Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor

Update Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor
Turkish authorities on Tuesday detained a former mayor and dozens of municipality officials in the western city of Izmir over alleged corruption, extending a crackdown against the country’s main opposition party. (AP/File)
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Updated 16 min 18 sec ago

Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor

Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor
  • Police detained 120 officials from the opposition Republican People’s Party, including former Izmir Mayor Tunc Soyer
  • The Izmir Public Prosecutor’s Office issued arrest warrants against 157 officials

ANKARA: Turkish authorities on Tuesday detained a former mayor and dozens of municipality officials in the western city of Izmir over alleged corruption, extending a crackdown against the country’s main opposition party.

Police detained 120 officials from the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, including former Izmir Mayor Tunc Soyer and the party’s provincial leader Senol Aslanoglu, state-run Anadolu Agency said.

In total, the Izmir Public Prosecutor’s Office issued arrest warrants against 157 officials as part of an investigation into alleged rigging of municipality tenders and fraud, it added.

Officials from CHP-controlled municipalities in Istanbul and elsewhere have faced waves of arrests this year, including Istanbul’s Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu who was arrested in March over allegations of corruption. His arrest triggered the largest street protests Turkiye has seen in more than a decade.

Imamoglu is regarded as the main challenger to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s 22-year rule and was officially nominated as his party’s presidential candidate following his imprisonment. Turkiye’s next election is due in 2028 but could come sooner.

Many people in Turkiye consider the cases to be politically driven, according to opinion polls. But Erdogan’s government insists the courts are impartial and free from political involvement.

The crackdown comes a year after the CHP made significant gains in local elections.


UAE foreign minister reaffirms Abu Dhabi’s support for UN’s nuclear watchdog

UAE foreign minister reaffirms Abu Dhabi’s support for UN’s nuclear watchdog
Updated 3 sec ago

UAE foreign minister reaffirms Abu Dhabi’s support for UN’s nuclear watchdog

UAE foreign minister reaffirms Abu Dhabi’s support for UN’s nuclear watchdog
  • Emirati minister discussed the regional situation with the IAEA chief and exchanged views on current developments in the Middle East
  • Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan said UAE values its partnership with the IAEA, which has been essential in advancing Abu Dhabi’s peaceful nuclear program

LONDON: Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, minister of foreign affairs, discussed cooperation between the UAE and the International Atomic Energy Agency during a call on Tuesday with IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi.

The Emirati minister discussed the regional situation with the IAEA chief and exchanged views on current developments in the Middle East, according to the Emirates News Agency.

Sheikh Abdullah highlighted the UAE’s support for the IAEA’s role in promoting the peaceful use of nuclear energy for sustainable development, in line with international safety and non-proliferation standards.

The UAE values its partnership with the IAEA, he said, which has been essential in advancing Abu Dhabi’s peaceful nuclear program to provide clean electricity while upholding international standards for safety, security and non-proliferation.


Israeli army kills two in West Bank, including one teen

Israeli army kills two in West Bank, including one teen
Updated 4 min 9 sec ago

Israeli army kills two in West Bank, including one teen

Israeli army kills two in West Bank, including one teen
  • Palestinian health ministry says 15-year-old Amjad Nassar Abu Awad was killed by Israeli military gunfire in Ramallah

RAMALLAH: The Palestinian health ministry said Tuesday that the Israeli army killed two people including a 15-year-old boy in separate incidents in the occupied West Bank.
“At dawn today, Tuesday, 15-year-old child Amjad Nassar Abu Awad was martyred by Israeli gunfire in the city of Ramallah,” the ministry said in a statement.
“Also at dawn today, 24-year-old young man Samer Bassam Zagharneh was martyred by Israeli gunfire near the town of Dhahiriya” in the southern West Bank, the ministry added.
The Israeli military told AFP it was “looking into” the two reported incidents.
Around 20 people, mostly young boys and teenagers, had gathered at a Ramallah hospital to mourn Abu Awad, an AFP journalist at the scene reported.
In tears, the boys touched Abu Awad’s face in the white light of the hospital morgue.
Two Palestinian teenagers, aged 13 and 15, were killed last week in the West Bank towns of Al-Yamoun and Kafr Malik respectively.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967.
Violence has soared in the West Bank since the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023 that triggered the Gaza war.
Since then, Israeli troops or settlers have killed at least 946 Palestinians, including many militants, according to the health ministry.
Over the same period, at least 35 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks or during Israeli military operations, according to Israeli figures.


Veolia scales up hazardous waste management in global GreenUp push

Veolia scales up hazardous waste management in global GreenUp push
Updated 13 min 32 sec ago

Veolia scales up hazardous waste management in global GreenUp push

Veolia scales up hazardous waste management in global GreenUp push
  • French transnational to increase hazardous waste treatment capacity by 50 percent by 2030
  • New Drop technology destroys targeted PFAS up to 99.9999%, a major step forward in fight against ‘forever chemicals’

COURRIERES: As hazardous waste becomes an emerging bottleneck in global industry, environmental services giant Veolia is taking center stage with a bold new road map. At its “Deep Dive Waste to Value” conference held in Courrieres, northern France, the company unveiled a sweeping strategy to expand hazardous waste treatment capacity by 50 percent by 2030 — a key pillar of its broader GreenUp plan to accelerate sustainable infrastructure worldwide.

The event marked a strategic repositioning, beyond the scope of a corporate update. In an age of tightening regulations, industrial transformation and health concerns tied to chemical pollutants, hazardous waste is no longer a passive liability — it is a value stream to be captured, a risk to be neutralized and a global challenge requiring scalable, science-backed solutions.

The Courrieres hazardous waste facility, one of Veolia’s flagship sites, processes about 140,000 tonnes of waste per year. (Supplied)

Veolia executives from across Europe, North America, the Middle East and the Australia–New Zealand region convened at the event, offering insights into how the company is reshaping its global hazardous waste portfolio to meet mounting environmental and regulatory demands.

From PFAS destruction technologies to global acquisitions, Veolia’s leadership outlined how the company plans to lead the next chapter in environmental security — focusing on innovation, infrastructure investment and tailored regional solutions aligned with industry needs.

From buckets of paint to PFAS: the scope of hazardous waste

Hazardous waste comes in various forms — from industrial effluents to household products like leftover paint, expired garden chemicals or solvents. The path to circularity starts not just with large-scale technology, but also with individual action. Next time you have a bucket of unused paint or expired garden products, think again before dumping it into nature — a reminder that sustainable change hinges on both systemic infrastructure and everyday choices.

At scale, Veolia aims to increase its hazardous waste treatment capacity by 530,000 tonnes, eliminate over 9 million tonnes of pollutants annually and increase revenues from this segment by 50 percent by 2030.

According to CEO Estelle Brachlianoff: “Hazardous waste treatment is becoming a strategic bottleneck for several industries. It is also an essential topic for human health and environmental security.”

Macro and micro-scale strategy

Hazardous waste is a global issue requiring both top-down and bottom-up engagement. “We need international cooperation,” Brachlianoff said, “but also change at the household level. Sustainable impact requires both.”

She identified three defining industry drivers: Pollutant removal for health, strategic industrial restructuring and supply chain resilience. “Waste is not waste anymore — it’s an untapped resource,” she added.

Veolia now treats more than 8.7 million tonnes of hazardous waste each year and reported €4.3 billion ($5 billion) in 2024 revenue from its hazardous waste segment. Its portfolio includes advanced capabilities such as strategic metal separation, battery recycling, and thermal treatment across a proprietary lab and incineration network.

Emmanuelle Menning and Estelle Brachlianoff. (Supplied)

Courrieres: Where the science happens

The Courrieres hazardous waste facility, one of Veolia’s flagship sites, processes about 140,000 tonnes of waste per year. Every load undergoes 10–20 tests, then sorting by waste family, followed by incineration or chemical treatment — a full cycle that can take as little as 10 to 45 minutes.

Due to the complexity and infrastructure requirements, treatment investments are closely tied to local waste volumes. When volumes are insufficient, waste may be transported to facilities elsewhere in Europe or beyond.

The PFAS challenge: Veolia’s new Drop Technology

One of the most significant challenges Veolia aims to tackle is PFAS — the persistent, health-risk chemicals often used in industrial and household applications. These “forever chemicals” resist breakdown due to their strong carbon-fluorine bonds and are increasingly under regulatory scrutiny.

In a major announcement, Veolia introduced Drop, its newly patented PFAS destruction technology, developed in-house and now being deployed across its 20 hazardous waste incineration lines in Europe.

Unlike traditional incineration, Drop uses a catalyst-assisted thermal process at more than 900 degrees Celsius, which not only enables destruction and removal efficiency of up to 99.9999 percent for both polymeric and non-polymeric PFAS, but also reduces corrosion and fouling in incineration systems — increasing long-term reliability.

“This is a disruptive innovation capable of eliminating targeted PFAS while preserving industrial infrastructure,” said Catherine Ricou, CEO of Veolia Hazardous Waste Europe. “We’re proud to set a European benchmark in PFAS treatment.”

Global markets and local solutions

Executives across regions presented how Veolia’s strategy is adapted to local contexts:

In Europe, Ricou highlighted four strategic pillars: Network strength, asset diversity, a granular customer base and innovation. With 20 operational sites handling waste from sectors like pharmaceuticals and households, the company is targeting 10 percent compound annual growth rate in hazardous waste EBITDA.

In North America, Bob Cappadona, president and CEO of Veolia Environmental Solutions and Services, highlighted recent acquisitions in Massachusetts and California, and the commissioning of one of the continent’s largest PFAS treatment facilities in Delaware.

From the Middle East, Helder Daravano, Veolia general manager of MAGMA, said the region is growing “twice as fast as Europe” despite being one-quarter its size. New facilities in (Tahweel) and the UAE (MAGMA) are positioning Veolia as a full-service player in the region.

In Australia and New Zealand, Matt Ead, Veolia’s national remediation services manager, detailed a shift from landfilling to pretreatment, supported by M&A activity and market-specific strategies.

Estelle Brachlianoff and Veolia executives at the "Deep Dive Waste to Value" conference in Courrières - France. (Supplied)

Scaling through GreenUp: investments and M&A

To meet rising demand, Veolia’s GreenUp program outlines both organic and acquisitive growth:


Five new treatment facilities are under development across the US, Europe, Middle East and Asia.
An additional 285,000 tonnes of capacity will be added by 2027, with a total of 430,000 tonnes by 2030.
$354 million in acquisitions across the US, Brazil, and Japan will contribute 100,000 tonnes of capacity.

Emmanuelle Menning, deputy CEO finance and purchasing, described the approach as a formula balancing growth, performance and capital allocation, adding that hazardous waste — particularly high-temperature incineration — remains one of Veolia’s most profitable segments.

Environmental security and strategic autonomy

“At Veolia, we are architects of environmental security. Our objective is to protect strategic autonomy,” said Brachlianoff, highlighting the company’s commitment to global agreements like the Basel Convention, ensuring waste does not get exported to less-regulated regions.

At Courrieres, which operates at 94–96 percent capacity, Veolia plans to reconfigure its boilers by 2028 to make the plant energy autonomous. The site today handles 80 percent domestic (Northern France) and 20 percent international waste, including from Italy.

Waste is no longer waste

The overarching takeaway: Hazardous waste is no longer just an environmental liability — it is a strategic resource, a public health priority and a business imperative. As Veolia aligns innovation with policy, technology and investment, it is helping set the global standard for the future of sustainable waste management.


Charities demand closure of Gaza aid agency backed by US, Israel

Charities demand closure of Gaza aid agency backed by US, Israel
Updated 01 July 2025

Charities demand closure of Gaza aid agency backed by US, Israel

Charities demand closure of Gaza aid agency backed by US, Israel
  • Over 500 Palestinians killed, more than 4,000 injured at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution centers
  • Gazans face ‘impossible choice: starve or risk being shot while trying desperately to reach food to feed their families’

LONDON: A group of more than 130 charities and NGOs has called for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation to be closed.

The GHF, backed by the US and Israel, has been operating since May to distribute aid but has been fiercely criticized by observers, with over 500 Palestinians killed and more than 4,000 injured at its distribution centers.

Organizations including Oxfam, Save the Children and Amnesty International on Tuesday said Palestinians are being forced into “militarized” zones in order to receive essential supplies.

“Today, Palestinians in Gaza face an impossible choice: starve or risk being shot while trying desperately to reach food to feed their families,” the groups said in a statement.

“Orphaned children and caregivers are among the dead, with children harmed in over half of the attacks on civilians at these sites.”

The GHF was established after Israel imposed a blockade on Gaza following the breakdown of a US-backed ceasefire with Hamas in March.

Four aid distribution centers were set up, replacing around 400 that were run by international bodies during the ceasefire.

The group of aid agencies and charities said the GHF system “is not a humanitarian response” to the problems facing Gazans, who have lived in a constant state of displacement and supply shortages since the outbreak of the war in October 2023.

“Amidst severe hunger and famine-like conditions, many families tell us they are now too weak to compete for food rations,” the group added.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday condemned the GHF’s distribution system as being “inherently unsafe.”

It came after a report in Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Israeli soldiers were ordered to shoot directly at Palestinian civilians to disperse them from overcrowded GHF aid distribution centers.


NGOs urge end to US-backed Gaza aid distribution system

NGOs urge end to US-backed Gaza aid distribution system
Updated 01 July 2025

NGOs urge end to US-backed Gaza aid distribution system

NGOs urge end to US-backed Gaza aid distribution system
  • The signatories to Monday’s statement included NGOs from Europe, the United States and Israel working in medical assistance, hunger relief, development and human rights
  • More than 500 Palestinians were killed and almost 4,000 injured while trying to access or distribute food in less than four weeks

JERUSALEM: A group of 169 aid organizations called for an end to a US- and Israeli-backed aid distribution scheme in Gaza after repeated reports of people being killed while seeking rations.
The NGOs urged a return to the UN-led aid mechanism that existed in the war-torn territory until March, when Israel imposed a full blockade on humanitarian assistance entering Gaza during an impasse in truce talks with Palestinian militant group Hamas.
“NGOs call for immediate action to end the deadly Israeli distribution scheme (including the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation) in Gaza,” the organizations wrote in a joint statement Monday.
They urged action to “revert to the existing UN-led coordination mechanisms, and lift the Israeli government’s blockade on aid and commercial supplies.”
The US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has been tasked with distributing aid in the Palestinian territory since late May, when the two-month blockade was partially eased after mounting international condemnation and warnings of imminent famine.
GHF operations have since been marred by chaotic scenes and near-daily reports of Israeli forces firing on those waiting to collect rations in the territory, where the Israeli military is seeking to destroy Hamas.
The signatories to Monday’s statement included NGOs from Europe, the United States and Israel working in medical assistance, hunger relief, development and human rights.
They said more than 500 Palestinians were killed and almost 4,000 injured while trying to access or distribute food in less than four weeks. The Hamas-ruled territory’s health ministry has given similar figures.
“Under the Israeli government’s new scheme, starved and weakened civilians are being forced to trek for hours through dangerous terrain and active conflict zones, only to face a violent, chaotic race to reach fenced, militarized distribution sites,” the statement read.
Aid distribution in Gaza was traditionally coordinated through various NGOs and UN agencies, notably the UN agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA, which had 13,000 staff in the coastal enclave before the war.
Israel said it tasked GHF with distribution in Gaza to keep Hamas from controlling the flow of aid.
The Israeli military last week denied a newspaper report that cited Israeli soldiers as saying they had been ordered to fire at civilians near aid centers.
It said in a statement that it was “operating to allow and facilitate the distribution of humanitarian aid” by GHF, “and to secure the routes leading to the distribution centers, in order to allow the aid to reach the civilians rather than Hamas.”
It added that it was examining “reports of incidents of harm to the civilians approaching the distribution centers.”