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Morocco king calls to restore ties with ‘brotherly’ Algeria

July 31, 2022 at 4:04 pm | Published in: AfricaAlgeriaMoroccoNews

King Mohammed VI of Morocco attends the signing of bilateral agreements at the Agdal Royal Palace on February 13, 2019 in Rabat, Morocco [Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images]
 

Middle East Monitor – July 31, 2022 at 4:04 pm

 Morocco’s King Mohammed VI has reiterated calls to restore diplomatic ties with Algeria, which severed ties with Rabat last year citing “hostile tendencies” towards Algiers following the kingdom’s decision to resume relations with Israel in 2020.

“We aspire to work with the Algerian presidency so that Morocco and Algeria can work hand in hand to establish normal relations between two brotherly peoples,” King Mohammed said yesterday as part of his traditional address marking the 22nd anniversary of his accession to the throne.
“I stress once again that the borders that separate the Moroccan and Algerian brothers will never be barriers preventing their interaction and understanding.
He urged Moroccans to “preserve the spirit of fraternity, solidarity and good neighbourliness towards our Algerian brothers” and described the two countries as being more than neighbours.
“We consider Algeria’s security and stability as part of Morocco’s security and stability,” Mohammed said. “What affects Morocco will also affect Algeria, because they are complementary twins.”
As part of the US-brokered Abraham Accords, Morocco joined other Arab states in normalising ties with Israel, including the UAEBahrain and Sudan. The agreement between Rabat and Tel Aviv was made in part, by the US agreeing to recognise the disputed Western Sahara territory, whose independence movement, the Polisario Front is supported by Algeria in addition to the Palestinian cause.

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100 French MPs slam Erdogan’s ‘policy of war’ against Syrian Kurds

From: Ahramonline – AFP , Saturday 30 Jul 2022

A hundred French parliamentarians, mainly from the political left, on Saturday denounced Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s “policy of war” against Kurds in northern Syria.
 

File Photo: A Turkish soldier walks next to a Turkish military vehicle during a joint US-Turkey patrol near Tel Abyad, Syria taken on September 8, 2019. REUTERS
File Photo: A Turkish soldier walks next to a Turkish military vehicle during a joint US-Turkey patrol near Tel Abyad, Syria taken on September 8, 2019. REUTERS

While the rest of the world is focussed on Ukraine, as Russia’s war crimes multiply there, Erdogan is “planning to launch an umpteenth bloody offensive against the Kurds in northern Syria,” the parliamentarians said in a statement published by the JDD title.
The Turkish president “is taking advantage” of Turkey’s pivotal status, as a NATO member on good terms with both Moscow and Kyiv, “to obtain a blank cheque from the Atlantic Alliance in order to intensify his attacks in northern Syria”, according to the statement initiated by Communist senator Laurence Cohen.
“Western countries must no longer look the other way”, said the elected representatives, parliamentary deputies and upper house senators mostly from leftist and ecologist parties.
They were joined by some from the rightwing Republicans (LR) and President Emmanuel Macron’s ruling party.
They called on the West “to guarantee the protection of Kurdish activists and associations present on European soil”.
The signatories urged France to refer the matter to the UN Security Council “to declare a no-fly zone in northern Syria and place the Syrian Kurds under international protection”.
They also called for the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) to “be granted international recognition”.
Erdogan is threatening to launch a new military offensive against Kurdish-controlled areas of northern Syria, where he wants to establish a buffer zone 30 kilometres (20 miles) deep.
Turkey has launched a string of offensives in Syria in the past six years, most recently in 2019 when it conducted a broad air and ground assault against Kurdish militias after former US president Donald Trump withdrew American troops.
Erdogan has urged Russia and Iran to back his efforts, saying at a three-way summit last week that “we will continue our fight against terrorist organisations”.

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Turkey’s standoff with NATO isn’t over yet

Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson (right) and her Finnish counterpart Sanna Marin in spring 2022. The two Nordic countries want to join NATO. Photo: Wikipedia
Despite efforts by Sweden and Finland to appease Turkey on the Kurdish question, it remains an issue
By BURCU OZCELIK
AUGUST 1, 2022
The Kurdish question loomed large in NATO’s meeting in June in Madrid. The headlines focused on Turkey’s objection to Sweden and Finland joining the military alliance, while Ankara’s long-standing concern about Kurdish separatists was an unspoken elephant in the room.
Turkey has long claimed that Sweden and Finland harbor Kurdish militants along with other high-profile opponents of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government. This frustration looks like it will remain a contentious issue in future relations between Turkey and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Erdogan made a triumphant return to Ankara from the summit, having wrested the desired concessions from Sweden and Finland on the matter of curbing the activities of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has been labeled a terrorist organization by the European Union, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
Since the summit, Swedish and Finnish lawmakers have faced backlash from political opponents, mainly those on the left. In Sweden, the Green Party and the Left Party warned against the risks of allying with Turkey.
Turkey is demanding the extradition of more than 70 people it describes as terrorists from Sweden. In early July, members of the Left Party posed with flags from the PKK, as well as its Syrian offshoot YPG (People’s Defense Units), which has received arms in the fight against Islamic State (ISIS) from Western countries such as the US.
Although left-wing members of the Swedish parliament have historically shown some sympathy to the group, the latest incident, which took place during a political meeting on the island of Gotland, was designed to call attention to the NATO summit. Although the Left Party is not in government, it helps prop up the Social Democrat cabinet.
Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson condemned the images, saying “posing with such flags is extremely inappropriate.”
The domestic implications of what was arguably a foreign-policy win will continue to play out over the coming months in Turkey. Erdogan has his own challenges at home ahead of next year’s presidential and parliamentary elections, coinciding with the centennial of the founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923.
Kurdish voters have been a significant block in previous polls. In the past, their votes have swayed tight elections. While Turkey might have gained ground on the international dimensions of its fight against Kurdish separatists at the NATO summit, there are still profound challenges in the domestic dynamics of the Kurdish question that will gain fresh urgency in the next election cycle.
Just look at the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democracy Party (HDP). From his prison cell in the western city of Edirne, the jailed former head of the HDP, Selahattin Demirtas, wrote a passionate letter stating that politics and violence cannot go together.
Demirtas was imprisoned on charges of support for terrorism after an urban guerrilla insurgency orchestrated by the PKK and its affiliates in the summer of 2016 in parts of southeastern Turkey.
In the letter published on July 1 in the pro-Kurdish daily Yeni Yasam, which is banned in Turkey, Demirtas called for “change,” urging Turkey’s opposition parties to find new paths to unite in a joint effort against Erdogan’s governing Justice and Development Party (AKP).
He also called on his own party to embrace Turkey and seek an honorable peace within the unity of the country.
His words were a clear call for the Kurdish opposition to act like an autonomous political party, free from external interference by PKK militants based in the Qandil Mountains in northern Iraq.
However, it is unclear how far the plea will resonate within the wider Kurdish movement, which has been angered by the events at the Madrid summit. Whether the Kurds can separate legitimate demands for political rights and continued armed insurgency will determine the fate of future generations of Kurdish people in Turkey and across the Middle East.
Time could be limited as Turkey moves to ban Kurdish political parties. Turkey’s Constitutional Court will review a case seeking to ban the HDP – the third-largest party in parliament, with a mandate of 12% of national voters – on grounds of its links to terrorism.
Two-thirds of the court’s members are required to agree on a decision, however, it is not yet clear when the review will take place. In April, the HDP submitted its defense to the Constitutional Court, repudiating the charges.
A ban ahead of next year’s elections would unfairly silence millions of pro-peace Kurdish voices and play directly into the hands of PKK fighters spoiling for armed violence against Turkish targets. It would also jeopardize dying hopes for Turkey’s European Union ascension bid.
But the HDP cannot continue its rights struggle within Turkey’s political system while refusing to sever its ties with a proscribed terrorist organization. No other NATO member would accept such a situation.
Having wrested written commitments from Sweden and Finland, Turkey may believe it has the upper hand in the battle with Kurdish militants and can afford to take reconciliatory steps toward the Kurds in Turkey. There may be an opportunity here for restarting dialogue, which has been frozen since the resurgence of violence six years ago.
Things could change in Turkey’s international approach to the Kurdish issue if Sweden and Finland fail to uphold their commitments agreed to in Madrid. As such, this issue is bound to hang over NATO.
The view in Ankara is that the accession process has only just begun, meaning that the standoff between Turkey and NATO may not yet be resolved.
This article was provided by Syndication Bureau, which holds copyright.

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Democrat: Dissolving Parliament is the best option to get out of the political crisis

July 31, 2022 – Iraqi News Agency

Baghdad-INA 
The Kurdistan Democratic Party confirmed today, Sunday,  that dissolving parliament is the best option to get out of the political crisis, while revealing the most prominent contents of the initiative of the President of the Kurdistan Region, Nechirvan Barzani, to resolve the political crisis.
The party’s deputy, Jiay Timur, said in a statement to Al-Iraqiya News, which was followed by the Iraqi News Agency (INA), that “the majority of opinions are with the dissolution of Parliament, which is considered the best solution to get out of this crisis, and contributes to defusing it,” noting that “the dissolution of Parliament will lead to some positive results.”

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UN calls for ‘peaceful, inclusive’ talks to form Iraqi government ​

July 31, 2022 – Rudaw
 

 

 

Supporters of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr inside the Iraqi parliament on July 20, 2022. Photo: AFP; UN logo. Graphic: Rudaw

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – The United Nations on Saturday urged Iraq’s political parties to form an “effective” national government through peaceful and inclusive talks as supporters of influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr remain inside the Iraqi parliament.
Sadr supporters stormed Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone and forced their way into the legislative chamber in protest of the pro-Iran Coordination Framework’s candidate for the Iraqi premiership.
The UN called for “immediate steps to de-escalate the situation” following clashes between protestors and Iraqi security forces.
“Freedom of expression and peaceful assembly are fundamental rights that must be respected at all times,” read a statement by Deputy Spokesman for UN Secretary-General Farhan Haq.
The UN “urges all parties and actors to rise above their differences and form, through peaceful and inclusive dialogue, an effective national government that will be able to deliver on longstanding demands for reform, without further delay,” he added.
Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani on Sunday said he is following the events in Iraq with a “deep concern.”
Barzani called Iraqi political blocs to the Kurdish capital of Erbil to begin “open and unified” talks aimed at reaching a joint agreement between the parties.
At least 125 protestors, including security forces, were injured on Saturday when Sadr supporters flocked into the parliament building for the second time in under a week, deepening the political impasse that has engulfed Iraq.
The US embassy in Baghdad expressed concern over reports of violence in the protests while Iraqi officials called for dialogue.
Sadr supporters staged an open-ended sit-in inside the parliament building in opposition to the nomination of Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani, Iraq’s former minister of labor and social affairs, as a candidate for the country’s prime minister position by the pro-Iran Coordination Framework.
Sadr, who was the main winner of the October elections, withdrew from the parliament last month after failing to reach an agreement with the framework to form a government.
However, despite no longer having representatives in the parliament, the Sadrist movement remains strong and popular on Iraqi streets, and a single tweet from the cleric pours thousands of protestors into the streets.

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New round of nuke talks likely to be held soon: Iranian lawmaker

Photo taken on Dec. 17, 2021 shows a meeting of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) Joint Commission in Vienna, Austria. (EU Delegation in Vienna/Handout via Xinhua)
Source: Xinhua – Editor: Huaxia – 2022-07-31 22:24:16
TEHRAN, July 31 (Xinhua) — An Iranian lawmaker said on Sunday that new round of talks on the revival of the 2015 nuclear deal will probably be held soon, the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) reported.
Given the European sides’ efforts to resume the talks, Ali Bagheri Kani, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, has hinted that the new round of the negotiations will probably be held in the coming days, Yaqoub Reza-Zadeh, a member of the Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, told ISNA.
Hoping for a good agreement in the potential new round of talks, Reza-Zadeh noted that Iran will tread carefully in its efforts to achieve an outcome acceptable to both the people and the parliament.
The venue could still be Vienna, but the definite one “will eventually be determined following an agreement among the sides,” he said.
Iran signed the nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), with world powers in July 2015, agreeing to curb its nuclear program in return for the removal of sanctions on the country. However, former U.S. President Donald Trump pulled Washington out of the agreement in May 2018 and reimposed unilateral sanctions on Tehran, prompting the latter to drop some of its commitments under the pact.
The talks on reviving the JCPOA began in April 2021 in the Austrian capital but were suspended in March this year because of political differences between Tehran and Washington.
After a three-month pause, the talks resumed in late June in Qatar’s capital Doha, but failed to settle the differences.  ■

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Iranian, Qatari FMs discuss JCPOA on phone

Islamic Republic News Agency – August 1, 2022

Tehran, IRNA – Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and his Qatari counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani discussed the 2015 Iran nuclear deal on Saturday.

The two diplomats discussed on the phone the latest developments regarding the nuclear accord, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), Qatar-based Al Jazeera News Network reported.
The two ministers discussed regional developments as well.

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Iran: Outrage after government puts Google on Safe Search for all Iranians

Restrictions on access roundly mocked by internet users who accuse government of treating Iranians like children

Youths at an internet cafe in Tehran on 24 January 2021 (AFP)

By  
MEE correspondent

Published date: 30 July 2022 09:39 UTC

Iranians have reacted with incredulity to a move by the government to forcibly activate Safe Search on Google for all citizens, accusing officials of treating them like children.
Iran’s communications minister, Isa Zarepour, confirmed the new restriction earlier this week, saying his government had activated Safe Search following requests from Iranian families.
‘You may be a history or a medical researcher, but when the Safe Search option is enabled, Google will provide you with content that is good for a kid’
– Soroush, IT expert
He told reporters that “no restrictions have been placed on other searches” and “only the access to [porn], immoral and extremely violent content” had become limited just to “address the concerns of families”.
He also claimed that “many” other countries have taken the same decision.
The restriction means that the Iranian state has effectively hijacked Google’s domain name system (DNS), meaning that, rather than being directly connected to Google DNS when users enter the Google web address, they will be directed to one controlled by the government.
The move has provoked an outcry from internet users who argue the Islamic Republic is effectively infantilising the country.
Soroush, an IT expert and owner of a start-up in Tehran, said the new restriction would cause enormous problems for professionals in the country.
“Google’s artificial intelligence shows the search results to the user based on the algorithms defined for it. One of these important issues is the age of the user,” he told Middle East Eye, not wanting to reveal his full name.
“You may be a history or a medical researcher, but when the Safe Search option is enabled, Google will provide you with content that is good for a kid. Therefore, the search results for you would become weak and unusable.”
Internet crackdown
The Iranian government, currently headed by conservative Prime Minister Ebrahim Raisi, has been accused of taking steps to restrict internet access for Iranians.
Since early 2022, parliament has been discussing a draft law titled “The Protection Bill,” which rights groups have warned would give unprecedented levels of data to the security services and organisations like the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, as well as cutting off Iranians from the global internet by slowing down internet speed when using international websites and social networks.
‘The problem lying here is that this option has been forcefully imposed on people’s internet without their consent and also on all Iranians not just kids’
Opposition to the bill led to more than one million Iranians signing an online petition urging the high-ranking officials to put an end to this project.
However, while the controversial bill is yet to be passed, many view the new Safe Search restrictions as part of the same assault on internet freedoms in Iran.
“This feature of Google is great, and parents should be made aware of this in order to protect their children from harmful content,” said one political activist, who didn’t want his name to be disclosed.
“I have no doubt about this, but the problem here is that this option has been forcefully imposed on people’s internet without their consent and also on all Iranians, not just kids.”
He told MEE the new rules meant a “dark future” for the internet in Iran.
“While I previously thought the Islamic Republic wouldn’t risk heavy damage to its social supporting base, I think now that they are willing to move further forward with their plan for limitation on the global internet as they think limitless access to the internet has greater risks for them,” he said.
‘Even the jungle has its own rules’
Many hardliners, including those who would like to see internet restrictions go further, have defended the Safe Search imposition, arguing that an unregulated internet could be potentially harmful for ordinary Iranians.
Majid Nasirayi, the spokesperson for the Cultural Commission of Parliament, used an elaborate metaphor to justify his support for the rule.
“Look at nature, even the jungle has its own rules. A lion never takes the position of a giraffe, and a giraffe also doesn’t take a lion’s place. When nature has rules and regulations, why shouldn’t we have rules?” he told journalists.

Bereaved mother of slain Iranian protester faces 100 lashes for own defiance

“Why do [you make people] sensitive whenever we state that cyberspace shouldn’t be left free?”
The Google restriction also has an added geopolitical bonus for Iran.
Shortly after the rule was imposed, the Iranian government unblocked Russian search engine Yandex.
Hailing the move, the influential pro-government Fars News Agency compared Google with Yandex, implying that, unlike the American search engine, the Russian one offers positive results when people search the word “Iran”.
The hardline pro-government Hamshahri newspaper said the move could be “assessed within the framework of the 20-year cooperation agreement between Iran and Russia, in which the field of information technology is considered one of the important parts of this agreement”.
But regardless of the justifications, Iranian internet users are mortified. They fear that they could be witnessing the first step on the road to the end of already limited online freedoms in Iran.
Others note who stands to benefit, in a country that has long suffered under sanctions and where a small number of government-linked elites have been able to turn a healthy profit.
“Blocking, limiting the access, the protection bill, and the Safe Search, will only lead to more profits for the market of selling VPNs,” said Yousef who is the co-founder of a local start-up in the field of tourism and travelling, referring to virtual private  networks, which can offer a degree of invisibility to users.
“Therefore, such plans and moves will only further make VPN makers richer, and interestingly, the market is indirectly and fully in the hands of government and other Islamic Republic entities.”

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President Ilham Aliyev approves amendments to Law “On status of Member of Parliament”

AZERNEWS – July 2022 16:40 (UTC+04:00)
 
President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev

President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev has signed a Law amending the Law “On the status of Member of Azerbaijani Parliament”, Azernews reports.
The following changes have been made in accordance with the document:
– under Article 21:
1.1.1. the first, second, and sixth parts are canceled;
1.1.2. in the third part, the words “in the amount of 2,475 manats ($1,455)” are replaced by the words “in the amount of 3,550 manats ($2,088)”;
1.1.3. in the fifth part, the words “in a one-time amount” are replaced by the words “in a double amount”;
The second sentence is removed from Article 29.
The effective date of the law is July 1, 2022.

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Azerbaijan increases fines for sale of human organs

InternationalNews.az – August 1, 2022

Fines for the sale of human organs have been increased in Azerbaijan, according to the law of the Republic of Azerbaijan on making amendments to the Criminal Code of the Republic of Azerbaijan, approved by President Ilham Aliyev, News.az reports.
According to the amendment, the Purchase and sale of human organs and tissues, as well as donor organs, shall be punishable by a fine of 6,000 to 9,000 manats or correctional works for a period of up to 2 years or imprisonment for a period of up to 3 years with or without deprivation of the right to hold certain positions or engage in certain activities for a period of up to 3 years will be punished.

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