Author: afp

  • Erdogan’s rival Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen dies in exile

    Erdogan’s rival Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen dies in exile

    US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who was accused by Ankara of organising a failed 2016 coup, has died in exile in the United States aged 83, his movement and the Turkish government said Monday.

    Turkish-born Gulen, who had lived in the United States since 1999, was once a close ally of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan before the two became bitter enemies.

    “Our intelligence sources confirm the death of the leader of the FETO organisation,” Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told a press conference, using Turkey’s term for Gulen’s once-influential Hizmet movement.

    Turkey’s TRT public television said the preacher, who had lived in Pennsylvania for a quarter of a century and was stripped of his Turkish nationality in 2017, died in hospital overnight.

    In a message on X, Gulen’s website Herkul, which is banned in Turkey, said he died on “October 20”, pledging to share details about his funeral.

    Gulen moved to Pennsylvania in 1999, ostensibly for health reasons, and from there he ran Hizmet which, at the time, had a sprawling network of public schools on every continent.

    In 2013 he had a major falling out with Erdogan and three years later the Turkish strongman accused him of plotting to overthrow him, dubbing Hizmet “the Fethullah Terror Organisation” (FETO).

    Some 250 people died on July 15, 2016 when a rogue military faction tried to overthrow Turkey’s government using warplanes and tanks, with Erdogan blaming Gulen supporters within the military.

    “This organisation has become a threat rarely seen in the history of our nation,” Fidan said, accusing its followers of “being used as a weapon against their own country”.

    Despite Gulen’s death, Turkey would continue “the fight against this organisation, which poses a national security problem”, Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc wrote on X.

    Once an ally who helped Erdogan when he became prime minister in the early 2000s, Gulen’s ties with him became strained in 2010.

    Three years later, Gulen became persona non grata when a corruption scandal engulfed the Turkish premier’s inner circle.

    Erdogan blamed Gulen, and later began accusing him of terror links although the preacher repeatedly insisted his movement was merely a network of charitable and business institutions.

    Things worsened after the coup, with the authorities prosecuting more than 700,000 people and handing a life sentence to some 3,000 Gulen followers for their alleged involvement in the putsch.

    Bayram Balci, a researcher at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences-Po) told AFP the death of the once-charismatic preacher would have little impact in Turkey.

    “Since the break with Erdogan in 2010 and especially after the attempted coup in 2016, Gulen’s image has been very bad. Few people hold him in high esteem,” he told AFP.

    There was no chance Ankara would allow Gulen’s body to be repatriated for burial, and he would likely be buried near his home in Pennsylvania, he said.

    Hizmet is “no longer the big movement that it once was” with its influence much reduced and its vast network of schools now only mainly operating in Germany, the United States, Nigeria and South Africa.

    Turkey still regularly rounds up Gulen followers and demands their extradition from countries where his network is active.

    Turkish security sources quoted by the private NTV broadcaster said very few people were expected to attend Gulen’s funeral and that his body would likely be buried in the US at a location which would be kept secret.

  • Fans gather to mourn Liam Payne’s death at UK and other vigils 

    Fans gather to mourn Liam Payne’s death at UK and other vigils 

    Fans mourning Liam Payne’s death turned out across Britain and beyond at organised vigils Sunday, with at least 1,000 gathering in central London to pay tribute to the former One Direction star.

    It came four days after Payne died aged 31 following a fall from the balcony of his Buenos Aires hotel room, prompting an outpouring of grief and condolences from family, former bandmates, fans and others.

    Investigators have said he appeared to have been “going through an episode of substance abuse”.

    Those at the London memorial at the Peter Pan statue in Hyde Park were encouraged in social media posts to bring “flowers, letters, balloons, pictures” and did not disappoint.

    Gathering in the rain under umbrellas bearing those things and more, the crowd of mainly young people sang One Direction songs after also standing in silence for periods.

    “He was such a big part of our childhood — we just came to pay our respect,” student Katie Etchells, 20, wearing a One Direction t-shirt, told AFP.

    She was one of many who said that they at first thought word of his death was “fake news”, calling the realisation it was true “very upsetting”.

    “I think he’ll be happy to know that so many people does love him,” a tearful Luna Franco, 20, from Italy, told AFP.

    – ‘Unify’ – –

    Musician Shukhrat Turdikhodjaev, 21, said he had gone from “disbelief at first” to shock on hearing Payne had died.

    He added the turnout showed that the singer “was able to connect and unify so many different people”.

    Elsewhere, news reports and social media posts showed hundreds also gathered in the Scottish cities Edinburgh and Glasgow, as well as Paris, New York, Stockholm and many other places.

    Fans were also set to gather later Sunday in Birmingham in central England — near Wolverhampton where Payne was born and raised.

    He would shoot to fame around the world as a teenager in the hugely successful pop group One Direction, which formed in 2010 after its members appeared on “The X Factor”.

    Sunday’s meet-ups mirror gatherings seen across Latin American in recent days.

    In Buenos Aires, tearful fans have continued to mass in front of the Casa Sur Hotel, where Payne plunged to his death and an altar dedicated to him has been created full of flowers and messages.

    On Friday, his father Geoff Payne visited the scene, thanking fans gathered there in a shared moment of grief.

    Meanwhile Mexico City, the Ecuadorian capital Quito and various towns and cities in Colombia are among the other places to have seen impromptu ceremonies for Payne.

    – ‘Just really sad’ –

    Anguished reactions have continued to stream in, including from Girls Aloud star Cheryl Tweedy, Payne’s former partner and the mother of their seven-year-old boy, who called his death an “earth shattering event”.

    Payne’s One Direction bandmate Zayn Malik said Saturday on X that he was postponing the current US leg of his tour until January, citing “the heartbreaking loss experienced this week.”

    Payne died from “multiple traumas” and “internal and external haemorrhaging” after the fall from the hotel, an autopsy found.

    It suggested he had not tried to stop his fall and was in a state of “semi or total unconsciousness” before his death.

    The singer, who had spoken publicly about struggles with alcohol and coping with fame from an early age, was alone at the time and appeared to be “going through an episode of substance abuse,” prosecutors have said.

    Back in London, fan Chelsea Willy, 20, summed up the feelings of those mourning the loss.

    “It is just really sad,” the actress said. “I’ve been a fan of him since I was very little,” she added, noting she cried on learning the news.

  • Liam Payne: One Direction singer swept up by teenage stardom

    Liam Payne: One Direction singer swept up by teenage stardom

    Liam Payne, who died aged 31 after plunging from a hotel balcony in Buenos Aires, spent more than half his life in the public eye as a member of one of the world’s most successful boy bands.

    The singer from Wolverhampton in central England was first unsuccessful in his audition on the hugely popular television talent show “The X Factor”.

    But he hit gold on the programme in 2010, aged just 16, joining Niall Horan, Harry Styles, Louis Tomlinson and Zayn Malik — and One Direction was born.

    Over the next six years, the group enjoyed global fame and legions of screaming fans, selling more than 70 million copies of their five albums. They went on four world tours and won nearly 200 awards.

    Payne, described by former X Factor host Dermot O’Leary as “a joy… polite, grateful and… always humble”, was said to be the “driving force” behind some of One Direction’s most loved songs.

    He penned “Story of My Life”, “Night Changes” and “Midnight Memories” among others, and once referred to himself as the “first verse man” — singing the coveted first verse of most of the songs on the band’s first album “Up All Night”.

    After Malik left One Direction in 2015, the band went on an “indefinite hiatus” a year later, prompting Payne and the others to start solo careers.

    Payne met with early success with his debut solo single “Strip That Down”, released in 2017, reaching number three on the UK Singles Chart.

    Last year, he revealed he was working on a second solo album, having delayed a planned tour due to health problems, and released his last single “Teardrops” in March 2024.

    – Charity –

    Payne, who fell from a third-floor hotel balcony in the Argentinian capital on Wednesday, was in the city to watch his former bandmate Horan in concert.

    While the exact circumstances of the fall are unclear, police said they responded to a report of “an aggressive man who may be under the influence of drugs or alcohol”.

    He leaves behind a son from a previous relationship with the Girls Aloud singer Cheryl.

    News of Payne’s death left fans distraught. “I feel like it’s a part of adolescence lost,” said one, Lena Duek, 21, outside the hotel.

    She described One Direction as the soundtrack of her teenage years and had been hoping for them to reunite.

    British anti-poverty charity Trussell praised Payne for his “compassion and kindness” for supporting their foodbanks. Chief executive Emma Revie said he funded more than 360,000 meals during the pandemic.

    – Anxiety, frustrations –

    Payne’s death came as he faced heavy criticism on social media following an interview in which his ex-partner Maya Henry accused him of being abusive.

    In the interview this week, Henry said Payne would tell her he was “going to die” as a manipulation tactic. The Daily Mail reported Henry obtained a “cease-and-desist” order against Payne.

    In recent years, the singer opened up about his struggles with alcohol and dealing with fame at such a young age.

    “I’ve found in my life at the moment, because of the way things have happened, that everything’s kind of fast-forwarded,” he told Esquire Magazine in 2019.

    Speaking about anxiety and losing his sense of self, he added: “It’s a bit like being stuck out in deep water and you’re just going ‘well, it would be really nice to get back now’.”

    However, after taking a break, Payne said last year he was ready to return to music career in a video titled “I’m Back… “.

    In it, he said he was sober and apologised for taking out “frustrations” with his career on “everybody else”.

    “The rest of the boys really stuck by me when I needed them most, they kinda came to the rescue,” he added.

    “I feel like I’ve got more of a grip on life now, and everything that was getting away from me.”

  • Trio wins Economics Nobel for work on wealth inequality

    Trio wins Economics Nobel for work on wealth inequality

    The Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded on Monday to Turkish-American Daron Acemoglu and British-Americans Simon Johnson and James Robinson for research into wealth inequality between nations.

    By examining the various political and economic systems introduced by European colonisers, the three have been able to demonstrate a relationship between institutions and prosperity, the jury said.

    “Reducing the vast differences in income between countries is one of our time’s greatest challenges,” Jakob Svensson, chair of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences, said in a statement.

    “The laureates have demonstrated the importance of societal institutions for achieving this,” Svensson added.

    Acemoglu, 57, is a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), as is Johnson, 61.

    Robinson, 64, is a professor at the University of Chicago.

    The jury highlighted the laureates’ work, illuminating how societal institutions play a role in explaining why some countries prosper while others do not.

    “I am delighted. It’s just a real shock and amazing news,” Acemoglu told reporters via telephone as the award was announced in Stockholm.

    The Economics Prize is the only Nobel not among the original five created in the will of Swedish scientist Alfred Nobel, who died in 1896.

    It was instead created through a donation from the Swedish central bank in 1968, leading detractors to dub it “a false Nobel”.

    However, like for the other Nobel science prizes, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decides the winner and follows the same selection process.

    The economics prize wraps up this year’s Nobel season, which honoured achievements in artificial intelligence for the physics and chemistry prizes, while the Peace Prize went to Japanese group Nihon Hidankyo, committed to fighting nuclear weapons.

    South Korea’s Han Kan won the literature prize — the only woman laureate so far this year — while the medicine prize lauded discoveries in understanding gene regulation.

    The Nobel Prizes consist of a diploma, a gold medal and a one-million-dollar sum.

    They will be presented at ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo on December 10, the anniversary of the 1896 death of scientist and prize creator Alfred Nobel.

  • Pre-Halloween ‘Terrifier’ lands atop North America box office

    Pre-Halloween ‘Terrifier’ lands atop North America box office

    New indie horror film “Terrifier 3” opened atop the North American box office, while last weekend’s leader, “Joker: Folie a Deux,” suffered a record plunge from its own debut, industry watchers reported Sunday.

    “Terrifier 3,” from indie studio Cineverse and Icon Events, earned an estimated $18.2 million for the Friday-through-Sunday period, according to Exhibitor Relations. Analyst David A. Gross called that “an outstanding opening for a third episode in an indie horror series.”

    The slasher film has Art the Clown back to spread holiday fear — and plenty of blood and guts — with David Howard Thornton again playing the psychopathic harlequin.

    Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s “The Wild Robot” placed second again, at $13.4 million. Lupita Nyong’o voices Roz, a robot stranded on a remote island who is forced to befriend woodland animals to survive.

    That left Warner Bros.’ “Joker” film, a dark musical Batman spinoff, suffering a huge 80 percent drop, from last weekend’s $40 million to $7.1 million — a stunning result for a film with a budget close to $200 million.

    That second-week collapse was the worst ever for a comic book-based movie and one of the biggest for any film, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

    In fourth place, down one spot, was another Warner Bros.’ film, “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice,” at $7.0 million. Michael Keaton again plays the back-from-the-dead title character.

    And in fifth, at $3.8 million, was Focus Features’ new “Piece by Piece,” a comedy-drama using Lego animation to follow the life of singer-songwriter Pharrell Williams. The all-star voice cast includes Gwen Stefani, Snoop Dogg, Kendrick Lamar, Jay-Z, Justin Timberlake and Busta Rhymes.

    Meantime, a gritty new film about Donald Trump, “The Apprentice,” detailing his early rise in New York, had a weak opening, placing 10th with $1.6 million. Trump had threatened to try to block the release over its often unflattering depiction. Sebastian Stan plays Trump.

    Rounding out the top 10 were:

    “Transformers One” ($3.7 million)

    “Saturday Night” ($3.4 million)

    “My Hero Academia: You’re Next” ($3 million)

    “The Nightmare Before Christmas (reissue): ($2.3 million)

    “The Apprentice” ($1.6 million)

  • Doraemon ke awaz khamosh hogayi: Woman behind the voice passes away

    Doraemon ke awaz khamosh hogayi: Woman behind the voice passes away

    A Japanese actor who was the voice of “Doraemon”, a cartoon cat robot beloved by children in Japan and other countries has died, her agency said Friday. Nobuyo Oyama was 90.

    For a quarter of a century until 2005, Oyama lent her endearingly hoarse voice to the titular blue feline from the 22nd century with his “magic pocket” and its supply of fantastical gadgets, including a door that lets you travel anywhere.

    She “passed away on September 29 due to old age”, her talent agency told AFP. Her funeral was attended by close relatives, it said.

    “Doraemon” is still on air as one of the longest-running Japanese anime series, popular across Asia and farther afield.

    While Oyama’s successor has played the role for nearly two decades, her voice remains the definitive sound of the robot for many who grew up hearing it.

    In “Doraemon”, the cuddly robot cat with its huge smile travels back in time to help a lazy schoolboy called Nobita overcome the trials of everyday life.

    Created by the artist Fujiko F. Fujio, the character first appeared in manga strips in 1969, making the transition to the small and big screen over the following decades.

  • US expands sanctions against Iran’s oil industry over Israel strikes

    US expands sanctions against Iran’s oil industry over Israel strikes

    The United States hit Iran’s oil and petrochemicals sectors with new sanctions Friday in response to Tehran’s October 1 attack against Israel, designating dozens of new companies and firms.

    The US Treasury Department said it was going after Iran’s so-called “shadow fleet” of ships involved in selling Iranian oil in circumvention of existing sanctions, designating 10 companies and 17 vessels as “blocked property” over their involvement in shipments of Iranian petroleum and petrochemical products.

    The State Department also announced it was slapping sanctions on six other firms and six ships for “knowingly engaging in a significant transaction for the purchase, acquisition, sale, transport, or marketing of petroleum or petroleum products from Iran.”

    “Today’s sanctions target Iranian efforts to channel revenues from its energy industry to finance deadly and disruptive activity — including development of its nuclear program, the proliferation of ballistic missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

    The sanctions form part of the US response to Iran’s attack, in which it launched some 200 ballistic missiles against Israel in retaliation for the killing of Tehran-backed militant leaders and a general from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

    Israel has said its response to Iran’s second direct attack against its territory this year would be “deadly, precise, and surprising.”

    US President Joe Biden told reporters last week that Israel should consider “other alternatives than striking oil fields,” amid reports it was planning to do so.

    His national security advisor Jake Sullivan said Friday that sanctions had been announced after the president had consulted with America’s allies and partners.

    “These measures will help further deny Iran financial resources used to support its missile programs and provide support for terrorist groups that threaten the United States, its allies, and partners,” Sullivan said in a statement.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington had made clear after the October 1 attack that Tehran would face consequences.

    “To that end, we are taking steps today to disrupt the flow of revenue the Iranian regime uses to fund its nuclear program and missile development, support terrorist proxies and partners, and perpetuate conflict throughout the Middle East,” he said in a statement.

  • Trump biopic ‘The Apprentice’ hits US theaters weeks before election 

    Trump biopic ‘The Apprentice’ hits US theaters weeks before election 

    Explosive Donald Trump biopic “The Apprentice” hits US theaters Friday, with filmmakers gambling that it will draw audiences in a fiercely polarized nation just weeks before its subject’s election showdown with rival Kamala Harris.

    The hot-topic film about the Republican candidate’s younger years has drawn legal threats from Trump’s attorneys, not least for deeply unflattering scenes including a depiction of the former president raping his wife.

    None of the major Hollywood studios was willing to risk distributing the polarizing movie, which is instead being released in some 1,700 North American movie theaters this weekend by indie studio Briarcliff Entertainment.

    “I think it’s interesting that people think this movie is controversial,” said director Ali Abbasi at the film’s New York premiere this week, which was attended by stars Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong.

    “Think about it. We’re talking about a person who is actually convicted in civil court of sexual assault.”

    The most talked-about scene in “The Apprentice” shows Trump raping his first wife, Ivana, after she belittles him for growing overweight and bald.

    In real life, Ivana accused Trump of raping her during divorce proceedings, but later rescinded the allegation. She died in 2022.

    Controversy tends to raise awareness, said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for Comscore, “but whether that translates to people wanting to see it is a whole different thing.”

    “The Apprentice” is “not going to be the number one movie at the box office this weekend,” he predicted.

    But it can still only benefit from the timing, much like the recent successful release of another biopic, “Reagan.”

    “You’ve got to strike while the iron is hot, and right now political movies are pretty hot.”

    Despite the headlines, “The Apprentice” offers a nuanced view of the young Trump as an ambitious but naive social climber, desperately trying to navigate the cutthroat world of Manhattan property deals and politics.

    “I really don’t think we’ve done like a hit job on Donald Trump,” Abbasi told AFP at the Cannes film festival in May, where he used a press conference to invite Trump to watch the movie before judging it.

    On Wednesday, marketers hired a plane to fly a banner over a Trump rally in Pennsylvania which read “TRUMP GO SEE THE APPRENTICE FRIDAY.”

    Nonetheless, Trump’s lawyers have vowed to sue the producers, calling the film “garbage” and “pure malicious defamation.”

    Its title reflects the name of NBC television show “The Apprentice,” which brought Trump fame and fortune over 15 seasons beginning in 2004.

    Executive producer James Shani told the New York premiere audience the film had been “especially difficult” to release, and praised Briarcliff for being the only distributor with “the balls to get us here.”

    “I think that says a lot about the time that we’re in,” he said.

  • Let ‘Emily in Paris’ remain in Paris, Macron says

    Let ‘Emily in Paris’ remain in Paris, Macron says

    French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview published Wednesday he hoped that Netflix’s hit series “Emily in Paris” would remain centred on the French capital rather than move to Rome.

    The fourth season of “Emily in Paris”, currently streaming, takes events to the Italian capital where the show’s star, played by Lily Collins, seeks to break new ground both personally and professionally.

    When the show was renewed for a fifth season last month, the series’ creators said it would play out between Paris and Rome, with Emily having “a presence” in Italy.

    Darren Star, the creator and showrunner of “Emily in Paris”, was quoted as saying that the show’s heroine “was becoming very comfortable in Paris. I wanted to throw her into some unfamiliar waters”.

    Asked by US magazine Variety what he thought of the move, Macron said he would not take it lying down.

    “We will fight hard,” he said. “And we will ask them to remain in Paris.”

    Macron’s wife Brigitte has a cameo appearance in the show’s fourth season, in which, during a chance meeting in a restaurant, she says she follows Emily on Instagram.

    “I was super proud, and she was very happy to do it,” the president said about his wife’s effort. “‘Emily in Paris’ is super positive in terms of attractiveness for the country. For my own business, it’s a very good initiative.”

    Was he asked to appear on the show? “I’m less attractive than Brigitte,” Macron replied.

    “Emily in Paris” has been mostly lambasted by French critics for showing the French capital in what they say is an unrealistically glamorous light. Some of them have admitted, however, that it has its moments.

    “It’s a saccharine series filled with stereotypes,” judged culture magazine Telerama when the show first aired. “And yet we can’t get ourselves to totally hate it.”

    Britain’s The Guardian came to the show’s defence. “Yes, Emily in Paris is unrealistic”, the paper said. “But when it comes to escapist TV, reality is overrated.”

  • India mourns death of billionaire Ratan Tata

    India mourns death of billionaire Ratan Tata

    Crowds of mourners gathered in India’s financial capital, Mumbai, on Thursday for the funeral of industrialist Ratan Tata, hailed as a “titan” who led one of the country’s biggest conglomerates.

    Tata, who died at the age of 86 on Wednesday, transformed the Tata Group into a sprawling international enterprise with a portfolio ranging from software to sports cars.

    His coffin, draped in an Indian flag, was flanked by a guard of honour, with a marching band of trumpets and drums accompanying the procession.

    Mumbai has declared a day of mourning, with the funeral rites to take place on Thursday afternoon.

    “A titan of Indian industry”, The Hindu newspaper called him on its front page. “India loses its crown jewel”, the Hindustan Times wrote.

    Tributes also poured in from fellow industrialists, with Asia’s richest man, Mukesh Ambani, saying it was a “big loss, not just to the Tata group, but to every Indian”.

    Who was Ratan Tata?

    Tata was born in Mumbai in 1937 into a family of Parsis — a proud but dwindling community which played an outsized role in the city’s business affairs under British rule.

    He had intended to chart his own course in life as an architect after graduating from Cornell University in New York.

    But an appeal from his grandmother saw him return to India in 1962 and join the sprawling family business, beginning work as a factory floor labourer and sleeping in a hostel for trainees.

    He took over the family empire in 1991, riding the wave of the radical free-market reforms India had just unleashed that year.

    Tata’s 21 years at its helm saw the salt-to-steel conglomerate expand its global footprint.

    His 2008 decision to purchase Britain’s loss-making Jaguar and Land Rover carmakers for $2.3 billion burnished his reputation when Tata Group was able to restructure both brands and return them to profit the following year.

    The Tata Group said his philanthropy work “touched the lives of millions.”

    “From education to healthcare, his initiatives have left a deep-rooted mark that will benefit generations to come,” the company added.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi called Tata “a visionary business leader, a compassionate soul and an extraordinary human being.”

    Modi praised Tata for providing “stable leadership to one of India’s oldest and most prestigious business houses”.

    People from all walks of life appreciate him for his service towards the country.

    In one of his last social media post he addressed the concerns regarding health that was posted two days ago.