Middle East & North Africa

India: Teachers read students' minds minutely and foil their plan

Kanpur: The teachers always stop what the  students plan in their minds. They fail to fulfil their plan as their masters minutely read their faces and easily learn their ideas in a short period.

It could be aptly a curious coincidence but it remains a swapping reality every day. Yet, it seems simply, no-nonsense, matter-of-factual drily funny but not humorous in any sort of way.

When students were surprised to find one subject’s marks just the day after the end of examinations, they began to expect other subjects’ marks to be disclosed on a regular turn of the days.

Turkey: Military operation in Syria stays on table while Ankara sees terror threat there — Erdogan

ANKARA, July 20. /TASS/: A potential new military operation in northern Syria will remain on Turkey’s agenda, while Ankara still sees a terror threat coming from the neighboring state, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday.

Iran demands "serious" economic guarantees from U.S. in nuclear talks: spokesman

TEHRAN, July 20 (Xinhua) -- Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani said Wednesday that for the talks to save the 2015 nuclear deal, the United States should give guarantees for securing Iran's economic interests under a possible agreement, according to official IRNA news agency.

"The ground is ready for an agreement, and we believe that there is no important problem to this end," he said during his press conference.

Washington should make a political decision, Kanaani said, adding that Iran demands "serious" guarantees from the United States.

Cyprus president: Turkish Cypriot proposals aim at partition

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Proposals put forward by the leader of Cyprus’ breakaway Turkish Cypriots are a new, “unacceptable” bid for the ethnically divided island’s permanent partition, the nation’s Greek Cypriot president said Wednesday.

President Nicos Anastasiades said in a statement that he considered the ideas to be “another attempt to entrench the unacceptable narrative for a settlement based on two independent states.”

Libya says oil exports resumed after monthslong hiatus

CAIRO (AP) — Libya resumed oil exports Wednesday, ending a hiatus that lasted months.

The resumption came after the country restarted production at oil fields following the firing of the chairman of the state-run oil corporation by one of the country’s rival governments.

A Malta-flagged tanker, Matala, docked at the al-Sidra terminal to ship one million barrels of crude oil, the new leadership of the National Oil Corporation said. The vessel will then head to Italy, it said.

Israel: Elevator project in Old Jerusalem leads to surprising finds

JERUSALEM (AP) — Installing an elevator doesn’t normally involve a 2,000-year plunge into an ancient city’s history. But in Jerusalem, even seemingly simple construction projects can lead to archaeological endeavors.

Archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem say they have made numerous discoveries, including an ornate first-century villa with its own ritual bath, after a project began to increase access for disabled people to Jerusalem’s Western Wall.

Iran advises Turkiye against Syria military operation

19 July 2022; MEMO: Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has advised Turkiye's President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, not to launch a new military operation in Syria, in advance of a trilateral summit with Russia, Reuters reports.

According to the report, a new military operation would be to the detriment of Syria, Turkiye and the region, Khamenei said.

Turkiye hopes US will not fall for lawmaker 'game' on F-16 sales

19 July 2022; MEMO: Ankara hopes Washington will not fall for a "game" by some US lawmakers against the potential sale of F-16 jets, Turkiye's Defence Minister said, after the House of Representatives approved a Bill creating a new hurdle to any Turkish purchase, Reuters reports.

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