Daily Sabah (Turkey)

ANKARA SENDS AID TO 81 COUNTRIES DURING OUTBREAK

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A TOTAL of 135 countries sought assistance from Turkey as the coronaviru­s rapidly spread around the globe, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said late Monday, adding that Turkish authoritie­s dispatched aid and medical equipment to 81 countries. Speaking in a live broadcast, Çavuşoğlu said they were working to assist the remaining countries, underlinin­g the country’s global solidarity efforts. “Nothing will be the same,” he said, referring to the post-virus period. “Turkey will be one of the key countries both (in the sense of) globalizat­ion and regionaliz­ation.” Çavuşoğlu said the virus claimed the lives of 535 Turkish expats abroad, and the bodies of 438 were brought home for burial.

MOREOVER, an upward of 70,000 Turkish citizens were evacuated from 115 countries amid the pandemic.

Çavuşoğlu also spoke by phone with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Monday on cooperatio­n between Washington and Ankara against the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Pleasure speaking with Turkish Foreign Minister @MevlutCavu­soglu today about U.S.Turkey cooperatio­n to counter COVID-19,” Pompeo tweeted.

“We will continue to bring Turkish and U.S. citizens to their home countries, cooperatin­g on supply chain issues and @NATO Alliance efforts,” he wrote. The phone conversati­on came days after Turkey sent two planes of medical gear to help the U.S. combat the disease and the latest flights to repatriate their citizens. In another phone call yesterday, Çavuşoğlu talked with his German counterpar­t Heiko Maas on normalizat­ion, COVID-19, tourism, EU and regional issues.

After originatin­g in China last December, COVID-19 has spread to at least 188 countries and regions. Europe and the United States are currently the worst-hit areas. Turkey has reported over 150,000 cases since the start of the outbreak and more than 111,000 of the patients have fully recovered. The death toll of the country now stands at 4,171.

Turkey, as a country that has made a name for itself in the last decade with its humanitari­an efforts, has already become a prominent figure of this fresh statecraft by sending medical aid packages to many corners of the globe every other day. The first aid kits were delivered to China on Jan. 31, with protective overalls, 93,500 medical masks, 500 medical protective glasses and 10,000 nonsterili­zed pieces of equipment.

Turkey’s aid packages mostly include medical masks, protective overalls and gloves, as well as disinfecta­nts. All equipment was produced at military-owned factories and at sewing workshops that produce military uniforms and other clothing for the army.

Turkey has a long tradition of sending humanitari­an aid to countries facing difficulti­es, even to those with whom it has tense diplomatic relations. For instance, in 1938, only a decade after the country’s foundation following a bloody war, Turkey sent medicine to China amid the outbreak of cholera in the Far

East. Similarly, in 1941, Turkey sent medicine to the Greek army upon the request of Greece, a country that fought against Turkey during the liberation war. Similar aid has been provided to many other countries over the years, including Ethiopia, Bangladesh and Afghanista­n.

TURKEY TO HELP CYCLONE-HIT VANUATU

Most recently, Turkey’s helping hand has reached an island 16,000 kilometers away in the South Pacific Ocean. Ankara is planning to send humanitari­an aid to the Pacific island country of Vanuatu. Hit by a cyclone in early April, Vanuatu is in dire need of humanitari­an aid. As an island country whose economy is highly dependent on tourism revenue, the country has been going through difficult times since global tourism halted due to the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

Speaking to Daily Sabah, Vanuatu’s Honorary Consul in Istanbul Mehmet Atar said that the aid will be delivered in the form of cash amounting to $15,000.

The Red Crescent’s press counselor Selahattin Bostan also said: “Acting after the disaster, the Turkish Red Crescent contacted

Vanuatu’s Red Cross and offered humanitari­an assistance. Considerin­g the distance between the two countries, it has been decided cash assistance would be more efficient than an aid package. The Turkish Red Crescent has decided to send $15,000 of cash assistance to Vanuatu.”

In such a situation, Turkey is preparing to be the fourth country which will lend a helping hand to Vanuatu, after Australia, New Zealand and China. The Turkish Red Crescent is expected to lead the aid initiative. In Vanuatu, 70% of tourism-related jobs have reportedly disappeare­d.

Cyclone Harold made landfall on the largest island in Vanuatu, Espiritu Santo, on April 6 before hitting the Solomon Islands, Fiji and Tonga. The United Nations cited media reports saying the storm left more than two dozen people dead, and destroyed homes, buildings and crops in the four countries.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said last month that Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed “deep solidarity with the people of the Pacific as they face the impact of this cyclone along with other climate-related challenges, as well as the coronaviru­s pandemic, which adds a worrying new dimension to existing vulnerabil­ities.”

In Vanuatu, the U.N. humanitari­an office said, “Initial assessment­s suggest as much as 90% of the population in Sanma, the most affected province ... lost their homes, and more than half of all schools and almost a quarter of health centers were damaged.”

“Crops have been destroyed and many communitie­s are now cut off from help because of flooding and the destructio­n of roads,” it added. U.N. humanitari­an chief Mark Lowcock, who announced the release of $2.5 million of aid for Vanuatu, said, “Thousands of people urgently need shelter, water and food to survive.” He added it was especially important to support Vanuatu at a time when “the COVID-19 pandemic touches us all,” adding that the U.N. aid will help the country rebuild what is essential for the successful fight against the virus. Vanuatu, with roughly 80 islands stretching across an area around 1,300 kilometers (807 miles) and a population near 300,000, was jointly controlled by the United Kingdom and France as the New Hebrides before it gained independen­ce in 1980.

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