Can Olive Oil Cure Cancer Patients? Published December 29th, 2020 - 01:18 GMT (Shutterstock)
“This is a very important motivation for a woman,” she said.
Natural olive oil cure and medical attention helped Gamze Deniz, a cancer patient, to recover from the deadly disease. She has now established a boutique firm producing cold-press olive oil in the Aegean Sea resort town of Bodrum.
After she was diagnosed with cancer in 2017, she started to receive medical treatment chemotherapy and radiotherapy – leading to second-degree burns on her skin. She then started using high-quality olive oil.
Meet the oldest survivor of olive oil soap production in Palestine in pictures https://t.co/SMjs2zWyCGpic.twitter.com/HHZRyrWuWQ
Turkish woman s tryst with olive oil to beat cancer aa.com.tr - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aa.com.tr Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Modern Diplomacy
Published 3 months ago
A new project will help avert the closure of viable micro and small enterprises (MSEs) affected by the health and economic shocks of the COVID-19 pandemic and maintain employment levels during the crisis. The $300 million Rapid Support for Micro and Small Enterprises Project for Turkey, implemented by the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Organization of Turkey (KOSGEB), will help people and firms by providing reimbursable support financing for manufacturing firms and other, innovative young firms focusing on manufacturing, scientific research and development, and computer programming.
The Project will provide financing in the form of performance-based reimbursable support to eligible MSEs, including innovative young firms that have been negatively impacted by COVID-19 but remain financially viable and are likely to survive the crisis, if they can access funding to meet their temporary liquidity needs.
World Bank to provide $300 mln loan for pandemic affected firms in Turkey Source: minsvyaz.ru
ANKARA (Turkey), December 21 (SeeNews) - The World Bank Group said it will provide a $300 million (246.5 million euro) loan to Turkey for the implementation of a project intended to help local micro and small enterprises (MSEs) fight the economic impact from the Covid-19 pandemic.
The project, implemented by Small and Medium Enterprises Development Organization of Turkey (KOSGEB), will provide reimbursable financing to Covid-19-affected firms focusing on manufacturing, scientific research and development, and computer programming, the World Bank said in a statement last week.
The project will pay special attention to women-owned firms, the bank added.