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Istanbul bombing: 22 people arrested, Turkish authorities point to PKK Kurds

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Steph Deschamps / November 14, 2022

The person who planted the bomb on Istiklal Street in Istanbul on Sunday, killing at least six people on the shopping street, has been arrested, Interior Minister Soumeylan Soylu told the official Anadolu Agency.
 
Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu blamed the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) for the attack that killed at least six people on Sunday in Istanbul’s Istiklal shopping street, and announced the arrest of some 20 suspects, including one who allegedly planted the bomb.
 
“The person who planted the bomb has been arrested (…) According to our findings, the PKK terrorist organization is responsible” for the attack, Soylu said in an overnight statement, relayed by the official Anadolu Agency and local TV stations.
 
Another 21 suspects have also been arrested, he added.
 
The minister also accused the Kurdish forces that control most of northeastern Syria, which Ankara considers terrorists, of being behind the attack.
 
“We believe that the order for the attack was given from Kobane,” he added.
  
A city that has remained famous for the 2015 battle that enabled Kurdish forces to push back the Islamic State group, Kobane is controlled by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), of which the PKK-allied People’s Protection Units (YPG) are a major component.
  
The attack, which was not claimed, left six people dead and 81 injured, half of whom had to be hospitalized. The victims, all Turkish citizens, included a 9-year-old girl and a 15-year-old girl. 
 
The attack occurred in the middle of the afternoon in the ultra-popular pedestrian street of Istiklal on Sunday, which is frequented by Stamboulians and tourists.
  
Closed immediately after the attack, access to the street was allowed again Monday morning, Turkish media reported.
 
Mr. Soylu did not specify the conditions under which the suspected “person” was arrested, nor whether it was a “woman” as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and then his vice-president Fuat Oktay had stated on Sunday evening.
 
The PKK, considered a terrorist organization by Ankara but also by its Western allies including the United States and the European Union, has been in armed struggle against the Turkish government since the mid-1980s. It has often been blamed in the past for bloody attacks on Turkish soil.
 
President Recep Tayip Erdogan and his vice-president, Fuat Oktay, had previously said that a “woman” was responsible for the attack, which Soylu did not immediately clarify on Monday morning.

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At least 63 employees of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees killed in Gaza

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At least 63 employees of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees killed in Gaza, Magnate Daily
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Eva Deschamps / October 31, 2023

Since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas on October 7, 63 employees of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) have already lost their lives in the Gaza Strip. Ten aid workers have been killed in the last 72 hours, according to this new toll released by the agency on its website on Monday.
 
At least 22 UNRWA staff were also injured. Since October 7, 44 UNRWA facilities have also been destroyed. Of its 22 health centers, only nine are still operational, the UN agency said, warning that the provision of health care is made even more difficult by the very low fuel supply.
 
The UN agency had previously reported that several of its warehouses had been looted. “Due to the very limited aid available and overcrowded shelters, growing tensions are being reported within the displaced communities,” it stressed. Some 672,000 refugees are living in 149 UNRWA facilities across the Gaza Strip, “in increasingly difficult conditions”. “The ability to provide vital assistance was further hampered by the 36-hour communications blackout between October 27 and 29”, UNRWA added.
 
In all, an estimated 1.4 million people have been displaced in the Gaza Strip. Over 120,000 of them have taken refuge in public buildings such as hospitals and schools.
 
“The aid currently available is insufficient to meet the most basic needs of displaced people and the communities hosting them”, warns the UN agency.
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Mouse embryos grown in space for the first time

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Mouse embryos grown in space for the first time, Magnate Daily
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Sylvie Claire / October 31, 2023

This research into mammal reproduction in space could prove crucial for future solar system exploration missions.
 
Mouse embryos were grown on board the International Space Station (ISS) and developed normally, according to a Japanese study published in the scientific journal “iScience” on Saturday, October 28.
 
This is “the very first study to show that mammals might be able to thrive in space”, claim Yamanashi University and the Riken National Research Institute.
 
The researchers, including Teruhiko Wakayama, a professor at Yamanashi University’s Center for Advanced Biotechnology, and a team from the Japanese space agency Jaxa, sent frozen mouse embryos aboard a rocket to the ISS in August 2021. The astronauts thawed the embryos at an early stage, using a specially designed device, and cultured them on board the station for four days.
 
The experiment “clearly demonstrated that gravity had no significant effect”, noted the researchers. After analyzing the blastocysts (cells that develop into fetuses and placentas) that were returned to their laboratories on Earth, they observed no particular changes in the state of DNA and genes.
 
“In the future, it will be necessary to transplant blastocysts grown in microgravity on the ISS into mice to see if the mice can give birth,” in order to confirm that the blastocysts are normal, say Yamanashi University and the Riken Institute.
 
This research could prove crucial for future space exploration and colonization missions. As part of its Artemis program, NASA plans to send humans back to the Moon to learn how to live there in the long term, and to prepare for a trip to Mars in the late 2030s.

 

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Bobi, the world’s oldest dog, died aged 31

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Bobi, the world&#8217;s oldest dog, died aged 31, Magnate Daily
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Steph Deschamps / October 25, 2023

The world’s oldest dog died last weekend in Portugal. Bobi, a purebred Rafeiro de l’Alentejo, was 31 years and 165 days old, reports the British public broadcaster BBC on Monday.
 
Last February, Bobi entered the Guinness Book of Records as not only the oldest living dog, but also the oldest dog of all time.
 
The old record had been held for almost 100 years by Bluey from Australia. He died in 1939 at the age of 29 years and five months.
Bobi has spent his entire life with the Costa family in the village of Conqueiros, near the west coast of Portugal.
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