Tag: InternationalNews

  • Syria’s civil war: Efforts intensify to protect Aleppo

    {Hundreds killed in recent days as rebels and government forces battle for control of northern city and its outskirts.}

    Bombardment of the northern city of Aleppo shows no sign of ending even as the Syrian military extends a unilateral ceasefire around Damascus and opposition strongholds nearby for another 48 hours.

    Monday’s announcement of the truce extension came as a humanitarian convoy delivered aid to 12,000 families trapped in a government-besieged area in central Syria.

    The Aleppo fighting threatens to scuttle the first peace talks in Geneva between President Bashar al-Assad’s representatives and opposition groups which are due to resume at an unspecified date after breaking up in April.

    Between 350,000 and 400,000 people are believed to remain in rebel-held parts of Aleppo, once a city of two million.

    Meanwhile, in Geneva, John Kerry, the US secretary of state, said “several proposals”, aimed at finding a way to restore at least a partial truce in Syria, were being discussed.

    “We’re getting closer to a place of understanding, but we have some work to do, and that’s why we’re here,” he said at the start of a meeting on Monday with Adel al-Jubeir, Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister.

    {{Saudi condemnation}}

    After meeting Jubeir and Staffan de Mistura, the UN envoy for Syria, Kerry said he hoped for more clarity in the next day or so on restoring the nationwide ceasefire.

    “What is happening in Aleppo is an outrage. It’s a violation of all humanitarian laws. It’s a crime,” Jubeir said.

    “It’s a violation of all the understandings that were reached.”

    De Mistura, for his part, said he would travel to Moscow for talks.

    The US and Russia had agreed to keep extra staff in Geneva to work on the ceasefire.
    “Both sides, the opposition and the regime, have contributed to this chaos, and we are working intensely in order to try to restore the cessation of hostilities,” Kerry said.

    The peace talks in April in Geneva failed to make any headway, but De Mistura has said he hopes they can resume “during the course of May”.

    On Monday, France also called for a ministerial meeting of the international group supporting Syria to “restore the ceasefire”.

    Russian role in question

    Al Jazeera’s Diplomatic Editor James Bays, reporting from Geneva, said both opposition delegates and diplomats were questioning Russia’s role in the peace efforts.

    “Many diplomats will tell you Russia is not properly invested in this political process, that instead it seems they are pursuing or allowing their allies to pursue a military option,” he said.

    “The process is very close to collapse … if they cannot get the cessation of hostilities back in place.”

    The government declared its ceasefire on Friday around Damascus, the capital’s Eastern Ghouta suburbs and the coastal Latakia region in the wake of two weeks of rising violence.

    Russia’s Tass news agency quoted Lieutenant-General Sergei Kuralenko, head of the Russian coordination centre in Syria, as saying that the Damascus area ceasefire was brokered by Russia and the US “in agreement with the Syrian leadership and the moderate opposition”.

    But more than three dozen rebel factions said on Saturday they would not respect the truce unless the government agreed to extend it over the whole country.

    The latest partial truce in Syria does not cover Aleppo, the country’s largest city and the scene of its worst violence in recent weeks.

    Russian and American officials said they were working to arrange a truce for Aleppo.

    Rebels and government forces are battling each other with rockets and bombs across Aleppo and its outskirts.

    ‘Barrel bombs’ dropped

    Rebels on Monday lobbed rockets into government-held areas in the western part of Aleppo while government helicopters dropped “barrel bombs” – crude and unguided explosives – on opposition-held areas in the city and surrounding villages, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

    Separately, a car bomb detonated in the rebel-held Salhin neighbourhood of Aleppo, appearing to target an Islamic judiciary council.

    The explosion wounded a lawyer and several other people, according to the Local Coordination Committees, an activist network.

    The Syrian Civil Defence, also known as the White Helmets, which organises rescue operations in opposition-held areas of Aleppo, said several civilians were killed and wounded, including a judge for the Ahrar al-Sham rebel group.

    Fierce violence has taken the lives of more than 250 civilians over the previous nine days, according to the SOHR, while only six died in violence on Sunday.

    Syrian state television said on Monday that a missile hit the surroundings of Aleppo University Medical Hospital, and several civilians were injured by rebel mortar attacks on the residential area of Jamiyat Hay al-Zahra in western Aleppo.

    The rebel-held local council of Aleppo city announced a state of emergency in areas it runs due to the intense bombardment.

    The opposition accuses the Assad government of deliberately targeting civilians in rebel-held parts of Aleppo to drive them out.

    For its part, the government says rebels have been heavily shelling government-held areas, proving that they are receiving more sophisticated weaponry from their foreign supporters.

    The ISIL dimension

    In the countryside north of Aleppo, other rebel groups have been fighting against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, which is not party to any ceasefire.

    Amaq, a news agency affiliated to ISIL, said the group’s fighters had gained control of the villages of Doudayan, Tel Shaer and Iykda from rival rebels in the northern Aleppo area near the border with Turkey.

    They said that they were able to cut the supply routes of other rebels in the area, despite Turkish artillery shelling to aid the rebels against ISIL.

    SOHR said the ISIL fighters staged a counterattack to regain lost ground but there had been no major gains for any side.

    On the humanitarian front, the news was more encouraging.

    Relief efforts by the International Committee for the Red Cross continued, with a convoy of 13 Red Cross lorries and three trucks from the Syrian Arab Red Crescent delivering food, hygiene items, diapers and school books to the besieged town of Talbiseh, north of the central city of Homs, Pawel Krzysiek, a Red Cross spokesman, said on Monday.

    The population of Talbiseh has doubled to 60,000 with the influx of displaced residents from other areas, according to the Red Cross.

    Syria’s conflict erupted in 2011 after the repression of anti-government protests and has since escalated into a complex, multi-faceted war, which has killed more than 270,000 people.

  • Cab drivers protest diesel ban in Delhi

    {WHO survey ranks Indian capital as the most polluted out of 1,600 cities checked.}

    Hundreds of taxi drivers protested in New Delhi on Monday against a ban on diesel cabs, the latest initiative aimed at improving air quality in the world’s most polluted capital.

    India’s top court on Saturday ordered taxis run on the dirty fuel off the city’s roads, refusing industry requests for more time to switch to greener compressed natural gas (CNG).

    Many of Delhi’s taxis already run on CNG, but the ban will impact about 30,000 traditional cabs and some working for app-based Uber and Ola services, according to taxi operators.

    The Supreme Court has been pressuring authorities to reduce dangerous levels of haze and dust that choke the city, with a string of orders last year including a ban on new, large diesel cars, affecting all road users.

    Angry taxi drivers blocked key intersections in Delhi and neighbouring satellite city of Gurgaon on Monday morning, bringing peak-hour traffic to a standstill for hours.

    “You can’t have knee-jerk solutions to long-standing problems,” Balwant Singh, who heads a taxi union of 500 members, told AFP at a noisy demonstration in central Delhi.

    “Why go after commercial passenger vehicles only? Private diesel cars are running freely on the roads, why not stop them?”

    Some drivers said they knew of no available technology to switch from diesel to CNG and would instead be forced to buy new taxis. “I sold my house to buy the taxi and now I will have to sit at home and twiddle my thumbs. How will my family of five survive you tell me,” said driver Tarun Kumar.

    A 2014 World Health Organisation survey of more than 1,600 cities ranked Delhi as the most polluted, partly because of the nearly 10 million vehicles on its roads.

    The ban by the court, which was acting on a petition, came just days after the end of another two weeks of “odd-even” that kept about one million cars off Delhi’s roads.

    The government scheme, first tested in January, restricts cars to alternate days according to whether they carry odd or even-numbered licence plates.

    But Delhi-based research institute TERI said its analysis found the measures had not significantly reduced concentrations of PM 10 and PM 2.5 during the first week.

    These fine particles measuring less than 2.5 micrometres are linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease.

    Smog envelops buildings on the outskirts of New Delhi, India.
  • May Day observed from Turkey to Taiwan

    {Trade unions and other groups stage rallies and events around the world to mark International Workers Day.}

    Trade unions and other groups are staging rallies around the world to mark International Workers Day. A look at some May Day events:

    {{TURKEY}}

    Turkish police on Sunday used tear gas and water cannon to disperse dozens of May Day demonstrators in Istanbul.

    Security forces arrested several people to prevent them from gathering in Istanbul’s Taksim Square which has symbolic meaning as the centre of protests in which 34 people were killed in 1977.

    A police vehicle ran over and killed one protester who was trying to reach the public square, named by local media as 57-year-old Nail Mavus, in Tarlabasi district of Istanbul.

    In the nearby district of Sisli, police fired tear gas and water cannon to scatter other protesters.

    Up to 15,000 police and 120 water cannons were deployed across Istanbul, according to Anadolu Agency.

    According to Birgun newspaper, 52 people were arrested as they tried to reach Taksim Square.

    “The police are routinely heavy-handed in such demonstrations, not only on May Day. The scuffles occurred after police did not let people enter Taksim Square,” Yavuz Baydar, a Turkish columnist and analyst, told Al Jazeera.

    Authorities had previously agreed with some unions to mark the day in a designated area in Istanbul’s Bakirkoy district near the airport.

    Elsewhere in Turkey, May Day marches were held without incident but were cancelled in the southern city of Gaziantep after of a car-bomb attack on a police station.

    A May 1 rally in the city of Adana was also cancelled earlier on Sunday as a result of a suicide-bombing threat.

    Turkish police detained four suspected Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) members who were allegedly planning an attack on May Day celebrations in the capital Ankara, the state-run Anadolu Agency said.

    Initial investigations showed that the four were Syrian citizens who had been in Ankara for some time, Anadolu said, without giving details on the nature of the attack.

    “It is a tense Turkey nowadays. A low-intensity civil war is going on in the mainly Kurdish southeastern provinces of the country,” Baydar, the Turkish columnist, said.

    “As for the oppositional liberal parts of society in the urban areas, they believe their demands are not being met, and not even being listened to, by the government. This tension has been spreading across the country.”

    Tens of thousands of people marched across Moscow’s Red Square on Sunday morning in a pro-Kremlin workers’ rally. The protesters were carrying the Russian tricolour and balloons.

    As is typical for rallies organised by the ruling United Russia party, the May Day rally steered clear of criticising President Vladimir Putin or his government for falling living standards.

    The slogans focused on wages and jobs for young professionals.

    Left-wing Russian groups held their own rallies.

    This year the May Day coincided with the Orthodox Easter in Russia.

    Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov told Russian news agencies before the rally that he celebrates Easter despite the Communist Party’s history of oppressing the Russian Church.

    When a supporter greeted him with “Christ has risen!”, Zyuganov echoed “He is risen indeed!” in a traditional Orthodox greeting.

    {{TAIWAN}}

    In Taipei, Taiwan’s capital, labour unions took to the streets with a march to call on the government to reduce working hours and increase wages.

    Many among the Taiwanese public have been concerned that outgoing President Ma Ying-jeou’s push for closer economic ties with China has benefited just a few.

    Young Taiwanese have seen wages stagnate and good full-time jobs harder to find as the export-led economy has slowed.

    Chen Li-jen, a protester with the Taiwan Petroleum Workers Union, said that while companies were seeing their earnings per share grow every year, workers’ salaries were not rising in tandem.

    “Hardworking labourers are being exploited by consortiums,” Chen said.

    “For the past decade, our basic salary has not made any progress.

    “Labourers’ rights have always been neglected. This is why I hope to take advantage of the May 1 Labour Day protest and tell the government that we are determined to fight for our rights.”

    Thousands of people in the German cities of Berlin and Hamburg are participating in demonstrations marking the Labour Day, according to the DW news agency.

    The protests have been peaceful, with police only reporting some minor incidents of violence.

    Protests against the far-right Alternative for Germany Party are expected to take place in several German cities, including Stuttgart, where the party is holding a congress.

    Leftwing protests were held against the demonstration of right-wing, anti-immigration activists in the town of Plauen.

    {{SOUTH KOREA}}

    Tens of thousands of South Koreans took part in Sunday’s May Day protests to criticise labour reforms pushed by the government and to call for a higher minimum wage.

    Labour activists say the labour reform bill, pushed by President Park Geun-Hye and her conservative Saenuri Party, will make it easier for companies to lay off workers.

    “Let’s fight together against the evil bill!” labour activists and unionised workers chanted in unison during a protest held in Seoul Plaza in front of the city hall.

    About 30,000 unionised workers at local companies took part, according to the Federation of Korean Trade Unions.

    {{FRANCE}}

    Sunday’s May Day rallies pulled together all the different French trade unions and groups opposed to the proposed reform of the Labour laws.

    The traditional marches, which will continue throughout the day, are likely to be tense affairs after violence marred demonstrations earlier this month.

    Police are expected to be out in force following protests on April 28 during which dozens of police officers were wounded and 214 arrest were made.

    Bernard Cazeneuve, interior minister, in a telegram to senior police officers on Saturday, outlined a number of measures to be taken to avoid a repeat of the violence at previous demonstrations.

    William Martinet, president of the UNEF students union, accepted that more needed to be done to protect and police the marches.

    The CGT and the Force Ouvriere trade unions will lead the main May Day march in Paris, which will leave Place de la Bastille and head for Nation in the southeast of the city.

    There will be representations from all the major student unions.

    There will also be marches in other major towns and cities all over France.

    However, neither the CFDT nor the CFTC unions, both of whom support the proposed Labour reform, will be marching today.

    For its part, France’s far-right National Front party moved its annual May 1 gathering from its traditional location near the famous Louvre, to another location at Saint Augustin, a church in north central Paris.

    The National Front said it had made the decision after ISIL announced earlier this year that the group was on the list of targets.

    However, the founder Jean-Marie Le Pen still held a rally at the traditional location, in defiance of current party leader Marine Le Pen, his daughter.

  • Brussels attack: Airport reopens after ISIL attacks

    {Facility has gradually been restarting operations after March bombings that killed 32 people in the Belgian city.}

    The departure hall at Brussels’ Zaventem Airport has partially reopened, 40 days after multiple suicide attacks hit the airport and a metro train, killing 32 people and wounding at least 270 others.

    Two attackers detonated suitcase bombs in the departure hall at the airport on March 22 before a third bomber blew himself up on a metro train in the Belgian city.

    Both attacks were claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group.

    On Sunday, Belgian flags were displayed on each side of a stage put up for the ceremony, with the date of the attacks and written tributes to the victims.

    “We are back to the familiar scene of our passengers in the departure hall,” said Arnaud Feist, head of Brussels Airport, which operates Zaventem.

    The messages in several languages included “Love beats hate” and “Violence will never be the answer”.

    On the floor in front lay bouquets of flowers, candles, photos of the victims and messages addressed to them.

    Travellers were asked to arrive three hours before their flights to allow time for extra police security checks at the entrance to the departure hall.

    About 400 passengers for only three flights were able to check in on Sunday afternoon in the departure hall, still relatively quiet compared to its usual bustle before the attacks.

    The flights chosen were from Belgian carriers Brussels Airlines and Jetairfly TUI Airlines Belgium, to Malaga, Palma de Mallorca and Lisbon.

    Zaventem Airport was completely closed for 12 days after the attacks and has progressively been restarting operations, though it is not expected to return to full capacity until June.

    Belgian police have arrested six people in raids as part of their investigation into the attacks.

    Three men were charged by Belgian prosecutors with terrorist offences, including a suspect who local media said appeared on security footage with two suicide bombers at Brussels airport shortly before they detonated their bombs.

    Authorities identified the suspect as Faycal C, although Belgian media reported his full name as Faycal Cheffou.

    Travellers in Brussels have been asked to arrive three hours before their flights to allow time for extra security checks
  • May Day observed from Turkey to Taiwan

    {Trade unions and other groups stage rallies and events around the world to mark International Workers Day.}

    Trade unions and other groups are staging rallies around the world to mark International Workers Day. A look at some May Day events:

    {{TURKEY}}

    Turkish police on Sunday used tear gas and water cannon to disperse dozens of May Day demonstrators in Istanbul.

    Security forces arrested several people to prevent them from gathering in Istanbul’s Taksim Square which has symbolic meaning as the centre of protests in which 34 people were killed in 1977.

    A police vehicle ran over and killed one protester who was trying to reach the public square, named by local media as 57-year-old Nail Mavus, in Tarlabasi district of Istanbul.

    In the nearby district of Sisli, police fired tear gas and water cannon to scatter other protesters.

    Up to 15,000 police and 120 water cannons were deployed across Istanbul, according to Anadolu Agency.

    According to Birgun newspaper, 52 people were arrested as they tried to reach Taksim Square.

    “The police are routinely heavy-handed in such demonstrations, not only on May Day. The scuffles occurred after police did not let people enter Taksim Square,” Yavuz Baydar, a Turkish columnist and analyst, told Al Jazeera.

    Authorities had previously agreed with some unions to mark the day in a designated area in Istanbul’s Bakirkoy district near the airport.

    Elsewhere in Turkey, May Day marches were held without incident but were cancelled in the southern city of Gaziantep after of a car-bomb attack on a police station.

    A May 1 rally in the city of Adana was also cancelled earlier on Sunday as a result of a suicide-bombing threat.

    Turkish police detained four suspected Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) members who were allegedly planning an attack on May Day celebrations in the capital Ankara, the state-run Anadolu Agency said.

    Initial investigations showed that the four were Syrian citizens who had been in Ankara for some time, Anadolu said, without giving details on the nature of the attack.

    “It is a tense Turkey nowadays. A low-intensity civil war is going on in the mainly Kurdish southeastern provinces of the country,” Baydar, the Turkish columnist, said.

    “As for the oppositional liberal parts of society in the urban areas, they believe their demands are not being met, and not even being listened to, by the government. This tension has been spreading across the country.”

    Tens of thousands of people marched across Moscow’s Red Square on Sunday morning in a pro-Kremlin workers’ rally. The protesters were carrying the Russian tricolour and balloons.

    As is typical for rallies organised by the ruling United Russia party, the May Day rally steered clear of criticising President Vladimir Putin or his government for falling living standards.

    The slogans focused on wages and jobs for young professionals.

    Left-wing Russian groups held their own rallies.

    This year the May Day coincided with the Orthodox Easter in Russia.

    Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov told Russian news agencies before the rally that he celebrates Easter despite the Communist Party’s history of oppressing the Russian Church.

    When a supporter greeted him with “Christ has risen!”, Zyuganov echoed “He is risen indeed!” in a traditional Orthodox greeting.

    {{TAIWAN}}

    In Taipei, Taiwan’s capital, labour unions took to the streets with a march to call on the government to reduce working hours and increase wages.

    Many among the Taiwanese public have been concerned that outgoing President Ma Ying-jeou’s push for closer economic ties with China has benefited just a few.

    Young Taiwanese have seen wages stagnate and good full-time jobs harder to find as the export-led economy has slowed.

    Chen Li-jen, a protester with the Taiwan Petroleum Workers Union, said that while companies were seeing their earnings per share grow every year, workers’ salaries were not rising in tandem.

    “Hardworking labourers are being exploited by consortiums,” Chen said.

    “For the past decade, our basic salary has not made any progress.

    “Labourers’ rights have always been neglected. This is why I hope to take advantage of the May 1 Labour Day protest and tell the government that we are determined to fight for our rights.”

    Thousands of people in the German cities of Berlin and Hamburg are participating in demonstrations marking the Labour Day, according to the DW news agency.

    The protests have been peaceful, with police only reporting some minor incidents of violence.

    Protests against the far-right Alternative for Germany Party are expected to take place in several German cities, including Stuttgart, where the party is holding a congress.

    Leftwing protests were held against the demonstration of right-wing, anti-immigration activists in the town of Plauen.

    {{SOUTH KOREA}}

    Tens of thousands of South Koreans took part in Sunday’s May Day protests to criticise labour reforms pushed by the government and to call for a higher minimum wage.

    Labour activists say the labour reform bill, pushed by President Park Geun-Hye and her conservative Saenuri Party, will make it easier for companies to lay off workers.

    “Let’s fight together against the evil bill!” labour activists and unionised workers chanted in unison during a protest held in Seoul Plaza in front of the city hall.

    About 30,000 unionised workers at local companies took part, according to the Federation of Korean Trade Unions.

    {{FRANCE}}

    Sunday’s May Day rallies pulled together all the different French trade unions and groups opposed to the proposed reform of the Labour laws.

    The traditional marches, which will continue throughout the day, are likely to be tense affairs after violence marred demonstrations earlier this month.

    Police are expected to be out in force following protests on April 28 during which dozens of police officers were wounded and 214 arrest were made.

    Bernard Cazeneuve, interior minister, in a telegram to senior police officers on Saturday, outlined a number of measures to be taken to avoid a repeat of the violence at previous demonstrations.

    William Martinet, president of the UNEF students union, accepted that more needed to be done to protect and police the marches.

    The CGT and the Force Ouvriere trade unions will lead the main May Day march in Paris, which will leave Place de la Bastille and head for Nation in the southeast of the city.

    There will be representations from all the major student unions.

    There will also be marches in other major towns and cities all over France.

    However, neither the CFDT nor the CFTC unions, both of whom support the proposed Labour reform, will be marching today.

    For its part, France’s far-right National Front party moved its annual May 1 gathering from its traditional location near the famous Louvre, to another location at Saint Augustin, a church in north central Paris.

    The National Front said it had made the decision after ISIL announced earlier this year that the group was on the list of targets.

    However, the founder Jean-Marie Le Pen still held a rally at the traditional location, in defiance of current party leader Marine Le Pen, his daughter.

    France's National Front party founder Jean-Marie Le Pen delivered a speech as part of May Day tribute to Joan of Arc
  • Policemen killed in blast in Gaziantep in Turkey

    {Security sources say ISIL suspect’s home raided after bombing in southeastern city hit police station.}

    A bomb attack outside the police headquarters in Turkey’s southeastern city of Gaziantep has killed two policemen and injured 22 others, officials say.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Sunday’s attack, which happened about 60km from the Syrian border.

    Security sources, however, said police raided the home of a man suspect with links to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group after the attack. The suspect’s father was detained.

    Turkish media reported that an explosive-laden vehicle blew up next to the safety barriers at the entrance of the city’s main police station.

    Two cars entered the area with assailants firing automatic weapons and police responding to the attack, daily Hurriyet reported.

    One of the cars drove off, while the second car exploded, according to the newspaper.

    ‘Extremely nervous’

    Reporters were told that there may be a threat of another attack.

    Al Jazeera’s Stefanie Dekker, reporting from the scene of the blast, said police officers at the station were “extremely nervous”.

    “Police officers wouldn’t let anyone come within 100 metres of the police headquarters,” she said. “They are literally cocking their weapons at anyone that approaches.

    Later on Sunday, 10 soldiers were wounded in a bomb attack in the largely Kurdish southeastern town of Dicle, Turkish security officials said.

    Ambulances went to the scene, about 65km north of Diyarbakir, the region’s biggest city.

    In the same region, three soldiers were killed and 14 others wounded in an earlier attack by Kurdish fighters during a military operation in the town of Nusaybin, Turkey’s army said in a statement.

    A May 1 rally in the city of Adana was cancelled earlier on Sunday as a result of a suicide-bomb threat.

    Our correspondent said Turkey faces security threats “on multiple levels”.

    “It has had ISIL-linked attacks across the country, and then you also have the threat of the PKK,” she said, referring to the outlawed Kurdish armed group.

    “Finally, you have the spillover of the Syrian war.”

    {{Target of attacks}}

    Since the emergence of ISIL in the summer of 2014, several Turkish cities, including Gaziantep, have been under threat.

    In April, Turkish authorities detained two alleged ISIL members in Gaziantep.

    It was believed the pair was planning suicide bombings in Gaziantep and other Turkish cities, according to the governor’s office.

    Last December, Turkish counterterrorism units revealed that members of ISIL prepared suicide-bomb vests and other materials in a depot in the city for use in the double suicide bomb attack that killed 102 people in Ankara on October 10, 2015.

    Gaziantep was also the target of several attacks before the emergence of ISIL.

    In August 2012, a bomb attack near a police station in the city killed 10 people and injured 66.

    Although there was no claim of responsibility, the bombs were believed by Turkish officials to be planted by PKK fighters.

    {{Artillery attacks
    }}
    Kilis, another Turkish border town only 56km away from Gaziantep, has been the target of several artillery attacks in the past weeks.

    Official sources say a total of 17 people have been killed in Kilis this year from repeated rocket attacks.

    “We’ve also had Syrian journalists shot dead in the open streets here in Gaziantep just a week ago because they were very critical, vocally, publicly critical of ISIL,” Al Jazeera’s Dekker said.

    “Syrians have moved here for relative safety but it just goes to show that it isn’t safe, that anything can happen at any moment.”

    Turkey’s largely Kurdish areas have been hit by waves of violence in clashes between government security forces and PKK fighters after a ceasefire fell apart last July.

    “It is a tense Turkey nowadays. A low-intensity civil war is going on in the southeastern provinces,” Yavuz Baydar, a Turkish columnist, told Al Jazeera from Istanbul.

    “As for the oppositional liberal parts of society in the urban areas, they believe their demands are not being met, and not even being listened to, by the government. This tension has been spreading across the country.”

  • CIA mocked for ‘live tweeting’ Bin Laden killing

    {US spy agency marks fifth anniversary of al-Qaeda chief’s assassination by posting timeline of operation on Twitter.}

    US spy agency the CIA has “live tweeted” the military raid that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan five years ago, drawing derision and satire from many people on Twitter.

    Bin Laden was killed by US Navy Seal commandos on May 2, 2011, when they raided his compound in Abbottabad.

    Several of the tweets included diagrams and maps of the compound, providing a rundown of the operation from the moment US President Barack Obama and intelligence officials approved it until the president received confirmation that bin Laden had been killed.

    Speaking to ABC News, CIA spokesperson Ryan Trapani defended the operation, arguing that the “takedown of bin Laden stands as one of the great intelligence successes of all time”.

    He said: “On the fifth anniversary, it is appropriate to remember the day and honour all those who had a hand in this achievement.”

    Several social media users mocked the CIA's Twitter timeline of bin Laden's assassination
  • Muqtada al-Sadr loyalists leave Baghdad’s Green Zone

    {Prime Minister Abadi issues call for arrests as 24-hour sit-in ends but protesters vow to return if demands are not met.}

    Protesters in Baghdad’s Green Zone have left the heavily fortified government district after a 24-hour sit-in but pledged to return by the end of the week if their demands for political reform are not met.

    The dispersal came on a day two suicide car-bomb attacks in southern Iraq killed at least 32 people and injured 75 others.

    Sunday’s blasts, claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group, occurred in the centre of the southern city of Samawa.

    Iraq has endured months of discontent prompted by Haider al-Abadi’s attempt to replace party-affiliated ministers with technocrats as part of an anti-corruption drive.

    A divided parliament has failed to approve the prime minister’s proposal amid scuffles and protests.

    Abadi’s arrest order

    Deep frustration over the deadlock culminated in a breach on Saturday of the Green Zone by supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr, the powerful Shia leader.

    Protesters stormed the parliament, clashed with police and broke the barricades.

    Abadi’s statement ordered “the interior minister to track down the perpetrators who assaulted the security forces, the citizens and members of the council of representatives and were involved in vandalising public property and to present them to court so they can have a fair trial and face justice”.

    Sadr and his supporters want the political system put in place following the US-led invasion in 2003 to be altered.

    As it stands, entrenched political blocs representing the country’s Shias, Sunnis and Kurds rely on patronage, resulting in widespread corruption and poor public services.

    The major blocs have until now blocked Abadi’s reform efforts.

    “In Iraq, a change is demanded by almost most Iraqis, especially by those out of power,” Ghassan al-Atiyyah, head of Iraqi National Initiative, told Al Jazeera.

    “Ultimately, the ball is in our court. We have to devise a way to improve the situation. Failure of the secular and ethnic parties in moving Iraq forward has created an atmosphere for change.”

    Abadi has given warning that continued turmoil could hamper the war against ISIL, which controls large parts of northern and western Iraq and has frequently targeted the seat of power.

    The Green Zone protesters issued an escalating set of demands, including a parliamentary vote on a technocrat government, the resignation of the president, prime minister and parliamentary speaker and new elections.

    If none of the demands are met, a spokesperson for the protesters said in a televised speech, they would resort to “all legitimate means”, including civil disobedience.

    The peaceful defusing of the crisis came after Abadi convened a meeting with Iraq’s president, parliament speaker and political bloc leaders who called the breach “a dangerous infringement of the state’s prestige and a blatant constitutional violation that must be prosecuted”.

    The Green Zone, a 10sq km district on the banks of the Tigris River which also houses many foreign embassies, has been off-limits to most Iraqis since the US-led invasion in 2003.

    In an unprecedented breach on Sunday, hundreds of people pulled down and stormed over concrete blast walls, celebrating inside parliament and attacking several deputies.

    Many protesters, including some women and children, had spent Sunday in the square, taking refuge inside event halls from 37C heat, while others lay on the grass or cooled off in a large fountain topped with a military statue.

    Videos on social media showed a group of young men surrounding and slapping two Iraqi legislators as they attempted to flee the crowd, while other protesters mobbed motorcades.

    Protesters were also seen jumping and dancing on the parliament’s meeting hall tables and chairs and waving Iraqi flags.

    The protesters eventually left the parliament on Saturday night before camping out in the Green Zone.

  • Hindu tailor hacked to death in Bangladesh

    {Police in Tangail investigating whether victim was targeted for his religious beliefs or killed in a family dispute.}

    At least two unknown assailants have hacked a Hindu tailor to death in central Bangladesh, police say, amid a rise in attacks on religious minorities in the South Asian nation.

    Police officials said they were investigating whether Saturday’s killing in Tangail was linked to religious groups suspected of a series of minority killings, or was tied to a family dispute.

    “They came on a motorcycle and attacked him as he sat on a roadside. They hacked him on his head, neck and hand,” Aslam Khan, deputy chief of Tangail district police, told AFP news agency.

    The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group has claimed credit for the attack in a post online but the claim could not be independently verified.

    Bangladesh is reeling from a series of attacks on members of minority faiths, secularists, foreigners and intellectuals in recent months, including two gay activists and a liberal professor in the past eight days alone.

    Many of the killings have been blamed on or claimed by groups such as al-Qaeda or ISIL.

    Police said local Muslims had filed a complaint against Joarder, who owned a tailoring shop, to police in 2012 for making comments about Prophet Muhammad.

    He was charged with hurting religious sentiments and spent three weeks in jail.

    “But the trial did not proceed after the complainants withdrew the charges,” Abdul Jalil, the police chief of Gopalpur sub-district, told AFP.

    ISIL threat

    Another police official said that the dispute appeared to have ended peacefully, adding that the victim’s family said he was also being threatened by a relative.

    The murder came less than a week after attackers hacked to death two gay-rights activists in the capital Dhaka, saying they tried to promote homosexuality in the deeply conservative nation.

    In February suspected ISIL supporters decapitated a top Hindu priest inside a temple complex in a northern district.

    However, the government denies that international groups such as ISIL or al-Qaeda have a presence in the country.

    Hindus make up around nine percent of Bangladesh’s population.

    Bangladesh is reeling from attacks on minority faiths, secularists, foreigners and intellectuals
  • Minamata patients speak out on anniversary of disease

    {Sunday marks 60 years since the Minamata disease, a neurological condition caused by toxic dumping, was discovered.}

    Sunday marks 60 years since doctors in Japan discovered a neurological disease in the town of Minamata, caused by one of the world’s worst cases of toxic dumping.

    In 1932, the Chisso Corporation, an integral part of the local economy for over a century, began to manufacture acetaldehyde, used to produce plastics, in their chemical plant in Minamata.

    Mercury from the production process began to spill into the bay.

    Inhabitants of Minamata started to show strange symptoms. They were shouting uncontrollably, slurring their speech or dropping their chopsticks at dinner.

    As later got known, they were slowly being poisoned by mercury that found its way into their food.

    The mercury was discharged for decades, continuing even after illness was linked to it.

    Fighting for compensation

    Exhibits in the town’s museum chart how the practice went on until 1968 – 12 years after the disease was first diagnosed and nine years after experiments on cats confirmed mercury poisoning as its cause.

    Today, more than 2,000 residents of Minamata are officially recognised as “Minamata patients” and they are receiving continuing support.

    About 2,000 others are still fighting for that status, and 70,000 defined simply as “sufferers” are entitled only to help with medical bills.

    Kenji Nagamoto is one of the town residents who was recognised as a “Minamata patient.”

    He has been battling the disease since he was born and today he is working in a daycare centre to sustain his ability to walk.

    “I am the only person here who can still walk,” he told Al Jazeera.

    “When I think about the feeling of others who can’t, it makes me think that if Chisso had stopped dump mercury earlier, none of this would have happened.”

    A clean-up operation costing hundreds of millions of dollars has, authorities say, restored the waters to the purest standards.

    But Minamata’s residents still feel their town’s dark legacy.

    “Our physical conditions and symptoms change daily. The company and the authorities may be able to help us financially, but they can’t save our hearts,” said Masami Ogata, another “Minamata patient”.