Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu vowed yesterday that Turkey would continue operations against the Islamic State (IS) group and Kurdish militants after it bombed targets in Syria and made nearly 300 arrests.
“The operations that were started today are not a single event, but a process,” Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara in televised comments.
Davutoglu said 297 people, including 37 foreigners, had been arrested in nationwide raids against suspected members of the Islamic State, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and other militant groups.
Photo: AFP
Earlier, Turkish air force jets had launched strikes on Islamic State positions in Syria, following a suicide bombing in Turkey blamed on the group that claimed 32 lives.
Davutoglu said the warplanes had been “100 percent” successful in eliminating their targets.
“Whichever terrorist organization poses a threat to the borders of the Turkish Republic, measures will be taken without hesitation. We are observing activity in Syria and on the border at every moment. Turkey will show the strongest reaction to the slightest movement that threatens it,” Davutoglu said.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Tuesday declared martial law in an unannounced late night address broadcast live on YTN television. Yoon said he had no choice but to resort to such a measure in order to safeguard free and constitutional order, saying opposition parties have taken hostage of the parliamentary process to throw the country into a crisis. "I declare martial law to protect the free Republic of Korea from the threat of North Korean communist forces, to eradicate the despicable pro-North Korean anti-state forces that are plundering the freedom and happiness of our people, and to protect the free
France on Friday showed off to the world the gleaming restored interior of Notre-Dame cathedral, a week before the 850-year-old medieval edifice reopens following painstaking restoration after the devastating 2019 fire. French President Emmanuel Macron conducted an inspection of the restoration, broadcast live on television, saying workers had done the “impossible” by healing a “national wound” after the fire on April 19, 2019. While every effort has been made to remain faithful to the original look of the cathedral, an international team of designers and architects have created a luminous space that has an immediate impact on the visitor. The floor shimmers and
CHAGOS ISLANDS: Recently elected Mauritian Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam told lawmakers that the contents of negotiations are ‘unknown’ to the government Mauritius’ new prime minister ordered an independent review of a deal with the UK involving a strategically important US-UK military base in the Indian Ocean, placing the agreement under fresh scrutiny. Under a pact signed last month, the UK ceded sovereignty of the Chagos archipelago to Mauritius, while retaining control of Diego Garcia — the island where the base is situated. The deal was signed by then-Mauritian prime minister Pravind Jugnauth and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Oct. 3 — a month before elections in Mauritius in which Navin Ramgoolam became premier. “I have asked for an independent review of the
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