Erdogan hails Algeria trade deals on Africa tour

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, and Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, right, speak through their interpreters during a meeting in Algiers. Erdogan is in Algeria for a two-day visit aimed at boosting political and economic cooperation between the two countries. (AP Photo)
Updated 27 February 2018
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Erdogan hails Algeria trade deals on Africa tour

ALGIERS: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan welcomed the signing of trade deals with Algeria on Tuesday as he visited the country on the first leg of a tour of Africa.
Erdogan said the agreements would allow Ankara and Algiers to diversify trade pending the signing of “an agreement on the protection of investments as soon as possible.”
The Turkish president had already insisted, in an interview published in the Algerian daily Echorouk on Monday, on the need for the bilateral agreement to be finalized in order to “protect investments.”
“We see Algeria as an island of political and economic stability in the region. Our first trading partner in Africa is Algeria,” Erdogan said on Tuesday.
But “investments and trade will gain in volume as the work of our businessmen in Algeria is facilitated,” he said, without elaborating, in remarks made in the presence of Algeria’s Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia and Industry Minister Youcef Yousfi.
Currently worth around $4 billion, trade was expected to “reach $5 billion at the first stage, then $10 billion,” he said.
In his interview with Echorouk, Erdogan criticized Algeria’s importation barriers “which hinder the development of bilateral trade” and he also called for its visa regime to be eased for Turks, especially businessmen.
On Tuesday, he said he was “convinced” of the need to speed up cooperation in the energy sector, notably by developing “joint projects.”
Erdogan also welcomed Monday’s signing of a memorandum of understanding between Algerian state oil giant Sonatrach and Turkish groups Ronesans and Bayegan for $1 billion in petrochemical investments at Yumurtalik in southern Turkey.
At the conclusion of the agreement, Sonatrach is to provide the raw materials for the production of 450,000 tons of polypropylene each year, the Turkish president said.
Shortly after his arrival on Monday evening, Erdogan’s delegation signed seven agreements in hydrocarbons, agriculture, tourism, education, diplomacy and culture.
On Tuesday afternoon he met ailing Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 80, who rarely appears in public.
The Turkish strongman — who has described his tour of Africa as “historic” — is expected in Nouakchott on Wednesday before heading to Senegal and Mali.


Death toll in Iran protests rises to more than 500, rights group says

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Death toll in Iran protests rises to more than 500, rights group says

DUBAI/JERUSALEM: Unrest in Iran has killed more than 500 people, a rights group said on Sunday, as Tehran threatened to target US military bases if President Donald Trump carries ​out threats to intervene on behalf of protesters.
With the Islamic Republic’s clerical establishment facing the biggest demonstrations since 2022, Trump has repeatedly threatened to intervene if force is used on protesters.
According to its latest spreadsheet — based on activists inside and outside Iran, US-based rights group HRANA said it had verified the deaths of 490 protesters and 48 security personnel, with more than 10,600 people arrested.
Reuters was unable to independently verify the tolls.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, speaking in parliament on Sunday, warned the United States against “a miscalculation.”
“Let us be clear: in the case of an attack on Iran, the occupied territories (Israel) as well as all US bases and ships will be our legitimate target,” said Qalibaf, a former commander in Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards.
Authorities intensify crackdown
The protests began on December 28 in response to soaring prices, before turning against the clerical rulers who have governed since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Authorities accuse the US and Israel of fomenting unrest. Iran’s police ‌chief Ahmad-Reza Radan said ‌security forces had stepped up efforts to confront “rioters.”
The flow of information from Iran has been hampered ‌by ⁠an Internet blackout ​since Thursday.
Footage ‌posted on social media on Saturday from Tehran showed large crowds marching along a street at night, clapping and chanting. The crowd “has no end nor beginning,” a man is heard saying.
In footage from the northeastern city of Mashhad, smoke can be seen billowing into the night sky from fires in the street, masked protesters, and a road strewn with debris, another video posted on Saturday showed. Explosions could be heard.
Reuters verified the locations.
State TV aired footage of dozens of body bags on the ground at the Tehran coroner’s office on Sunday, saying the dead were victims of events caused by “armed terrorists.”
Three Israeli sources, who were present for Israeli security consultations over the weekend, said Israel was on a high-alert footing for the possibility of any US intervention.
An Israeli military official said the protests were an internal Iranian matter, but Israel’s military was ⁠monitoring developments and was ready to respond “with power if need be.” An Israeli government spokesperson declined to comment.
Israel and Iran fought a 12-day war in June last year, which the United States briefly joined by ‌attacking key nuclear installations. Iran retaliated by firing missiles at Israel and an American air base in ‍Qatar.
US ready to help, says Trump
Trump, posting on social media on Saturday, said: “Iran is looking at FREEDOM, perhaps like never before. The USA stands ready to help!!!“
In a phone call on Saturday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio discussed the possibility of US intervention in Iran, according to an Israeli source present for the conversation.
Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s last shah and a prominent voice in the fragmented opposition, said Trump had observed Iranians’ “indescribable bravery.” “Do not abandon the streets,” Pahlavi, who is based in the US, wrote on X.
Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, a Paris-based Iranian opposition group, wrote on X that people in Iran had “asserted control of public spaces and reshaped Iran’s political landscape.”
Her group, also known as Mujahideen-e-Khalq (MEK), joined the 1979 revolution but later broke from the ruling clerics and fought them during the Iran-Iraq war in ‌the 1980s.
Netanyahu, speaking during a cabinet meeting, said Israel was closely monitoring developments. “We all hope that the Persian nation will soon be freed from the yoke of tyranny,” he said.