Turkish police officer dies from gunshot wounds suffered in Istanbul drug raid

ISTANBUL (AP) — A police officer died Monday after being shot and seriously wounded during an early morning drug raid in Istanbul, Turkish officials said.

Officer Emre Albayrak died of his wounds in a hospital. He was part of a special operations team carrying out the raid in the Cekmekoy district on Istanbul's Asian side.

"Our police officer Emre Albayrak, who was seriously injured in a narcotics operation in the Cekmekoy district, could not be saved despite all interventions in the hospital to which he was taken and became a martyr," Istanbul Governor's Office said in a statement.

The man who opened fire on police was killed and two other suspects were detained, the office said.

Turkey has experienced a rise in drug-related crime in recent years. There was a 23% rise in drug-related incidents last year compared to 2023, according to a National Police Counter-Narcotics Department report.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said in a social media post Monday that 970 suspects had been detained in nationwide counter-narcotics operations over the previous week.

Turkish police officer dies from gunshot wounds suffered in Istanbul drug raid

ISTANBUL (AP) — A police officer died Monday after being shot and seriously wounded during an early morning drug raid in ...
Climate change threatens Asia's water and power systems, reports warn

BENGALURU, India (AP) — Climate change is battering Asia's water and power systems and putting millions in harm's way, forcing countries to pour billions into shoring up basic services, according to two recent reports.

Water-related disasters are rising across the region even as spending to protect communities falls short. Asian nations will need $4 trillion for water and sanitation between 2025 and 2040 — about $250 billion a year, the Asian Development Bank said in a report released Monday.

Governments are under growing pressure to protect power systems people rely on every day. By 2050, extreme weather could leave listed power companies in Asia-Pacific with about $8.4 billion a year in damage and lost revenue, a third higher than now, according to recent research by the Hong Kong-based non-profit Asia Investor Group on Climate Change and the New York-based MSCI Institute, a sustainability think tank.

Those risks have been playing out this year across Asia as it was pummeled bylate-arriving storms, relentless rains and severe floods.

In central Vietnam's Quy Nhon, power lines snapped when Typhoon Kalmaegi blasted the coastal city with heavy rain and strong winds. Floods from the relentless downpours left streets submerged under chest-high water days later, turning entire neighborhoods into islands. The day after the storm made landfall, Hai Duong, 29, rushed to a mall that still had power to charge her phone.

"I can't go back because my home is underwater. I just want to see if my relatives are safe," she said.

Asia's water resources need to be climate proofed

The ADB report says 2.7 billion people, about 60% of the Asia-Pacific population, have access to water for most of their basic needs but more than 4 billion still remain exposed to unsafe water, degraded ecosystems and escalating climate hazards.

Much of the progress since 2013 comes from major gains in rural water access, it says. About 800 million more people in rural areas now have piped water, helping many countries move out of the lowest level of water security. India played a big part in this shift.

But Asia faces a triple threat: environmental pressures, low investment and climate change, said Vivek Raman, principal urban development specialist at the ADB and a lead author of the report.

"It's a tale of two realities," Raman said.

The report says water ecosystems were rapidly deteriorating or stagnating in 30 of the 50 Asian countries that were studied, plagued by unchecked development, pollution and land being converted to other uses. Asia also accounts for 41% of global flooding and its coastal megacities and Pacific islands face mounting threats from storm surges, rising sea levels and salty water pushing inland. From 2013 to 2023, Asia and the Pacific experienced 244 major floods, 104 droughts, and 101 severe storms — events that undermined development gains and caused widespread damage.

Governments currently meet only 40% of the estimated $4 trillion in investment, or roughly $250 billion annually, in funding needed for water and sanitation from 2025-2040. That leaves an annual shortfall of over $150 billion.

Asia's rapid growth is both an opportunity and a challenge said Amit Prothi, director general of New Delhi-based Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure, who was not involved with the report. "The amount of infrastructure we'll build in Asia in the next three decades will be as much as what was built in the last two centuries. So, this is an opportunity to rethink and build in a new way," he said.

The coalition found that $800 billion in infrastructure, about a third of it in Asia, is exposed to disasters each year globally.

Asia's power utilities are losing billions due to climate change

Extreme heat, floods and water shortages are already costing Asia's power utilities $6.3 billion annually, a figure projected to exceed $8.4 billion by 2050 if companies fail to strengthen climate adaptation measures, research by the Asia Investor Group on Climate Change and the MSCI Institute shows.

Asia accounts for 60% of the world's power generation capacity and remains deeply reliant on coal. The report warns that climate changes threatens both energy security and economic growth across a region where over 4 billion people need reliable electricity.

"Overall, if you were looking at the types of impacts and the preparedness of companies, most companies are at very early stages," said Anjali Viswamohanan, director of policy at the Asia Investor Group on Climate Change.

Its study of 2,422 power plants across China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia and South Korea found extreme heat to be the costliest hazard, responsible for over half of all losses by 2050. Heatwaves reduce power plant efficiency and strain transmission networks. India's main power utility NTPC, Indonesia's PLN, and Malaysia's Tenaga Nasional all face a high risk of disruptions caused by rising heat.

Disruptions to water are a big factor

Another major threat comes from declining river flows in Asia's major basins, which supply the water needed by coal and gas plants and fuel hydropower dams.

At the same time, heavy rainfall and flooding also pose risks, especially in coastal and riverine regions. Malaysia's Tenaga Nasional faces some of the highest coastal flood exposure due to power plants built in low-lying areas, the report said.

Despite mounting hazards, most utilities lacked detailed, funded plans for adapting to climate impacts. The report found that while nine companies of the 11 studied assessed how climate change impacts them, only seven examined risks at individual plants. Just five calculated and disclosed how future climate impacts could raise costs or hurt their earnings.

Rapidly shifting climate risks make it hard to predict the costs and insurance needed to protect energy infrastructure, said Jakob Steiner, a geoscientist affiliated with the University of Graz, who wasn't involved in either report.

Financing gaps in the power sector may be easier to close than those in water and sanitation, since energy projects can attract strong industry interest and investment, he said. But some countries daunted by demands from international investors for environmental safeguards might turn to regional financiers that are less scrupulous about such concerns.

"For energy infrastructure, I see more hope that the financing gap can be closed," he said. "But that can also come at a cost."

Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam. Follow Sibi Arasu on X at@sibi123___

The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Climate change threatens Asia’s water and power systems, reports warn

BENGALURU, India (AP) — Climate change is battering Asia's water and power systems and putting millions in harm's...
Indonesia is repatriating 2 Dutch drug traffickers convicted on drug trafficking charges

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian officials said on Monday that two Dutch nationals imprisoned in Indonesia on drug trafficking convictions will be repatriated to the Netherlands later in the day following theagreement between the two countries.

The two prisoners, including one who had been sentenced to death, were handed over by the Indonesian authorities to Dutch authorities at a prison in Jakarta, ahead of an evening flight.

The men wore baseball caps and bright green T-shirts at the handover. They were being treated for health problems, and the Netherlands had requested their repatriation on humanitarian grounds.

Indonesia's deputy minister for immigration and correctional coordination, I Nyoman Gede Surya Mataram, said at a news conference in Jakarta that the two men would continue to serve their prison sentences in the Netherlands.

Siegfried Mets, 74, the prisoner on death row, was convicted of involvement in the shipment of 600,000 ecstasy pills from the Netherlands to Indonesia. He has been held in a prison in Jakarta since February 2008.

Another prisoner, Ali Tokman, 65, was taken into custody at Surabaya airport in December 2014 after customs officers found slightly more than 6 kilograms (13.5 pounds) of brown-colored MDMA, a psychoactive drug. He has served 11 years of a life sentence.

Indonesia under PresidentPrabowo Subianto's administration has sent several foreign prisoners home under bilateral agreements with each of their countries. They includeda Filipinawho faced the death penalty for drugs,five Australiansconvicted of heroin trafficking, andtwo British nationalswho also faced death penalty and life sentence for smuggling drugs to Indonesia.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says Indonesia is a major drug smuggling hub despite having some of the strictest drug laws in the world, in part because international drug syndicates target its young population.

About 530 people are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug-related crimes, including nearly 100 foreigners, the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections' data showed last month.Indonesia's last executions,of a citizen and three foreigners, were carried out in July 2016.

Indonesia is repatriating 2 Dutch drug traffickers convicted on drug trafficking charges

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian officials said on Monday that two Dutch nationals imprisoned in Indonesia on drug tr...
Matt LaFleur shading the officiating of Micah Parsons was the real drama in Packers' win over Bears, not the postgame handshake with Ben Johnson

The non-theatric theatrics were just a distraction. The real drama — and a telling tactic for the Green Bay Packers — came later Sunday.

Yahoo Sports

Yes, Packers head coach Matt LaFleur unquestionably did a flyby handshake with the Chicago Bears' Ben Johnson. No, it wasn't nearly as dramatic as some of the instantaneous reactions portrayed it. If anything, the nanosecond of interaction between the two was more dust-bunny than dust-up. Maybe you craved a Jim Harbaugh vs. Jim Schwartz (circa 2011) postgame confrontation, only to be disappointed with LaFleur simply giving Johnson a chilly little ¡olé! before everyone swiftly moved on with their postgame.

"Just a quick handshake," LaFleur said following thePackers' 28-21 win over the Bears. "We'll see them again in two weeks."

Any drama or pettiness between the Packers and Bears fell flat after a week of intensely re-racking comments Johnson made in his introductory news conference with the Bears last January, when he said he "enjoyed beating Matt LaFleur twice a year" as offensive coordinator of the Detroit Lions. Instead, LaFleur was forward-looking and respectful of the Bears, reciting his fairly typical mission-first-and-always diatribes about methodically moving forward. Conversely, Johnson was complimentary of the Packers and seemingly appreciative about being part of a rivalry between the two teams being reinvigorated as each vies for the NFC North crown.

"I do think there's some aura that comes with playing here and competing here," Johnson said of Lambeau Field. "I love it for our guys. This is what the football gods made football to be. Cold weather in December like this. Green Bay, Chicago — it's outstanding. I think it's awesome to have this rivalry alive and well right now and we'll get another chance at it here in two weeks."

For the most part, that was the underlying Packers message: Green Bay held down its end of the bargain and it will see Chicago again in two weeks when the division could be decided at Soldier Field.

Oh — and stop committing the clearly egregious but also unflagged holding penalties on Micah Parsons.

That's where the spice was Sunday. Less between LaFleur and Johnson than between the Packers' coach and Sunday's officiating crew. Not to mention the seemingly overwhelming majority of the Green Bay fan base, which flooded social media with clips of Parsons being held by Bears tight end Colston Loveland and offensive tackle Darnell Wright, among others.

A hold by Wright left Packers fans particularly seething after it was posted by the NFL's X account as a Chicago highlight, showcasing a pivotal scramble and completion by Bears quarterback Caleb Williams during a late fourth-quarter drive. On the play, Parsons comes off the right edge and is met by Wright, who hooked his arm around Parsons' neck and corralled him out of the way as Williams rolled out of trouble and completed a 24-yard pass to wideout Devin Duvernay deep into Green Bay territory. In the background of the play, you see Parsons on his knees and raising his arms to the sky, seemingly asking for a penalty or some kind of explanation for what it would take to get a flag.

Parsons would finish with eight quarterback pressures in the win, but zero sacks or tackles. Afterward, LaFleur took exception to the lack of flags when it came to the way the Bears were blocking Parsons. More than once during the game, the Packers head coach could be seen animatedly engaging officials and complaining about what appeared to be unflagged holding incidents. Asked about one of the incidents, LaFleur said he wasn't sure what constituted holding after seeing how Parsons was handled by officials.

"I guess I don't know," LaFleur said. "I thought there was one that certainly was questionable, to say the least. But apparently the officials disagree, so it is what it is. We just gotta continue to strain and fight and try to get to the quarterback."

GREEN BAY, WI - DECEMBER 07: Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons (1) is held during a game between the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears on December 7, 2025 at Lambeau Field, in Green Bay, WI. (Photo by Larry Radloff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Pressed on it further, he doubled down.

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"Officials, I don't think that their jobs are easy by any stretch," LaFleur added. "I think it is a difficult job, but I guess I don't know what holding is anymore. Because I thought [one] was pretty clear — clear and obvious hold. But I guess I don't know what that means."

LaFleur was careful to walk the line between an outright criticism of any officials. But engaging with the questions of reporters who are prepared to highlight what has been happening the past several weeks with Parsons is no accident. LaFleur knows what he's doing. He's running an early December gambit from a postgame podium that can also be paired at some point with the Packers submitting private officiating protests to the league office with accompanying video — not an uncommon practice for NFL teams — to send a message.

Something along the lines of:Micah is being held repeatedly over the course of our games … the evidence is being broadcasted in front of everyone's eyes … and it needs to be officiated better than this.

This is what you do when you have a $46.5 million per season edge rusher who is being prevented from completing one of the primary missions that wreck games. Namely, hitting the quarterback. Repeatedly. It's also what you do when the race for the NFC North — and even more importantly, the conference's No. 1 playoff seed — are still hanging in the balance. You look for an edge. Especially one that is provable on game film and rightfully should be called if officials are seeing it.

Of course, this isn't new territory for Parsons. Dallas Cowboys fans complained about it for years, dating back to his rookie season in 2021. And it wasn't just the fan base, either. In December of 2023, when Dallas was in a fistfight with the San Francisco 49ers and Detroit Lions for the No. 1 playoff seed in that season's playoffs, the Cowboys reached out to the NFL's league office to argue that Parsons was being blocked (and allegedly held) by opposing teams repeatedly, without the plays resulting in penalties.

Parsons lamented it publicly that season — and at other times — over the course of his career in Dallas. Now, it has traveled with him north to Green Bay, and the Packers are in the midst of the same frustration. That might be why Parsons seemed to be the most pragmatic person of all Sunday when questioned about any frustration over a lack of offensive holding penalties.

"I just gotta keep fighting through," Parsons told reporters. "That's been the definition of my career. There's always fighting through whatever. I'm a smaller guy and I think [officials] realize that and I've got an advantage on the defensive side — I play with great leverage and I'm able to get under people's arms."

"I think the rulebook is you got to be in the chest area and I'm just not getting grabbed in the chest area," he added. "But like I said, there's nothing I can do about it. I just got to keep fighting through."

Asked by a reporter about being corralled by the neck, Parsons gave a verbal shrug.

"That's not in the rulebook at all," he said.

LaFleur surely isn't going to accept that. It's unlikely general manager Brian Gutekunst will, either. That much seemed clear when the head coach gladly added fuel to a debate that is likely going to draw only more attention as the Packers move toward the playoffs — not to mention another meeting with the Bears in Week 16 that could decide the division.

That's two weeks from now, and the Packers have opened the next chapter in the drama between the two rivals. And it has everything to do with how the Bears — and the rest of Green Bay's opponents into the playoffs — will be scrutinized when it comes to how Parsons is officiated.

Matt LaFleur shading the officiating of Micah Parsons was the real drama in Packers' win over Bears, not the postgame handshake with Ben Johnson

The non-theatric theatrics were just a distraction. The real drama — and a telling tactic for the Green Bay Packers — cam...
No. 14 Illinois battle-tested, opens Big Ten slate vs. Ohio State

No. 14 Illinois is a late entry into Big Ten play after a tough nonconference schedule but will take those experiences into the conference opener at Ohio State on Tuesday in Columbus.

The Illini are one of three teams, along with Penn State and Nebraska, not to have played at least one Big Ten game. Illinois has been busy against high-quality opponents, the latest a 75-62 victory over No. 13 Tennessee on Saturday in Nashville to give Illinois (7-2) a 2-2 record vs. ranked nonconference opponents.

"I still believe this team can be very, very good and accomplish a lot," Illinois coach Brad Underwood said. "But it's been frustrating due to the lack of practice. It's almost like an NBA preseason where you're playing into shape and playing guys into shape.

"That's hard when you're playing UConn, Alabama right down the list, Tennessee and the league games coming up. It's been really challenging."

Ohio State (7-1, 1-0 Big Ten) started its conference docket with an 86-82 win at Northwestern on Saturday and may have found another player to complement starters Bruce Thornton, John Mobley Jr., Devin Royal and Christoph Tilly.

Brandon Noel, a sixth-year transfer from Wright State, has meandered his way through the nonconference schedule but exploded for a season-high 29 points and seven rebounds against the Wildcats, hitting 13 of 15 field goals.

It was different from the previous game, a 67-66 loss to Pittsburgh, when Noel had no points or rebounds in nine minutes. That prompted talks with coach Jake Diebler during the week between games to try to find the form that produced 15.1 points per game in 97 career games for Wright State.

"He needed some clarity on where that production was going to come from and we talked that out and it was a great conversation," Diebler saidl. "And the way he practiced this week was like, I didn't know he's going to have 29 and seven, but you just knew he was going to play well because he earned the right to play well.

"We played him a little bit more at the center position, which I think he's able to use his athleticism, ability to drive it and that helped some. But when he was able to get active on the glass and he was able to finish and get some easy looks in transition, I think that just kind of unlocked the rest of the game."

Noel's performance came out of nowhere, unlike the steady play of Illinois freshman guard Keaton Wagler, who is averaging 13.8 points, 5.6 rebounds and has 21 assists to 10 turnovers. He is also tied for the team lead with 14 made 3-pointers, shooting 34.1%.

Wagler had 16 points, eight rebounds, five assists and zero turnovers vs. Tennessee.

"Keaton just plays," Underwood said. "The environment doesn't bother him, maybe a little bit of the physicality, but it's just a matter of him getting comfortable with it.

"We didn't even talk about his shooting threes but what he does, we needed him to be more aggressive and assertive. But the most impressive thing is no turnovers. Seemingly most every single day he takes care of the ball. Avery is a very mature decision maker, something you don't see with freshmen."

--Field Level Media

No. 14 Illinois battle-tested, opens Big Ten slate vs. Ohio State

No. 14 Illinois is a late entry into Big Ten play after a tough nonconference schedule but will take those experiences...
No. 22 Indiana, Penn State vying for first Big Ten win of season

After losing twice last week, No. 22 Indiana hopes to pick up the pieces Tuesday when the Hoosiers host Penn State in a Big Ten matchup from Bloomington, Ind.

This will be the conference opener for the Nittany Lions (8-1), while the Hoosiers (7-2, 0-1) got a dose of league play at Minnesota last Wednesday. Indiana was 7-0 and ranked No. 22 heading into that contest -- an early-season run highlighted by wins over Marquette and Kansas State -- before absorbing a 73-64 loss at the hands of the Golden Gophers.

Tucker DeVries (17.8 points per game) and Lamar Wilkerson (16.0), Indiana's top two scorers on the season, were held to a collective 24 points on 8-of-27 shooting against Minnesota.

The duo combined for a more typical total of 38 points on Saturday against Louisville, but they shot 10-of-29 from the field between them. The sixth-ranked Cardinals, meanwhile, knocked down 41.9% of their 3-pointers that day en route to an 87-78 victory.

"Our guys played their tails off. They left it out there," Hoosiers coach Darian DeVries said. "I was proud of them from that standpoint. Was there things that we could have done better? Yeah, absolutely. But I liked the way we approached the game. I liked our mindset. I liked our toughness, physicality. I thought that's what we need to do every night."

Penn State is coming off an 87-76 win over Campbell on Dec. 2. Kayden Mingo registered 21 points, while Freddie Dilione V had 17 points to pace a balanced scoring attack. Mingo averages a team-best 15.0 points per game, while Dilione is next at 13.2.

The Nittany Lions are averaging 83.1 points per game, but they have allowed 70-plus points to teams such as Navy, Harvard, Boston University and Campbell -- a trend that coach Mike Rhoades knows isn't sustainable.

"We've got to be able to guard good offensive teams," Rhoades said. "I thought our guys did better sustaining our defense, deflections in the half court."

Indiana won both matchups with Penn State last season -- a six-point victory on the road on Jan. 5 and a five-point win on Feb. 26 in Bloomington.

--Field Level Media

No. 22 Indiana, Penn State vying for first Big Ten win of season

After losing twice last week, No. 22 Indiana hopes to pick up the pieces Tuesday when the Hoosiers host Penn State in ...
A second flight of Iranian deportees, carrying 55, has left the US, Iran says

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A second flight carrying Iranians deported from the United States has left America, Iranian officials said, as Washington reportedly planned to send hundreds of prisoners back to the Islamic Republic.

The deportations come as tensions remain high between Iran and the U.S. afterAmerica bombed Iranian nuclear sites during Tehran's 12-day war with Israel in June. Activists abroad also have expressed concern about deportees returning to Iran, whose theocracy has been cracking down on intellectuals and executing prisoners at a rate unseen in decades.

A report published Monday by the Mizan news agency, the official mouthpiece of the Iran's judiciary, quoted Iranian Foreign Ministry official Mojtaba Shasti Karimi acknowledging the deportation of 55 Iranians.

"These individuals announced their willingness for return following continuation of anti-immigration and discriminative policy against foreign nationals particularly Iranians by the United States," Karimi reportedly said.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei also said Sunday there were plans for 55 Iranians to return to the Islamic Republic.

Based on the U.S. claims, "the Iranians were repatriated because of legal reasons and breach of immigration regulations," Baghaei said.

The U.S. government did not immediately acknowledge the deportation flight and it wasn't clear whether the plane had arrived yet in Tehran. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security and State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment from The Associated Press early Monday.

The deportations represent a collision of a top priority of President Donald Trump —targeting illegal immigration— against a decades-long practice by the U.S. of welcoming Iranian dissidents, exiles and others since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

In September,Iranian officials acknowledged as many as 400 Iranianscould be returned under the Trump administration policy. That month, the first such flight arrived in Tehran.

In the lead up to and after the 1979 revolution, a largenumber of Iranians fled to the U.S. In the decades since, the U.S. had been sensitive in allowing those fleeing from Iran over religious, sexual or political persecution to seek residency. Iran has maintained only those facing criminal charges face prosecution, while others can travel freely. However, Tehran has detained Westerns and others with ties abroad in the past to be exchanged in prisoner swaps.

Iran has criticized Washington for hosting dissidents and others in the past. U.S. federal prosecutors have accused Iran of hiring hitmen to target dissidents as well in America.

Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

A second flight of Iranian deportees, carrying 55, has left the US, Iran says

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A second flight carrying Iranians deported from the United States has left America, Iranian officials...

 

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