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South Caucasus News Review

Iran’s Mouteh gold complex ramps up gold bullion production



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South Caucasus News Review

Iranian MFA Spox: Mutual visits will help improve Tehran-Baku relations



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South Caucasus News Review

MP Hikmat Babaoghlu: Azerbaijan should actively participate in Syria’s reconstruction and recovery work



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South Caucasus News Review

Exhibition “Turkic World” leaves art lovers in awe


International Turkic Culture and Heritage Foundation has presented an exhibition by People’s Artist Ashraf Heybati titled “Turkic World”, Azernews reports.

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South Caucasus News Review

«Из-за возраста [потерпевшего] Б.Иванишвили запросили допрос-online» — обвиняемый Бачиашвили


5 февраля Бидзина Иванишвили даст показания по делу против бывшего главы «Фонда соинвестирования» Георгия Бачиашвили в Тбилисском городском суде. Однако олигарх не явится лично, а будет допрошен дистанционно. По словам прокурора Михаила Садрадзе, дистанционный допрос связан с «обеспечением безопасности» и тем, что допрос может занять длительное время. Также в суде было отмечено, что возраст Иванишвили […]

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Illegal Actions, Missing Consequences – The Bulwark


Illegal Actions, Missing Consequences  The Bulwark

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Blogs and Tweets

What went wrong in the Philly jet crash that killed seven people



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Investigators are early into their investigation of the plane crash in Northeast Philadelphia that killed seven people.

The big picture: The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), which has been on the ground since Friday, says it’ll take several days — or potentially weeks — to collect and analyze evidence from the sprawling crash site.

The latest: Investigators have recovered the jet’s black box, the NTSB said Sunday night.

  • They found it 8 feet underground, along with an enhanced ground proximity warning system that could contain flight data. They also found the plane’s engines.

The parts are being sent to the agency’s lab in Washington, D.C. to be analyzed.

  • Investigators also obtained surveillance footage and several statements from witnesses. They encouraged the public to email NTSB with video and photos of the crash.

The agency said it expects to have a preliminary report done within 30 days.

  • But a final report with a probable cause won’t come for 1-2 years.

Zoom in: The medical jet climbed to about 1,500 feet before descending at a 45-degree angle and crashing on Cottman Avenue about 3.5 miles away from the airport, according to city and federal officials.

  • The crew didn’t send any distress messages from the cockpit and didn’t respond to a transmission from air traffic control, NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy said.
  • The jet was in the air for less than a minute.

“It looks like a rocket that comes straight down,” David Evans, an airline transport pilot and flight instructor, told the Inquirer. “Even a Lear has some sort of glide capability. It just looks so highly unusual.”

Based on air traffic control recordings, the weather at the time of the incident and publicly available flight path data, the two most likely culprits are either spatial disorientation in a low overcast cloud layer immediately after takeoff, or some catastrophic mechanical failure, Axios’ Alex Fitzpatrick — a pilot — tells us.

  • Juan Browne, a commercial pilot and aviation accident expert, tells Axios spatial disorientation is more common at night when pilots are reliant on their instruments to help them fly.
  • The lack of a distress call and the steep, rapid decline suggest the pilots were “110 percent task saturated” trying to safely navigate, Browne says. “We call it ‘helmet fire’ in the industry.”

Caveat: Only after the official investigation may we have a full understanding of what happened.

  • That the aircraft impacted the ground so violently will no doubt complicate investigators’ work, given the state of the physical evidence, Axios’ Fitzpatrick adds.

What they’re saying: Tammy Duffy, a 59-year-old pharmaceutical representative from Hamilton, New Jersey, tells Axios she was stuck in rush-hour traffic near Cottman Avenue and Roosevelt Boulevard when the plane struck.

  • The explosion and a fiery mushroom cloud sent people running for their lives.
  • “Time froze,” says Duffy, who shut her vents to keep acrid smoke from entering her car. “It reminded me of 9/11.”

Commissioner Lisa Deeley said on X the tragedy has shaken the neighborhood where she grew up: “You see these things on TV, but it’s totally different when it is in your own backyard,” Deeley wrote.

Heather Long, who lives near the crash site, told Axios residents are worried about how they’ll get to work this week — since many streets are still barricaded with police officers preventing traffic from entering or leaving.

  • “We don’t have any answers,” Long said. “I want to know when we can leave.”

What’s next

“Long-term recovery”: That’s what the city’s Managing Director Adam Thiel is warning residents to brace for as the massive effort to restore normalcy to the neighborhood gets underway.

The crash site along Cottman Avenue — a busy corridor with a mix of homes and businesses — stretches at least a half-mile between Bustleton Avenue and Roosevelt Boulevard.

  • Aerial footage shows a deep crater in the ground there, and a debris field that officials said likely spans several miles.
  • The full extent of the damage isn’t even known yet, officials said: They’ll only be able to assess it after the crash investigation.

Mike’s thought bubble: I went down to the site Sunday and saw the usually bustling, noisy hub brought to a standstill — a surreal feeling.

  • The scene was eerily quiet even though there were police, investigators and onlookers everywhere, and I watched investigators use an excavator to hoist the charred remains of abandoned cars onto a tow truck.

State of play: Roosevelt Boulevard is expected to open by rush hour Monday morning, Philadelphia Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel said Sunday.

  • The Roosevelt Mall is expected to reopen on Tuesday, Kristen Moore, a spokesperson for mall owner Brixmore Property Group tells Axios.
  • PECO has restored services to the neighborhood, except for some buildings that were impacted by the crash.
  • It’s not clear when Cottman Avenue will reopen to traffic.

What we’re watching: The city is still working to figure out exactly how many people were displaced or missing due to the crash.

  • “It is possible there are still people … that we don’t know about,” Thiel said Sunday.

Officials will hold a town hall meeting at 7pm on Wednesday to answer residents’ questions and share more resources. The location is TBD.

  • The city is partnering with three organizations so residents can soon donate to people impacted by the crash.

Get a free daily digest of the most important news in your backyard with Axios Philadelphia.

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South Caucasus News Review

Azerbaijan expresses condolences to Pakistan over terrorist attack


The Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs has extended its condolences to Pakistan following a terrorist attack in Balochistan.

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Will the DOJ really dismantle Google? Here’s what happens next. – POLITICO



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The Google trial faces a long series of filing dates, court hearings and likely challenges that will drag any meaningful changes out for years. | Jeff Chiu/AP

The Department of Justice’s landmark proposal to dismantle Google’s search monopoly offers the first clear window into how Washington’s accelerating antitrust effort could clip the wings of Big Tech giants — and also highlights political questions about how long the push will survive.

Unlike European regulators targeting the same firms, President Joe Biden’s enforcers are swinging for the fences, proposing a radical restructuring of how Google works rather than chipping away at the company with fines.

“What is remarkable is the breadth of the proposal,” said Cristina Caffarra, co-founder of the Competition Research Policy Network and an adviser to regulators and plaintiffs going after Google on both sides of the Atlantic.

The DOJ’s proposal, filed late Tuesday night, comes after a judge found in August that the company illegally monopolized the online search and advertising markets. The potential remedies being proposed by the government are sweeping: From limits on new deals with phone or computer makers to restrictions on the use of artificial intelligence and even a full-scale restructuring, virtually everything is under consideration. A final proposal is due late next month.

But as America’s competition enforcers ratchet up their fight with top tech firms — Apple, Amazon and Meta are also facing lawsuits, and Google is embroiled in a separate DOJ fight — they’re expected to hit a series of hurdles.

The Google trial, first through the process, faces a long series of filing dates, court hearings and likely challenges that will drag any meaningful changes out for years. And all the cases could encounter skeptical judges worried about overly invasive remedies to monopoly power.

With a new administration poised to take the White House next year, presidential politics could also undercut any broader push against the tech giants. Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are both under pressure to replace Biden’s hard-charging antitrust enforcers — particularly Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan.

“Neither candidate has been very clear about their antitrust priorities,” said Rebecca Haw Allensworth, an antitrust expert at Vanderbilt Law School.

Spokespeople for the Harris campaign declined to comment on whether the vice president supports a Google breakup, or would maintain Biden’s antitrust stance on tech if elected president. Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung said that while the GOP nominee has assembled a transition leadership group, “formal discussions of who will serve in a second Trump Administration [are] premature.”

It’s possible that specifics could change as the DOJ finalizes its requests over the next month. But its aggressive proposal to cut Google down to size is already seen by antitrust experts as a signal of what could be coming for Big Tech — with America’s antitrust enforcers increasingly willing to take big shots at the most powerful companies on the planet.

Florian Ederer, an economist at Boston University who specializes in competition policy, said the tentative proposal to spin off key Google products like Chrome or Android “would mark a historic moment in [digital] antitrust enforcement.” He said such a breakup “could have profound economic impacts, not only for Google but for the broader tech ecosystem.”

Caffarra called it “a world away from the European approach,” which she framed as far too cautious.

“That U.S. enforcement went from being way behind Europe — comatose until 2019 — to this in five years is a testament that antitrust is mainly about posture and drive, and regulators getting their act together,” Caffarra said.

In addition to the DOJ, the Google search case was joined by the attorneys general of dozens of states, which remain co-plaintiffs.

In a statement, Google attacked the DOJ’s “radical and sweeping proposals” and warned of “unintended consequences” — including weakened consumer privacy, the collapse of popular Google products and a decline in American AI innovation “at a critical moment.”

The tech lobby largely echoed Google’s complaints. Chris Mohr, president of the Software and Information Industry Association, said in a Wednesday statement that the DOJ “seeks to punish Google for its continued innovation” and that its proposal “will make the internet less safe for Americans … kneecap AI development and undermine broader U.S. national interests.”

Google noted that Tuesday’s DOJ proposal is “the start of a long process.” The company plans to appeal the underlying decision that it has an illegal monopoly, a process that will likely take years to fully resolve. It pledged to respond to the DOJ’s final remedies “as we make our case in court next year.”

It’s possible that the DOJ’s antitrust enforcers will ultimately back away from a Google breakup or other more aggressive fixes to its monopoly.

Allensworth said many of the DOJ’s asks already “push the envelope in terms of being stronger than what antitrust has, for the last 40 years anyway, imposed in monopolization cases.” And if the agency keeps its foot on the gas, she said, there’s a strong chance that federal judges will reject its more intrusive changes to the company — especially any plans to spin off Android, Chrome or Play.

“This I view as a very unlikely remedy for the judge to grant, because breakups are seen as an unusually invasive remedy that would need a strong justification,” Allensworth said. She added that Google’s control over those three products is largely ancillary to this specific case.

The DOJ’s antitrust enforcers will also be under new leadership in the White House come January. Jonathan Kanter, head of the agency’s Antitrust Division, would almost certainly step down if Trump wins, and the former president would face significant pressure from orthodox conservatives to replace him with a softer touch. Harris is under her own pressure from tech billionaires — including some bankrolling her presidential campaign — to fire aggressive antitrust enforcers like Khan.

“All bets are off if Trump wins,” said Caffarra, adding that it’s also “really unclear” who Harris will pick to lead the DOJ and its antitrust wing.

But other experts don’t anticipate a major change once Biden leaves office.

In the specific case of Google’s search monopoly, the horse has largely left the barn: the DOJ will have already filed its final remedies by the time a new president takes over, teeing up a lengthy appeals process.

Bill Kovacic, a former FTC chair and antitrust professor at George Washington University Law School, said he suspects Trump “will not tamper with” the case, which was initially filed in 2020, toward the end of his administration.

“Trump brought the Google search case! That’s his case,” Kovacic said. “He doesn’t like these companies. He has no sympathy for them. So I imagine he would tell his assistant attorney general, ‘Keep up the good work, full speed ahead.’”

Despite clamoring from billionaires, Kovacic said Harris is also unlikely to dump Biden’s pugnacious approach to Big Tech’s market power. He noted a large fanbase for antitrust enforcement in Washington and beyond that worries Harris will cave to Silicon Valley, where she started her career.

“She would pay a significant price if she were to back off in any way in these big, visible, high-profile cases,” Kovacic said.

Despite the many hurdles and open questions, the former FTC chair said Tuesday’s preliminary DOJ proposal is less a high-water mark than a sign of things to come.

“It’s going to give confidence to the plaintiffs in the other cases that they can prevail against a formidable, dominant firm in this field,” said Kovacic. “It shows it can be done. You see people scaling the highest mountains, and you think ‘I can climb, too.’”

Adam Cancryn contributed to this report.


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South Caucasus News Review

Adjara: 10 natural disaster affected families gets new houses


Today ten families whose house were affected due to natural disasters got new houses in Adjara region. The new climate resilient houses have been built under “Providing housing for eco-migrant families” program 2025.

The “Providing housing for eco-migrant families” is being financed by Ministry of Health & Social Affairs of Ajara. The Adjara ministry routinely launched such initiatives to provide housing facilities to families affected by any climate disaster or other.

The official Facebook of ministry while sharing glimpses of this event stated, “Within the framework of the 2025 program providing housing for eco-migrant families” with the co-financing of the Ministry, 10 eco-migrant families purchased safe housing.”

It is to be added that the property registration procedure was held at the Batumi House of Justice, which was attended by the deputy minister of health of Ajara, Eduard Nakashidze.

The ministry continues the program “Providing housing for eco-migrant families” in 2025. Ten families purchased housing with co-financing in the first stage. This year, a total of 120 families affected by the disaster will benefit from the program.  An amount of 6,240,000 GEL has been allocated for this extremely helpful housing program, said Deputy Minister Eduard Nakashidze.

There were some changes made in existing program. According to the changes made to the program in 2025, the beneficiary can build a residential house on land plots registered in ownership, with the amount provided for in the program, based on a construction permit issued by the relevant municipality.

The Ministry has been implementing the Eco-Migrant Families Housing Provision” program since 2016 and to date, 859 residential units have been purchased within the program.

The program will be open to all the affected families in future as well. The authorities are expecting positive response from families to get houses under this program as well.

The families who received ownership of new houses have expressed their gratitude to the authorities especially ministry of health & social affairs of Ajara. They said this will give them a chance to restart their life in new and safe houses.

The post Adjara: 10 natural disaster affected families gets new houses appeared first on Georgia Online.