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Turkey lifts curfew, travel restrictions

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Evening and weekend curfews along with restrictions on intercity travels that were put in place over half a year ago were scrapped across Turkey starting on Thursday.

The country’s Interior Ministry said this on Thursday in Istanbul adding that caps on a  number of patrons in restaurants both indoor and outdoors had also been lifted.

The ministry said that offices would be  allowed to operate as normal and cinemas and theatres could once again welcome guests.

According to the ministry, The mask requirement for public spaces continues to apply, and hygiene and distance rules must continue to be observed,

It stated that weddings and concerts might also take place, as long as social distancing requirements could be met.

However, it warned that dances where the minimum distance could not be kept would remain banned.

It also said that music might only be played in bars or other facilities until midnight.

The Turkish Society for Respiratory Research had warned against the easing of measures, given the spread of the more virulent Delta variant around the world.

In Turkey, exit restrictions were in effect on weekends starting in November, and then later also imposed on weeknights.

Restaurants and cafes, for example, remained closed for weeks and could only offer delivery services.

Then, at the end of April, the government imposed a 17-day hard lockdown.

The number of new daily infections was falling in Turkey. Currently, between 5,000 and 6,000 new cases were recorded every day in the country of 84 million.

Some 40 per cent of the population had received at least one vaccine dose.

dpa/NAN

 

 

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Russia hosts 2-day BRICS summit in Kazan

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Russian President Vladimir Putin is hosting a summit of the BRICS inter-governmental organisation in the city of Kazan from Tuesday to Thursday.

The summit brings together 24 heads of state and government and is seen by Putin as part of an initiative to create a new world order to end the dominance of the U.S…

Prominent among the guests was Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Representatives from a total of 32 countries would attend.

The original members of BRICS are, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa have been joined by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Ethiopia and Iran among others.

The status of Saudi Arabia is yet unclear.

Russia, which currently chairs the organisation, announced that Saudi Arabia would be accepted as a member country at the start of the year.

But there has been no confirmation from Riyadh, and Saudi Arabia would be represented at the summit by its foreign minister.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov said Saudi Arabia’s status would be cleared up at the summit.

Turkey is to participate as an interested party.

Speaking ahead of the summit, Putin said a central aim would be promoting financial cooperation and providing an alternative to the SWIFT network, through which international payments are routed.

Many Russian banks were banned from the network after its invasion of Ukraine.

Setting up a joint bank is also on the BRICS agenda.

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Report says minority of German car owners buy electric vehicles

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Report says minority of German car owners buy electric vehicles

A recent report from German insurer HUK Coburg shows a sluggish transition to electric vehicles among German car buyers, indicating that a small fraction of the population is fully embracing electric cars.

According to the report, only 3.9 per cent of private car owners opted for electric vehicles both new and used during the third quarter of this year.

The report reveals that the share of battery-powered cars within the private vehicle fleet saw a modest increase of just 0.1 per cent between July and September, reaching a total of 2.9 per cent.

As the market leader in motor vehicle insurance in Germany, HUK covers nearly 14 million insured vehicles.

The company analysed data from hundreds of thousands of drivers registering vehicles annually, retroactively calculating electric car rates in the private vehicle sector since early 2020.

In spite of a broader range of electric vehicle models and technical advancements, the shift to electric vehicles this year has regressed to 2021 levels.

This particularly followed the government’s decision to eliminate purchase incentives.

The company predicts that the overall national share of electric cars may grow at a slower pace this year compared to the previous four years.

The evaluation also reveals that over one-third of previous electric car owners have chosen combustion engines for their next vehicle purchase this year, raising concerns about a potential “fundamental acceptance problem” within the market.

Meanwhile, a representative survey conducted by YouGov, involving 4,147 participants, found that 17 per cent expressed intentions to transition from combustion engines to electric motors within the next two years.

However, even if these respondents follow through on their plans, HUK’s calculations indicate that Germany would still fall short of its target of 15 million purely electric cars by 2030.

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Israel Declares UN Chief ‘Persona Non Grata’ Over Iran Attack Response

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Israel declared UN Chief Antonio Guterres “persona non grata” on Wednesday, accusing him of failing to specifically condemn Iran’s missile attack on Israel.

“Anyone who cannot unequivocally condemn Iran’s heinous attack on Israel does not deserve to step foot on Israeli soil,” said Foreign Minister Israel Katz in a statement.

“This is an anti-Israel Secretary-General who lends support to terrorists, rapists, and murderers,” he said.

Katz added that Guterres, who he said supported the “murderers of Hamas, Hezbollah, the Huthis, and now Iran, the mothership of global terror, will be remembered as a stain on the history of the UN for generations to come”.

Following Iran’s missile attack on Israel late Tuesday, Guterres condemned the “broadening conflict in the Middle East”, slamming “escalation after escalation” in the region.

“This must stop. We absolutely need a ceasefire,” said Guterres.

Israel has been a harsh critic of the UN, with ties between the state and the international body souring even more after the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Guterres has repeatedly called for a ceasefire to halt the fighting in both Gaza and Lebanon.

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