Israel restricts entry to Al-Aqsa Mosque for Palestinians from West Bank

The Israeli authorities on Friday imposed restrictions on Palestinians from the occupied West Bank on their entry to Al-Aqsa Mosque to mark the first Friday prayer in the holy month of Ramadan. Eyewitnesses told Anadolu that Israeli forces were deployed at the checkpoints leading to East Jerusalem where Al-Aqsa Mosque is located. They checked their IDs and barred entry for many of them. Palestinian Abdelaziz Al-As'ad, 60, told Anadolu that he tried to cross the Qalandia Israeli military checkpoint, northern Jerusalem, several times but the Israeli forces checked his ID and prevented him from entry under security prevention. "Israel claims that it provides facilities [to Palestinians] but in fact this is a lie, what is happening is a restriction on the movement and a prevention of worship," Al-As'ad added. On Monday, Israel announced various restrictions on Palestinians during the holy month of Ramadan with regard to entering Al-Aqsa Mosque. 'Women of all ages, male children up to 12 years old, and men over 55 years old will be allowed to enter the Al-Aqsa Mosque during Ramadan without a permit,' the coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, Maj. Gen. Ghassan Alyan, said in a statement on Monday. With regard to the Gaza Strip, according to the statement, Israel imposed a "limited quota" for women aged 50 and over, and men aged 55 or over, from Sunday to Thursday, to enter the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Tension has been rising across the occupied West Bank in recent months amid repeated Israeli military raids into Palestinian towns. Nearly 90 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since the start of this year, according to Palestinian figures. Fourteen Israelis have also been killed in separate attacks during the same period.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Netanyahu vows ‘consensus’ amid protests as Knesset proceeds with vote on judicial overhaul

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday affirmed that the parliament, Knesset, will vote next week on his government-proposed judicial reform bill. This came in a speech by Netanyahu amid mass protests against his coalition government's plan for a judicial overhaul. Netanyahu affirmed that the next week's vote will take place on the selection of judges as part of the judicial reform plan, according to The Jewish Press. "The law to change the appointment of judges (judicial reforms) will be submitted to the Knesset next week," Netanyahu said, noting that the bill 'will restore the right balance between authorities.' Referring to the daily anti-government protests, Netanyahu said: 'In order to prevent a rift in our nation, each side must take seriously the claims and concerns of the other.' He also said the judicial reform bill has already been amended, as previously demanded by Israeli President Isaac Herzog. "We cannot allow any disagreement, no matter how sharp, to jeopardize the common future of all of us," he said. "We must not only reject violence, but we must condemn incitement." He also stressed the significance of 'litigation and obtaining as broad a consensus as possible' as the best ways for reform. Earlier on Thursday, Netanyahu summoned Defense Minister Yoav Gallant to his office, following Gallant's statements against the judicial reforms, according to Hebrew media. Gallant was expected to give a speech on Thursday evening to call for a halt to the judicial overhaul's legislation process, the Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported. However, Gallant cancelled his speech after his meeting with Netanyahu. 'At the prime minister's request and in light of his planned statement this evening, the minister of defense is delaying his statement at this stage,' Gallant's office said in a statement according to the daily Times of Israel. It said Gallant recently provided Netanyahu with disturbing data regarding the reform plan's impact on the willingness of officers and soldiers for reserve service in the army. In a related context, the Israeli police said it had arrested 26 demonstrators in Tel Aviv on suspicion of violating the law. It added that it "arrested 10 demonstrators in the central region on charges of disorderly conduct." According to the Israeli daily Haaretz, the police had arrested 87 demonstrators across Israel. Israel has been experiencing mass protests for the past 12 weeks against the government's judicial reform plan. Protesters set fire to Bordeaux town hall amid anger over pension reform * Ikram Kouachi contributed to this report.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Estonia expels Russian diplomat

The Russian Foreign Ministry promised to retaliate for the move, saying "the response will follow." In February, Russia downgraded its relations with Estonia to the level of charge d'affaires over Tallinn's decision to reduce the size of the Russian mission. Currently, Russia has downgraded diplomatic ties with two Baltic states - Estonia and Latvia.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Muslim population in Spain increased 10 times in last 30 years

Secretary of the Islamic Commission of Spain said that the Muslim population living in Spain has increased 10 times in the last 30 years, exceeding 2.5 million. Mohamed Ajana told Anadolu that according to official records, 2.5 million, and according to unofficial figures, about 3 million Muslims live in Spain. Ajana added that the Muslim population in Spain, which was seen as purely immigrants in the past, now has an important place among Spanish citizens. He stated that more than one million Muslims in the country are Spanish citizens, some of them are immigrants and others are of Spanish origin. Explaining that Muslims from Morocco, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Senegal, and Algeria are in the majority, he shared the information that the majority of the Muslim population in Spain lives in industrialized regions such as Catalonia, Valencia, Andalusia, and Madrid. Ajana also said that there are currently 53 Islamic federations serving the Muslim community in Spain, and that there are about 2,000 mosques. He said the main problems that Muslims face are obtaining permits and licenses for the construction of mosques, the existence of only 40 Muslim cemeteries despite the increase in population, education, and Islamophobia.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Spain’s first major wildfire of the season forces 1,500 from their homes

As a wildfire continues to rage Friday in a mountainous region in eastern Spain, around 1,500 people are still unable to return home. Residents of eight towns in Valencia and two in Aragon were forced to flee their homes on Thursday as the first major wildfire of the year ripped through the area's dry forest. Strong winds and sweltering temperatures - exceeding 30 C (86 F) in the city of Valencia on Thursday - helped the fire spread rapidly. Police reported on Friday morning that it had burned through at least 1,000 hectares (2,471 acres). 'These are difficult moments… The most important thing is human lives,' Valencia President Ximo Puig said on Thursday night, adding that 18 more firefighting aircraft would join the battle against the flames on Friday. Large areas around Spain's Mediterranean coast are at extreme risk of forest fires, and conditions will only worsen through Sunday, according to Spain's meteorology agency AEMET. Last week, AEMET declared that Spain was in a long-term drought after another abnormally warm winter. It also predicts that this spring and summer will be hotter than usual, upping the chances for another intense fire season. In 2022, Spain and Portugal experienced unprecedented wildfire activity in late July and early August, after a record-breaking heat wave combined with severe drought conditions, according to EUMETSAT. On Tuesday, the Portuguese government also warned that this summer's wildfire season could be even worse.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Magnitude 5.6 earthquake rattles northwestern Iran, 82 people injured

At least 82 people were injured as a magnitude 5.6 earthquake struck Iran's northwestern province of West Azerbaijan on Friday, local authorities said. In a press statement, Amir Abbas Jafari, the director general of crisis management in West Azerbaijan province, also said several buildings were damaged in the earthquake in the cities of Khoy and Salmas. The Turkish Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) said in a statement that the earthquake was recorded at a depth of seven kilometers (some five miles) and was also felt in the eastern Turkish provinces of Van and Hakkari.

Source: Anadolu Agency

3 QUESTIONS – 20 years after US invasion of Iraq

In 3 questions, Adam McConnel evaluated the consequences of the US invasion of Iraq after 20 years for Anadolu's Analysis Department. What are the consequences of the war in Iraq for the US? The US' international credibility was seriously damaged because the invasion was carried out on the pretext of Saddam Hussein's Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs) program, which turned out to be non-existent (as many contemporary observers knew and predicted, similar to the blind sage Tiresias, in a futile attempt to warn the American Oedipus Rex). The invasion's subsequent horrors, such as the massive numbers of civilian deaths, torture in Abu Ghraib Prison, or the continuing political and social disorder that the US proved unable to remedy, further undermined the US' international standing. Ultimately, the US lost its moral high ground while teaching others how to carry out modern media campaigns aimed at building public support for military action against foreign societies. No, the US officials were ever held accountable for the invasion, but some soldiers were held accountable for atrocities.[1] Domestically, the most direct consequence for the US was thousands of dead soldiers and hundreds of thousands of injured or permanently traumatized veterans. Despite the broad consensus emerging in the past twenty years that the invasion was a disastrous mistake, many US policymakers and pundits have either not understood the mistake [2] or have drawn erroneous conclusions while attempting to avoid the same situation or win short-term political gains by appealing to traditional American isolationism.[3] Beyond the military and political costs, the US also expended trillions of dollars on the invasion and its aftermath while many US citizens continued to suffer from poverty, inadequate education and health care, and decaying infrastructure.[4] How did it shape the Middle East politically and geographically? All regional countries were affected in some way by the invasion's results, rippling outwards as refugee populations or as political and economic turbulence. Some countries, such as Trkiye, experienced both. General disgust with the Iraq invasion and the behavior of US officials, soldiers, and 'contractors' entrenched anti-American sentiment across the region. The most important single result was Iran's newfound influence in post-Saddam Iraq, which gave Tehran a direct land link to Syria and enhanced stature for the entire region's Shi'ite and Alawite populations. However, the George W. Bush Administration's democratization rhetoric [5], which rolled out as an ex post facto justification once the WMDs didn't appear, also provided a long-term impetus to democratic sentiments in many Arab societies. This is an additional factor that helped trigger the Arab Spring movements and the resulting socio-political developments. Iran's greater profile and activity intensified its regional rivalries with countries such as Saudi Arabia and Israel, which eventually resulted in Yemen's political collapse and Israel's various asymmetrical attacks against multiple Iranian targets, both in Iran and in Syria. The US' post-invasion policy mistakes paved the way for extremist groups' emergence, such as Daesh/ISIS. The eventual American realization that invading Iraq was an error induced the Obama Administration not to take on greater burdens in Syria, which in turn opened the door to direct Russian involvement there. Subsequently, Russia step-by-step broadened its partnership with the Iranian regime, became the true decision-maker in Syria, and for the first time opened a southern front against Trkiye, a NATO member. The Obama Administration's same preference also resulted in the US-PKK partnership's formation (under the 'Syrian Democratic Forces' guise). What does the future hold? Even though Iraq is now somewhat politically and economically stable, democracy, functioning governmental institutions, and internal political cohesion are still only distant mirages. Because some international actors, such as the Arab League, are slowly rehabilitating the Damascus regime,[6] Iran's ability to influence events across Iraq and Syria will continue to be an important element in regional political calculations. Similarly, the Chinese-backed initiative to reestablish relations between Riyadh and Tehran, if it proves workable, will confirm Iran as the most lasting beneficiary of the George W. Bush Administration's premier policy catastrophe. Expanded Iranian stature also implies that Russia's regional footprint will remain large. Fifty years from now, the US' Iraq invasion will most likely appear to historians as the decision that marked the permanent decline of the US' stature and ability to influence events in the Eastern Mediterranean. Frankly, the appearance of US political leadership that might display the capability, policy acumen, and will to resurrect US influence there seems remote and unrealistic. Many US officials and pundits are still blind to the realities, but the growth in Iran and Russia's regional prestige, and now China's entrance as a regional conflict resolution manager are developments that can be traced back to the George W. Bush Administration's hubristic decision to invade Iraq on false pretenses. Finally, the US invasion of Iraq had profound and long-lasting effects on the US-Turkish relations. Many related incidents can be mentioned, but the formation of the US-PKK partnership, another profound mistake that has its roots in the US' Iraq invasion, will continue to blight relations between the two states until US officials end their insistence on cooperating with an organization that US law designates as terrorist.

Source: Anadolu Agency