Estonia has committed one-third of its defense budget to Ukraine: Minister

Estonia has committed one-third of its defense budget to Ukraine, the country’s defense minister said Tuesday.

Speaking at a meeting with reporters covering the US State Department and Defense Department, Hanno Pevkur said Estonia defines the conflict in Ukraine not only as the Russia-Ukraine war but also as the war of the free and rule-based world with Russia.

“We are doing a lot. So Estonian help to Ukraine has come to 1% of our GDP,” Pevkur said, referring to gross domestic product, or the total value of goods produced and services provided in a country in a given period of time.

His remarks came after meeting US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin at the Defense Department.

Pevkur said there will be a greater US presence in Estonia in the coming years and stressed that the US is committed to protecting NATO members, including Estonia.

He also said he is looking forward to NATO’s next plans, which include establishing a divisional structure and divisional headquarters in Estonia together with the UK.

“And when the UK allocates a brigade to Estonia, then the US will look more deeply into what capabilities are additionally needed to send the message to Russia that NATO is there and that NATO will protect each inch of its territory,” said Pevkur.

“We also agreed that if there is a need for additional information sharing, we will do it swiftly and quickly,” he added.

Regarding their meeting, the Pentagon said in a statement that Austin and Pevkur discussed the ongoing efforts to ensure NATO’s credible deterrence and defense posture.

“Secretary Austin and Minister Pevkur discussed security cooperation and future defense capabilities in Estonia, and Secretary Austin lauded the decisions taken at the Madrid Summit, as well as Estonian defense spending and defense investment,” said the statement.

“Secretary Austin commended Estonia for its forward-leaning support to Ukraine and agreed with Minister Pevkur on the necessity of maintaining that strong support moving forward,” it added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Anadolu Agency’s Morning Briefing – Oct. 19, 2022

Anadolu Agency is here with a rundown of the latest developments around the world.

• Two US Air Force F-16 jets intercepted two Russian bombers near the state of Alaska, the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) said Tuesday.

• French cement maker Lafarge will pay more than three-quarters of a billion dollars after pleading guilty to US charges of providing material support to two designated terrorist groups, the Justice Department announced Tuesday.

• Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba submitted a proposal Tuesday to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on severing diplomatic relations with Iran as relations between the two countries have become strained due to claims that Tehran has been providing drones to Russia.

• The Organization of Islamic Cooperation on Tuesday welcomed a decision by the Australian government to end its recognition of West Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

• A nationwide strike by French trade unions caused major transport disruptions across France on Tuesday amid an ongoing strike at oil depots.

• The European Union said Tuesday that it would enable energy companies to set up consortiums for gas purchases.

• Germany’s interior minister has dismissed the head of the national cybersecurity agency, local media reported Tuesday.

• The death toll from a military plane crash in Russia’s southern port city of Yeysk rose to 14, authorities said Tuesday.

• Sweden’s new prime minister announced the members of his Cabinet on Tuesday and set out priorities for his government, including fighting crime, a stepped-up defense posture, and action against climate change.

• The Lebanese army said Tuesday that an Israeli gunboat had violated the country’s territorial waters in the second such incident this week.

• Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that he has no available data about deliveries of Iran’s unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to Russia.

• Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced Tuesday that 30% of his country’s power stations have been destroyed since Oct. 10, causing massive blackouts across the country.

• Local authorities continued to report airstrikes in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv on Tuesday morning as another wave of drone and missile strikes on cities throughout the country entered its second week.

• Israel’s Foreign Ministry summoned the Australian envoy to Tel Aviv on Tuesday over Canberra’s move to reverse its recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital, according to local media outlets.

Source: Anadolu Agency

North Korea fires ‘warning’ artillery shells into maritime ‘buffer zones’

North Korea last night again fired artillery rounds into maritime “buffer zones” and warned South Korea to immediately stop its ongoing military drills.

In a statement on Wednesday, the North Korean People’s Army (KPA) said last night’s artillery firing was in response to the South Korean military who fired dozens of shells of multiple rocket launchers in the forefront area of Cholwon County, South Kangwon Province, on Tuesday.

“The situation on the Korean peninsula is getting worse due to the enemies’ repeated military provocations in the forefront area,” said the KPA spokesman in a statement published by the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

Pyongyang called the ongoing South Korean annual military exercises that started on Monday “enemy’s war drill against the north” and said they send a serious warning once again.

“It made sure that KPA units on the east and west fronts conducted a threatening, warning fire toward the east and west seas in the night of Oct. 18, as a powerful military countermeasure,” said the North military spokesman, adding “enemies should immediately stop the reckless and inciting provocations escalating the military tension in the forefront area.”

Earlier, South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said that North Korea fired some 100 artillery rounds into the Yellow Sea and 150 into the East Sea last night

The artillery shells fell into eastern and western buffer zones north of the Northern Limit Line, Yonhap News Agency cited a statement by the JCS.

On Friday, North Korea also fired a short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) into the East Sea and fired 170 artillery shots into maritime “buffer zones.”

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol called the move violation of the 2018 agreement. He was referring to a 2018 agreement between the two countries, which created buffer zones along land and sea boundaries and no-fly zones above the border.

Tension on Korean Peninsula further grew after recent military drills by South Korea and the US and North Korean missile tests.

On Sunday, the South Korean presidency warned that North Korea is expected to carry out its seventh nuclear test at any time.

Earlier, on Friday, North Korea fired another short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) into the East Sea, two days after firing two long-range strategic cruise missiles, involving units operating “tactical nukes.”

On Oct. 4, the US and South Korean forces held live-fire joint drills after North Korea fired a missile over Japan for the first time in five years.

Tensions in the region began in 2020 when North Korea attacked and blew up the inter-Korean liaison office along the border. Seoul has threatened a strong response if Pyongyang “further worsens the situation.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

UK railway workers union announces new strikes over pay dispute

The UK’s biggest transport sector union on Wednesday announced new strikes in November due to an ongoing dispute over pay.

The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) said the industrial action will be held on Nov. 3, 5, and 7 amid the cost of living crisis fueled by hyperinflation in the country.

The annual inflation was announced as 10.1% by the Office for National Statistics on Wednesday.

The negotiations over a pay rise have been underway between the RMT and the rail operator Network Rail for some months but a deal is still to be reached after the union turned down an 8% rise.

The Network Rail “reneged on their promises of an improved pay offer and sought to impose job cuts, more unsocial hours and detrimental changes to rosters,” according to a statement by the RMT.

“On the one hand they were telling our negotiators that they were prepared to do a deal, while planning to torpedo negotiations by imposing unacceptable changes to our members’ terms and conditions,” RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch said.

“Our members are livid with these duplicitous tactics, and they will now respond in kind with sustained strike action.”

The Network Rail said in response that a two-year 8% deal with discounted travel and an extended job guarantee to January 2025 was on the table.

“Unfortunately, the leadership of the RMT seem intent on more damaging strikes rather than giving their members a vote on our offer,” the company said.

Source: Anadolu Agency

EU leaders to discuss energy crisis at upcoming summit

European Union leaders will discuss the energy crisis caused by Russia’s war in Ukraine at a meeting of the European Council in Brussels on Thursday and Friday.

“The focal point of our agenda is the energy crisis,” said European Council President Charles Michel in his invitation letters to EU leaders on Tuesday.

“EU leaders will assess the state of energy prices and security of supply, including market optimization measures and progress on demand reduction. They will also decide on any further action that needs to be taken,” said the council president, adding the meeting will follow up on an informal European Council meeting held on Oct. 7 in Prague, the Czech Republic, which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency.

The focus of the discussions will be reducing electricity demand, enhancing the security of supplies, and guaranteeing affordable prices for households and businesses.

Michel said they “must act with the utmost urgency” on the energy crisis, adding: “We must imperatively intensify our three lines of action: reducing demand, ensuring security of supply, and containing prices.”

The leaders at the meeting will also discuss measures to reduce prices by “fully capitalizing on the negotiating clout of our unity at 27 (members) by jointly purchasing gas, developing a new benchmark that more accurately reflects conditions on the gas market, and examining a temporary dynamic price limit,” he said.

“I also expect us to address other short- and long-term market interventions, such as an EU framework to cap the price of gas for electricity generation.”

Michel noted that although member states have different national constraints, he is confident that discussions will be constructive and mindful of the bloc’s “urgent collective interest.”

EU to enable consortiums for gas purchases

Following up on Michel’s remarks on using the EU’s “negotiating clout” to bring down prices, the EU on Tuesday said it would enable energy companies to set up consortiums for gas purchases.

“We know that Europe’s energy demand is very large. So it is logical that instead of outbidding each other, the member states and the energy companies should leverage their joint purchasing power, and for that, we propose today legal tools for pooling energy demand at the European level,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told a press conference, outlining a package of new measures to address high energy prices and ensure the security of supplies.

“We’re also enabling energy companies to set up a gas purchase consortium so that they are together able to purchase gas,” she said, adding the aggregation of demand will be mandatory for at least 15% of the volume needed to fill this storage.

Last year, she said, European energy companies were outbidding each other in the spot market and “driving the crisis up.”

Von der Leyen said solidarity is crucial in order for EU countries to be prepared “in case of a full gas and electricity disruption.”

Default rules will be established on solidarity among EU countries that apply in case of disruption when there is no bilateral agreement in place, said von der Leyen.

“We need to tame the (energy market) volatility,” she said, adding: “The current pricing benchmark is no longer adapted to a market that is shifting from pipeline gas to LNG.”

“We will develop a new benchmark and put in place a mechanism to limit excessive gas prices in the meantime.”

Informal European Council outcome

At an informal European Council meeting earlier this month, however, the leaders were unable to find common ground on capping gas prices to mitigate the energy crisis. They only showed support for setting up joint gas procurement measures by the end of the winter to avoid outbidding each other in markets.

Before the meeting, von der Leyen proposed a “roadmap” to the leaders to limit rising energy bills by capping the market price of imported natural gas and reforming the European electricity market.

The leaders discussed a plan on a so-called “corridor for decent prices with reliable partners” on limiting the price of natural gas as well as another option to “take out the peaks and speculation” from the broader market prices, she said after the summit.

As part of an overall reform of the EU market, they also talked about possibilities to curb or decouple the price of gas used to generate electricity. This came after the demand of 15 EU countries, including Spain, France and Italy.

Under the current rules, high gas prices have had an inflationary effect on final electricity bills which is based on the price of the last and most expensive energy source and does not reflect the lower costs of renewables or nuclear power.

Von der Leyen promised that the EU executive body would come with more detailed proposals on the subject in the coming weeks.

Referring to Germany’s recently announced €200 billion ($197 billion) energy support package which critics have said is against EU competition rules, she said: “We have to keep our single market together and we have to avoid fragmentation.”

“The bloc’s single market has proven to be our single best asset in times of crisis,” she added, underlining that it must be preserved by assuring a level playing field and avoiding “fragmentation and dispersion.”

The European Commission will look into new ways to support European consumers through already existing funds, von der Leyen said.

Source: Anadolu Agency

UK’s annual inflation rises to 10.1% in September

Britain’s annual consumer inflation rate increased to 10.1% in September, up from 9.9% in August, official data showed on Wednesday.

The figure returned to July’s 40-year high due to rising food prices, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement.

The prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages jumped 14.5% year-on-year in September, accelerating from 13.1% in August. The pace of hike had been the largest since April 1980.

The annual core inflation, excluding energy, food, alcohol, and tobacco, increased to 6.5% in September, an all-time high.

On a monthly basis, the UK’s consumer prices index rose by 0.5% in September.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Instead of fleeing, residents of small town in Pakistan choose to fight back raging deluge

On Aug. 28, a red alert was issued for some 30,000 residents of a small town called Johi to evacuate as raging floodwaters had already inundated every nook and corner around their homes.

As the swirling floodwater was heading towards Johi, located west of the worst-hit Dadu district of southern Sindh province, the town heard an announcement through loudspeakers.

But, the call was not for evacuation. Instead, the adult male population was asked to reach the “ring dyke” – a 17-kilometer wall in a circle – the residents had constructed in 2010 to save the town from flooding.

The previous successful experience encouraged the inhabitants to make another attempt at saving the town, although the flood this time was massive.

The adjacent Khairpur Nathan Shah town had already been submerged by the devastating floods, which altogether brought a third of Pakistan under water, aside from killing nearly 1,700 people since mid-June.

Slumped on a chair at his utility store in the main Johi bazaar, Nasarullah Jamali recalled the day when some residents opted for evacuation but a majority rushed towards the dyke.

The gushing floodwaters struck the dyke on Sep. 1.

“Only 30% of the residents preferred to leave the town, but the majority, in their thousands, rushed to the dyke as we have only three days and (as many) nights to save our town,” Jamali, who along with his three brothers took part in the reconstruction of the dyke, told Anadolu Agency.

The dyke — constructed 12 years ago — was not well-maintained and required major repairs and consolidation considering the amount of floodwaters heading towards the town.

“Thousands of people reached the dyke within an hour, carrying bags, quilts, pillow covers, everything that can hold the sand, rocks, and dirt,” Jamali went on to say.

‘First 5 days were crucial’

A walk in the Johi bazaar gave an all-normal feeling. Grocery stores and shops were humming with crowds of buyers, the fish and fruit sellers were making loud chants to attract customers, and roadside stalls were full of tea lovers.

Generally, there was no sign of panic, although the Anadolu Agency team managed to reach the town from Dadu by boat.

The only road leading to Johi is still inundated at different points, whereas almost all croplands around the town are under 4-5 feet (over 1 meter) deep water.

Amjad Soomro, a local teacher, and one of the leaders of the move, recalled the night when floodwaters struck the dyke, which was originally 7-foot (over 2 meters) high.

“We had had the 2010 experience with us. Some 11 pickets consisting of 40 people each were formed and assigned along the dyke, mainly the northern side, which was relatively weak,” Soomro said.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency at his tuition center, which he runs in the evening, he said different groups were assigned the task to fill bags, sheets, quilts, and pillow covers with rocks, dirt, and sand.

While, he added, others were sent by boats and vehicles to nearby Dadu city and Bhaan town, which were hit by rains only and relatively clear, to procure bags in maximum numbers.

“None of us could sleep the first two nights as the government authorities had already warned of the deluge rushing towards us, as high as 8 feet (2.5 meters),” he recalled.

The first five days were “crucial” and “difficult,” especially the night of Sep. 4, when the raging floodwater was striking the dyke hard.

The dyke was raised up to 10 feet (3 meters), 2 feet higher than the water level.

“As the water level increased, we would keep raising the dyke height. It was literally like a foot-by-foot rise in water and dyke levels simultaneously,” he maintained.

The “operation to save Johi” lasted for a month and culminated only after the water levels dropped down to 4 feet.

“A mass congregation was held on the dyke, where thanksgiving prayers were offered and the town elders announced the culmination of the operation,” Soomro said.

Women’s role

The 10-foot high dyke forms a circle around the town, hindering the waterway.

Bags filled with sand, rocks, and dirt are crammed between the pieces of wood erected with short gaps on top of the wall in an attempt to save the bags from being washed away.

A massive lake has been formed across the dyke, inundating large swathes of croplands.

Nazeer Ahmad, who runs a stationery shop, was full of praise for Johi women.

“Politicians across party lines, lawyers, teachers, farmers, and shopkeepers, everyone played a role in the successful struggle, but the role of women was extraordinary,” Ahmad observed.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, he said the local women not only encouraged their men to take part in the repair and reconstruction of the dyke but they themselves joined hands in the successful attempt.

“Many of them joined us and helped in filling the bags, while others voluntarily assumed the task to cook food for the men working on the dyke,” he went on to say.

The old people and those who were not able to do the hard labor remained helpful in bringing and distributing food, he added.

“The hustle-bustle you are witnessing here is because of our brave people, particularly women, who instead of fleeing chose to fight back the deluge. And they made it despite there being no government help,” Ahmad maintained.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Borsa Istanbul up at midweek’s open

Türkiye’s benchmark stock index opened at 3,860.71 points on Wednesday, up 0.5%, or 19.15 points, from the previous close.

Borsa Istanbul’s BIST 100 index dropped 0.16% to end the Tuesday at 3,841.56 points, with a daily trading volume of 98 billion Turkish liras ($5.29 billion).

The US dollar/Turkish lira exchange rate was at 18.5860 as of 09.58 a.m. local time (0658GMT), the euro/Turkish lira exchange rate was at 18.2650, and a British pound traded for 20.9560 Turkish liras.

Brent crude oil was selling for around $90.2 per barrel, while the price of an ounce of gold was $1,644.90.

Source: Anadolu Agency

US support to Ukraine will only ‘lead to its destruction’: Russia

US intentions to “strengthen the position” of Kyiv will only lead to “the destruction of Ukraine,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said Wednesday.

“The US is supplying weapons to destroy the country that they have taken care of (Ukraine) for many years. This is such a vital contradiction. They seem to want to strengthen and strengthen, but everything leads to the opposite result… Washington’s position, which relies on inflating the conflict, leads to the destruction of Ukraine,” Maria Zakharova said on Sputnik Radio.

Zakharova further noted that many in Ukraine already understand this, adding that “the US did not plan any peace, prosperity, or democracy on the territory of Ukraine.”

“They intended to use the conflict as a springboard, as a training ground, as a tool,” she said.

The statement comes in response to remarks made by US Deputy Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Karen Donfried during a briefing on Tuesday, who said that Washington intends to provide Ukraine with a “maximally strong” position by the time peace talks with Russia begin.

“We will continue to assist the people of Ukraine and provide them with support to help them defend themselves and their territory against Russia’s illegal invasion. We will do this for as long as it takes,” Donfried added.

Donfried said the referendums are “propaganda stunts to try to mask futile attempts at a land grab in Ukraine,” adding that the results were “orchestrated” and “do not reflect the will of the people in Ukraine.”

She reiterated that the US will never recognize Russia’s annexation of any territory of Ukraine.

The US announced on Friday an additional $725 million in security assistance for Ukraine’s defense needs.

The announcement came days after Russia conducted airstrikes across Ukraine, including the capital Kyiv.

Ukraine’s Russian-occupied regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, as well as Russian-controlled parts of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, held referendums on joining Russia on Sept. 23 – 27.

Around 98% of voters chose to join Russia, Moscow claimed, but the results were highly disputed and dismissed by Ukraine and its Western allies.

The polls have been widely condemned by the international community, with European nations and the US calling them a “sham,” and saying they are a violation of international law.

Source: Anadolu Agency