World Halal Summit, OIC Halal Expo to begin in Istanbul on Thursday

The 8th World Halal Summit and the 9th Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Halal Expo will begin in Istanbul on Thursday.

The two major gatherings on the global market for products and services conforming to Islamic guidelines (known as halal) will see the participation of nearly 500 exhibitors from 40 countries

The four-day events, for which Anadolu Agency is the global communications partner, are expected to host some 40,000 visitors, 9,000 of whom are foreigners, including bureaucrats.

The expo, considered the most important commercial cooperation platform on the halal market, aims to make Türkiye the hub of the halal market of more than $7 trillion.

“The market is expected to reach $10 trillion in the next five years. The halal economy will shape the global market in the near future,” said Yunus Ete, the head of the World Halal Summit council.

The OIC Halal Expo, themed For a Sustainable Trade: Explore All the Aspects of the Growing Global Halal Industry, will gather sector representatives from various areas such as cosmetics, textiles, finance and tourism, especially food.?

Businesses from other sectors such as logistics, publishing, packaging and education will also participate in the event.

More than 50 international speakers will make presentations in 11 different sessions during the events which will end on Sunday.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Libyan parliament sacks allied central bank governor over graft

The Libyan parliament has sacked the Governor of Eastern Libya’s Central Bank, Ali al-Hibri, over corruption suspicions.

The move followed a session held by the East Libya-based assembly in Benghazi city on Tuesday. A parliamentary statement said that al-Hibri was also relieved from his role as a chair of two committees responsible for the rebuilding of Benghazi and Derna cities.

According to the statement, the parliament asked the Libyan Audit Bureau to check all the transactions conducted by al-Hibri and asked the Public Prosecutor to take legal measures over the corruption allegations.

The statement, however, did not specify the nature of the corruption allegations against al-Hibri.

Oil-rich Libya has remained in turmoil since 2011 when longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi was ousted after four decades in power.

Writing by Ahmed Asmar

Source: Anadolu Agency

Kazakh parliamentary elections to be held in 1st half of 2023: Majilis

The chairman of the lower house of Kazakhstan’s parliament (Majilis) announced on Wednesday that the elections will be held in the first half of next year.

“Parliamentary elections will be held in the first half of next year, but the president will announce this. Naturally, after that, a new government will be formed. We have to wait until the president announces the deadlines,” Yerlan Koshanov said on the sidelines of the plenary meeting of the Majilis, according to the state-run Kazinform news agency.

The statement came as Kazakhstan’s incumbent President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev won the country’s snap presidential election with 81.31% of the votes, according to final results declared by the country’s election authority on Tuesday.

Tokayev was registered as the winner of the election and Kazakhstan’s president, according to a press briefing by the Central Election Committee.

Votes received by Tokayev amount to about 6.45 million out of around 12 million eligible voters, while the voter turnout was 69.4% in the election, as nearly 8.3 million voters cast their ballots.

Zhiguli Dayrabaev was Tokayev’s closest opponent who received %3.4% of the votes.

Tokayev will be sworn in as the president during an inauguration ceremony on Saturday, the press briefing noted.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Oil prices increase on expected fall in US crude stocks

Oil prices rose on Wednesday as US data revealed that the crude stockpiles decreased more than anticipated, signaling an improvement in demand situation in the country, however, rising Covid cases in China limits further upticks.

International benchmark Brent crude traded at $88.45 per barrel at 10.00 a.m. local time (0700GMT), a 0.10% increase from the closing price of $88.36 a barrel in the previous trading session.

The American benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) traded at $81.04 per barrel at the same time, a 0.11% gain after the previous session closed at $80.95 a barrel.

Expectations of a hefty drop in US crude oil inventories was the driver for the upward price trend.

Late Tuesday, the American Petroleum Institute (API) announced its estimate of a fall of 4.8 million barrels in US crude oil inventories relative to the market expectation of a decline of 2.2 million barrels.

A strong inventory decrease implies an uptick in crude demand in the US, assuaging market concerns over falling demand.

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) will release official oil stock data later Wednesday, and if a build in stock levels is confirmed, prices will fall.

However, rising coronavirus cases in China, the world’s largest crude oil importer, is supressing demand euphoria as country’s strict zero-covid policy reduces hopes for short-term demand recovery in the country.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Top US court clears way for Congress to receive Trump tax documents

The US Supreme Court allowed a House of Representatives committee Tuesday to obtain former President Donald Trump's tax returns.

The court's unsigned order ends a three-year battle between Trump and the House Ways and Means Committee in the final weeks of a Democratic-controlled chamber.

The two-sentence order does not note any dissents, saying only that Trump's application for a stay in the case has been denied. No reasoning was provided.

Trump defied long-established presidential tradition and refused to publicly release his tax documents when he assumed office. But Joe Biden resumed the practice after winning the 2020 presidential election.

The committee is seeking six years of Trump's tax returns as part of its investigation into how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audits presidents. Trump's attorneys have said the effort to obtain the records is a thinly-veiled attempt at abusing congressional authority that will result in the ex-president's documents being leaked to the public.

Still, there are major questions over what exactly the committee will be able to do with the documents with just over a month to go before Republicans assume control of the House, and just weeks before Congress takes its winter break.

Trump's defeat is the second dealt by the top court in as many months, with the Supreme Court deciding in early October that it would not intervene in a legal dispute concerning government documents seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate.

Trump sought to have a ruling from the 11th US Circuit of Appeals thrown out after the court ruled that an independent arbiter, known as a special master, cannot review more than 100 classified government records seized during the FBI's Aug. 8 search of Mar-a-Lago. The special master was allowed to only review documents that did not bear government classification markings.

The Supreme Court's ruling marked a major victory for the Justice Department, which had asked the court to deny Trump's appeal.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Scotland cannot hold 2nd independence referendum without UK government’s approval, top court rules

The UK Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that the devolved Scottish parliament cannot legislate for a second independence referendum without prior approval from the national UK government.

The ruling is not a particularly big surprise, but will nonetheless heap further pressure on the relationship between the separatist Scottish National Party (SNP) and the unionist parties that dominate Westminster.

In 2014, Scotland voted 55% to 45% to stay in the UK.

Since then, the ruling SNP has continued to win elections in Scotland, which the nationalist political party says gives them a mandate for a second independence referendum. The party leader and Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon previously said there would be a second referendum on the matter in 2023.

"While disappointed by it I respect ruling of (the UK Supreme Court), it doesn't make law, only interprets it. A law that doesn't allow Scotland to choose our own future without Westminster consent exposes as myth any notion of the UK as a voluntary partnership & makes case for Indy," Sturgeon wrote on Twitter.

Scotland voted against Brexit in 2016, but the UK overall voted to leave the EU – another factor the SNP argue has fundamentally changed the state of British politics, and as such justifies a second independence referendum.

Reactions

Sturgeon later responded in a statement to the Supreme Court ruling, saying: "The route we take must be lawful and democratic. For independence to be achieved, and as is clearer by the day, achieving independence is not just desirable, it is essential if Scotland is to escape the disaster of Brexit.”

"Let us be blunt, a so-called partnership in which one partner is denied the right to choose a different future, or even to ask itself question cannot be described in any way as voluntary or even a partnership at all,” she said.

"So this ruling confirms that the notion of the UK, a voluntary partnership of nations, if it ever was a reality, is no longer a reality, and that it exposes a situation that is quite simply unsustainable."

Secretary of State for Scotland Alister Jack said in a statement: “People in Scotland want both their governments to be concentrating all attention and resources on the issues that matter most to them. That’s why we are focussed on issues like restoring economic stability, getting people the help they need with their energy bills, and supporting our NHS (National Health Service).”

Douglas Ross, the leader of the Scottish Conservatives, tweeted that he welcomed the Supreme Court’s unanimous judgment.

“We know that the majority of Scots do not want another independence referendum,” he continued. “It is now time for Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP Government to fully focus on the big challenges facing Scotland.”

Anas Sarwar, the leader of the political party Scottish Labour, said in a statement: “We must now focus on the problems facing our country, from rising bills to the crisis in our NHS. There is not a majority in Scotland for a referendum or independence, neither is there a majority for the status quo. One thing is clear, there is a majority in Scotland and across the UK for a change.”

Source: Anadolu Agency

1 dead, 13 injured in 2 explosions in West Jerusalem

Two explosions went off in West Jerusalem on Wednesday, according to Israeli police.

A police statement said the first blast took place near a bus station at the entrance of West Jerusalem. Another explosion was reported at the city’s Ramot junction.

“Following the explosion that occurred near a junction at the entrance to Jerusalem near the bus station Wednesday morning, another explosion occurred near the bus station at the Ramot junction in Jerusalem,” police said.

According to police, an Israeli was killed and 13 others injured in the two explosions.

The cause of the explosions is not yet clear.

Israeli public broadcaster KAN said the first blast was caused by an explosive device in a bag.

“The police suspect that the perpetrator arrived on an electric bike and placed the explosive device,” the broadcaster said.

Israeli police launched an investigation regarding the possibility of a link between the two blasts.

According to Army radio, Israeli police raised the level of alert in Jerusalem following the explosions.

Outgoing Defense Minister Benny Gantz also held a security session to assess the situation. The Israeli Prime Minister’s Office also said it will hold a security assessment session later on Wednesday.

*Ikram Imane Kouachi contributed to this report

Source: Anadolu Agency

3 killed, 4 injured in shelling, rocket strikes in eastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia

Shelling by Russian forces in eastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia regions early Wednesday killed three people and injured four others, according to local authorities.

“Another act of terrorism by the Russians. Around 7:40 a.m. (0540GMT), the shelling took place in the city of Kupiansk. A nine-story residential building and a polyclinic building were damaged. Unfortunately, two people died — a 55-year-old woman and a 68-year-old man. One man was hospitalized, another was treated on the spot,” Kharkiv Governor Oleh Synyehubov said on Telegram.

Synyehubov noted that a private house was also damaged in Kupiansk as a result of the shelling, and several houses and farm buildings were destroyed in the city of Vovchansk.

Fatalities also included a 1-year-old who was killed when a missile hit a maternity ward at a local hospital.

“At night, Russian monsters fired huge rockets at the small maternity ward of Vilnius Hospital. Grief fills our hearts — a baby … has been killed. Rescuers are working on the spot,” Zaporizhzhia Governor Oleksandr Starukh said on Telegram.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the deputy head of the Ukrainian Presidential Office, later issued a statement on Telegram, saying that two doctors were injured by the blast in the maternity hospital.

“The enemy has once again decided to try to achieve with terror and murder what he wasn’t able to achieve for nine months and won’t be able to achieve. Instead, he will only be held to account for all the evil he brought to our country.” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in reaction to the shelling.

As of Monday, civilian casualties in the ongoing Moscow-Kyiv war reached 16,784, including 6,595 deaths and 10,189 injuries, according to the UN figures.

Source: Anadolu Agency