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Israeli Air Defense In Cyprus Extends Intel Reach Over Turkey: 'More Dangerous Than S-300s'
Via Middle East Eye
Israel delivered advanced air defense systems to Cyprus last week, marking the third shipment since December amid rising tensions with Turkey, sources familiar with the matter told Middle East Eye.
A video published on Thursday showed a truck passing through the port of Limassol transporting components of the Barak MX system, an aerial interceptor capable of striking threats up to 150km away. The Cypriot news site Reporter confirmed that the Barak MX system has now been fully delivered and is expected to become operational this year.
An IAI Barak MX air defense launcher in Ashdod, Israel, via Reuters.
The delivery comes after Shay Gal, vice president of external relations at Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), which manufactures the Barak MX, argued in a July article that Israel should reconsider its approach toward Cyprus and devise military plans to “liberate” the island\...
Indian traders are intensifying the boycott of Turkish products, triggered by Turkiye's support for Pakistan. Fruit vendors in Rajasthan's Alwar have stopped selling Turkish apples, following a similar move by marble traders in Ajmer. The Alwar Fruit Mandi Union is displaying "Boycott of Turkish apples" posters and promoting alternatives from Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, and South Africa....
Istanbul's Grand Bazaar Rocked By Fears Over Fake $50 And $100 Bills
Fears of counterfeit $50 and $100 bills have disrupted foreign-exchange trade at Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, the nation's largest currency trading gray market.
According to the state-run Anadolu Agency, some bureaus at the bazaar, a hub for currency trading, stopped purchasing the bills, saying the counting machines they use can't identify the fake notes.
“The number of counterfeit dollars isn't clear,” Anadolu cited Resat Yilmaz, a tradesman at the Bazaar, as saying. “These bills have to be collected, which can take two weeks.” Money-counting machines also have to be updated, he added.
A representative for currency traders said the disruption has no basis and “there's no fake currency” in circulation. He blamed banks for what he said was a “clogging” of trading.
“Banks should accept old dollar bills. Currently, no bank is doing that,” Mehti Seren, head of the Association of All Authorized Institutions ...