’t reveal customer info to US

The world’s largest chipmaker from Taiwan on Monday said it did not reveal any customer-related information in its submission to the US.

 

“The company has submitted its answers to a questionnaire issued by the US Department of Commerce (DoC), which requested it be filled in and returned by Nov. 8, to address the global chip supply shortage,” said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), in a statement to Focus Taiwan news outlet.

 

Washington had in September issued what is called as Request for Information (RFI) to the TSMA, Samsung, Intel Corp., among others.

 

Under the RFI, the semiconductor companies were asked to “voluntarily share information about inventories, demand, and delivery dynamics.”

 

However, the TSMC asserted “the company did not disclose any confidential information about customers in its response to the US request.”

 

Meanwhile, the DOC said: “Its goal is to understand and quantify where bottlenecks may exist.”

 

The demand by the US had raised concerns regarding customer base and their information which companies submit with the TSMC.

 

Chip supply lines faced pressure amid COVID-19 pandemic last year when the demand was high because most of the work shifted to online infrastructure raising demands in mobile phones, laptops and computers which use electronic chips. The automobile sector also heavily relies on the chip manufacturing sector.

 

Silvia Fang, the TSMC vice president in legal and general counsel, last month stressed that the Taiwanese company “would not disclose any sensitive information about its clients.”

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Asian markets close Monday with mixed figures

Stock markets in Asia ended Monday with mixed figures ahead of US inflation data.

 

The US Department of Labor is set to announce the consumer price index for October on Wednesday.

 

The Asia Dow, which includes blue-chip companies in the region, fell by 10.7 points, or 0.27%, to close at nearly 3,892 points.

 

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 stock exchange decreased 104.5 points, or 0.35%, to 29,507.

 

The Hang Seng, the benchmark for blue-chip stocks trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange, dropped by 106.7 points, or 0.43%, to 24,763.

 

China’s Shanghai stock exchange rose 7.06 points, or 0.20%, to 3,498.6 points after the country’s foreign trade figure for October was announced.

 

China’s exports soared by 27.1% year-on-year to surpass $300 billion in October, while its imports totaled $215.7 billion, surging 20.6%, the General Administration of Customs data showed.

 

The country posted a foreign trade surplus of $84.5 billion in October versus $66.8 billion a month ago.

 

The Indian Sensex benchmark climbed 491.20 points, or 0.82%, to 60,559, while the Singapore index was up 21.6 points, or 0.66%, to 3,263.​​​​​​​

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY

Without emissions trading system, EU partners will be subject to carbon border adjustment

European Union trading partners that have not put an emission trading system in place, within the scope of their targets to combat climate change, will be subject to a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), according to Kadri Simson, the EU Commissioner for Energy.

 

Speaking to Anadolu Agency in an exclusive interview on the sidelines of the COP26 summit, Simson said the CBAM aims to ensure that European emission reductions contribute to a global emissions decline, rather than pushing carbon-intensive production outside of Europe.

 

On July 14, the European Commission (EC) adopted a proposal for a new Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism under the EU’s Green Deal package to put a carbon price on imports of a targeted selection of products so that ambitious climate action in Europe does not lead to ‘carbon leakage’.

 

If the proposal is approved, the EU would demand that its trading partners set up their own emissions trading systems to reduce carbon emissions. However, if governments fail to do so, the EU would implement the carbon tax mechanism at the border.

 

The aim is to also encourage industry outside the EU and international partners to take similar steps to combat climate change, Simson said.

 

Although the EU currently causes less than 10% of annual emissions, she stressed the importance of EU trading partners complying with carbon emission targets in energy production and consumption.

 

This could affect Turkey, one of the major trade partners of the EU, accounting for half of the country’s exports.

 

A study by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) shows that Turkish exporters of energy-intensive products such as cement, steel and aluminum could face steep additional costs when legislative proposals tabled by the EC under the European Green New Deal come into effect.

 

Businesses in Turkey could pay extra charges of as much as €777 million ($898 million) under the new rules, but if only direct emissions are considered, costs could decrease to €399 million ($461 million).

 

Reducing methane emissions could reduce global temperature rise by 0.2 degrees Celsius

 

Commenting on the global commitment to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030 under the Global Methane Pledge, Simson said that with pledges from 105 countries, the global temperature rise could be reduced by 0.2 degrees Celsius (32.36 degree Fahrenheit) by reducing methane emissions.

 

“It is very important for countries to accept this problem first and then make a political commitment. We expect them to implement clear plans. Reducing methane emissions will contribute to achieving our Paris Agreement goals,” she said.

 

Led by the US and the EU, 105 countries signed up to the pledge but India, China, Russia, Iran and Australia, which are among the biggest methane emitters, failed to do so.

 

The signatory countries account for 46% of the global emissions and represent almost 70% of the global economy.

 

Simson underlined the importance of scaling up climate finances from developed countries to developing and emerging economies in the fight against global climate change.

 

She argued that the EU has always kept its promises and it would increase financial support if other developed countries also deliver on their promises.

 

“Because without keeping our promises, we can’t expect that developing countries will follow our lead,” she said.

SOURCE: ANADOLU AGENCY