
Dilek Kütük
Articles
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Apr 18, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Nada Shakir |Dilara Aslan Özer |Talha Kose |Dilek Kütük
The RIF controls most of Sudan’s gold mining industry, which is involved in trade with countries such as the United Arab Emirates. It has also been accused of committing a massacre against protesters in June 2019, leaving 120 dead. Hemedti has served as the vice head of the Sudanese Sovereign Council, which was headed by al-Burhan. He has received support from the United Arab Emirates and Ethiopia while al-Burhan has the backing of the U.S. and Egypt.
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Apr 14, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Dilek Kütük |Dilara Aslan Özer |Talha Kose |Cengiz Algan
As a result, the DPS lost power in the August 2020 parliamentary elections for the first time since Montenegro gained independence in 2006. The opposition parties united against the DPS and a coalition government led by the pro-Serbian “For the Future of Montenegro” was formed. This was followed by intra-governmental crises and changes.
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Apr 12, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Nour Naim |Dilara Aslan Özer |Talha Kose |Dilek Kütük
The Chinese approach to AIArtificial intelligence is a broad field that has multiple sectors and it is hard to make a statement about one country dominating it. For example, China has excelled in facial recognition technology more than other countries, using it as a form of control and local surveillance. The ethics question here is whether China amassing big data to feed AI algorithms comes at the cost of the privacy of Chinese citizens.
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Apr 10, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Usman Masood |Dilek Kütük |Cengiz Algan |Nour Naim
The establishment—both local and global—had had enough. A vote of no confidence was called, and the PTI’s coalition partners spontaneously pulled back their support en bloc, amidst cries of foul play from Khan. The two major rival parties—the PMLN and the PPP—which had been each other’s fierce opponents for the last three decades, united under the banner of the new Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), attracting small parties that had deserted Khan in favor of the new coalition.
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Apr 7, 2023 |
politicstoday.org | Ali Lmrabet |Dilek Kütük |Cengiz Algan |Nour Naim
Racist rhetoric These migrants were considered “âbid,” slaves, and as “slaves” they were subjected to the violence of deprivation of freedom and control over their own body. The case created a considerable stir around the world, but not in Libya, where few are unaware of the atrocious end of Colonel Gaddafi’s Black guards, composed of Chadians, who were mobbed and lynched during the 2011 revolt.
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