Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene

Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene
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Alaa Al-Adwan, a Syrian expat in the Philippines, prepares a shawarma dish at his Baba Shawarma restaurant in Malabon, Metro Manila, on Jan. 30, 2024. (AN Photo)
Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene
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Baba Shawarma restaurant in Malabon, Metro Manila, on Jan. 30, 2024. (AN Photo)
Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene
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Alaa Al-Adwan at his Baba Shawarma restaurant in Malabon, Metro Manila, on Jan. 30, 2024. (AN Photo)
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Updated 09 February 2024
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Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene

Syrian shawarma sellers find niche in Manila’s street food scene
  • Overseas Filipino workers popularized Middle Eastern cuisine back home
  • Syrian businessmen reinvent themselves by selling Arab food with Philippine twist

MANILA:When Abdulkarim Al-Halabi left Syria in 2011, he sought stability which under unfolding civil war was no longer possible at home. Little did he know that he would eventually find it by joining the bustling street food scene in the Philippines.

Then single and in his 30s, Al-Halabi flew more than 8,500 km from Damascus, where he grew up, to try his luck in Manila.

He received encouragement from a friend — a fellow Syrian who married a Filipina and lived there.

“(My friend) suggested to me, why don’t you come to the Philippines? Perhaps you can do something. When I left Syria, I didn’t think I would open a food business,” Al-Halabi told Arab News.

After working for a few years for a food importer, in 2017 he tried his luck with a shawarma business.

Initially a cart, operating at night and on weekends, two years later it became Shawarma Sham— a proper stall with chairs and tables at a popular student hub across De La Salle University in the Philippine capital.

Open 24 hours, it now caters not only to students but also office workers and all those using delivery apps such as GrabFood, and Foodpanda.

Shawarma has been present in the Philippines since the 1990s, introduced as a snack by Filipinos working in the Middle East.

To Al-Halabi it gave a gateway to venturing into the Philippine food scene. And he is far from the only Arab who has set his sights on the opportunity.

Alaa Al-Adwan, 38, known to his friends and customers as Baba, moved to the Philippines in May last year.

Also from Damascus, he had worked in Dubai, a city that exposed him to different nationalities, including Filipinos. It was also there where he met and married his Filipino wife, who like him worked in the hospitality sector.

During numerous trips to the Philippines to visit his wife’s relatives, Al-Adwan learnt the local food landscape and decided to give it a try.

“I wanted (to do) something I could leave my child with in the future,” he told Arab News.

He called his brand Baba Shawarma and himself Baba Syriano.

At first, he sold only shawarma but soon expanded his menu after observing Filipinos’ penchant for grilled dishes.

The restaurant’s generous portions and Al-Adwan’s gregarious nature quickly attracted customers and in less than a year Baba Shawarma shot to social media fame.

From a one-man operation, Al-Adwan now manages seven employees at his shop in the Malabon area of metropolitan Manila.

He takes pride in his service and the quality of food — the standards applied in Dubai which he keeps on following, as he balances authenticity and the spirit of his culinary heritage with local market demands.

“In Dubai, hospitality is king. How you treat the customer is incredibly important,” Al-Adwan said.

“What I cook in the kitchen is authentic. The spices I have — authentic. But I need to also follow the Filipino taste. I need to follow what Filipinos like.”

While Al-Halabi also tweaked his menu to be more Filipino-friendly by adding more chicken-based dishes, Al-Adwan offers his customers add-ons one would not find in Syria, such as a slice of cheese.

“I give it a Filipino twist,” he said. “We don’t add cheese in Arab countries, but Filipinos love cheese in their shawarma.”

These concessions in their cuisine represent not only the need to cater to the market, but also a realization that they need to adapt to the tastes and flavors of their new home.

While most of their family members are now dispersed in Europe and Gulf countries, both of them are content with their lives in the Philippines.

“Filipinos are nice, warm, and friendly,” Al-Halabi said. “When I’m on the street, and I talk to people, I don’t feel that I am treated like a foreigner.”

Al-Adwan, too, felt at home and unlike many other Syrians who settled in different cultures, in the Philippines he saw no prejudice, no racism, and felt appreciated for working hard to provide for his family.

“Filipino people are lovely people, it is easy to talk to them,” he said. “They are very kind.”


Four Pakistan security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood capital

Four Pakistan security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood capital
Updated 17 sec ago
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Four Pakistan security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood capital

Four Pakistan security forces killed as ex-PM Khan supporters flood capital
ISLAMABAD: Pakistani protesters demanding the release of ex-prime minister Imran Khan on Tuesday killed four members of the nation’s security forces, the government said, as the crowds defied police and closed in on the capital’s center.
More than ten thousand protesters armed with sticks and slingshots took on police in central Islamabad on Tuesday afternoon, AFP journalists saw, less than three kilometers (two miles) from the government enclave they aim to occupy.
Khan was barred from standing in February elections that were marred by allegations of rigging, sidelined by dozens of legal cases that he claims were confected to prevent his comeback.
But his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party has defied a government crackdown with regular rallies. Tuesday’s is the largest in the capital since Khan was jailed in August 2023.
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said “miscreants” involved in the march had killed four members of the paramilitary Rangers force on a city highway leading toward the government sector.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the men had been “run over by a vehicle.”
“These disruptive elements do not seek revolution but bloodshed,” he said in a statement. “This is not a peaceful protest, it is extremism.”
The government said Monday that one police officer had also been killed and nine more were critically wounded by demonstrators who set out toward Islamabad on Sunday.


The capital has been locked down since late Saturday, with mobile Internet sporadically cut and more than 20,000 police flooding the streets, many armed with riot shields and batons.
The government has accused protesters of attempting to derail a state visit by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, who arrived for a three-day visit on Monday.
Last week, the Islamabad city administration announced a two-month ban on public gatherings.
But PTI convoys traveled from their power base in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and the most populous province of Punjab, hauling aside roadblocks of stacked shipping containers.
“We are deeply frustrated with the government, they do not know how to function,” 56-year-old protester Kalat Khan told AFP on Monday. “The treatment we are receiving is unjust and cruel.”
The government cited “security concerns” for the mobile Internet outages, while Islamabad’s schools and universities were also ordered shut on Monday and Tuesday.
“Those who will come here will be arrested,” Interior Minister Naqvi told reporters late Monday at D-Chowk, the public square outside Islamabad’s government buildings that PTI aims to occupy.
PTI’s chief demand is the release of Khan, the 72-year-old charismatic former cricket star who served as premier from 2018 to 2022 and is the lodestar of their party.
They are also protesting alleged tampering in the February polls and a recent government-backed constitutional amendment giving it more power over the courts, where Khan is tangled in dozens of cases.


Sharif’s government has come under increasing criticism for deploying heavy-handed measures to quash PTI’s protests.
“It speaks of a siege mentality on the part of the government and establishment — a state in which they see themselves in constant danger and fearful all the time of being overwhelmed by opponents,” read one opinion piece in the English-language Dawn newspaper published Monday.
“This urges them to take strong-arm measures, not occasionally but incessantly.”
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said “blocking access to the capital, with motorway and highway closures across Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, has effectively penalized ordinary citizens.”
The US State Department appealed for protesters to refrain from violence, while also urging authorities to “respect human rights and fundamental freedoms and to ensure respect for Pakistan’s laws and constitution as they work to maintain law and order.”
Khan was ousted by a no-confidence vote after falling out with the kingmaking military establishment, which analysts say engineers the rise and fall of Pakistan’s politicians.
But as opposition leader, he led an unprecedented campaign of defiance, with PTI street protests boiling over into unrest that the government cited as the reason for its crackdown.
PTI won more seats than any other party in this year’s election but a coalition of parties considered more pliable to military influence shut them out of power.
stm-jts/sco

Russia’s Medvedev warns West over discussing nuclear weapons for Ukraine

Russia’s Medvedev warns West over discussing nuclear weapons for Ukraine
Updated 53 min 33 sec ago
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Russia’s Medvedev warns West over discussing nuclear weapons for Ukraine

Russia’s Medvedev warns West over discussing nuclear weapons for Ukraine

MOSCOW: Senior Russian security official Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday that if the West supplied nuclear weapons to Ukraine then Moscow could consider such a transfer to be tantamount to an attack on Russia, providing grounds for a nuclear response.
The New York Times reported last week that some unidentified Western officials had suggested that US President Joe Biden could give Ukraine nuclear weapons, though there were fears such a step would have serious implications.
“American politicians and journalists are seriously discussing the consequences of the transfer of nuclear weapons to Kyiv,” Medvedev, who served as Russia’s president from 2008 to 2012, said on Telegram.
Medvedev said that even the threat of such a transfer of nuclear weapons could be considered as preparation for a nuclear war against Russia.
“The actual transfer of such weapons can be equated to the fait accompli of an attack on our country,” under Russia’s newly updated nuclear doctrine, he said.


China sends naval, air forces to shadow US plane over Taiwan Strait

China sends naval, air forces to shadow US plane over Taiwan Strait
Updated 26 November 2024
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China sends naval, air forces to shadow US plane over Taiwan Strait

China sends naval, air forces to shadow US plane over Taiwan Strait
  • The US Navy’s 7th fleet said a P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft had flown through the strait

BEIJING: China’s military said on Tuesday it deployed naval and air forces to monitor and warn a US Navy patrol aircraft that flew through the sensitive Taiwan Strait, denouncing the United States for trying to “mislead” the international community.
Around once a month, US military ships or aircraft pass through or above the waterway that separates democratically governed Taiwan from China — missions that always anger Beijing.
China claims sovereignty over Taiwan and says it has jurisdiction over the strait. Taiwan and the United States dispute that, saying the strait is an international waterway.
The US Navy’s 7th fleet said a P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft had flown through the strait “in international airspace,” adding that the flight demonstrated the United States’ commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific.
“By operating within the Taiwan Strait in accordance with international law, the United States upholds the navigational rights and freedoms of all nations,” it said in a statement.
China’s military criticized the flight as “public hype,” adding that it monitored the US aircraft throughout its transit and “effectively” responded to the situation.
“The relevant remarks by the US distort legal principles, confuse public opinion and mislead international perceptions,” the military’s Eastern Theatre Command said in a statement.
“We urge the US side to stop distorting and hyping up and jointly safeguard regional peace and stability.”
In April, China’s military said it sent fighter jets to monitor and warn a US Navy Poseidon in the Taiwan Strait, a mission that took place just hours after a call between the Chinese and US defense chiefs. (Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Additional reporting and writing by Ben Blanchard in Taipei; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)


Ukraine says Russia launched ‘record’ 188 drones overnight

Ukraine says Russia launched ‘record’ 188 drones overnight
Updated 26 November 2024
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Ukraine says Russia launched ‘record’ 188 drones overnight

Ukraine says Russia launched ‘record’ 188 drones overnight

KYIV: Russia staged a record number of drone attacks overnight over Ukraine, damaging buildings and “critical infrastructure” in several regions, the air force said Tuesday.
“During the night attack, the enemy launched a record number of Shahed strike unmanned aerial vehicles and unidentified drones,” the air force said, referring to Iranian-designed drones and putting the figure at 188.


President of Chile denies sexual harassment complaint

President of Chile denies sexual harassment complaint
Updated 26 November 2024
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President of Chile denies sexual harassment complaint

President of Chile denies sexual harassment complaint
  • Chilean President Gabriel Boric denies claims he sexually harassed a woman over a decade ago

Santiago: Chilean President Gabriel Boric was accused in a criminal complaint of sexually harassing a woman over a decade ago, an allegation he “categorically” denies, a lawyer said Monday.
“The president ... rejects and categorically denies the complaint,” attorney Jonatan Valenzuela said in a statement, referring to an alleged event in 2013.
The complaint was filed on September 6 in the local prosecutor’s office of Magallanes, in the far south of Chile where Boric is from.
Cristian Crisosto, who heads the Magallanes prosecutor’s office, confirmed “there is a criminal case related to the facts listed,” adding that there was a special team at the agency investigating the complaint.
According to Valenzuela, the complaint was filed by a woman who at the time sent Boric 25 emails that were “unsolicited and non-consensual,” including one with explicit images.
More than 10 years later, the woman “filed a complaint without any basis whatsoever against now-president Gabriel Boric.”
Boric, now 38, was 27 at the time and had just completed his law degree.
“My client never had an emotional relationship or friendship with her and they have not communicated since July 2014,” Valenzuela added.
The accusation against Boric comes as his administration is dealing with a separate scandal over sexual abuse after former crime czar and ex-deputy interior minister Manuel Monsalve was arrested this month on suspicion of raping his subordinate.
Boric, who is ineligible to run for reelection after his four-year presidential term ends in 2026, has special immunity and must first be subject to an impeachment trial by the justice department to be formally investigated.