Turkey needs Israel, Erdogan says: Zio-Watch, January 2, 2015

Published time: 3 Jan, 2016 07:20

Turkey's Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu © Marko DjuricaTurkey’s Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu © Marko Djurica / Reuters

The only Turkish official who appeared to have been bold enough to take responsibility for the downing of the Russian Su-24 bomber, PM Ahmet Davutoglu, has seemingly backtracked on his words. He now says he did not give a direct order to shoot down the jet.

In the days after November 24, when the Turkish F-16 fighter jet launched an unprovoked missile attack on the Russian Su-24 jet bombing terrorist positions in northern Syria, the Turkish prime minister publicly spoke out to justify the attack.

“It was decided that in the event of our airspace being violated, all necessarily measures would be taken, all relevant orders to the armed forces were given by me, personally,” Davutoglu said.

© Shamil Zhumatov

Downed in 17 seconds? Where Turkey’s story of Su-24 violating airspace just doesn’t add up

Now, however, in a newly published interview with channel NTV, the Turkish PM appears to be backtracking on his statement, downplaying his personal role in the fatal decision-making that spilled over into a serious rift between Moscow and Ankara.
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Published time: 2 Jan, 2016 14:29

RT’s Murat Gazdiev follows the Syrian Army’s mop-up group / RT The Syrian army has been storming the southern Daraa province in an effort recapture Al Sheikh Maskin, the town they call the “crossroads of the south” from the terrorists, wiping those out toward the Jordanian border. RT’s Murad Gazdiev is on the spot.

Al Sheikh Maskin is strategically located near several important highways, making its capture the key to operational success in the region. There is not much left of the town, which lays in ruins, and there are hardly any civilians left there.

“We launched our assault from the North [of Al Sheikh Maskin]. We do not control the North and the East… By taking this town, we split the rebels in two,”Syrian Army General Hassan told Gazdiev.

General HassanGeneral Hassan / RT

The main road through the town, the highway leading to the city of Daraa in the south and the main roundabout, is currently held by Syrian forces. The fighters of the Free Syrian Army, moderate opposition, are said to have abandoned the town and the people remaining in the area are mostly armed Islamists opposing the government troops.

“Airstrikes spread panic among the militants, and many fled. Now, some of them are entrenched inside the town. We are looking for them,” General Hassan said.
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Published time: 2 Jan, 2016 10:55

A captured Islamic State militant who spoke to Sputnik news agency has bolstered claims that Turkey is involved in illegal oil deals with the jihadist group up to the hilt.

24-year-old Mahmud Ghazi Tatar says he joined Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL) from the Turkish city of Adiyaman. Together with other recruits, he was transported over the border into Syria where he received terrorist training.

Mahmud Ghazi TatarMahmud Ghazi Tatar / RT

Having taken part in the civil war in Syria, he was captured by Kurdish forces last June and is now imprisoned.

RT obtained interview footage with the captive from Sputnik news agency. In it, the former IS fighter reveals details about Turkey’s alleged oil links to the terror group.
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Turkish military forces have killed over 260 Kurdish fighters allegedly affiliated with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) during two days of operations in the country’s three southeastern districts.

In a Saturday statement, the Turkish chief of general staff announced the killing of a total of 267 PKK elements in what it described as “ongoing operations” in the predominantly Kurdish-populated areas, already under a military curfew.

According to the military statement, 179 of the Kurdish fighters were killed in the Cizre district of the Sirnak province while 55 more were killed in operations in the Sur district and 24 others in the Silopi district of the Diyarbakir province.

The three heavily Kurdish-populated districts have remained under Ankara-imposed military curfew since early December, when the so-called anti-terrorism operations by Turkish armed forces began.

The statement further added that three more PKK members were killed in Cizre on Friday while three others were taken into custody by Turkish security officers.

It added that five other Kurdish militants were also killed in Silopi on Friday as 15 Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) were destroyed, along with two trenches and the removal of seven barricades.

It further pointed to the killing of another PKK fighter in Diyarbakır’s historical Sur district in an operation that also demolished three barricades.
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Thousands of mourners have participated in a mass funeral procession in the occupied West Bank city of al-Khalil (Hebron) to lay to rest 14 Palestinians killed by Israeli forces.

The funeral was held on Saturday after the Israeli regime handed over the bodies of 23 Palestinians, including the 14, on Friday night.

The bodies, which were wrapped in Palestinian flags and covered with flowers, were carried to the al-Hussein Ibn Ali mosque in city center. Prayers were also held for the deceased in the adjacent al-Hussein football stadium and across city streets, Palestinian Ma’an news agency reported.

The mourners then marched through Ein Sarah Street before reaching the al-Shuhahda (Martyrs) Cemetery, where the 14 were laid to rest.

Tensions have dramatically escalated since the Israeli regime’s imposition of restrictions in August on the entry of Palestinian worshipers into the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in East al-Quds.
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Published time: 2 Jan, 2016 16:00

Members of the Shi'ite ulema council pray as they hold a sign for Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr who was executed along with others in Saudi Arabia, during a protest demonstration in Karachi, Pakistan, January 2, 2016. © Akhtar SoomroMembers of the Shi’ite ulema council pray as they hold a sign for Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr who was executed along with others in Saudi Arabia, during a protest demonstration in Karachi, Pakistan, January 2, 2016. © Akhtar Soomro / Reuters

Shiite Muslims across the Gulf region have reacted with disgust and condemnation after Saudi Arabia executed a leading Shiite cleric, Sheikh Al-Nimr, on terror charges Saturday. He was one of the 47 people who were put to death.

03 January 2016

07:59 GMT

Iranian police have arrested 40 people in connection with the attack on the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Tehran, local authorities reported.

07:25 GMT

Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Beirut has increased security in the wake of the attack on the country’s embassy in Tehran, the Kuwaiti daily al-Jarida reported. The staff of the Beirut embassy were told to stay inside the compound as angry demonstrations protesting Saudi Arabia’s execution of Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr started in the Lebanese capital.

06:44 GMT

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeated his condemnation of Saudi Arabia for executing Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr, saying Saudi politicians will face “divine vengeance.”
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Published time: 2 Jan, 2016 20:55

© Political Beauty© Political Beauty / YouTube

A group of ‘art activists’ are hoping to put an end to the needless deaths of refugees by building a bridge across the Mediterranean Sea.

More than 3,770 men, women, and children died last year trying to cross the open waters in search of a better life; free from violence, poverty and persecution.

The death toll is a tragic increase on 2014, when 500 less people perished in the attempt.

In a monumental display of humanity, the Center of Political Beauty is proposing to build a stone bridge from Africa to Europe in a bid to “stop the futile dying in the Mediterranean.”

According to the political performance artists, who claim to use “humanity as a weapon,” the 230 kilometer overpass would stretch from the Tunisian coastal town of al-Huwariyah to Agrigento in Sicily.
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