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Turkey condemns deadly attacks in Tunisia, Kuwait, France

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an and the Foreign Ministry have condemned Friday's attacks in Tunisia, Kuwait and France.
      
The attack on a tourist hotel in Sousse, east Tunisia left at least 37 people dead, including foreigners, and injured 36 others on June 26, the Tunisian Health Ministry said.

Bulgarian President, FM Condemn Terrorist Attacks in France, Tunisia, Kuwait

Bulgarian President Rosen Plevneliev and Foreign Minister Daniel Mitov condemned the three terrorist attacks, which took place in France, Tunisia and Kuwait on Friday.

The Bulgarian Foreign Ministry strongly condemned the three attacks, which threatened the values of peace, democracy and freedom and expressed solidarity with the peoples of the three countries.

Suicide Bomb Explodes at Shia Mosque in Kuwait, Leaves Several People Dead

A suicide bomb attack, which exploded at a Shia mosque in the capital of Kuwait - Kuwait City on Friday left several people dead.

According to some reports, at least eight people were killed and injuring several others in the suicide attack, which came after the Friday prayers, Al Jazeera reports.

Bomb strikes Shiite mosque in Kuwait

A bomb has exploded in a Shiite mosque in the Kuwaiti capital.
     
The bomb struck the Imam Sadiq Mosque in a busy area of Kuwait City's al-Sawabir district. Witness Abdullah al-Saffar was at the mosque at the time. He says the explosions took place on the mosque grounds following Friday prayers, and that there were casualties.
     

Erdo?an calls for Kuwaiti cooperation on construction, banking

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an has told Kuwaiti businesspeople that Turkey is ready to take part in the construction sector in the Gulf nation, as Islamic banking remains a strong field of cooperation. 

Erdo?an said April 28 during a meeting in Kuwait City that he had learned the Gulf country was preparing for a breakthrough in the construction sector. 

Political resolution a must for Syria

Can it be possible to end the Syrian quagmire through some sort of a proxy war against a ruthless dictator by a coalition of not-so-clean democratic performance or an imperialist, hegemonic "coalition of the willing" aspiring, apart from some other comparatively less important strategic interests, to oust Russians from the Middle East?

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