You are here

Region

Region section

Egyptian artisans carve a path to world luxury markets

By - May 17,2023 - Last updated at May 17,2023

CAIRO — Egyptian luxury brands are harnessing traditional craftsmanship from jewellery design to carpet weaving to bring the country’s ancient cultural riches to the world.

Experts in the sector say the global appeal of Arab and Islamic designs from other countries shows Egypt could do more to promote its rich, millennia-old artistic heritage.

One pioneer has been master jeweller Azza Fahmy, whose signature Islamic art-inspired pieces have graced the world’s rich and famous including US pop star Rihanna and Jordan’s Queen Rania.

Fahmy, who started off in an Old Cairo workshop about 50 years ago, said her focus has been designs that “resonate with Egyptian identity”.

Artists and artisans in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous country, draw from a history that spans ancient Pharaonic times, the Mamluk, Ottoman and modern eras.

“We are lucky to be able to draw on 6,000 years of history,” said textile designer Goya Gallagher, founder of Cairo-based Malaika Linens, which makes high-end household pieces.

“The main challenge is making sure our pieces are timeless, that they’re very well made and always hand-made,” she said at the company workshop on the western outskirts of Cairo.

Myriad challenges 

 

But while Egypt boasts some business success stories, many more luxury goods makers say they labour against myriad odds to eke out a market both locally and internationally.

In the era of global mass production, Egypt’s once expansive pool of skilled artisans has shrunk, with many young people turning their backs on family skills passed down through the ages.

As businesses struggle to fill the talent gap, they also face the headwinds of a painful economic crisis that has tanked the local currency and restricted raw material imports.

The state’s efforts to support the handicrafts sector, meanwhile, have been “limited and sporadic”, says the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation.

Culture consultant Dina Hafez agreed that Egypt offers little in the way of formalised arts and crafts training.

“The training of artisans is still essentially based on informal education and networks of apprenticeship,” said Hafez of Blue Beyond Consulting.

“The sector lacks any structure. We need a real ecosystem. But for the moment, it’s all based on personal initiatives.”

She said Egypt could learn from Turkey and Morocco, “where the opportunities and obstacles look a lot like Egypt”, but which had managed to launch “their designs onto the international scene”.

 

‘Soft power’ 

 

Still, change is afoot.

Fahmy, the jewellery designer, said there is always space in the market for works made by skilled artisans and “good designers with creative minds and quality education”.

Many designers hope to benefit from government initiatives to draw in investment and tourism revenue from its ancient wonders.

At the Grand Egyptian Museum at the foot of the Giza pyramids, Egyptian luxury stores enjoy pride of place.

Although its official opening has been long delayed, the museum offers limited tours and events, and the shops already “showcase the best of Egyptian crafts”, said the owner of one, Mohamed Al Kahhal.

In Cairo’s historic centre, linen company Malaika trains women from marginalised backgrounds in embroidery and sells the wares to its customers and to other fashion and textile brands.

Carpet maker Hend Al Kahhal works in the same spirit, of bringing Egyptian identity to global frontiers.

Standing on the factory roof, where wool and silk creations hung out to dry, Kahhal said the family business works with designers “to give a contemporary touch to Pharaonic and Mamluk motifs”.

The Egyptian Handicrafts Export Council, under the trade and industry ministry, has long been working to showcase such Egyptian creations internationally.

But Hafez, the culture consultant, said she hopes for more progress in future, as often “budget constraints, red tape and customs regulations don’t exactly make things easier”.

The question, she said, is whether Egyptian “authorities are really aware of the soft power these creators can have”.

 

Erdogan rival faces uphill struggle in Turkey runoff

By - May 17,2023 - Last updated at May 17,2023

Turkey's Republican People's Party (CHP) Chairman and Presidential candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu casts his ballot to vote in the presidential and parliamentary elections, in Ankara, Turkey, on Sunday (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Turkey's secular opposition leader may have succeeded in forcing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan into his first ever runoff, but his chances of winning on May 28 are remote.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu was predicted to perform well in Sunday's first round but ended up with just under 45 per cent while Erdogan fell fractionally short of the 50-per cent threshold required for an outright victory.

His six-party alliance now needs to accomplish seemingly impossible electoral gymnastics to unseat Erdogan, who needs just a sliver of extra support to extend his two decades in power to 2028.

"The second round will be easier for us," Erdogan spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said on Tuesday. "There is a difference of five points, close to 2.5 million votes. It seems there is no possibility of this closing."

Mobilising more young voters could boost Kilicdaroglu's prospects, with polls suggesting he will win that group by a two-to-one margin.

More than five million first-time voters — who grew up knowing no leader other than Erdogan, were eligible to vote on Sunday and are deemed more likely to want change.

Kilicdaroglu, a 74-year-old former civil servant, tried to revive his campaign on Tuesday with a message targeted at young people.

“You can’t afford anything. You even have to think about a cup of coffee. Your joy of life has stolen, whereas youth is carefree,” he said on Twitter.

“They didn’t give you that even for a day.”

 

Kurds: A double-edged sword? 

 

Kurds, a minority ethnic group representing around 10 per cent of the electorate, may also come out stronger in favour of Kilicdaroglu.

The opposition leader, himself an Alevi Kurd who represents one of Turkey’s most repressed communities, was endorsed by the pro-Kurdish HDP party in late April.

But Sunday’s turnout in Kurdish-majority provinces was believed to hover around 80 per cent, well below the national average of almost 89 per cent.

Greater Kurdish support may also be a double-edged sword that makes Kilicdaroglu’s bid for power near impossible.

One of Erdogan’s attack lines was linking the opposition to outlawed Kurdish militants that have waged a deadly insurgency against the Turkish state for decades — an appeal to nationalist and conservative Turks that appeared to work.

“On balance, Kilicdaroglu’s electoral alliance with pro-Kurdish HDP hurt him,” said Washington Institute analyst Soner Cagaptay.

“Some HDP voters in Kurdish-majority provinces stayed home on election day, while some Turkish nationalist voters abandoned Kilicdaroglu, admonishing him for allying with the HDP.”

Sinan Ogan, a nationalist third candidate, picked up 5 per cent of the vote and his support could be crucial in the second round.

He is a secular nationalist, which separates him from religious conservatives who have rallied around Erdogan.

But he has also campaigned strongly against “terrorism”, a word that many Turkish politicians use to condemn Kurds.

 

Easier time for Erdogan 

 

“Anti-Kurdish nationalism of this line represented by Ogan... makes it very difficult for Kilicdaroglu to strike a deal,” Kursad Ertugrul of Ankara’s Middle East Technical University told AFP.

Even if Kilicdaroglu somehow earned Ogan’s backing, that would probably alienate the Kurdish vote, said Berk Esen, a political science professor at Sabanci University in Istanbul.

The disparate six-party opposition alliance, which only selected Kilicdaroglu as their joint candidate after a year of bitter argument, now also faces the challenge of staying united after Sunday’s disappointment. 

“Erdogan will have an easier time than Kilicdaroglu wooing voters,” especially Ogan’s backers, noted Emre Peker of the Eurasia Group consultancy.

“The president’s supporters are also likely to turn out in greater numbers to vote in the runoff than Kilicdaroglu backers as opposition... momentum ebbs.”

Having won 49.5 per cent in the first round, Erdogan does not need to make major concessions to Ogan to win on May 28, added Esen.

Erdogan’s campaign is likely to stay focused on security issues, a winning formula among Turkey’s “conservative-nationalist” working class despite the severe impact of the economic crisis, Ertugrul told AFP.

The idea of a “great Turkey” being forged through infrastructure projects and tapping into “the conservative sensibilities of the ‘moral majority’” were also at the heart of Erdogan’s messaging, he added.

“This campaign [irrespective of the truth of the statements] seems to have resonated with his social base.”

Tunisian opposition party denounces 'political verdict' against jailed leader

By - May 17,2023 - Last updated at May 17,2023

In this file photo taken on February 21, 2023, the head of Tunisia's Islamist movement Ennahdha Rached Ghannouchi arrives to a police station in Tunis (AFP photo)

TUNIS — The Tunisian Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party on Tuesday condemned the one-year prison sentence handed to its leader Rached Ghannouchi, calling it an "unjust political verdict".

Ghannouchi, a leading opponent of President Kais Saied, was sentenced on Monday on terrorism-related charges following his April 17 arrest.

He had appeared in court at the end of February on the charges after being accused of calling police officers "tyrants".

The case was one of several levied by authorities against Ghannouchi, whose party was the largest in parliament before Saied dissolved the chamber in July 2021 as part of a power grab allowing him to rule by decree.

Prior to his detention, the 81-year-old former parliamentary speaker had said that eradicating different viewpoints, such as the left or political Islam, might lead to a "civil war".

"We condemn the sentence handed down against Rached Ghannouchi, which we consider an unjust political verdict, and we call for his release," Ennahdha said in a statement. 

Ghannouchi had a history of rejecting "in his statements and writings, extremism and terrorism and advocated moderation", the statement added.

The sentence further demonstrated the authorities' use of "the anti-terrorism law to discredit and eradicate opposition", said Salsabil Chellali, Human Rights Watch's Tunisia director.

Ghannouchi's arrest and subsequent prison term were "both based on public declarations by the leader of Ennahdha", she added.

"Now under Saied's presidency, Tunisian political life is punctuated by arbitrary arrests, against a backdrop of interference by the executive in judicial affairs."

In addition to the one-year prison sentence, Ghannouchi was fined 1,000 dinars ($326). 

Ghannouchi had already been in court last November over allegations his party had helped jihadists travel to Iraq and Syria.

Before that, he was interrogated over alleged money laundering in relation to foreign donations for an Ennahdha-linked charity.

Ghannouchi is the most prominent opposition figure arrested following President Saied's power grab.

He is among more than 20 of Saied's political opponents and personalities arrested since February, including former ministers and business figures.

 

Turkish drone kills three PKK-linked fighters — Iraqi Kurdish security

By - May 17,2023 - Last updated at May 17,2023

ERBIL, Iraq — A Turkish drone strike in northern Iraq on Tuesday killed three Yazidi fighters affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), an Iraqi Kurdish security official said.

It is the latest deadly strike blamed on Turkey in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region, where the PKK, whose fighters are Turkish Kurds, has rear bases.

The Turkish military maintains dozens of bases in northern Iraq and carries out air strikes and ground operations against the PKK, which is classified as a "terrorist" group by Ankara and its Western allies.

“A Turkish drone strike on Tuesday afternoon targeted a position of the Sinjar Resistance Units in the locality of Khanasor,” the anti-terrorist services of Iraqi Kurdistan region said in a statement, referring to the PKK-linked Yazidi movement.

Tuesday’s strike is the first officially reported in Iraq since the first round of Turkey’s presidential election held Sunday.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will face his first ever run-off on May 28, after two decades in power, but chances are remote that his challenger from the secular opposition, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, will win.

Since 1984 the PKK has waged an insurgency in Turkey that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, and for many years the fighting between Turkey’s armed forces and Kurdish militants has spilled over into Iraq’s mountainous Kurdish north.

On April 16, officials blamed a drone strike carried out by Turkey for killing at least two people and wounding two others in Iraq’s Kurdistan region.

The strikes near the town of Penjwen, close to the Iranian border, targeted a vehicle carrying PKK fighters, one official said at the time.

On April 7, drone strikes also blamed on Turkey targeted the surroundings of Sulaimaniyah airport, when the commander of the Kurdish-led and US-allied Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) were present, as well as US troops.

A source at the Turkish defence ministry denied any involvement by the country’s military.

On April 3, Ankara had halted flights to and from Sulaimaniyah until at least July 3, blaming increased PKK activity in and around the airport.

Turkey regards the SDF and its main component, the People’s Protection Units, as an offshoot of the PKK.

In July, artillery strikes blamed on Turkey hit a park in Iraqi Kurdistan killing nine, which Ankara denied responsibility for and blamed the PKK.

Baghdad and Arbil, Iraqi Kurdistan’s capital, have long been accused of ignoring the situation to preserve their strategic alliances with Ankara, only offering symbolic condemnations of violations of Iraq’s sovereignty and the impact on civilians.

Turkey is one of war-battered Iraq’s main trading partners and until March Erbil was exporting oil directly to Turkey, independently of the federal government in Baghdad.

Erdogan ascendant as Turkey heads for historic run-off

By - May 16,2023 - Last updated at May 16,2023

ISTANBUL — Turkey on Monday woke up to the prospect of its first presidential run-off vote after conservative President Recep Tayyip Erdogan confounded pollsters and his secular rival to win the first round of the country’s pivotal election.

Pre-election opinion polls had suggested Erdogan risked a first national election defeat to his main challenger’s disparate six-party alliance, in a vote seen as the most important in the Muslim-majority nation’s post-Ottoman history.

But the 69-year-old defied expectations in Sunday’s ballot and could extend his two-decade grip on power on May 28, after neither he nor Kemal Kilicdaroglu reached the 50 per cent threshold for a first-round victory.

With almost all ballots counted on Monday morning, Erdogan led with 49.42 per cent of the vote to Kilicdaroglu’s 44.95 per cent, according to official figures provided by state news agency Anadolu.

A nationalist third candidate, Sinan Ogan, emerged as the kingmaker after picking up 5 per cent, but has yet to come out for either frontrunner.

Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its far-right allies were also close to an outright majority in Sunday’s parliamentary elections.

The lira fell against the euro as traders digested with apprehension the increased likelihood of Erdogan’s unconventional economic policies continuing.

The Borsa Istanbul index opened sharply in the red on Monday and was down by almost 4.5 per cent at around 11:00am (0800 GMT).

 

 ‘It’s going to be close’ 

 

The result was a crushing disappointment for Kilicdaroglu and his Republican People’s Party (CHP) supporters.

An overcast dawn greeted Istanbul residents on Monday, a symbolic reflection of the opposition’s gloomier outlook but opinions were divided as to the outcome of Turkey’s unprecedented run-off.

“Erdogan is going to win. He’s a real leader. The Turkish people trust him and he has a vision for Turkey,” Hamdi Kurumahmut told AFP in Istanbul.

“Of course there are things that need to be improved, on the economy, education or the refugee policy. But we know he’s the one who can sort all that out,” added the 40-year-old tourism sector worker.

Betul Yilmaz, 26, wanted to keep the faith in a Kilicdaroglu victory if he sealed an alliance with Ogan. “But it’s going to be close,” the young woman said..

Pro-government daily Sabah called Erdogan’s unexpectedly strong performance a “superb success”.

Kilicdaroglu, who has a history of defeats to pro-Erdogan candidates, only emerged as the opposition’s candidate after a year of bitter debate between the alliance’s disparate members, who span Turkey’s cultural and religious divides.

Israeli army kills Palestinian in West Bank — Palestinian ministry

By - May 16,2023 - Last updated at May 16,2023

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian man Monday in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian health ministry said, with the army saying it returned fire after being shot at.

"Saleh Mohamed Sabra, 22, was killed by live bullets during an Israeli attack in Nablus," the ministry said, adding that another Palestinian was wounded by gunfire.

The incident comes after a ceasefire ended five days of fierce fighting between the Islamic Jihad militant group in Gaza and Israel. The clashes killed 35 people, the vast majority Palestinians.

The conflict has this year claimed the lives of least 150 Palestinians, according to an AFP tally based on official sources from both sides.

These figures include combatants as well as civilians, and, on the Israeli side, three members of the Arab minority.

Palestinians on Monday mark the "Nakba", or catastrophe, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced from their homes following the creation of Israel 75 years ago.

A month into Sudan's brutal war, no end in sight

By - May 16,2023 - Last updated at May 16,2023

Smoke billows in Khartoum amid ongoing fighting between the forces of two rival generals on Thursday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — One month since Sudan's conflict erupted, its capital is a desolate war zone where terrorised families huddle at home as gun battles rage, while the western Darfur region has descended into deadly chaos.

Residents of Khartoum have endured weeks of desperate shortages of food and basic supplies, power blackouts, communications outages and runaway inflation.

The capital of five million, long a place of relative stability, has become a shell of its former self.

Charred aircraft lie on the airport tarmac, foreign embassies are shuttered and hospitals, banks, shops and wheat silos have been ransacked by looters.

Violence also renewed in El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state, leaving hundreds killed and the health system in "total collapse", medics said.

Fighting continued on Monday morning, with loud explosions heard across Khartoum and thick smoke billowing in the sky while warplanes drew anti-aircraft fire, according to witnesses. 

"The situation is becoming worse by the day," said a 37-year-old resident of southern Khartoum who did not wish to be named.

"People are getting more and more scared because the two sides... are becoming more and more violent." 

The fighting broke out on April 15 between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, who leads the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

What remains of the government has retreated to Port Sudan about 850 kilometres away, the hub for mass evacuations.

Around 1,000 people have been killed during the fighting, mainly in and around Khartoum as well as the ravaged West Darfur state, according to medics. 

Violence on Friday and Saturday alone in El Geneina left at least 280 killed, according to Sudan’s doctors union, which cited “difficulties in surveying all casualties”. 

“There was still heavy shelling on Sunday that hit my home, damaging a part of it and injuring one of my sisters,” said a resident of El Geneina. 

“Other houses around us were completely destroyed.” 

In their latest moves, Burhan declared that he was freezing the RSF’s assets, while Daglo threatened in an audio recording that the army chief would be “brought to justice and hanged” in a public square.

 

History of coups 

 

Sudan has a long history of military coups, but hopes had risen after mass protests led to the ouster of Islamist-backed strongman Omar Al Bashir in 2019, followed by a shaky transition toward civilian rule.

As Washington and other foreign powers lifted sanctions, Sudan was slowly reintegrating into the international community, before the generals derailed that transition with another coup in 2021.

Despite the bullets, aerial bombardments and anti-aircraft fire of recent weeks, neither side has been able to seize the battlefield advantage.

The army, backed by Egypt, has the advantage of air power while Daglo is, according to experts, supported by the United Arab Emirates and foreign fighters. 

Daglo commands troops that stemmed from the notorious Janjaweed militia, accused of atrocities in the Darfur war that began two decades ago.

For now, “both sides believe that they can win militarily”, US Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines told a recent Senate hearing.

Multiple truce deals have been violated as hopes dimmed for an end to the fighting.

Both sides “break ceasefires with a regularity that demonstrates a sense of impunity unprecedented even by Sudan’s standards of civil conflict,” said Alex Rondos, the European Union’s former special representative to the Horn of Africa.

The security breakdown has broadened to the country’s far-flung regions where ethnic violence last week left over 50 killed in the central West Kordofan and the southern White Nile states, according to the UN. 

 

 ‘Poorer for longer’ 

 

The fighting has deepened the humanitarian crisis in Sudan, where one in three people already relied on humanitarian assistance before the war.

Since then, aid agencies have been looted and at least 18 of their workers killed. 

Across the Red Sea, in the Saudi city of Jeddah, envoys from both sides have been negotiating.

By May 11 they had signed a commitment to respect humanitarian principles, including allowing in badly needed aid.

But, “absent a significant change of mindset... it is hard to see that commitments on paper will be fulfilled,” said Aly Verjee, a Sudan researcher at Sweden’s University of Gothenburg.

Sudan has had a long history of conflicts, especially in Darfur, where Bashir from 2003 unleashed the Janjaweed to quash a rebellion by non-Arab ethnic minorities.

The scorched-earth campaign killed up to 300,000 people and uprooted more than 2.7 million, the UN said. 

According to the health ministry, the bulk of deaths during the current fighting have occurred in Darfur.

With hospitals gutted, “there are also reports of people dying from the injuries they sustained in the early days of fighting”, said Mohamed Osman of Human Rights Watch.

Doctors Without Borders said food shortages in Darfur displacement camps mean “people have gone from three meals a day to just one”.

Verjee said the fighting has caused “the partial deindustrialisation of Sudan”.

“This means that any future Sudan will be much poorer for much longer.”

 

Syria attends first Arab League meeting in 11 years

By - May 16,2023 - Last updated at May 16,2023

Smoke billows following a Syrian army air strike on the besieged Eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus, late on February 23, 2018 (AFP photo)

RIYADH — Syria ended over a decade of exile from the Arab League on Monday as its officials took part in a preparatory session ahead of Friday's summit in Saudi Arabia. 

"I... take this opportunity to welcome the Syrian Arab Republic to the League of Arab States," Saudi finance minister Mohammed Al Jadaan told the meeting, which was broadcast live by state TV channel Al Ekhbariya. 

Jadaan added that he was "looking forward to working with everyone to achieve what we aspire to", as the camera panned to the Syrian delegation. 

It was the first time Syrian officials participated in an Arab League meeting since the body suspended Damascus in November 2011 over its violent crackdown on protests which spiralled into a conflict that has killed more than 500,000 people and displaced millions. 

Earlier this month, the pan-Arab body officially welcomed back Syria's government, securing President Bashar Assad's return to the Arab fold.

Saudi King Salman has invited Assad to attend Friday's summit in the Red Sea coastal city of Jeddah, which would be his first since the 2010 meeting in Libya. 

Regional capitals have gradually been warming to Assad as he has held onto power and clawed back lost territory with crucial support from Iran and Russia. 

The United Arab Emirates re-established ties with Syria in 2018 and has been leading the recent charge to reintegrate Damascus. 

 

 'Arab solidarity' 

 

Diplomatic activity picked up after a deadly earthquake struck Syria and Turkey on February 6. 

A decision in March by Saudi Arabia and Iran, a close ally of Damascus, to resume ties has also shifted the regional political landscape. 

Riyadh, which cut ties with Assad's government in 2012 and had long openly championed the Syrian leader's ouster, confirmed last week that work would resume at the two countries' respective diplomatic missions.

But while Syria's frontlines have mostly quietened, large parts of the north remain outside government control, and no political solution to the conflict is in sight. 

Top diplomats from nine Arab countries discussed the Syria crisis in Saudi Arabia last month, and five regional foreign ministers including Syria's met in Jordan on May 1.

The Arab League’s secretary-general, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, said on Monday that Syria’s return could revive “the principle of Arab solidarity”, according to a statement delivered by his deputy, Hossam Zaki.

 

 ‘Serious challenges’ 

 

But not every country in the region has been quick to mend ties with Assad. 

Qatar said this month it would not normalise relations with Assad’s government but also noted this would not be “an obstacle” to Arab League reintegration.

Aboul Gheit said the “positive atmosphere” created by the end of some disputes in the region “should not push us away from the reality that the Arab region has been witnessing for years, which is the accumulation and overlapping of serious challenges”.

Among these, he added, was “a new wave of displacement”, a likely reference to the month-old conflict in Sudan, which has prompted nearly 200,000 people to flee the country and displaced hundreds of thousands more within its borders.

The conflict is expected to be a major agenda item during the summit on Friday.

A senior Saudi diplomat said last week that army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, one of two generals at the heart of it, had been invited to represent Sudan but that it was unclear who would attend.

Representatives of Burhan and of his adversary, paramilitary leader Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, have been in Jeddah for more than a week for talks facilitated by Saudi Arabia and the United States.

On Thursday, the two sides signed an agreement committing to respect humanitarian principles, but they have yet to agree on terms of a possible truce.

 

Gaza truce holds as Palestinians, Israelis count deadly cost

Israeli strikes kill 33 Palestinians in coastal enclave

By - May 14,2023 - Last updated at May 14,2023

Rockets are fired from Gaza City towards Israel on Saturday. A ceasefire took effect in and around the Gaza Strip after five days of cross-border exchanges that have killed at least 33 Palestinians in Gaza and two people in Israel (AFP photo)

GAZA CITY — Calm returned to Gaza Sunday as a fragile ceasefire ending five days of fighting held, leaving Palestinians and Israelis to count the cost of cross-border fire which has killed dozens.

Fishermen took to their boats in the coastal Palestinian enclave, as Gazans emerged from sheltering in their homes amid the fierce exchange of fire.

The fighting which broke out Tuesday with Israeli strikes on the Islamic Jihad group ceased late Saturday, following days of truce talks led by Egypt.

As the skies fell silent, residents were left to mourn the 33 people killed in Gaza, as well as the two in Israel, a Palestinian labourer from the territory and an elderly Israeli.

After the ceasefire took effect in Gaza, ambulances and fire trucks drove in convoy while Palestinians gathered in the streets to celebrate.

More than 50 homes were destroyed and around 950 people displaced in Gaza, said the United Nations citing local officials.

“We’re on the street, there’s no home for my children or their children,” said Mohammed Al Louh, whose house was destroyed by Israeli strikes.

“After the ceasefire, we have an ongoing tragedy because of the great scale of the destruction,” his relative said, standing beside the rubble.

Medics said 190 people were wounded in Gaza and 30 in Israel — seven with injuries resulting from Palestinian rocket fire and the rest while heading to shelters.

UN Middle East envoy Tor Wennesland welcomed the truce and said he was “deeply saddened by the loss of life and injuries”.

Sunday also saw Israel reopen its two crossings with Gaza, the closure of which had affected Palestinians with work permits or permission to access essential medical treatment not available in the impoverished territory.

The move also paved the way for supplies of medicine, food and fuel to reach the blockaded enclave.

 

‘Quiet met with quiet’ 

 

While Israel and Islamic Jihad committed to the ceasefire, both warned they would not hesitate to resume fire if the other side violated the agreement.

“Quiet will be met with quiet,” the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement.

“If Israel is attacked or threatened, it will continue to do everything that it needs to in order to defend itself.”

Tariq Salmi, an Islamic Jihad spokesman, said if Israel “commits any foolish act or any assassination... the resistance will resume where it left off”.

But as calm returned in Gaza, clashes persisted in the occupied West Bank.

Israeli forces raided central Nablus early Sunday, sparking clashes with Palestinian residents, according to an AFP photographer.

The Israeli strikes on Gaza killed at least six top figures from Islamic Jihad, which is considered a terrorist group by the United States and the European Union.

At least six children and multiple civilians were also among the dead in Gaza, which is ruled by the militant group Hamas.

Islamic Jihad responded to the Israeli strikes with volleys of rocket fire, prompting sirens to blare as Israel’s defence system intercepted most of the projectiles.

Restrictions imposed on Israelis living near the Gaza border were expected to be lifted later Sunday.

Turkey decides Erdogan's future in knife-edge vote

By - May 14,2023 - Last updated at May 14,2023

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan casts his ballot at a polling station to vote in the presidential and parliamentary elections, in Istanbul, on Sunday (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Turkey on Sunday voted in a momentous election that could extend President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's two-decade rule.

Turnout was expected to be huge in what has effectively turned into a referendum on Turkey's longest-serving leader and his Islamic-rooted party.

It is the toughest of more than a dozen that Erdogan has confronted, one that polls suggest he might lose.

Erdogan, 69, has steered the nation of 85 million through one of its most transformative and divisive eras in the post-Ottoman state's 100-year history.

Turkey has grown into a military and geopolitical heavyweight that plays roles in conflicts from Syria to Ukraine.

The NATO member's footprint in both Europe and the Middle East makes the election's outcome as critical for Washington and Brussels as it is for Damascus and Moscow.

"My hope to God is that after the counting concludes this evening, the outcome is good for the future of our country, for Turkish democracy," Erdogan said after casting his ballot in Istanbul.

The emergence of Kemal Kilicdaroglu and his six-party alliance, a group that forms the type of broad-based coalition that Erdogan excelled at forging throughout his career, gives foreign allies and Turkish voters a clear alternative.

Polls suggest the 74-year-old secular opposition leader is within touching distance of breaking the 50 per cent threshold needed to win in the first round.

A run-off on May 28 could give Erdogan time to regroup and reframe the debate.

But he would still be hounded by Turkey’s most dire economic crisis of his time in power and disquiet over his government’s stuttering response to a February earthquake that claimed more than 50,000 lives.

“We all missed democracy,” Kilicdaroglu said after voting in Ankara. “You will see, God willing, spring will come to this country.”

 

Heavy turnout

 

The election is expected to feature heavy turnout among the country’s 64 million registered voters.

The last national election saw Erdogan win 52.5 per cent on a turnout of more than 86 per cent.

Turkey has no exit polls but tends to count ballots quickly.

Polling stations close at 5:00pm (1400 GMT) and all reporting restrictions are lifted four hours later. The first results are sometimes published before then.

Voters will also select a new 600-seat parliament.

Polls suggest that Erdogan’s right-wing alliance is edging out the opposition bloc in the parliamentary ballot.

But the opposition would win a majority if it secured support from a new leftist alliance that represents the Kurdish vote.

 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF