Showing posts with label expats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expats. Show all posts
Saturday, August 05, 2017
Qatar to Approve Permanent Residency for Some Expats
Sunday, July 03, 2016
Thursday, February 24, 2011
SKY NEWS: Read on >>> Steph Oliver, Sky News Online | Thursday, February 24, 2011
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: Glen Mundy, head of the International School Tripoli, based on the western outskirts of the Libyan capital, speaks to the Guardian's Adam Gabbatt via Skype about his experience of the recent turmoil
Monday, May 17, 2010
Labels:
Bangkok,
expats,
street violence,
Thailand
Sunday, May 09, 2010
THE TELEGRAPH: Britons living in Spain have been warned that some face "express demolition" of their houses under a tough new law announced by the regional government of Andalusia.
Owners of homes which are retrospectively judged to have fallen foul of regional planning rules can now be given just one month's notice that council bulldozers are being sent in, as part of a crackdown on excessive development in one of Spain's most popular regions.
Thousands of homes that were bought or built in good faith across the area are at risk since the regional authority began reviewing local councils' planning approvals - and concluded that in many cases, permission to build should never have been granted.
The threat of sending in bulldozers at short notice has horrified the estimated 5,000 Britons with properties in the hillsides of Almanzora, one of the worst affected areas 60 miles north of the coastal city of Almeria in southern Spain.
Hundreds of properties have already been served with demolition orders, but most homeowners had not felt under immediate threat because of Spain's slow-moving legal system. They believe that the fast-track demolition orders will change that.
"The fast-track orders could speed up the legal process and hasten demolitions," said Maura Hillen, who organised a mass rally against them in Malaga. To add insult to injury, after a demolition the victim would have to pay the municipality for the bulldozer. >>> Nick Meo in Costa Almeria and Fergal MacErlean | Sunday, May 09, 2010
Saturday, February 28, 2009
NRC HANDELSBLAD: The wealthy Gulf state of Dubai has been hit hard by the global economic crisis. Tens of thousands of workers have been laid off and forced to return to their homelands. The Dutch community in Dubai is also feeling the pinch.
Jan Demmink has lived in Dubai for 28 years. It's the pleasant atmosphere, the entrepreneurial spirit and the climate that keep him in the Gulf state. He witnessed the transformation of what was once a tranquil and prosperous town into the vast collection of skyscrapers that makes up modern-day Dubai.
Under the leadership of Sheik Mohammed and his father Maktoum III, the emirate invested in the financial sector, tourism and real estate. The bigger, more expensive and more luxurious the better. Yet these are the very sectors that have been shaken to their foundations by the crisis and meanwhile Dubai has no major oil reserves to fall back on.
Financial nosedive
Jan Demmink works in the electronic security of complexes such as refineries, palaces and roads. His position is safe for the time being. "I work on long-running projects, so I have yet to feel the effects of the crisis," he explains. "But in construction you can see the signs already. A halt has been called to projects that were only started recently, or which have yet to get under way."
Dutch dredging company Van Oord is one of those in the firing line. The company hit the headlines worldwide with the construction of Palm Jumeirah, the first of Dubai's famous Palm islands and the construction of The World archipelago. Van Oord was all set to embark on a third island project, Palm Deira, an order worth 2.5 billion euros, the largest in the company's history. Part of the order has already been realised but the rest is on the back burner for the foreseeable future. The funding simply isn't there. Spokesman Bert Groothuizen says no one saw the rapid changes coming. "It was a nosedive. Especially in the fourth quarter of 2008. And I don't think these problems will be solved in six months' time." Expats Feeling the Economic Nosedive in Dubai >>> By Willemien Groot for Radio Netherlands Worldwide | Friday, February 27, 2009
The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback & Hardback – The Netherlands) >>>
Labels:
Dubai,
Dutch expats,
expatriates,
expats,
financial crisis,
lay-offs
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