Showing posts with label Arab states. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arab states. Show all posts
Friday, June 23, 2017
Qatar Blockade: Arab States Give Doha 10 Days to Cut Ties with Iran & Close Turkish Base
Labels:
Arab states,
Doha,
Iran,
Qatar,
Turkey
Sunday, September 27, 2015
Saturday, September 05, 2015
Britain Pledges to Help Thousands of Refugees – But Rich Arab States Have Taken In NONE
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates – all relatively close to war-ravaged Syria and said by commentators to have the capacity to quickly house refugees – are yet to take any of the four million Syrians fleeing the region.
The news comes as record numbers embark on the life-threatening journey to Europe – and packed refugee camps in Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Egypt come under threat from the Islamic State advance.
And although the tragic death of three-year-old Aylan Kurdi has seen European attitudes to the crisis change overnight, campaigners have slammed Gulf states' unwillingness to change tack.
Syrians must apply for tourist visas and work permits in order to have any hope of starting a new life in the Gulf – with few of the costly documents ever granted.
Amnesty International's Head of Refugee and Migrants' Rights, Sherif Elsayid-Ali, said: "The records of Gulf countries is absolutely appalling, in terms of actually showing compassion and sharing the responsibility of this crisis... It is a disgrace." » | Patrick Maguire | Saturday, September 5, 2015
Labels:
Arab states,
Bahrain,
Kuwait,
Qatar,
refugee crisis,
refugees,
Saudi Arabia,
UAE
Monday, September 07, 2009
HAARETZ: U.S. special Mideast envoy George Mitchell has managed to obtain "pledges" from many Arab states for various steps toward normalization with Israel, some more significant and some less so, senior U.S. government officials told Haaretz on Sunday.
That is one of the main questions to which Israel is hoping to receive an answer when Mitchell arrives later this week or early next: what steps toward normalization the Arab states have agreed to take in exchange for a partial freeze in West Bank settlements.
Sources in the Prime Minister's Office, the Defense Ministry and the Foreign Ministry all said that Israel still does not have a clear picture of what quid pro quos Mitchell has managed to obtain in his talks with these states.
The U.S. officials also declined to specify which states had made these pledges. Saudi Arabia, which Washington had hoped would be one of them, has thus far refused to offer anything to Israel, though it has agreed to provide the Palestinian Authority with hundreds of millions of dollars to shore up its shaky financial situation.
"We've done our part," an associate of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's said on Sunday. "We decided to make an effort to facilitate the diplomatic process, but now we want to see that we will also get something in exchange."
According to the U.S. officials, some Arab states have agreed to let Israel open offices in their territory, others have agreed to grant visas to Israeli businessmen and tourists, and still others have offered to allow direct telephone connections between Israel and their countries. >>> Barak Ravid | Monday, September 09, 2009
Thursday, February 14, 2008
EARTH TIMES: Valletta, Malta Arab states attending the European Union- Arab League meeting in Malta on Tuesday lobbied the Dutch government against a highly controversial anti-Islam film about to be released in the Netherlands. The foreign ministers of Syria, Egypt and Morocco spoke against the film with Dutch State Secretary for Social Affairs and Employment Ahmed Aboutaleb, a Muslim himself, at the ministerial meeting that ended Tuesday, The Times of Malta reported.
Dutch far right leader Geert Wilders is behind the 15-minute film (Fitna), which according to advance reports denounces the Koran as a fascist book and claims it incites people to murder. Arab states lobby against Dutch anti-Islam film >>> By DPA
Mark Alexander (Paperback)
Mark Alexander (Hardback)
Sunday, November 18, 2007
SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: GULF states, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, could revalue their currencies while maintaining their pegs to the US dollar.
Such a move would probably have the effect of further undermining faith in the flagging greenback and perhaps prompt Asian nations also to consider unhooking their currencies from the dollar.
The Arab states may revalue by an unspecified amount in as soon as a month, a well-placed source - who declined to be identified because the matter was confidential - said on Saturday. No decision had been made on whether to revalue, he said.
The comments came as heads of state of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries began a summit meeting in the Saudi capital, Riyadh.
Gulf states are facing record inflation, caused partly by the weakening dollar which has made imports from Europe more expensive. Consumer prices rose a record 4.9 per cent in Saudi Arabia in August while inflation in the UAE increased to a record 9.3 per cent last year. Qatar has the highest inflation in the region, reaching 14.8 per cent.
"It makes sense for them to do it," said Jens Nordvig, senior global markets economist at Goldman Sachs in New York. "Given the emerging inflation pressures, there are very good reasons for them to allow currency appreciation." Arab states talk of revaluation (more) By Matthew Brown and Anchalee Worrachate
Mark Alexander
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