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General

India begins G-20 presidency with pledge to promote universal sense of oneness

“India’s Presidency of the G20 is here!” declared the official Twitter account of India’s G-20 Presidency on Thursday. “Thank you Indonesia for your stewardship of the grouping over the last year,” it statement said.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo officially handed over the G-20 presidency to India during the bloc’s Nov. 15-16 summit on Indonesia’s Bali island.

Modi said in a statement issued by his office on Thursday that the previous 17 G-20 presidencies produced significant results and that he “will benefit from these achievements, and build further upon them.”

He added that the presidency would “work to promote this universal sense of one-ness.”

Last month, the prime minister unveiled the logo, theme, and website for India’s G-20 Presidency.

“Today, we do not need to fight for our survival – our era need not be one of war. Indeed, it must not be one!” he stated, adding that “today, the greatest challenges we face – climate change, terrorism, and pandemics – can be solved not by fighting each other, but only by acting together.”

The prime minister said India is the world’s fastest-growing large economy and that the country’s agenda for the bloc will be “inclusive, ambitious, action-oriented, and decisive.”

“Our citizen-centric governance model takes care of even our most marginalized citizens while nurturing the creative genius of our talented youth,” he added.

Modi noted that “we will encourage an honest conversation” among the most powerful countries “on mitigating risks posed by weapons of mass destruction and enhancing global security.”

The G-20 is a strategic multilateral platform that connects the world’s major developed and emerging economies, which account for more than 80% of global GDP, 75% of international trade, and 60% of the world population.

Local media reported that the country will host up to 200 meetings across the country over the next year during its tenure. The G-20 Summit will be held in the national capital New Delhi in September of next year.

New Delhi Television said 100 monuments across the country, including UNESCO world heritage sites, will be lit up with the G-20 logo for a week.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

Putin has failed to break Ukraine, must end ‘vicious invasion’: US official

There is a clear way to stop “this fire” which is “for Russia to stop it’s vicious war against Ukraine,” Victoria Nuland, US under secretary of state for political affairs, said in her address to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Ministerial Council.

She also urged Belarus to “cease to be an enabling platform for these vicious attacks.”

“(Putin) has failed to break Ukraine, with his vicious invasion with his war crimes, and human rights abuses, and now his cruel attack on the most vulnerable, young people, the elderly, plunging millions into cold and darkness,” said Nuland.

Putin also failed to break the OSCE, which is why the US remains optimistic about the future despite “all the horrors of this year,” she added.

“It’s important not just for Europe, it’s important for the world because this organization has set the gold standard for tools that we are now exporting to other continents to help solve conflicts, defend democracy, to defend a free press, defend security, ensure military transparency,” she said.

“That needs to continue here, and it will, thanks to the resilience that we’ve created, but it also needs to continue around the world,” she added.

Maybe one day Russia’s “benighted citizens … will once again have the chance to live under a more free system,” Nuland continued.

“The system that Ukraine is fighting so hard for and that so many of the rest of us enjoy; a system where dignity is respected, where elections are free, where the press is free, where there is accountability and justice, where leaders work for the people and not the other way around,” she added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

Police detect 5 letter bombs sent to high-profile targets in Spain

According to the Interior Ministry, Spanish police also discovered a similar letter bomb addressed to Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez last Thursday.

In total, five letter bombs were sent to high-profile targets in Spain over the past week.

The first, addressed to Sanchez containing explosive material, was sent by ordinary mail and was deactivated by police.

The same day, the Interior Ministry told police to increase security around mail packages being sent to government offices, although it was not made public until a week later.

On Wednesday, a similar package addressed to the Ukrainian ambassador exploded in the Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid. One staffer suffered from minor injuries.

Later that night, the arms company Instalaza, which makes the C90 rocket-propelled grenade launchers that Spain sends to Ukraine, discovered another suspicious package. Staff reported it to the police and the bomb was deactivated.

Just a few hours later, early Thursday morning, security at the Torrejon Air Base in Madrid detected another suspected envelope directed to the European Union Satellite Center. After passing it through an X-ray machine, authorities saw it contained “a mechanism,” according to the interior minister.

Consequently, police were called to deactivate the explosive.

Also, another envelope was detected at the Defense Ministry in Madrid on Thursday, which was addressed to Defense Minister Margarita Robles, according to the sources who spoke to Spanish news agency EFE.

Although police are still investigating, Interior Minister Fernando Grande Marlaska said all four letter bombs, excluding the one directed to the Defense Ministry as it was known later, had “similar characteristics.”

Rafael Perez, director general of the Civil Guard, later said that the five envelopes had “similar characteristics” and were sent from inside Spain, citing preliminary investigations.

The Interior Ministry has increased security measures around consulates and other sensitive organizations, and the High Court is now investigating the cases.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

The past that the West wants all to forget: The African slave trade

Even before Europeans started colonizing Africa, slaves had been traded on the continent for centuries, often captured in wars or among the indigenous population and sold to serve wealthy families.

Europeans added an intercontinental dimension after they set foot on the continent in the 15th century, with slave ships transporting African captives across the Atlantic in massive numbers.

The Portuguese, specifically, launched this new form of the slave trade, selling those they captured on the coast of West Africa as slaves and organizing regular sea voyages to carry them to foreign markets, often in Brazil, the Caribbean Islands, or North America.

After the discovery of the Americas and the entry of countries such as the Netherlands, Spain, Britain, and France into the colonial race, the slave trade eventually became a major source of commerce.

While previously slaves were sold from ports in East and North Africa held certain rights, the inhumane treatment they suffered while crossing the ocean and at the places where they arrived eventually triggered a backlash that led to the prohibition of slavery towards the end of the 19th century.

The main ports that were used in the African Slave Trade were located in present-day Benin, Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Congo, Nigeria, and Angola.

While the Spanish and Portuguese served the main role in transporting slaves from West Africa early on, they were joined by the Dutch and British in the following centuries.

25 slaves in exchange for one horse

By the beginning of the 17th century, the number of slaves sold in slave markets in Italy, Spain, and Portugal is estimated to be around 50,000, with 25-30 fetching the price of a single horse.

French traders, who began transporting slaves from Central and West Africa in the 17th century, later also gained commercial bases in Madagascar, off the East African coast.

The vast majority of the estimated 2 million slaves taken on French ships in the 17th and 18th centuries were from that island and were destined for Mauritius and Reunion Island, which today remains a territory of France in the Indian Ocean.

Island of Goree

The Island of Goree, off the Senegalese capital of Dakar, was one of the most important centers of the slave trade in West Africa.

Opened to settlement by the Portuguese in 1450, Goree was captured in 1677 by France, which held the island until Senegalese independence in 1960.

It was the “slave houses” built in 1780 that brought the UNESCO-protected island to its sad infamy today.

West Africans were gathered and kept in chained to each other for weeks in these houses, categorized according to their health, age, and height before being shipped to the New World.

Some slaves were sent to Europe and South America on boarding ships called Tumberios, meaning “floating grave” in Portuguese.

Others were sold from slave markets for 1 kilogram (2.2 pounds) of rice or potatoes or employed in construction or household work.

Millions of Africans are estimated to have been bought and sold as slaves on Goree, the meeting point of slave traders.

Three-cornered trade and Britain

It is known that ships departing from the ports of Nantes, Rochelle, Bordeaux, Liverpool, Bristol, Amsterdam, and Lisbon in Europe came to Goree Island, where young and healthy slave candidates were collected from various parts of Africa were shown off to potential buyers.

The “value” of male slaves was judged by their height, weight, and muscle condition, while the criteria for women and children were their dental and general health.

The three corners of Africa, Europe, and America constituted the three corners of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, with the sale of raw materials and slaves carried on for hundreds of years by France, Portugal, the British, and the Dutch.

Products brought from Europe were left in Africa in exchange for the slaves in West Africa, who were then transported to agricultural lands in America in exchange for raw materials to Europe.

Many of the slaves that Britain transported to the Caribbean Islands and its new colonies in America also came from West Africa, exchanging for them high-demand items such as cloth, copper, and gunpowder.

The Netherlands, first colonial empire to arrive in South Africa

Dutch colonizers arrived in Africa earlier than many other European countries. They were the first colonial empire in South Africa, where they numbered at just 90 in 1652 before their population boomed to 16,000 by 1795.

In the same year, the number of South Africans enslaved by the Dutch in South Africa had increased to 16,839.

The Netherlands, which used South Africa as a center for its own slavers, took the slaves they collected to the Americas and Europe by ships, many of which docked at Cape Town.

According to historians, two-thirds of the population of Cape Town consisted of slaves in 1795.

Tanzania, German colonial capital

The Tanzanian town of Bagamoyo was used as the capital of the so-called “German East Africa” colonial administration, which included most of present-day Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi.

Previously largely under the control of Omani sultans from the 17th century to the end of the 1800s, Bagamoyo became one of the main slave trade hubs, boasting strategic value due to its proximity to the island of Zanzibar.

It was a center for trading in foodstuffs before the 17th century, after which it was used to meet the growing demand for slaves and elephant tusks in Europe and the Americas.

Slaves brought to the coast from the interior of Africa sometimes had to travel for months or years at a time.

Exhausted and ill slaves were killed when it became clear that they would be unable to continue on the road ahead.

They were fed a kind of nut called “bitter cola” to keep them on their feet and conserve energy along the way.

In East Africa, 23% of African slaves taken from their homes in the 19th century were taken to Arabia, Iran, and India, 18% to South Africa and America, and 6% to Reunion Island and Mauritius to work in the French sugar cane fields.

Port of Bimbia, forgotten slaver hub

The Bimbia slave port, located near the city of Limbe in present-day Cameroon, is one of the forgotten historical centers of the slave trade, where 10% of the continental slave trade was conducted.

The enslaved African ancestors of well-known figures such as former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and famous music producer Quincy Jones also passed through the Bimbia, which is considered a part of Cameroon’s national heritage.

Today, visitors can see the remains of the chains and dungeons where millions of slaves were brought from different parts of Africa to the Americas to be sold.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

Lithuania declares Russian embassy employee persona non grata

The Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the relevant diplomatic note was handed to a representative of the Russian Embassy in Lithuania.

“On Dec. 1, a representative of the Russian Embassy in Lithuania was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was handed a note recognizing an employee of the Russian Embassy as persona non grata in Lithuania for activities incompatible with diplomatic status,” the statement said.

The Russian embassy employee is supposed to leave Lithuania within five days, it added.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

Killing of Iranian youth who celebrated World Cup loss against US sparks outcry

The incident occurred in the port city of Anzali, situated along the Caspian Sea when Samak and his friends drove through the streets celebrating Iran’s loss.

Some reports suggested that he was hit by security forces for honking and celebrating Team Melli’s defeat, which prevented them from advancing to the knockout stage of the marquee football competition.

Tensions have been running high in the Islamic republic amid sweeping protests triggered by the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police in mid-September.

National team players have also been under tremendous pressure during the tournament with many protesters urging them not to play.

After Iran’s 2-0 loss to the US, there were reports of celebrations in many cities of Iran, including Anzali.

Samak’s killing has drawn widespread anger and outrage, including from one of the members of Iran’s national football team.

Police have denied reports that Samak was killed in their firing, saying “based on available evidence,” he was killed by a “hunting weapon,” adding that “a number of suspects were immediately detained.”

Col. Syed Jafar Jawanmardi, a police officer in Anzali, was quoted as saying by local media that “considering the sensitivity of the matter and the possibility of abuse by some elements and instigators,” an investigation was started with the coordination of judicial authorities.

Prosecutor’s office in Gilan confirmed that the young man was killed by bullet wounds.

“As soon as this suspicious incident happened, a court case was filed to deal with the issue and the prosecutor of Bandar Anzali is handling the case,” prosecutor Fallah Miri said in a statement.

Gen. Amirali Hajizadeh, aerospace commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, in remarks on Tuesday acknowledged for the first time that more than 300 people have been killed in months-long protests marred by violence.

Human rights watchdogs, however, have put the number of fatalities at more than 500, including civilians and security forces.

The US and EU have imposed a slew of sanctions targeting officials and entities over what they say “repression of protests,” while Iranian authorities have accused Western states of “fomenting riots” in the country.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

Greek health workers strike over draft bill on national health system

Multiple unions are backing the strike against the draft bill, which was proposed by the Health Ministry and is currently in parliament for ratification, saying that it promotes privatization in the National Healthcare Service (ESY).

The bill, allowing for the part-time employment of doctors in public hospitals in a bid to cut back on government health spending, has received criticism from ESY physicians.

In a statement, the Federation of Hospital Doctors of Greece (OENGE) said the draft bill amounts to blackmail of both patients and doctors, arguing that it made patients into customers and doctors into sellers.

Another union joining the strike, the Panhellenic Federation of Employees at Public Hospitals (POEDIN), called on the government to increase public health funding in the budget instead of seeking ways to save money at the cost of the health of citizens.

“We demand the strengthening of ESY with adequate staffing and funding,” it said.

The legislation, if passed, is expected to affect public medical facilities, particularly in Athens and the adjacent port city of Piraeus, the Left.gr news outlet reported.

Opposition parties SYRIZA-PS and MeRA25 also expressed their support for the strike and opposition to the bill.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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General

NATO will not be ‘dragged into Putin’s war’ in Ukraine: Stoltenberg

“NATO is not party to the conflict. We will not be dragged into Putin’s war,” Stoltenberg said at a joint news conference with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, after their meeting in Berlin.

The NATO secretary general accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of deliberately bombing Ukraine’s civilian and energy infrastructure to freeze and starve the Ukrainians into submission.

“Putin is using winter as a weapon. And we cannot allow him to win. At this critical moment, our continued support for Ukraine is more important than ever,” he added.

Stoltenberg thanked the German government for its financial and military support for Ukraine.

“Germany is among the allies providing most military, financial and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. Military equipment provided by Germany protects Ukrainian homes, schools and hospitals from Russian missile attacks,” he said.

New NATO initiative

Stoltenberg noted that, during their meeting with Scholz, they discussed Germany and Norway’s proposal to set up a center to protect critical undersea infrastructure, such as cables and pipelines on the seabed.

“The recent sabotage of the North Stream pipelines has reminded us all of the vulnerabilities of this infrastructure,” he said, adding that since then, NATO has doubled the number of ships patrolling the North and the Baltic seas.

“But we need to do more, to help protect this vital infrastructure. So, I welcome the German-Norwegian initiative to establish a NATO Undersea Infrastructure Centre,” Stoltenberg said.

“Such a center would provide allies with better situational awareness, map our vulnerabilities. And help deter and recover from any disruptive actions against Allied undersea infrastructure,” he added.

Patriots for Poland

Scholz reiterated that Germany will continue its efforts to support Ukraine and will also increase its contributions to the NATO alliance.

“The fact that Putin’s Russia is trying to change borders in Europe through military force, once again reminds us how important the transatlantic alliance is,” Scholz said.

“NATO alliance remains the central guarantor of our collective security,” he stressed.

The Social Democrat chancellor underlined that the German armed forces will continue its deployments to beef up NATO’s eastern flank, will provide jets for patrols over the Baltic region, and continue operating Patriot air defense systems in Slovakia.

Asked about Germany’s offer to deploy Patriot systems in Poland, Scholz told reporters that discussions were ongoing on this matter.

“Our offer to Poland continues as stated. We’re willing and ready to provide safety and security to Poland, and deploy a Patriot system there. The discussions are ongoing,” he said.

Germany had offered to send Patriot missile defense system to Poland last month, after a stray rocket crashed in the eastern part of the country, bordering Ukraine.

But Warsaw called on Berlin to deliver the Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine, to protect both Ukrainian and Polish airspace.

German authorities declined this proposal, stressing that those defense systems were intended for use on NATO territory.

Earlier, former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had warned that if Patriot systems and NATO personnel would be deployed in Ukraine, they will be “legitimate targets” for Russian troops.

Source: Anadolu Agency

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Games

Inside the World Cup trophy factory

It has two floors of offices and workshops and a dozen employees. The company is one of the tens of thousands of small and medium enterprises that make up the backbone of the Italian economy and contribute to making it one of the most prosperous in the world.

But it is here that one of the most iconic objects on the planet has been produced for the past 50 years: the World Cup trophy.

In the early 1970s, in the aftermath of Brazil’s third Jules Rimet Cup victory in Mexico City against Italy, the story of the most famous cup began here.

According to the FIFA regulations at the time, the three victories in 1958, 1962, and 1970 meant that the Rimet trophy was to be taken home by the Brazilians without returning it to the headquarters of the World Football Federation in Zurich, as normally would happen.

It was at that moment that FIFA recognized the need to design and produce a new cup and launched an international competition in which 53 works from all around the world were submitted.

Among them was one designed by Milanese sculptor Silvio Gazzaniga, Bertoni’s artistic director, who is still highly regarded today, six years after his death.

“The idea of this cup came from him and my grandfather Eugenio Losa,” said Valentina Losa, the CEO of Bertoni, a fourth-generation family company founded in the early 1900s.

“Initially, the design depicted two goalkeepers raising hands and holding a football over their heads. After various discussions, the sketch of the sculpture was changed, and the two goalkeepers were replaced by two angels of victory. And instead of the ball, a globe was drawn.”

Gazzaniga and Bertoni’s work was selected and the West German national team was the first team awarded the sculpture at the 1974 World Cup.

Inside the workshop, workers care for the production of the cup. First, it is hammered, ground, and polished. Then, passing from the hands of one worker to another, it is washed with baking soda and immersed in various liquid solutions.

Finally, it is varnished. Standing 38 centimeters (15 inches) high, the cup weighs 6.2 kilograms (14 pounds).

“There’s only one existing original copy of the World Cup that remains with FIFA. It goes to the winning team during the award ceremony after the world final. It is made of 18-carat gold and is given back to FIFA, which sends it back to us to engrave the name of the winning team on the disc underneath, immediately after the award ceremony,” said Losa. “The winning team still gets a replica of the cup, not in gold but in golden brass, on which its name is engraved.”

The 2022 World Cup is already in Qatar, along with its replica, ready to be given to the team that wins the tournament at the end of a month of matches on Dec. 18.

But at Bertoni, which among other things also produces the UEFA Cup, the UEFA Super Cup, and the Champions League Trophy — the one with the big ears — workers are already working on the production of the trophy for the 2026 World Cup, which will be jointly hosted by Canada, the US, and Mexico. The golden ring at the base of the cup between green malachite discs bears the inscription: “FIFA World Cup 2026.”

“We will present it shortly when this World Cup is over,” said Losa.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Categories
Games

Croatia draw with Belgium but reach last 16 in 2022 FIFA World Cup

Belgium manager Roberto Martinez stepped down from his post after the elimination.

“This was my last game as national coach,” Spanish coach said and added: “I don’t resign. It’s the end of my contract.”

The 2018 runners-up Croatia are waiting for their opponents in the upcoming stage.

Croatia’s Ivan Perisic had a scoring chance in the first seconds of the game but failed at Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium.

Dries Mertens wasted a chance for Belgium by shooting wide in one on one in the 13th minute.

Belgian player Yannick Carrasco’s challenge on Croatia’s Andrej Kramaric in the 15th minute was first given a penalty but after a Video Assistant Referee (VAR) review, it was ruled out due to an offside.

Croatia veteran Luka Modric was ruled offside by the VAR in a promising position in the 29th minute.

Several Belgium attempts were deflected by the Croatian defense and the first half ended goalless.

In the second half, Modric and Marcelo Brozovic’s attempts at Belgium’s net were denied by goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.

Romelu Lukaku, who got into the game in the second half, placed a promising header into Dominik Livakovic’s hands in the 49th minute.

Lukaku missed another chance when his shot to empty goal got out from the right post in the 60th minute, then, two minutes later, his header was inches over the opposition goal.

Lukaku could not finish another chance for Belgium in the six-yard box in the 90th minute.

Belgium’s several promising goal chances were denied by Croatia’s defense and goalie, and the game ended with 0-0 draw.

Meanwhile, Morocco topped Group F to march to the last 16 in a World Cup for the first time since 1986.

Called the Atlas Lions, Morocco became the first African team to win a World Cup group in the 21st century.

Source: Anadolu Agency