Anadolu Agency's Morning Briefing - September 11, 2020
Daily briefing on novel coronavirus pandemic worldwide, Turkey, other developments
ANKARA
Anadolu Agency is here with a rundown of the latest developments on the coronavirus pandemic and other news in Turkey and around the world.
Coronavirus and other developments in Turkey
Turkey's ruling party accused French President Emmanuel Macron of extending his country’s long history of colonialism.
Turkey’s foreign minister said his country expects the European Union to act as an “honest broker” in the Eastern Mediterranean region.
Turkey’s National Defense Ministry said the technical meeting between Turkish and Greek military delegations concluded. Both sides discussed measures aimed at preventing possible military engagement in the Eastern Mediterranean, according to a statement.
Here is an analysis you may be interested in reading about the transformation of the Eastern Mediterranean.
Turkish intelligence agents arrested a member of the PKK/KCK terror group in Ukraine and brought him back to Turkey in a special operation.
When a young mother-to-be in southeastern Turkey felt her baby unexpectedly coming, she got help with the delivery from an unexpected source: a satellite cellphone used skillfully by a local security officer.
Turkey denounced an Islamophobic attack in Sweden in which protesters burned a copy of the Muslim holy book Quran, characterizing it as a “disrespect”.
COVID-19 updates worldwide
The number of people who tested positive for the coronavirus in England rose 43% in one week, according to figures released Thursday from the National Health Service.
Around 180 vaccines to combat COVID-19 are in development worldwide, including 35 in human trials, the WHO chief said on Friday.
The number of coronavirus cases in Latin America and the Caribbean surpassed 8 million Thursday, with the virus showing no signs of slowing down in some countries.
South Africa registered 2,007 new cases of COVID-19 in a 24-hour period, bringing the country’s total number of infections to 644,438, Health Minister Zweli Mkhize announced Thursday.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told an international health meeting that clinical testing for COVID-19 vaccines needs to include African populations to ensure they are appropriate for Africans.
Bosnia and Herzegovina reopened its international borders, after more than five months of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Health authorities in Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Oman confirmed additional fatalities from the disease.
Africans living with noncommunicable diseases such as hypertension and diabetes are more likely to suffer severe cases of COVID-19 and eventually die, according to the Africa office of the World Health Organization.
Other global developments
A massive explosion rocked the city of Zarqa in Jordan early Friday due to an electric short circuit at an army munitions depot, according to a government spokesman.
China slammed the US decision to revoke visas of more than 1,000 Chinese students and scholars deemed to be a "security risk".
Chinese technology giant Huawei on Thursday unveiled its latest version of self-developed Harmony operating system (HarmonyOS) that is seen as an alternative for Google's Android, the country’s state-run media said.
Greece on Thursday denied that it attended technical talks with a Turkish military delegation at NATO headquarters, according to its official news agency.
The Taliban announced readiness to begin long overdue intra-Afghan negotiations beginning Sept. 12 in Doha, Qatar.
US President Donald Trump said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will begin intra-Afghan peace talks in Doha.
Iran’s armed forces on Thursday began a large-scale military exercise in the southern waters of the country amid unprecedented escalation of tensions with the US.
The EU on Thursday officially extended its sanctions against violation of Ukraine’s territory for another six months. The measures include travel restrictions and freezing of assets, targeting in total 175 people and 44 entities.
A UK-based rights group demanded Myanmar authorities immediately release three student leaders Thursday who were protesting ongoing unrest in Rakhine State.
The US designated four Russia-linked individuals Thursday for allegedly attempting to influence the American presidential elections in November.