Turkiye fires up coal pollution even as it hosts COP31

Kaddafi Polat rarely mentions his own health after decades of breathing the polluted air blanketing his village beneath the towering chimneys of a coal?fired power plant in southern Turkiye. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 19 February 2026
Follow

Turkiye fires up coal pollution even as it hosts COP31

  • Kaddafi Polat rarely mentions his own health after decades of breathing the polluted air blanketing his village beneath the towering chimneys of a coal?fired power plant in southern Turkiye

AFSIN: Kaddafi Polat rarely mentions his own health after decades of breathing the polluted air blanketing his village beneath the towering chimneys of a coal?fired power plant in southern Turkiye. What troubles him most is his children.
Fine dust settles on cars, laundry and the narrow streets of Cogulhan, a village in the Afsin district of Kahramanmaras province, leaving a grey film over daily life — and over the now-rotting playground where his kids once played.
Afsin?Elbistan is one of the country’s most polluting power plants, environmentalists say, but the government is planning to expand it, even as Turkiye prepares to host the COP31 UN climate summit next November.
“In the mornings, when the school bus comes, dust rises everywhere,” Polat, 52, told AFP at a local coffeehouse.
“Children breathe this in, what will happen when they’re 30 or 40? As a father, you worry.”
Once home to 10,000 people, most of the village’s residents have fled because of the pollution, locals say. Only a few hundred are left.
Crumbling houses line the streets, watched over by a solitary clock tower. The chimneys of the power plant dominate the skyline, pumping plumes of ash and smoke.
“Living here is like suicide,” Polat sighs, saying some stay because they are poor, others because they have land here.
“I’ve watched pollution change everything: people, animals, the soil, even the trees.”
A genuine climate leader?
One of Turkiye’s largest thermal power facilities, the plant generates 2,795 megawatts of power from highly polluting lignite, or brown coal, mined in the Afsin?Elbistan basin that holds 40 percent of the country’s reserves.
Opened in 1984, the eight-unit complex comprises privately-run Afsin-Elbistan A, and the state?run plant B.
But plans to expand Plant A by two units have alarmed environmentalists, especially with Turkiye preparing to host COP31, where the shift away from fossil fuels will be a central theme.
“If Turkiye is pursuing the COP31 presidency with a claim to being a genuine climate leader yet continues to insist on fossil fuel investments, particularly coal, then this is a paradox it must resolve,” said Emel Turker Alpay of Greenpeace Turkiye.
Turkiye aims to reach net-zero emissions by 2053, but coal still accounted for 33.6 percent of the resources used in electricity generation last year, official data shows.
Last week, Environment Minister Murat Kurum tried to dismiss a question about hosting COP31 and Turkiye’s increasing reliance on coal.
“We cannot reduce the matter solely to fossil fuels,” he told a news conference alongside UN climate chief Simon Stiell.
But Alpay said expanding one of the country’s most polluting plants contradicts both “Turkiye’s climate goals and the state’s responsibility to protect public health.”
Activists link the complex and its emissions of particulate matter and sulfur dioxide to an estimated 16,530 premature deaths.
Adding two more units could cause a further 2,268 deaths and impose 88.4 billion lira ($2.6 billion) in health costs, even with improved filtration technology, they warn.
Contacted by AFP, the plant declined to comment on the expansion plans.
Government ‘must choose’
Lutfi Tiyekli, who heads the Kahramanmaras doctors’ association, said the government “must choose between energy from this power plant and public health.”
“We are knowingly sacrificing people here to cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma,” he told AFP.
A local environmental activist, Mehmet Dalkanat, said sickness was widespread.
“People are dying. There isn’t a single household in this village without cancer,” said Dalkanat, who suffers chronic respiratory problems.
His son, Ali, said he worked as a security guard at the plant but left in 2020 with severe bronchitis.
“Had I kept working there, my health would have taken an irreversible path,” he said.
Danger levels
Air pollution in the Elbistan district remains far above World Health Organization and Turkish safety thresholds, said Deniz Gumusel of the Right to Clean Air Platform.
Under Turkish limits annual PM10 particulate matter should be capped at 40 micrograms per cubic meter, she said, but Elbistan has levels of up to three times higher.
And the daily average of PM10 particle levels reached 128.3 micrograms per cubic meter in Elbistan last year — over eight times the WHO guideline of 15 micrograms.
For Dalkanat, expansion would be the final blow.
“While the world is phasing out coal, building a new power plant here means this region is being written off,” he said.
In Cogulhan, residents have largely given up.
“Look where I walked, my footprints show like walking on snow,” said 62?year?old Eyup Kisa of the ash that constantly falls on the village.
“If they expand this plant, we’ll all die.”


US Justice Department official eyes cases against Cuba leaders as Trump floats ‘friendly takeover’

Updated 07 March 2026
Follow

US Justice Department official eyes cases against Cuba leaders as Trump floats ‘friendly takeover’

  • “Working group” formed to build cases against people connected to the Cuban government
  • Trump’s has increasingly displayed aggressive stance against Cuba’s communist leadership

MIAMI: The top Justice Department prosecutor in Miami is considering criminal investigations of Cuban government officials, according to people familiar with the matter. The inquiry comes as President Donald Trump has raised the possibility of a “friendly takeover” of the communist-run island.
Jason Reding Quiñones, the US attorney for the Southern District of Florida, has created a “working group” that includes federal prosecutors and officials from the Drug Enforcement Administration and other agencies to try to build cases against people connected to the Cuban government and its Communist Party, according to one of the people. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the effort.
It was not immediately clear which Cuban officials the office is targeting or what criminal charges prosecutors may be looking to bring.
The Justice Department said in a statement Friday that “federal prosecutors from across the country work every day to pursue justice, which includes efforts to combat transnational crime.”
The effort is taking place against the backdrop of Trump’s increasingly aggressive stance against Cuba’s communist leadership.
Emboldened by the US capture of Cuba’s close ally, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Trump last month said his administration was in high-level talks with officials in Havana to pursue “a friendly takeover” of the country. He repeated those claims this week, saying his attention would turn back to Cuba once the war with Iran winds down.
“They want to make a deal so bad,” Trump said of Cuba’s leadership.
While Cuba has faded from Washington’s radar as a major national security threat in recent decades, it remains a priority in the US Attorney’s office in Miami, whose political, economic and cultural life is dominated by Cuban-American exiles.
The FBI field office has a dedicated Cuba group that in 2024 was instrumental in the arrest of former US Ambassador Victor Manuel Rocha on charges of serving as a secret agent of Cuba stretching back to the 1970s.
In recent weeks, several Miami Republicans, in addition to Florida Sen. Rick Scott, have called on the Trump administration to reopen its criminal investigation into the 1996 shootdown of four planes operated by anti-communist exiles.
In a letter to Trump on Feb. 13, lawmakers including Reps. Maria Elvira Salazar and Carlos Gimenez highlighted decades-old news reports indicating that former President Raúl Castro — the head of Cuba’s military at the time — gave the order to shoot down the unarmed Cessna aircraft.
“We believe unequivocally that Raúl Castro is responsible for this heinous crime,” lawmakers wrote. “It is time for him to be brought to justice.”
While no indictment against Castro has been announced, Florida’s attorney general said this week that he would open a state-level investigation into the crime.
The Trump administration has also accused Cuba of not cooperating with American counterterrorism efforts, adding it alongside North Korea and Iran to a select few nations the US considers state sponsors of terrorism.
The designation stems from Cuba’s harboring of US fugitives and its refusal to extradite several Colombian rebel leaders while they were engaged in peace talks with the South American nation.