Turkey Requires Negative PCR Tests for All Incoming Passengers

People wearing masks take photos in the historic Sultanahmet Square with Hagia Sophia in the background, Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP)
People wearing masks take photos in the historic Sultanahmet Square with Hagia Sophia in the background, Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP)
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Turkey Requires Negative PCR Tests for All Incoming Passengers

People wearing masks take photos in the historic Sultanahmet Square with Hagia Sophia in the background, Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP)
People wearing masks take photos in the historic Sultanahmet Square with Hagia Sophia in the background, Istanbul, Turkey, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP)

Turkey is enacting precautions for international travel, requiring a negative COVID-19 test for passengers to enter the country starting Monday until March.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca tweeted a statement Friday saying travelers would need to present a negative result from a PCR test taken in a 72-hour window to board international flights en route to Turkey. Previously, tests weren't required for travel to Turkey.

The rule would apply to all land and sea arrivals starting Wednesday. Travelers would be quarantined at their destination if they don’t have test results.

Travelers arriving from the United Kingdom, Denmark and South Africa in the past 10 days would have to show a negative test result and go into mandatory quarantine for at least seven days until a second test.

Turkey has among the worst infection rates in the world, with a weekly average of more than 20,000 confirmed daily infections. The total death toll is 19,371, according to official statistics.



9 Killed in Courthouse Attack in Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan Province, Iranian Media Report

Iranian security forces. (EPA file)
Iranian security forces. (EPA file)
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9 Killed in Courthouse Attack in Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan Province, Iranian Media Report

Iranian security forces. (EPA file)
Iranian security forces. (EPA file)

At least nine people were killed in an armed attack by the Jaish al-Adl Baluch group on a courthouse in Iran’s restive Sistan-Baluchestan province on Saturday, including three of the assailants, state media reported. 

Another 22 were injured, according to thereport. 

Jaish al-Adl confirmed the deaths of its three members in the clashes with security forces in Zahedan, the capital of the far southeastern province bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan.  

Sistan-Baluchestan is home to Iran’s Baluch minority, who have long complained of economic marginalization and political exclusion. 

A toddler and a 60-year-old woman were among those killed, as well as three soldiers and law enforcement personnel assigned to the courthouse, the head of the province's judiciary told IRNA. He did not identify the sixth dead person.  

He said the attackers wore explosive vests and carried grenades. It was not clear if they had detonated them. 

Jaish al-Adl, which claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement on its Telegram account, said it had killed at least 30 members of the judiciary and security forces. It said it targeted judges and court personnel, whom it accused of issuing death sentences and house demolition orders to Baluch citizens. 

"We warn all judges and employees of the judiciary that Baluchestan will no longer be a safe place for them and death will follow them like terrifying shadows until retribution," the group said in its statement. 

It blamed security forces for the deaths of civilians, saying they had fired indiscriminately. 

The Baluch human rights group HAALVSH, quoting eyewitnesses, said several judiciary staff members and security personnel were killed or wounded when the assailants stormed the judges’ chambers. 

Sistan-Baluchestan is frequently hit by clashes between security forces and armed groups, including militants and separatists who say they are fighting for greater rights and autonomy. Tehran accuses some of them of ties to foreign powers and involvement in cross-border smuggling and insurgency.