Syria’s first astronaut defects to Turkey: report

Updated 12 August 2012
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Syria’s first astronaut defects to Turkey: report

ANKARA: General Muhammed Ahmed Faris, a military aviator who became the first Syrian in space, fled to Turkey on Sunday after defecting from President Bashar Assad’s regime, the Anatolia news agency reported.
Before crossing into Turkey, Faris visited the headquarters of the Free Syrian Army in his home town Aleppo in a show of solidarity with rebel forces battling Assad’s troops in Syria’s biggest city, it said.
Anatolia said it was Faris’ fourth attempt to defect.
Faris was born in 1951 in Aleppo, where the Syrian army was pounding rebel positions on Sunday ahead of a threatened ground assault on the city.
A graduate of the Aleppo’s military pilot school in 1973, Faris joined a Soviet crew on the orbiting space station Mir in 1987, for which he was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union and also received the Order of Lenin.
Scores of senior Syrian military officers have been crossing into Turkey to link up with the FSA in recent months as the fighting in Syria escalates, often accompanied by rank-and-file troops.
Turkey has taken in more than 45,000 refugees fleeing the conflict across the border, and is also sheltering the military defectors in a separate camp where security is higher.

 


Algeria bought about 600,000 metric tons wheat in tender, traders say

Updated 13 sec ago
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Algeria bought about 600,000 metric tons wheat in tender, traders say

  • Algeria’s tender purchases are optional ⁠origin but prices indicated Black Sea region wheat could be supplied including from Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria
  • The wheat was sought for shipment in three periods from the main supply regions

HAMBURG/PARIS: Algeria’s state grains agency OAIC is believed to have purchased about 600,000 metric tons of milling wheat in a tender which closed on Tuesday with negotiations continuing on Wednesday, European traders said.
Purchases were believed to have been made at around $259 and $260 a ton cost and freight included (c&f), traders said, the same level as reported on ⁠Tuesday.
Negotiations on Wednesday ⁠about more purchases were said to have been difficult as sellers were seeking over the $260 level, a level resisted by the OAIC, traders said.
Algeria’s tender purchases are optional ⁠origin but prices indicated Black Sea region wheat could be supplied including from Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria, traders said. Argentine wheat was not expected to be used as supplies were getting tighter after large recent sales.
The wheat was sought for shipment in three periods from the main supply regions, including Europe: April ⁠16-30, ⁠May 1-15 and May 16-31. If sourced from South America or Australia, shipment is one month earlier.
Reports reflect assessments from traders and further estimates of prices and volumes are still possible later. In its previous tender on January 19, Algeria bought around 600,000 tons of milling wheat at about $254 a ton c&f.