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Syria, Jordan, and Türkiye forge deal to launch trade corridor​

The agreement was signed during a meeting in the Jordanian capital, Amman, attended by the transport ministers of the three countries, News.Az reports, citing foreign media.

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The memorandum establishes a joint institutional and technical framework encompassing land, maritime, and rail transport, and forms specialized committees and joint working groups to standardize procedures and policies across the three countries. 

It also aims to turn these commitments into concrete projects, backed by investment and digital upgrades, to improve efficiency and sustain long-term cooperation. The coordination is expected to ease the movement of goods and passengers and streamline border procedures, improving supply chain efficiency and boosting trade among the three countries.

A three-year roadmap outlines the steps and measures required by transport authorities, aiming to turn borders from simple crossing points into hubs for economic integration and joint development. Central to this effort is the “Middle Corridor,” which the three countries hope to activate as a strategic route that links markets and expands transit trade, with the potential to reshape the region’s economic landscape.

The agreement prioritizes the railway sector, with plans to establish a trilateral technical committee to evaluate existing networks and determine the technical and economic requirements for future projects. As part of this effort, Syria is drafting a preliminary rail connectivity map linking the three countries to guide joint discussions and development.

The Hejaz Railway project is a central proposal, expected to link Anatolia in the north with the port of Aqaba in the south and extend toward the Gulf, improving the movement of goods and passengers in line with modern transport standards.

The step is part of a broader effort to develop the transport sector by streamlining border procedures, strengthening links between ports and inland regions, and adopting digital transport management systems. Officials say upgrading infrastructure – especially in land and rail – will be key to lowering costs and improving trade efficiency, in line with global trends toward more sustainable transport.

Jordanian, Turkish goals in trade agreement
Jordanian Minister of Transport Nedal Katamine said his country aims to strengthen its role as a regional logistics hub by developing multimodal transport, building modern logistics centers, upgrading border crossings, and expanding partnerships with the private sector. The effort is part of a broader economic modernization plan that places the transport sector at the center of growth and competitiveness.

Abdulkadir Uraloglu, the Turkish minister of transport, stressed that activating the “North–South Corridor” is expected to generate significant economic gains by increasing export capacity, revitalizing ports, expanding market access, and boosting transit revenues.

Uraloglu also noted that the trilateral cooperation provides a practical framework for developing the region’s transport sector, with the potential to connect this corridor to wider routes linking the Arabian Peninsula, Central Asia, and Europe. 

The agreement follows a series of technical meetings among the three countries focused on restoring land and rail links after years of disruption, particularly due to the war in Syria. As demand grows for more efficient alternative trade routes, the trilateral understanding marks a significant step toward reshaping the region’s transport network, strengthening economic integration, and reviving its role as a strategic corridor between East and West. 

The post Syria, Jordan, and Türkiye forge deal to launch trade corridor​ appeared first on azeritimes.com.

The post Syria, Jordan, and Türkiye forge deal to launch trade corridor​ first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.

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1.9 billion-year-old bedrock to house first permanent nuclear waste site​

We are now at about minus 430 meters (1,411 feet),” muttered geologist Tuomas Pere as he steered a car through a labyrinth of man-made tunnels. “We are driving through 1.9-billion year old bedrock,” News.Az reports, citing foreign media.

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After decades of construction, the world’s first facility for permanently disposing spent nuclear fuel is set to begin operations in Finland, becoming a final resting place for tons of dangerous radioactive waste.

Construction of Onkalo — which means “cave” in Finnish — began on the west coast in 2004. It sits on the secluded island of Olkiluoto, in a dense wooded area. The closest town is Eurajoki, about 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) inland, which is home to about 9,000 people. Many work at the nuclear power plant or storage facility

The Associated Press took a tour of the facilities where humans soon will not be allowed to tread.

‘Isolated from civilization’

Pere said the site — near three of Finland’s five nuclear reactors — was chosen for its migmatite-gneiss bedrock, which is known for its high stability and low risk of earthquakes.

“It’s the isolation from civilization and mankind on the surface that’s important,” he said, standing in a darkened disposal tunnel, soon to be sealed from humanity. “We can dispose of the waste more safely than by storing it in facilities located on the ground.”

Using unmanned machinery at a nearby encapsulation plant, radioactive rods will be sealed in copper canisters and then buried deep in tunnels over 400 meters underground, then packed in with “buffer” layers of water-absorbing bentonite clay.

Posiva, the company responsible for the long-term management of Finland’s spent nuclear fuels, says Onkalo can store 6,500 tons of spent nuclear fuel.

The final disposal canisters are designed to remain sealed “long enough for the radioactivity of spent fuel to decrease to a level not harmful to the environment,” it said.

“The solution that we have, it’s the missing point for sustainable use of nuclear energy,” said Posiva communications manager Pasi Tuohimaa.

Finnish nuclear power companies are paying for the project, he said, adding that they have saved money for decades for that purpose.

Posiva estimate it will take hundreds of thousands of years before the radioactivity falls to normal, background levels.

According to a 2022 report by the International Atomic Energy Agency, almost 400,000 tons of spent fuel have been produced globally since the 1950s, with two-thirds remaining in temporary storage and one third being recycled in a complex process.

The world’s spent nuclear fuel is currently temporarily stored inside spent nuclear fuel pools at individual reactors and at dry cask storage sites above ground.

There is currently no permanent underground disposal facility for commercial nuclear waste operational anywhere in the world. Sweden began building a repository in Forsmark — about 150 kilometers north of Stockholm — last year, but it’s not expected to open until the late 2030s. France’s Cigéo project is yet to begin construction and has seen opposition.

The Onkalo facility is expected to operate until the 2120s, when it will be permanently sealed.

‘There are uncertainties’

But Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety at the Union of Concerned Scientists, an American nonprofit organization, warned that geologic disposal of nuclear waste is still fraught with “uncertainties.”

“My view of nuclear waste disposal is that there’s no good option, but it’s important to find the least bad option, and geologic disposal in general is going to be the least bad option among a range of, you know, bad options,” he said.

Lyman said that the copper canisters that contain the spent nuclear fuel will eventually corrode, adding that there are different scientific opinions about how fast that could happen.

“The hope is that is such a slow process that most of the radioactive material will have decayed away by then. But again, there are uncertainties,” he said.

Still, Lyman said that permanently storing spent nuclear fuel deep underground is better than “leaving it on the surface of the Earth forever,” because nuclear material kept above ground “is vulnerable to sabotage.”

“For many decades after spent fuel is discharged from a reactor, it’s so radioactive that it makes transporting and reprocessing very difficult,” Lyman said. But eventually the main radioactive component will decay, he added, making it less risky to handle.

“So over time the plutonium becomes more accessible either to terrorists or to a country that may want to use it,” he said, adding that the only way a terrorist — or a state — could theoretically use the material for a nuclear bomb would be if they had “an off-site reprocessing capability.”

During reprocessing, spent nuclear fuel is separated to recover uranium and plutonium to recycle it for use in new fuel. The process also carries proliferation risks because the separated plutonium could potentially be diverted to build a nuclear weapon.

Overall, the risks associated with nuclear waste repositories will mainly affect “future generations,” Lyman concluded.

To deal with this challenge, an interdisciplinary field of study called nuclear semiotics has been established that looks into developing warning signs about nuclear waste repositories that can be understood by humans 10,000 years from now — or much longer given that it takes hundreds of thousands of years before nuclear waste is no longer dangerous.

For reference: the first humans lived around 300,000 years ago. The earliest writing system was developed in Mesopotamia roughly 5,200 to 5,400 years ago. Stonehenge in Britain is around 5,000 years old, while the Giza pyramids in Egypt are approximately 4,500 years old.

‘Nuclear message’

Austrian artist and inventor Martin Kunze has led an expert group on long-term information preservation at the Nuclear Energy Agency of the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. He has developed a system that he calls the “nuclear message” — crucial information for future generations that is printed on a solid ceramic plate below a hard glazed surface.

Kunze said that the ceramic plates are “inexpensive and very robust” and should ideally be buried “in large numbers” in the area around the repository as well as “inside the foundations” of every house in the community. The goal should be to distribute as many ceramic plates in the area as possible.

Finnish officials say the Onkalo nuclear repository reflects the country’s long-term approach to nuclear energy policy.

A 1994 act required radioactive waste generated in Finland to be handled, stored and permanently disposed of within the country’s borders.

“Back then… some of the waste was still exported, but we wanted to take care of it ourselves,” said Sari Multala, Finland’s environment minister. “We also stick to the decisions, unlike many other countries.”

Multala did not rule out eventually accepting limited amounts of nuclear waste from other countries. “In the small scale there could be some kind of possibilities, as long as it is allowed by the international regulators,” she said.

The post 1.9 billion-year-old bedrock to house first permanent nuclear waste site​ appeared first on azeritimes.com.

The post 1.9 billion-year-old bedrock to house first permanent nuclear waste site​ first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.

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Pregnant woman fatally shot after honking at man in car park​

Mum-of-one Ava Woodcock died on Tuesday after she was shot while arriving at Annie’s Restaurant in Glasgow, Kentucky, News.Az reports, citing foreign media.

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Brandon Bond, 24, has been charged with murder, first-degree fetal homicide, and first-degree fleeing or evading police.

Ava was pulling into the car park and honked her horn as Bond crossed the street, according to WBKO.

Bond then allegedly opened fire, which sent Ava’s car rolling before it crashed.

He reportedly ran away from the scene and was uncooperative with the police.

Amanda Eversole, Woodcock’s mother, uploaded a photo of Bond to her Facebook.

She wrote: ‘This piece of c**p will never see daylight again.

‘He took one of God’s precious babies away from our family, and my daughter is fighting for her life. I will never forgive you.’

A commenter added: ‘So sad, sending my deepest condolences to her and her family.’

The post Pregnant woman fatally shot after honking at man in car park​ appeared first on azeritimes.com.

The post Pregnant woman fatally shot after honking at man in car park​ first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.

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Dave Chappelle anchors Ohio radio station with renovated building

Dave Chappelle has helped secure the future of a small-town radio station by funding the renovation of a historic building in Yellow Springs.
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The press is immediately executing on its template for the Iran cease-fire, claiming Trump bailed on his war aims so Iran would let him off the hook on the Hormuz Strait—i.e., an Iranian victory, writes Holman Jenkins https://on.wsj.com/4vlU9bb

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Trump and his party confront the political perils of chaos: From the Politics Desk

Plus, what Democratic voters in two states with key Democratic primaries are looking for.
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Netanyahu orders more strikes on Lebanon despite threat to Iran peace deal

Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said “there is no ceasefire in Lebanon”. Speaking to Israelis in a social media video, he said the country’s armed forces were “continuing to strike Hezbollah with full force, and we will not stop until we restore your security.”

It comes after mass strikes by Israel in southern Lebanon killed hundreds of people and drew international criticism. The IDF has said it is carrying out further strikes against Hezbollah launch sites in Lebanon. Earlier the Israeli army ordered people to flee southern Beirut and warned of more attacks.

The US and Israel have denied that an end to fighting in Lebanon was part of the deal with Iran that led to a ceasefire. However ahead of key talks with Iran, President Trump has called for Israel to be “more low key” in its actions.

A statement said to be by Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has declared that Iran is the “victor” in the war with the US and Israel. It also said Iran would “move management of the Strait of Hormuz into a new phase”, suggesting Iran’s new policy of charging tolls for vessels to use the Strait may continue.

With the Strait still blocked, there are new warnings that global oil and gas prices will remain high into the medium term, leading to worldwide concerns over sustained inflation.

Clive Myrie presents BBC News at Ten reporting by Paul Adams, Fergal Keane and Simon Jack.

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Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs challenging 50-month prison sentence

Sean “Diddy” Combs and his legal team are challenging his 50-month prison sentence, arguing that the judge imposed an overly harsh punishment.

Read more: https://www.kvue.com/article/syndication/associatedpress/sean-diddy-combs-lawyers-appeal-his-conviction-with-first-amendment-argument/616-74a075cb-d257-43d6-b0c6-8434816b90d9

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Karl Rove: ‘Bad start’ for Abigail Spanberger as Virginia governor https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/5824429-rove-spanberger-bad-start-polls/

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Ukraine Braces for Winter on Its Own as EU Funds Remain Blocked

President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine is preparing for the upcoming winter using domestic resources as European funding remains blocked amid continued Russian attacks on energy infrastructure.