Turkiye detains 4 people as part of probe into landslide at gold mine that left at least 9 missing

Turkiye detains 4 people as part of probe into landslide at gold mine that left at least 9 missing
Security personnel stand at the entrance of the Copler gold mine near Ilic village, eastern Turkiye, on Feb. 14, 2024.(AP)
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Updated 14 February 2024
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Turkiye detains 4 people as part of probe into landslide at gold mine that left at least 9 missing

Turkiye detains 4 people as part of probe into landslide at gold mine that left at least 9 missing
  • Police detained four senior mine officials, including the field manager, as part of an investigation into the disaster
  • Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar said the mine was last inspected in August

ANKARA: Authorities on Wednesday detained four people in connection with a massive landslide that engulfed a gold mine in eastern Turkiye, leaving at least nine workers missing, Turkish state media reported.
The landslide struck the Anagold Madencilik company’s Copler mine in the town of Ilic in Turkiye’s mountainous Erzincan province on Tuesday. Video seemingly shot by a worker showed a huge mass of earth rushing down a gully, overrunning everything in its path. The landslide involved a mound of soil extracted from the mine, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said.
More than 800 search and rescue personnel, including police and military teams, mine rescuers and volunteers, were deployed to search for the nine missing personnel, Yerlikaya said.
Other workers at the mine have also joined the efforts to rescue their colleagues, while families of the missing waited in an area close to the mine for news of their loved ones, Haberturk television reported.
Yerlikaya later told reporters that five of the missing workers were believed to be near or inside a metal container when the landslide hit. Three others were either inside or close to a vehicle, while another was inside a truck, he said, adding that rescuers were using radar detection devices to try to locate the missing.
“We have an advantage in this mass,” Yerlikaya said. “We have started to search (for the vehicles and container) with metal radar detection. As soon as we get a trace of these vehicles and container with these radar scans, we want to focus on them and make progress.”
Police, meanwhile, detained four senior mine officials, including the field manager, as part of an investigation into the disaster, national broadcaster TRT reported.
Experts have warned that the landslide may carry environmental risks. Geologist Suleyman Pampal said the soil that formed the landslide had been processed for gold and may contain dangerous substances such as cyanide that is used to extract gold. He also warned of a threat to the nearby Euphrates River.
The Environment Ministry said in a statement that a stream leading to the Euphrates was closed to prevent water pollution. Erzincan Gov. Hamza Aydoglu also said there was no leakage into the waterway.
The mine was closed down in 2020 following a cyanide leak into the river, which stretches through Turkiye, Syria and Iraq. It reopened two years later after the company was fined and a cleanup operation was completed.
Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar said the mine was last inspected in August.
“During their inspections, they did not find anything relating to the mining accident that took place yesterday,” Bayraktar told reporters near the site. “Our investigation into what may have caused the accident is continuing.”
Turkiye has a poor mine safety record. In 2022, an explosion at the Amasra coal mine on the Black Sea coast killed 41 workers. The country’s worst mining disaster took place in 2014 at a coal mine in Soma, western Turkiye, where 301 people were killed.
In the wake of those incidents, engineers warned that safety risks were frequently ignored and inspections not adequately carried out.


Israeli airstrikes kill 11 Palestinians in Gaza

Israeli airstrikes kill 11 Palestinians in Gaza
Updated 2 sec ago
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Israeli airstrikes kill 11 Palestinians in Gaza

Israeli airstrikes kill 11 Palestinians in Gaza
  • Almost 41,600 Palestinians killed in Gaza since Oct 7
  • Israeli army says it struck a Hamas command center

CAIRO: Israeli military strikes across the Gaza Strip have killed at least 11 Palestinians, health officials in the enclave said on Sunday, as Israeli planes bombarded several northern, central and southern areas.
A school sheltering displaced Palestinians in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip was among buildings hit, killing four people and wounded several others, Gaza medics said.
The Israeli military said it struck Hamas militants operating from a command center embedded in a compound that had previously served as Um Al-Fahm School. It accused Hamas of exploiting civilian facilities and its population for military purposes, which Hamas denies.
In another strike, three people were killed in a house in Gaza City, medics said. Four others were killed in three separate airstrikes in Nuseirat and Khan Younis in central and southern parts of the Gaza Strip.
Israeli forces pursued their operations in Rafah, near the border with Egypt, and in Gaza City’s suburb of Zeitoun, where forces blew up several houses, according to residents and Hamas media.
On Sunday the Israeli military said forces continue the fight in a “multi-front war” and are operating in Gaza to bring Israeli and foreign hostages home and to “dismantle” Hamas.
It said troops discovered and dismantled an underground tunnel route that is approximately 1km long near residential buildings and civilian spaces in central Gaza, adding that they found several rooms and equipment used by Hamas for prolonged periods.
Fighting and Israeli military activities in Gaza have declined in the past week as Israel escalated its military offensive against Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon, killing its leader Hassan Nasrallah in an airstrike on Friday. The group announced Nasrallah’s death on Saturday.
Most of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million have been displaced by the war, in which 41,500 Palestinians have been killed, according to Gaza health authorities.
Israel and Hamas have been fighting since gunmen from the Palestinian militant group stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing about 250 hostages, going by Israeli tallies.


US airstrikes on Syria kill 37 militants affiliated with extremist groups

US airstrikes on Syria kill 37 militants affiliated with extremist groups
Updated 9 min 21 sec ago
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US airstrikes on Syria kill 37 militants affiliated with extremist groups

US airstrikes on Syria kill 37 militants affiliated with extremist groups
  • US Central Command said it struck northwestern Syria targeting a senior militant from the Al-Qaeda-linked Hurras Al-Deen group and eight others

BEIRUT: In Syria, 37 militants affiliated to the extremist Daesh group and an Al-Qaeda-linked group were killed in two strikes, the United States military said Sunday.
Two of the dead were senior militants, it said.
US Central Command said it struck northwestern Syria on Tuesday, targeting a senior militant from the Al-Qaeda-linked Hurras Al-Deen group and eight others. They say he was responsible for overseeing military operations.
They also announced a strike from earlier this month on Sept. 16, where they conducted a “large-scale airstrike” on a Daesh training camp in a remote undisclosed location in central Syria. That attack killed 28 militants, including “at least four Syrian leaders.”
“The airstrike will disrupt Daesh’ capability to conduct operations against US interests, as well as our allies and partners,” the statement read.
There are some 900 US forces in Syria, along with an undisclosed number of contractors, mostly trying to prevent any comeback by the extremist Daesh group, which swept through Iraq and Syria in 2014, taking control of large swaths of territory.
US forces advise and assist their key allies in northeastern Syria, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, located not far from strategic areas where Iran-backed militant groups are present, including a key border crossing with Iraq.


Iran vows response to Guards deputy commander killing in Lebanon

Iran vows response to Guards deputy commander killing in Lebanon
Updated 51 min 53 sec ago
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Iran vows response to Guards deputy commander killing in Lebanon

Iran vows response to Guards deputy commander killing in Lebanon

DUBAI: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Sunday that the killing by Israel of an Iranian Revolutionary Guards deputy commander in Beirut was a “horrible crime” that would not go unanswered.
Brig. Gen. Abbas Nilforoushan was killed in the Israeli strikes on Beirut on Friday in which Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah also died.
“There is no doubt that this horrible crime committed by the Zionist regime (Israel) will not go unanswered,” Araqchi said in a statement addressed to the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Major General Hossein Salami.
Earlier on Sunday, Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said that Iran-alligned armed groups would carry on confronting Israel with Tehran’s help following the killing of Nasrallah, Iranian state media reported.
An alliance known as the Axis of Resistance, built up over decades with Iranian support, includes the Palestinian group Hamas, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Yemen’s Houthis, and various Shiite Muslim armed groups in Iraq and Syria.
“We will not hesitate to go to any level in order to help the resistance,” Qalibaf said.
He also issued a warning to the United States.
“The US is complicit in all of these crimes and...has to accept the repercussions,” he said.
Iran’s Vice President for Strategic Affairs Mohammad Javad Zarif, asked about Nasrallah’s assassination, told state media on Sunday Iran would react at an appropriate time of its choosing against Israel.


Lebanon may be seeing ‘largest displacement’ ever: PM

Lebanon may be seeing ‘largest displacement’ ever: PM
Updated 53 min 33 sec ago
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Lebanon may be seeing ‘largest displacement’ ever: PM

Lebanon may be seeing ‘largest displacement’ ever: PM
  • Lebanon PM says up to 1 million may be displaced by Israel attacks

BEIRUT: Intense Israeli attacks may have forced up to a million people to flee parts of Lebanon in possibly the worst displacement crisis in the tiny country’s history, Prime Minister Najib Mikati said Sunday.
Mikati told reports that “the estimated number is very high and may reach one million” — which would amount to roughly a sixth of Lebanon’s population.
“It is the largest displacement movement that may have happened... in Lebanon,” he said.
On Friday, Israel killed Hezbollah’s powerful leader Hassan Nasrallah in a move many fear risks destabilising Lebanon and the wider region.
Since Monday, intense Israeli attacks across Lebanon’s east, south and on southern Beirut have killed hundreds of people and forced many to flee their homes.
Earlier this week, UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi said “well over 200,000 people are displaced inside Lebanon” and more than 50,000 had fled to neighboring Syria.
The intensive strikes come as Israel shifted the focus of its operation from Gaza to Lebanon, after nearly a year of cross-border fire with Hezbollah over the Gaza war, with the group saying it is acting in support of ally Hamas.


Lebanon army makes plea for ‘unity’ after Nasrallah’s killing

Lebanon army makes plea for ‘unity’ after Nasrallah’s killing
Updated 29 September 2024
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Lebanon army makes plea for ‘unity’ after Nasrallah’s killing

Lebanon army makes plea for ‘unity’ after Nasrallah’s killing
  • Troops had been deployed since Saturday in Beirut
  • Prime Minister Najib Mikati urged Lebanese “to come together” to preserve civil order

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s army on Sunday warned Lebanese against actions that would disturb public order in the crisis-hit country after Israel’s killing of Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the powerful Iran-backed group Hezbollah.
The army in statement said that it “calls on citizens to preserve national unity and not to be drawn into actions that may affect civil peace at this dangerous and delicate stage” following the massive Friday strike that killed Nasrallah and as Israeli attacks continue.
“The Israeli enemy is working to implement its destructive plans and sow division among Lebanese,” the army statement added.
Tiny Lebanon has long been divided along sectarian lines which had contributed to a devastating civil war in 1975-1990.
Hezbollah, the Shiite Muslim movement that wields great power in Lebanon’s south and whose military might is widely believed to dwarf Lebanon’s national armed forces, has drawn criticism from some Lebanese politicians over its decision to open a “support front” against Israel over the Gaza war nearly a year ago
A Lebanese army official told AFP troops had been deployed since Saturday in Beirut, where thousands have sought refuge from intense Israeli raids on Lebanon’s south, east and Hezbollah’s south Beirut bastion.
Prime Minister Najib Mikati urged Lebanese “to come together” to preserve civil order.
“Our national responsibility at this historic and exceptional moment requires setting aside political differences,” he said on Saturday, after cutting short a New York visit to attend the United Nations General Assembly.
United Nations special coordinator for Lebanon Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert also called for unity in a statement on X on Sunday.
“At this critical moment for Lebanon when uncertainty is rife, now is the time for the country to focus on the common interest that unites its people,” she said.
Hezbollah has been exchanging cross-border fire with Israel in support of ally Hamas after the Palestinian militant group’s unprecedented October 7 attack on Israel triggered war in Gaza.
But this week, Israel shifted the focus of its operation from Gaza to Lebanon, where heavy bombing since Monday has killed hundreds of people and displaced tens of thousands.