Turkey

700 illegal Pak immigrants in Turkish jails

Turkish FlagIslamabad, August 1 : Nearly 60-70 Pakistani immigrants are intercepted at the Iran-Turkey border every week and that a total of nearly 700 Pakistanis are imprisoned in various Turkish jails, said Pakistan’s Ambassador in Ankara Iftikhar Hussain Shah.

Shah said these Pakistani nationals are imprisoned in Turkish jails for illegal entry into the country, and that efforts were being made for their immediate return to their home country.

“We are making arrangements for their early return to Pakistan,” the Daily Times quoted the Pakistani envoy as saying in an interview with the BBC Radio.

Thirteen dead in dormitory collapse in Turkey

Thirteen dead in dormitory collapse in Turkey Ankara - A three-storey dormitory building collapsed in central Turkey early Friday morning killing 13 people and injuring 22, the NTV television station reported.

A gas cannister explosion was the most likely reason for the building to collapse at around 5 a. m. (0200 GMT) Friday morning, according to the mayor of the nearby town of Balcilar, Mehmet Demirgul.

Around 60 girls between the ages of 12 and 16 were staying at the dormitory in the Taskent region of Konya where they were attending summer Koran courses.

Pakistani refugees found dead near Istanbul

Ankara - The bodies of 13 refugees believed to have suffocated to death were found Wednesday morning near a village not far from Istanbul, the Dogan news agency reported.

Investigations continue into Istanbul bomb blasts

Ankara  - Turkish police continued investigations Tuesday into a bomb blast on Sunday in Istanbul that killed 17 people and injured more than 150 with officials pointing the blame at the separatist Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK), charges the PKK have denied.

As the families of the dead continued funeral preparations police were seeking a man in a black shirt who was captured by a mobile phone camera running down the street in Istanbul suburb of Gungoren just seconds before the second blast hit, Yenisafak newspaper reported on Tuesday.

NATO chief condemns Istanbul bomb attacks

Brussels - NATO's top official on Monday condemned the night's double bomb attack in Istanbul which left at least 16 people dead and over 150 injured.

"I condemn in the strongest terms the bombings that occurred in Istanbul yesterday (Sunday) evening. These appalling terrorist attacks targeted innocent civilians in a deliberate and brutal way," NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said in a statement.

"On behalf of the (NATO) allies, I express my condolences to the families of those who lost their lives, and my sympathies to those injured in the blasts. NATO will continue to stand firmly in solidarity with the Turkish people in the fight against terrorism," he said.

Turkish court begins deliberations on whether to shut ruling party

Ankara - Turkey's Constitutional Court began deliberations Monday on whether to close down the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) which is charged with undermining the secular system.

Turkey's chief prosecutor, Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya, brought the case to close down the AKP earlier, telling the court that it was "clear and present danger that (the AKP) wants to impose shariah law."

The prosecutor has claimed that attempts by the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to allow women to wear Islamic- style headscarves at universities were proof that the party aims to impose Islamic-style law.

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