19 April 2018 (AlJazeera News)
The Cuban National Assembly has formally elected Miguel Diaz-Canel as the country's new president.
The vote on Thursday marked the end of an era for Cuba, making Diaz-Canel the first person outside the Castro family to rule the country in 59 years.
Raul Castro, the previous president, stepped down after two five-year terms. Raul is the brother of the late Fidel Castro, who overthrew dictator Fulgencio Batista in the 1959 revolution and led the country for decades.
His nomination as the head of the 31-member Council of State was officially confirmed on Thursday. Diaz-Canel was the only candidate.
The Castro family had ruled the socialist nation since the 1959 revolution.
Castro will remain the head of the ruling Communist Party until 2021 and is expected to continue to play an important role in policy decisions.
"The Communist Party of Cuba is more important than the National Assembly or even the Council of State," said Al Jazeera correspondent Lucia Newman.
"They set the guidelines for the country and Raul Castro is going to remain as head of that old powerful communist party. So certainly Diaz-Canel is not going to be able to run off and become the great-reformer, even if he wanted to and from what we understand that is not his position," she added.
The transfer of power comes at a precarious time in Cuba's history. Cuban allies in Latin America have been voted out of government positions across the region in recent years.
A detente between the US and Cuba, longtime adversaries, has slowed after Donald Trump became president in 2017.
Cuba is also facing economic difficulties after Raul, who succeeded his brother Fidel as president in 2008, initiated market-style reforms that were agreed to in 2011. Though the reforms caused a boom in the Cuban economy, they have since slowed.
"Despite the errors and insufficiencies recognised in this plenary, the situation is more favourable than a few years ago," Castro, 86, was quoted as saying by party newspaper Granma.
Political campaigning is outlawed in Cuba, so little is known about Diaz-Canel's plans to navigate these challenges.
However, there is reason to believe the presumed president will continue with liberalising social policies, given his past support for LGBT rights, expanded internet access and loosening government controls on media.
Still, Diaz-Canel is not known to support changing Cuba's government from the one-party system in place since the revolution, a demand from anti-Castro politicians in Washington.
According to Ted Piccone, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute, the Trump administration will most likely "double down" on its "embrace of punitive regime change" in Cuba after Diaz-Canel assumes power.
Peshawar 19 April 2018 (Daily The Nation)
People in Pakistani Province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP) told Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Saqib Nisar, that nothing has improved for them in the province.
CJP, on Thursday, was visiting the Lady Reading Hospital and Al-Razi medical college in Peshawar where he inquired people about their problems. People responded that nothing has changed for them in the province.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s (PTI) party slogan of ‘tabdeeli’ is failed to satisfy people in KP despite having the majority in provincial government.
As the term is about to end, people in KP seems to dissatisfy with PTI’s provincial government's performance. In spite of the expectations, they say, nothing has changed for them.
CJP said the KP government has miserably failed in establishing even a single waste recycling plant in the province.
He was hearing different petitions related to education, health and safe water provision at the Peshawar Registry of the Supreme Court.
He remarked that health-related issues increased when hospitals and municipalities dump their waste in the open.
He summoned KP CM Pervez Khattak today before the court and told him to explain his “good governance”.
He said, “We’ll sit at the courts till 2 am to sort everything out.” A report has also been sought from the health secretary on the condition of hospitals.
CJP remarked that the bureaucracy will have to work for ensuring the basic amenities to the common man. “No compromise will be made on the fundamental rights of the people,” he added.
Justice Nisar stressed on KP government to speed up the hydro-power projects for ensuring cheap electricity to the people. He also remarked that the province is resourceful to generate hydroelectric energy.
In addition, addressing the issue of VIP protocol, the CJP ordered Inspector General (IG) KP to withdraw the 3,000 police officials deployed on security duty of influential people.
The IG ordered police department to call back the police officials by 2 pm today.
Islamabad 19 April 2018 (Daily The Nation)
Foreign Office has said the threatening statements emanating from the top Indian leadership against Pakistan should be the matter of concern for the international community, reported Radio Pakistan.
Responding to the queries of media persons at his weekly news briefing about Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's tirade against Pakistan in the UK, the spokesperson said the international community should also take notice and get stopped the ongoing Indian atrocities in Occupied Kashmir.
About the claims made by Modi about conducting surgical strikes in Pakistan, the spokesperson categorically dismissed them terming it farcical.
West Palm Beach, Florida (USA) 18 April 2018 (The New York Times)
In a tweet early on Wednesday, President Trump confirmed reports about the C.I.A. director Mike Pompeo’s secret meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, saying the session “went very smoothly” and that “a good relationship was formed.”
President Trump dispatched the C.I.A. director Mike Pompeo to North Korea to meet with its leader, Kim Jong-un, in recent weeks to lay the groundwork for a summit meeting between Mr. Kim and Mr. Trump, two people briefed on the secret trip said on Tuesday.
Mr. Trump alluded to Mr. Pompeo’s mission when he said on Tuesday afternoon that the United States was in direct talks with North Korea at “extremely high levels,” and that the White House was looking at five sites for a potential meeting of the two leaders.
The White House has used intelligence, rather than diplomatic channels, to communicate with North Korea, ever since last month, when Mr. Trump unexpectedly accepted Mr. Kim’s invitation to meet.
Mr. Pompeo, who is awaiting confirmation as secretary of state, has been dealing with North Korean representatives through a channel that runs between the C.I.A. and its North Korean counterpart, the Reconnaissance General Bureau, according to other officials. And he has been in close touch with the director of South Korea’s National Intelligence Service, Suh Hoon, who American officials said brokered Mr. Kim’s invitation to Mr. Trump.
On Tuesday, Mr. Trump also said he would give his blessing to North and South Korea to “discuss the end of the war” when the leaders of those countries meet this month, opening the door to a peace treaty that would replace the armistice that halted the Korean War in 1953.
His statements, which came as he welcomed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan to his oceanfront estate here, were fresh evidence of a diplomatic thaw underway on the Korean Peninsula, and made a once-unthinkable encounter between him and Mr. Kim far more likely.
The president did not specify who in his administration was talking to North Korea, nor did he give any hint of the sites under consideration — adding to the aura of mystery that has enveloped this potential meeting. The Washington Post first reported Mr. Pompeo's trip. which took place over Easter.
But his comments could raise other thorny issues. A peace treaty with North Korea would greatly increase pressure to ease economic sanctions on the North and to withdraw American troops from the Korean Peninsula. It would also complicate the already tangled diplomacy in East Asia.
In his meeting with Mr. Abe, however, Mr. Trump projected optimism. He described North Korea in language worlds away from the speech he gave in November in Seoul, when he called it cruel and barbaric, “the results of a tragic experiment in a laboratory of history.”
“I really believe there’s a lot of good will,” Mr. Trump said. “They do respect us. We are respectful of them.”
He even suggested that the North and the South might announce some kind of deal before he met Mr. Kim.
On Tuesday, a South Korean newspaper, Munhwa Ilbo, reported that the two countries were negotiating an announcement “to ease military tensions and end a military confrontation,” as part of the summit meeting planned between Mr. Kim and President Moon Jae-in of South Korea.
That could involve pulling troops out of the Demilitarized Zone, making it a genuinely “Demilitarized Zone.” A South Korean government official later played down the report, saying it was too soon to tell what a joint statement by Mr. Moon and Mr. Kim would contain, other than broad and “abstract” statements about the need for North Korea to “denuclearize.”
But analysts said South Korea was aiming for a comprehensive deal, in which the North agreed to give up its weapons in return for a security guarantee, including a peace treaty. Mr. Trump’s comments suggested he backed that effort.
“They do have my blessing to discuss the end of the war,” he said. “People don’t realize that the Korean War has not ended. It’s going on right now. And they are discussing an end to war. Subject to a deal, they have my blessing.”
While Mr. Abe lavished praise on Mr. Trump for the sanctions campaign, which he said had brought North Korea to the table, he did not repeat the president’s words about an end to the Korean War.
“Donald,” he said, “you’ve demonstrated your unwavering determination in addressing the challenge of North Korea.”
Mr. Abe said only that he hoped that the talks with Mr. Kim would force the North to address the threats posed by its nuclear and missile programs, as well as its abduction of Japanese citizens — a politically resonant issue in Japan that Mr. Trump promised to raise with Mr. Kim.
“Abe put on a surprisingly brave face,” said Michael J. Green, a senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who advised President George W. Bush on North Korea. “The president of the United States just endorsed a peace treaty with North Korea, a declared nuclear weapons state, and they offered nothing in return.”
China, which is a signer to the 1953 armistice, has long favored a peace treaty. But Japan, which did not sign it, is suspicious of one — as are some foreign policy experts in the United States, who point out that the North has yet to take any tangible steps to give up its nuclear arsenal.
The idea of a peace treaty is not new. The United States and North Korea discussed it in the 1990s and again in 2005. But it has never gone anywhere, largely because North Korea has reneged on pledges to give up its nuclear program.
Most scholars and officials agree that North and South Korea cannot themselves announce an end to the Korean War. It has to involve the United States and China as well, since both were signers to the armistice.
In welcoming Mr. Abe to his estate, Mar-a-Lago, for two days of meetings, Mr. Trump clearly hoped to change the subject from tampered documents, confiscated legal files and other symbols of the political storm clouds that hover over both leaders back home.
After days of ominous reports about his personal lawyer, Michael D. Cohen, and unflattering descriptions in a new book by James B. Comey, the F.B.I. director he ousted, Mr. Trump appeared to savor the prospect of discussing trade and the nuclear threat from North Korea with Mr. Abe, whom he described in Twitter as a “truly fine gentleman.”
The stakes are even higher for Mr. Abe, whose political survival is in doubt after two domestic scandals have sapped his approval ratings and raised questions about whether he will be forced to resign.
Mr. Abe has invested heavily in his relationship with Mr. Trump, whom he first visited at Trump Tower even before he was sworn in. Preserving that relationship, in the face of fresh challenges in trade and from North Korea, could affect Mr. Abe’s standing in Japan.
The White House sought to put a good face on the meeting, describing Japan as a great ally of the United States and Mr. Abe as a friend of Mr. Trump. But officials acknowledged there would be differences over trade, with Mr. Trump pushing for a trade deal between the two countries and Mr. Abe stung by Mr. Trump’s decision not to exempt Japan, like other American allies, from sweeping tariffs on steel exports.
“We have certain disagreements with respect to some of the trading issues,” Larry Kudlow, Mr. Trump’s chief economic adviser, told reporters before the meeting. “We’ll iron those out, hopefully.”
Mr. Kudlow said he expected Mr. Abe to petition Mr. Trump to grant Japan an exemption, but declined to predict how he would respond. He also tamped down expectations about the United States rejoining the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Asian trade pact, now anchored by Japan, which Mr. Trump pulled out of during his first week in office.
“We are in the pre-preliminary stages of any discussions,” he said. “It’s more of a thought than a policy.”
Having met six times — including once before at Mar-a-Lago — and spoken by phone 20 times, Mr. Trump and Mr. Abe were likely to talk about the issues dogging them at home, officials said. But American officials said they did not believe that would dominate their discussions.
“It’s all part and parcel of the relationship,” said Matthew Pottinger, the senior director for Asia at the National Security Council. “Sometimes they talk about the respective politics in each other’s countries. They enjoy talking about it.”
Ankara 18 April 2018 (Anadolu News)
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday announced early presidential and parliamentary elections on June 24.
Speaking at a news conference at the presidential complex following a meeting with opposition Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) head Devlet Bahceli, Erdogan said: “Turkey’s cross border operation in Syria, and the situation in both Syria and Iraq obliged Turkey to overcome uncertainties as soon as possible.
“For this reason at the end of talks with Mr. Bahceli, we decided to hold elections on June 24, 2018 on Sunday.”
He also added that transition to the new system of governance gained urgency in order to take and implement decisions “more strongly” regarding the future of the country.
"In a period, when developments in Syria accelerated, and we have to take very important decisions from macroeconomic equilibrium to large investments, election issue should be removed from the agenda as soon as possible."
Turkey's parliamentary and presidential elections were scheduled to take place in November 2019.
On April 16, 2017, Turkey held a referendum during which the majority of voters decided in favor of an 18-article bill to switch from a parliamentary to a presidential system.
Erdogan noted that Turkey was still being governed with the old system after the referendum, and the government still confronts the flaws of the system.
The president said that legal process for early elections, including preparations by Supreme Electoral Council were going to begin immediately.
The announcement comes after Bahceli made a call on Tuesday for early elections in the country.
Tehran 17 April 2018 (IRNA)
Iran's Army and the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) have proved to be unpredictable in responding to the enemies' potential threats, Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Major General Mohammad Baqeri noted in a statement released by his office on the occasion of Army Day.
The commander referred to the Zionists' propaganda and 'psychological war' against the Islamic Republic and said that the armed forces will not permit the US and its western and Arab allies to break the resistance of people.
He urged the Iranian armed forces to promote their defense capabilities to get prepared for encountering new enemy threats.
Islamabad 17 April 2018 (Anadolu)
Turkey’s state-run tea company opened a factory in northern Pakistan on Monday.
The General Directorate of Tea Enterprises (Caykur) opened its factory in the Mansehra region, around 200 kilometers from the capital Islamabad.
Attending Monday’s opening ceremony were Caykur Chairman Imdat Sutluoglu as well as Yusuf Zafar, the head of Pakistan’s Agricultural Research Council, and Farrukh Hamid, the head of Pakistan’s National Tea and High Value Crops Research Institute.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Sutluoglu said that the factory would have a daily production capacity of five tons.
Although Pakistanis consume a lot of tea, they are importing tea, he said, adding that the idea of opening a factory came from Pakistan itself.
According to official data, Pakistan spent over 23 billion Pakistani rupees (around $220 million) on tea imports during the first six months of 2017.
Over the past two decades, the country’s tea imports have ballooned over 325 percent.
Sutluoglu said that the facility would make a great contribution to the development of tea farming in Pakistan.
“This plant is a small gift from Turkey to Pakistan,” he added.
Moving to self-production
He said that Turkey is ready to support Pakistan on tea saplings as well.
Speaking at the opening ceremony, Hamid said that Pakistan is a big tea market, as it imports tea from 16 countries.
Zafar said that for years Pakistanis thought foreign teas were better but “we need to get used to our own products.”
“As Turkey has been producing its own tea for the last 90 years, we should come to this level too,” he added.
He said that the factory would help develop Pakistan’s tea industry.
After the opening ceremony, high-quality tea saplings brought from Turkey were planted in the factory garden.
Last August, Turkey donated an automatic tea-processing plant to Pakistan to support high-tech tea cultivation.
Caykur exported tea to 110 countries in 2017, Sutluoglu told reporters earlier this year.
He said Caykur is involved in 38 countries in Europe, 37 in Africa, 15 in Asia, 14 in the Mideast, and six in the Americas.
Caykur, founded in 1983, is a state-owned enterprise, and its processed-tea products include white, green, black, organic, leaf, and iced tea. It employs more than 10,600 people in its 56 factories.
Ankara 17 April 2018 (Anadolu)
The National Security Council on Tuesday advised an extension of the state of emergency in Turkey.
The council had met under the leadership of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in capital Ankara, according to a written official statement.
The council statement said the meeting, which lasted for around two hours, said: "In order to maintain the measures on protecting our democracy, principle of state of law, and rights and freedoms of our citizens, it has been decided to advise an extension of the state of emergency."
Turkey declared a state of emergency for the first time on July 20, 2016, following the defeated coup carried out by the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO).
FETO and its U.S.-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated coup, which left 250 people martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.
Ankara accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police, and judiciary.
The council also touched upon Turkey’s military operations in Syria.
“Turkey expects support of allies for Syria operations and expresses resolve for permanent political solution,” the statement said.
Turkey launched Operation Olive Branch on Jan. 20 to clear the terrorist groups YPG/PKK and Daesh from Afrin, northwestern Syria amid growing threats from the region.
On March 18, Turkish-backed troops liberated Afrin town center, which had been a major hideout for the YPG/PKK since 2012.
About the humanitarian crisis in Syria, the council added it was vital for the international community to act collectively in order to stop the massacres in the war-ravaged country.
The U.S., U.K. and France jointly launched strikes Friday night targeting the Syrian regime chemical weapons capabilities in retaliation for the suspected chemical attack that had killed dozens in eastern Ghouta.
Islamabad 13 April 2017 (Anadolu)
President of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Mamnoon Hussain recently inaugurated a week-long exhibition displaying a pictorial survey of relations between Turkey and Pakistan in Islamabad.
The exhibition -- titled Journey of Friendship and Brotherhood - A Pictorial Survey of Turkey-Pakistan Relations -- has been organized by Turkish embassy and Yunus Emre Turkish Culture Center at National Council of Arts.
Speaking at the inaugural ceremony, Pakistan’s President Mamnoon Hussain said his country considers Turkey as the “best friend”.
“Our excellent bilateral relations can be seen at the international forums, where Pakistan and Turkey always support each other,” Hussain told the participants.
Various photos of different personalities and events displayed in the exhibition highlighted the long lasting relations of fraternity and solidarity between the two countries.
Congratulating the Turkish Embassy and Yunus Emre Institute for their efforts to enlighten the new generation about the common heritage between the two nations, Hussain expressed hope that such events would also be organized in other parts of Pakistan.
For his part, Mustafa Yurdakul, Turkish Ambassador to Pakistan, said Turkey and Pakistan are neighbors without physical borders.
He also indicated the relations between the two countries are based on “heartfelt affection and inherit its strength from pure, simple and absolute brotherhood.”
Doha 15 April 2018 (Daily Gulf Times)
Doha-based Indian journalist Anil Kumar Vijayan (56) passed away following a heart attack on Friday. He left behind his wife Shirley and two sons, Ritwik and Rohit.
Many community members and friends paid homage to Vijayan when his body was kept for viewing at the Al Wakra Hospital mortuary on Sunday.
The body is expected to be flown on Monday to Mumbai, where his family is settled, according to sources close to him.
Vijayan breathed his last while attending a function in Mesaieed. He was planning to leave Qatar for good by the end of this month.
A veteran journalist, Vijayan had worked in newspapers and other publications in India and the Gulf region for about three decades.
In Qatar, he had worked as Editor of a business magazine, published by the Gulf Publishing and Printing Company and as copy editor in an English newspaper.
Before coming to Qatar, he had worked for Khaleej Times and Sharjah-based The Gulf Today, both together for about 12 years.
Vijayan will be fondly remembered for his sincerity and humility, his friends said.