Tag: Turkey

  • ‘President Erdoğan offers to take Imran Khan to Türkiye’

    ‘President Erdoğan offers to take Imran Khan to Türkiye’

    Türkiye’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has reportedly offered to take former prime minister Imran Khan to Türkiye, former information minister Mushahid Hussain Syed has claimed during a discussion on a private news channel program hosted by journalist Asma Shirazi.

    Discussing reports of a possible political settlement, Asma Shirazi noted rumours of a “last chance” for Khan and speculation about him leaving the country. Mushahid Hussain said he had heard that Erdoğan had extended an offer. “If Imran Khan wants to come to Türkiye, he would be most welcome”.


    Reacting to the claim, Asma Shirazi described it as a major development and asked whether the offer had been made earlier or had resurfaced recently. Mushahid Hussain clarified that he was referring to 2025.

    Mushahid Hussain said that nothing is impossible in politics, noting that if Imran Khan chose to consider the offer, a path could still open.

    He recalled that there had been discussion around Imran Khan’s release after the US presidential election in November 2024.  However, some of his own PTI allies sabotaged the plan. He added that in such dynamics, hawks and doves exist in every political camp, and that the political impasse had continued from 2022 through 2025, dominating the political landscape.

    On whether a settlement is possible, Mushahid Hussain said such outcomes could not be ruled out, noting that Imran Khan has been part of the system and maintained strong relations with the establishment over the years.

  • Aamir Khan says he supports boycotting Turkey

    Aamir Khan says he supports boycotting Turkey

    Bollywood actor Aamir Khan has openly supported the #BoycottTurkey initiative during his appearance on Aap Ki Adalat, one of the most popular shows in India. His remarks are in line with the recent online reports and claims suggesting Turkey aided Pakistan during the recent tensions between the two nuclear powers.

    Relations between India and Pakistan escalated in May 2025 following the April 22 terrorist attack in Pahalgam in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu & Kashmir (IIOJK). Subsequently, various open-source accounts on social media started sharing unverified information that Turkish military aircraft supplied arms to Pakistan. These allegations have not been confirmed by either government, but have ignited significant outrage on social media in India.

    During the interview, host Rajat Sharma inquired about a photo that has been circulating online showing Khan with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Khan clarified that this meeting took place years ago and had no connection to the current situation.

    “I met Erdoğan a long time ago. In 2023, when Turkey experienced a major earthquake, India was the first to offer assistance. At that moment, no one, including the government, anticipated Turkey would later support Pakistan,” Khan stated.

    When directly asked about his stance on the ongoing boycott, Khan responded, “Yes, I support it.”

    Khan expressed surprise at Turkey’s recent actions, noting that he had not anticipated the country taking a stance against India, particularly after India’s previous humanitarian aid to Turkey. His remarks have been widely circulated online, with boycott supporters citing them as justification for their position.

    The online backlash against Turkey grew stronger after Erdoğan urged for de-escalation between India and Pakistan during a press conference in Ankara. Though framed as a diplomatic initiative, critics in India recalled Erdoğan’s 2020 speech in Islamabad, where he had strongly backed Pakistan’s position on Kashmir.

    The reaction spilt over from social media into broader calls for action. Indian users renewed demands to cancel travel to Turkey, halt imports of Turkish goods such as marble and textiles, and push for a complete economic disconnect.

    Turkish social media users responded with mockery, dismissing the potential economic impact and resurfacing past criticisms of India’s domestic issues. The exchange became another flashpoint in the ongoing digital standoff between India, Pakistan, and their regional allies.

  • Turkey joins South Africa’s case against Israel

    Turkey joins South Africa’s case against Israel

    Turkey has filed an official request to join South Africa’s genocide case against Israel in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague.

    In a statement, the Turkish foreign ministry announced that it had decided to join the case—formally known as submitting a declaration of official intervention—and would make the necessary legal preparations.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said it had made the formal request on Wednesday.


    “The international community must do its part to stop the genocide and exert the necessary pressure on Israel and its supporters,” Fidan said in a post on X (formerly Twitter).


    “Turkiye will make every effort to do so,” he added.


    The court will make the final decision of admission to the case.


    South Africa brought its case against Israel in December, accusing it of state-led genocide in Gaza.

    To read more: All you need to know about South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at ICJ


    However, in January, the ICJ ordered Israel to refrain from any acts that could fall under the Genocide Convention and to ensure its troops commit no genocidal acts against Palestinians.


    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that in January, Turkiye provided documents for the case at the ICJ, also known as the World Court. In June, Spain said it had asked to intervene in the case at the ICJ.


    Israel has repeatedly dismissed the case’s accusations of genocide, claiming its right to self-defence after Oct 7 last year that killed 1,200 Israelis and foreigners. In 10 months of subsequent Israeli attack, more than 39,600 Palestinians have been martyred in Gaza. Hundreds of thousands are displaced, and most of the strip suffers from a humanitarian crisis.

  • Pakistani actors to join the cast of Selahuddin Eyyubi Season 2

    Pakistani actors to join the cast of Selahuddin Eyyubi Season 2

    Pakistani actors are making a significant impact in the joint Pakistan-Turkey TV series ‘Selahaddin Eyyubi,’ which tells the heroic story of Sultan Selahuddin Eyyubi.The first season, shot in Turkey, aired there a few months ago and is now being broadcast on Hum TV with Urdu dubbing. Pakistani actor Noor Ul Hassan joined the series later, making a strong debut as Sheikh Abdul Qadir Jillani in season 1.

    On Instagram, Ahmed Ali Akbar posted a story of Selahaddin Eyyubi posters.
    Meanwhile, entertainment journalist Maliha Rehman spilled the beans that the talented Durefishan Saleem has also joined the cast.

  • Turkey arrests 67 after mob attacks Syrian properties

    Turkey arrests 67 after mob attacks Syrian properties

    Turkish police were holding 67 people Monday after a mob went on the rampage in a central Anatolian city after a Syrian man was accused of harassing a child.

    A group of men targeted Syrian businesses and properties in Kayseri on Sunday evening, with videos on social media showing a grocery store being set on fire.

    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the latest bout of violence against Turkey’s large community of Syrian refugees.

    “No matter who they are, setting streets and people’s houses on fire is unacceptable,” he said, warning that hate speech should not be used for political gains.

    Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said the Syrian national, identified only by his initials as I.A., was caught by Turkish citizens and delivered to the police.

    Yerlikaya said on X that the Syrian man was suspected of harassing a Syrian girl, who was his relative.

    He said Turks who gathered in the area acted “illegally” and in a manner “that does not suit our human values”, damaging houses, shops and cars belonging to Syrians.

    Sixty-seven people were detained after the attacks, he said.

    “Turkey is a state of law and order. Our security forces continue their fight against all crimes and criminals today, as they did yesterday.”

    In one of the videos a Turkish man was heard shouting: “We don’t want any more Syrians! We don’t want any more foreigners.”

    Local authorities called for calm and revealed the victim was a five-year-old Syrian national.

    Turkey, which hosts some 3.2 million Syrian refugees, has been shaken several times by bouts of xenophobic violence in recent years, often triggered by rumours spreading on social media and instant messaging applications.

    In August 2021, groups of men targeted businesses and homes occupied by Syrians in the capital Ankara, after a brawl which cost the life of a 18-year-old man.

    The fate of Syrian refugees is also a burning issue in Turkish politics, with Erdogan’s opponents in last year’s election promising to send them back to Syria.

  • World not ready for climate change-fueled wildfires: experts

    World not ready for climate change-fueled wildfires: experts

    The world is unprepared for the increasing ferocity of wildfires turbocharged by climate change, scientists say, as blazes from North America to Europe greet the northern hemisphere summer in the hottest year on record.

    Wildfires have already burned swathes through Turkey, Canada, Greece and the United States early this season as extreme heatwaves push temperatures to scorching highs.

    While extra resources have been poured into improving firefighting in recent years, experts said the same was not true for planning and preparing for such disasters.

    “We are still actually catching up with the situation,” said Stefan Doerr, director of the Centre for Wildfire Research at the UK’s Swansea University.

    Predicting how bad any one blaze will be — or where and when it will strike — can be challenging, with many factors including local weather conditions playing into calculations.

    But overall, wildfires are getting larger and burning more severely, said Doerr, who co-authored a recent paper examining the frequency and intensity of such extreme events.

    A separate study published in June found the frequency and magnitude of extreme wildfires appeared to have doubled over the past 20 years.

    By the end of the century, the number of extreme wildfires around the globe is tipped to rise 50 percent, according to a 2022 report by the UN Environment Programme.

    Doerr said humanity had not yet faced up to this reality.

    “We’re clearly not well enough prepared for the situation that we’re facing now,” he said.

    Climate change is a major driver, though other factors such as land use and the location of housing developments play a big part.

    Fires do not respect borders so responses have evolved between governments to jointly confront these disasters, said Jesus San-Miguel, an expert for the European Commission Joint Research Centre.

    The EU has a strong model of resource sharing, and even countries outside the bloc along the Mediterranean have benefited from firefighting equipment or financial help in times of need, San-Miguel said.

    But as wildfires become increasingly extreme, firefighting simply won’t be a fix.

    “We get feedback from our colleagues in civil protection who say, ‘We cannot fight the fires. The water evaporates before it reaches the ground,’” San-Miguel said.

    Wildfires have already burned swathes through Turkey as extreme heatwaves push temperatures to scorching highsMahmut BOZARSLAN

    “Prevention is something we need to work on more,” he added.

    Controlled burns, grazing livestock, or mechanised vegetation removal are all effective ways to limit the amount of burnable fuel covering the forest floor, said Rory Hadden from the University of Edinburgh.

    Campfire bans and establishing roads as firebreaks can all be effective in reducing starts and minimising spread, said Hadden, an expert on fire safety and engineering.

    But such efforts require funding and planning from governments that may have other priorities and cash-strapped budgets, and the return is not always immediately evident.

    “Whatever method or technique you’re using to manage a landscape… the result of that investment is nothing happens, so it’s a very weird psychological thing. The success is: well, nothing happened,” said Hadden.

    Local organisations and residents often take the lead in removing vegetation in the area immediately around their homes and communities.

    But not everyone is prepared to accept their neighbourhood might be at risk.

    ‘People don’t think that it will happen to them, but it eventually will,’ fire expert Jesus San-Miguel saidETIENNE TORBEY

    “People don’t think that it will happen to them, but it eventually will,” San-Miguel said, pointing to historically cold or wet climates like the US Pacific Northwest that have witnessed major fires in recent years.

    Canada has adapted to a new normal of high latitude wildfires, while some countries in Scandinavia are preparing for ever-greater fire risk.

    But how best to address the threat remains an open question, said Guillermo Rein from Imperial College London, even in places where fire has long been part of the landscape.

    Even in locations freshly scarred by fire, the clearest lessons are sometimes not carried forward.

    “People have very short memories for wildfires,” said Rein, a fire science expert.

    In July 2022, London witnessed its worst single day of wildfires since the bombings of World War II, yet by year’s end only academics were still talking about how to best prepare for the future.

    “While the wildfires are happening, everybody’s asking questions… When they disappear, within a year, people forget about it,” he said.

  • Istanbul police clash with May Day protesters

    Istanbul police clash with May Day protesters

    Turkish police on Wednesday fired tear gas and rubber bullets and detained dozens of protesters after authorities banned May 1 rallies at Istanbul’s historic Taksim Square.

    More than 40,000 police were deployed across Istanbul, blocking even small sidestreets with metal barriers in an attempt to prevent protesters gathering.

    Police clashed with demonstrators near city hall in the Sarachane district, firing tear gas and rubber bullets to stop protesters breaching barricades, AFP reporters said.

    According to media reports, at least 150 people had been detained by midday, but authorities did not confirm the figure. AFP reporters saw many people being arrested.

    Some were detained trying to enter Taksim Square.

    Tall metal barriers were put up around the square, where authorities have banned rallies since 2013, when it was the focus of demonstrations against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government.

    Taksim was a rallying ground for May Day celebrations until 1977, when at least 34 people were killed during demonstrations. Authorities opened it up again in 2010, but it was shut again after the 2013 protests.

    In the Besiktas district, police detained at least 30 left-wing protesters who were shouting “Taksim cannot be banned”, an AFP journalist.

    One protester was dragged along the ground by police and his group detained.

    Another 30 people were detained in the Sisli district.

    The MLSA rights group said several journalists were pushed to the ground during the troubles.

    – ‘Taksim belongs to workers’ –

    Main roads across Istanbul were closed to traffic while public transport including ferries and subway trains were halted because of the security clampdown. Landmarks such as the Topkapi palace were cordoned off.

    Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said Taksim would be out of bounds for rallies to stop “terrorist organisations” using it for “propaganda”.

    Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) and unions had pressed the government to open the square for labour rallies but Erdogan warned on Tuesday against any provocation.

    CHP leader Ozgur Ozel, accompanied by Istanbul’s mayor Ekrem Imamoglu and labour unions, gathered at the Sarachane neighbourhood.

    “We will keep on fighting until Taksim is free,” Ozel said. “Taksim belongs to the workers.”

    Addressing the police, Ozel declared: “These workers are not your enemies Our only desire is for the day to be celebrated as a festival. We do not want conflict.”

    In 2023, Turkey’s top constitutional court ruled that the closure of Taksim Square for protests was a violation of rights.

  • Sindh police to receive advanced Turkish weapons to counter dacoit gangs: IGP

    Sindh police to receive advanced Turkish weapons to counter dacoit gangs: IGP

    In a recent press talk, Sindh’s Inspector General of Police, Ghulam Nabi Memon, stated that the police department has faced significant losses in personnel and resources battling dacoit gangs who possess more advanced weaponry.

    He, however, mentioned that the Sindh government is acquiring similar arms for the police force, with a shipment expected from Turkey in the next two weeks.

  • Actor Imran Abbas talks about his mother’s loss

    Actor Imran Abbas talks about his mother’s loss

    Actor Imran Abbas has been a big star for more than twenty years, and people still love him a lot for his looks, talent, and kindness. He’s also very open about how much he loves his family. Recently, he shared some of his feelings for his late mother with his fans on Nida Yasir’s show ‘Shan e Suhoor’.
    He suffered a major loss, losing both his parents and a close sister within two years. Tears flowed freely as he remembered his mother waiting for him at home. Imran stressed that we often fail to realize the significance of our parents until they are no longer with us. His bond with his mother was profound; she held immense importance in his life.


    “My mother’s food is the best food I have ever tasted. She used to make my favorite dishes, and even at the end, she made a kheer for me, which was in the refrigerator when she passed away.” He stored that kheer in a freezer, and it stayed with him for two years after her death until one day a house help accidentally threw it away.


    Imran recalled, “My mother’s hair always smelled of fresh jasmine flowers. She observed purdah, so I have never shared a picture of her even after her death, but she was a very beautiful lady.” He revealed that she passed away in his arms.

  • Fire breaks out at nightclub in Istanbul, more than two dozen injured

    Fire breaks out at nightclub in Istanbul, more than two dozen injured

    At least 29 people have been killed in a fire in a nightclub in Turkey, reports the BBC.


    The club was in the basement of a high-rise building in Istanbul. It was closed and undergoing renovations during the day.


    Speaking to the media, Istanbul governor Davut Gül said the cause of the fire was not yet clear. Gül also said that the victims of the fire were employees, but it is not clear whether they were contractors or employees of the nightclub.


    The investigation is underway. Several people have been arrested in connection with the fire as investigations continue. They include the nightclub manager and the manager of the renovations.


    The Mayor of İstanbul, Ekrem Imamoglu, offered his condolences on social media.


    “May God have mercy on our citizens who lost their lives, and I wish a speedy recovery to our injured,” he said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.


    Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is aware of the tragedy following a phone call with interior minister Ali Yerlikaya.