1st Mass held in Gulf’s largest cathedral in Bahrain

Bahrain’s largest Roman Catholic church held the first Mass on Sunday.

Father Saji Thomas led the Mass in “Our Lady of Arabia” church, which is located 20 kilometers south of the capital, Manama.

The church, the largest in the Arab Gulf region, was opened on Thursday at a cost of over $10 million.

According to the state news agency, the cathedral can seat up to 2,300 people and will serve the 80,000 Catholic Christians in Bahrain, who are mainly workers from India and the Philippines.

The Gulf’s first Roman Catholic church, “The Sacred Heart Church”, was opened in Manama in 1939.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Tunisia protest group calls for rallies to mark revolution anniversary

A protest group has called for demonstrations on Friday to mark the 11th anniversary of the Tunisian revolution.

In a statement on Sunday, the “Citizens Against Coup” initiative called for the restoration of the elected parliament and defending the country’s constitution.

The protest group renewed calls for setting a date for holding early parliamentary and presidential elections as an exit from the country’s ongoing political crisis.

On July 25, Tunisian President Kais Saied ousted the government, suspended parliament, and assumed executive authority. While he insists that his exceptional measures are meant to “save” the country, his critics accuse him of orchestrating a coup.

Tunisia, the birthplace of the Arab Spring revolutions, has been seen as the only country that succeeded in carrying out a democratic transition among Arab countries which witnessed popular revolutions toppling ruling regimes, including Egypt, Libya, and Yemen.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Stratcom Summit 2021: ‘Do not leave information vacuums’

Leave aside prejudice but do not leave information vacuums and for a good communications strategy, produce “engaging and evergreen content”, experts said on Sunday.

“We need to remove our biases; there is an important role of diversity of data, approach, analysis, and analysts,” said Ben Page, the CEO of Ipsos, French-based multinational market research and consulting firm.

Page was virtually addressing the Strategic Communications Summit 2021, hosted by Turkey’s Communications Directorate in the Turkish metropolis Istanbul.

“Focus on key things that drives perception,” Page urged, adding that communications “can change people’s perception.”

Warning that the online environment “threatens our view of reality at a new scale,” he said: “Do not leave information vacuums where people get educated through one-sided perspectives.”

“Be part of the public conversation and understand what to focus on and what to ignore,” he said, adding that opinion polls “remain the best way to understand the public mood.”

Ben said the research helps understand “how people are making decisions.”

On fake news, he said it was better to “get used to living with uncertainty. For example, COVID-19.”

Page said it was important to “understand the channels that are used by different audiences and the measures that work.” “Stick to them,” he insisted, suggesting “simplicity and consistency” in the approach.

‘Create engaging content’

Miklos Gaspar, head of digital media and public information at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), discussed how his office is “communicating nuclear topics” to laypeople.

Nuclear power “is a technical topic… some people like it, some people don’t care (because) they’re not aware of the nuclear potential,” said Gaspar, adding that a quarter of total electricity generated across the world today comes from nuclear sources.

He said digital has become the primary method of communication for the IAEA to “let people see all the potential of nuclear.”

Through its website and social media accounts, the IAEA reaches “about 6 million a month,” said Gaspar, adding that this “is more than five times we would do few years ago.”

“To catch, grab and keep the attention of people who are not interested in your topic, you need to be innovative in terms of content creation and also distribution mechanisms,” he said.

He said it was necessary to make websites “search engine optimized… in fact, hyper search engine optimized both in terms of the content.”

“We also make sure we are compatible with the evolving algorithm of Google and other search engines.”

Gaspar said the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction RT-PCR, which has almost become a household term due to COVID-19, “is actually a nuclear-derived technology.”

“The IAEA has been helping countries for decades to use PCR to detect viruses,” he said.

When the pandemic began, Gaspar said: “The IAEA put out an article explaining how the RT-PCR works … And it got us 1.3 million new visitors.”

“But it’s not enough to optimize for search engines,” he added, urging the use of “simple language, infographics, videos and embed them in the story,” as these factors will make them “evergreen,” he added.

He said times are changing and now is the time when “we use social media first content strategy.”

Gaspar also suggested producing content that is not specifically about one’s organization, saying: “We produce one-third of our content that is not about the IAEA but is about nuclear.”

Another way to increase engagement, he said, is working with other organizations and “cross-sharing our posts.”

Turkey this weekend is hosting Stratcom 2021, an international gathering to address compelling policies, issues, challenges, and trends of the strategic communication ecosystem.

The two-day summit brought together 112 speakers from over 30 countries and a distinguished audience of over 3,000.

Topics tackled at the summit include strategic communication, public diplomacy, digital diplomacy, the metaverse, nation branding, disinformation, new media, open intelligence, new communication technologies and trends, strategic marketing, and political communication.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Strategic Communications, Information Wars session held at Stratcom Summit in Istanbul

The Strategic Communications and Information Wars session was held Saturday at the Stratcom Summit 2021, with a top Anadolu Agency official among speakers at the Istanbul event.

Anadolu Agency’s board member and a member of Medipol University’s communication faculty, Yusuf Ozkir, gave information about the concepts of strategic communication management, public diplomacy and the basic elements of strategic communication.

He said Turkey exists as a country of goodness not only in military, diplomatic or foreign policy terms, but also in a humanitarian, conscientious sense and it has a thesis on a global scale.

Turkey is the country that has provided the most humanitarian aid in the last five years, according to global humanitarian reports, he stressed.

Turkey’s approach to well-being on a global scale is within the framework of aid, but on the one hand, it is also seriously supported through media outlets that make up Turkey’s soft power, noted Ozkir.

“We can say that the publications of Anadolu Agency in 13 languages and TRT in different languages have a seriously positive effect in this sense,” he said.

Recalling that Turkey was selected as the “most generous country” in 2017, 2018, 2019 according to the data by the global humanitarian aid report, as well as being in the position of the second most generous country in 2015 and 2016, he noted that in the past five years, Turkey has provided $35 billion in humanitarian assistance to different countries.

“During the pandemic period when the whole world was going through this difficult process, Turkey both experienced this process itself and, on the one hand, sent medical devices and supplies to almost 160 countries,” he said.

Mentioning that Turkey has been on the global agenda in lots of contexts in the last few years such as military capacity, defense industry, mobility in its foreign policy, and the economy, Ozkir underlined that another issue where Turkey draws attention the most is foreign aid.

“Thanks to these foreign assistance, Turkey wins the hearts of people and takes steps without relying on any interests or pragmatism to create long-term results.

“With this, we can say that it has achieved an important result in the context of strategic communication and public diplomacy and has brought the image of Turkey to a point that is equivalent to good on a global scale.”

-Companies turning into transnational actors

Another Anadolu Agency board member, and member of Istanbul University’s Communication Faculty, Ismail Caglar, said digital media is a force field that no state should leave empty, adding that states that are advantageous with strong infrastructure in this regard have started regulation.

“While the administrative demands of the central countries are being met, you have to bring a court decision when you make this request from Turkey or anywhere else in the world,” he said.

“Administrative decisions are not processed, even court decisions are often not processed. So there are states involved.

“These companies themselves have become transnational actors,” said Caglar.

Pointing out that “the truth” is open to being fictionalized in new media platforms, he noted that the concepts such as freedom of expression, freedom, democracy and human rights have been emptied this way.

“For example, we are not asking the following question; what percentage of your investment in advertising algorithms do you make in data security.

“What percentage of your investment in advertising algorithms do you make to prevent the killing of truth in your own medium?,” he said, adding that it will lead to a “digital dictatorship,” citing the closure of the social media accounts of former US President Donald Trump, Brexit and Cambridge Analytica.

– ‘Disinformation can be prevented with social media literacy’

Turgay Yerlikaya, a member of Istanbul University’s communication faculty, said cybersecurity is now considered an important issue in Turkey and has become a major component of national security.

“The reason for the establishment of the Stratcom center within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is the work done to manage information wars and to make the effects of Russia and China on the West and Eastern Europe dysfunctional, especially in the non-Western world,” he noted.

Yerlikaya added that Turkey and the world are moving toward a context where they will discuss and raise the issue of digitalization of these information wars much more in the next few years.

Kilic Bugra Kanat, SETA (Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research) Washington DC director of research, said information wars are not a new issue, one that has been experienced since the emergence of modern media.

“The technique may be different, the audience may also be different from place to place, but the methodology here, the goals are usually the same,” said Kanat.

“When we look at it, we see an information war led by a more professional group, especially before the internet-based information wars.

“We see a systematic struggle that goes on not only one-hit, but also continuous, highly professional, long-term preparation through intelligence. The present one is a little more flexible. Faster, more reactive,” he said.

“We need to understand that we are an actor against disinformation and that the public can prevent this at any time, both with social media literacy and with the training that will be given,” he added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Panel at Stratcom summit in Istanbul discusses how algorithms shape human life

The effects of algorithms on human rights were discussed on Sunday in a panel at the Stratcom summit 2021 in Istanbul.

In an address by video link, David Carroll of New York’s Parsons School of Design spoke on “How Algorithms Shape Human Life” moderated by Omer Kablan, a presenter at national broadcaster TRT World.

Asked about the social media companies saying “we are the product,” Carrol said: “This is the business model that was developed almost 20 years ago.”

He added: “The real customers to the platforms are not us, it is the legions of advertisers that increasingly rely on these platforms to acquire and maintain relationships with their customers.”

He explained: “We could say we are the product. But we can also say that the real customers don’t have much choice either.”

Struggle for data control

Carroll was featured in the Netflix documentary “The Great Hack” trying to get back his data from Cambridge Analytica – a firm brought down by a scandal over data misuse – showcasing his advocacy for data rights.

He told the panel that this fight was about “testing the data protection regulatory regime.”

“Can it do what it says it can do and (get) an answer to human rights? And unfortunately, I don’t feel that it succeeded,” he said.

“If we can’t recover our data, then we certainly can’t recover how algorithms are interfering with our expression of free will.”

Carrol said he started his Cambridge Analytica fight with “optimism” that it would be a place to find resolution, answers, and truth, but continued: “Unfortunately, the investigation was stymied and obstructed and never resulted in a conclusion, and the regulators never really succeeded at delivering satisfactory results. And so it means my personally feeling disappointed.”

“Ultimately, it took journalists, whistleblowers, leaders of the free press to hold accountable those who are supposed to hold accountable so we’re still relying on sort of last resort of free press and whistleblowing. And I feel like that’s a sign of a broken system,” he said.

Asked if people’s digital footprint might bite us in the future, Carroll answered: “I think the key thing that I learned is to appreciate fundamental differences between the approach of the EU and the US.”

He explained that EU laws see this information “still belongs to us and though it’s out there and that we still maintain rights to it.”

“Whereas in the United States, it’s a different philosophy,” he continued. “Once you put your data out there, you lose control of it.”

“I think that the European Union has a much more enlightened vision for this,” he said.

Stratcom

Turkey this weekend is hosting Stratcom 2021, an international gathering to address compelling policies, issues, challenges, and trends of the strategic communication ecosystem.

The two-day summit brought together 112 speakers from over 30 countries and a distinguished audience of over 3,000.

Topics tackled at the summit include strategic communication, public diplomacy, digital diplomacy, the metaverse, nation branding, disinformation, new media, open intelligence, new communication technologies and trends, strategic marketing, and political communication.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Turkish parliament speaker congratulates Kenya on its Republic Day

Turkey’s parliament speaker on Sunday congratulated Kenya on its Republic Day.

Mustafa Sentop stated in separate letters to Kenyan National Assembly Speaker Justin Muturi and Senate Speaker Kenneth Makelo Lusaka that Turkey values the strengthening of its relations with Kenya in all areas.

Inter-parliamentary visits, which both sides can improve through joint efforts, will surely help strengthen these relations, he added.

In the letters, he also expressed his congratulations to Kenyans on the occasion of their Republic Day, which is also their Independence Day, on behalf of members of Turkey’s parliament.

Kenya celebrates their national day on Dec. 12, which commemorates Kenya’s admission to the Commonwealth as a republic in 1964.

Kenya got independence from Great Britain on the same day in 1963.

Source: Anadolu Agency