Anadolu Agency's Morning Briefing - Sept. 4, 2022
Daily briefing on latest global developments
ANKARA
Anadolu Agency is here with a rundown of the latest developments around the world.
• Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Athens to look at history, saying: "If you go too far, the price will be heavy," amid tensions between Türkiye and Greece.
• Erdogan told his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in a telephone call that as with the grain agreement, Türkiye could also play a facilitating role in the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant standoff in southern Ukraine.
• Another ship left Ukrainian ports under the Istanbul grain export deal, according to the Turkish National Defense Ministry.
• An estimated 70,000 people gathered Saturday in the Czech capital of Prague to protest rising energy bills and the government's policy on the Russia-Ukraine war.
• Skyrocketing energy prices have forced many Dutch factories to close, according to media reports.
• A fire completely burned down a mosque in northern France, local media reported, with authorities suspecting an arson attack.
• At least 20 civilians in central Somalia were killed in an attack on a convoy carrying food supplies by the al-Shabaab terror group, said officials.
• Mortar shells again landed inside Bangladesh amid reports of internal gunfights between the Myanmar army and a rebel group that has been ongoing for more than a week.
• Türkiye has left the whole of Europe behind in terms of deportation success rate, which is 67%, said the country’s Directorate of Migration Management said.
• NASA postponed its latest attempt to launch the Artemis I mission to the moon because of a fuel leak, the second in a week.
• Barcelona claimed a 3-0 away victory against Sevilla in the fourth week of the Spanish La Liga.
