New Sri Lankan initiative celebrates expats for fostering Saudi ties

Special New Sri Lankan initiative celebrates expats for fostering Saudi ties
Sri Lankan Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Ameer Ajwad, center, hands a certificate of recognition to Chandralal Senadhira, a Sri Lankan expat who spent over 30 years of his career in the Kingdom. (Sri Lanka Embassy)
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Updated 10 July 2024
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New Sri Lankan initiative celebrates expats for fostering Saudi ties

New Sri Lankan initiative celebrates expats for fostering Saudi ties

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s envoy in Riyadh has launched a new initiative to celebrate the country’s expatriates building their professional careers in the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia is one of the top destinations for Sri Lankan expats, with tens of thousands of them living and working in the Kingdom.

“Sri Lankan migrant workers form part of the bilateral relations between Sri Lanka and Saudi Arabia. They play a significant role in contributing to the host country’s socio-economic development by sharing their skills and expertise, as well as to the economic growth of the home country by sending their hard-earned remittances,” Ambassador Ameer Ajwad told Arab News on Wednesday.

The first person to receive the accolade was Chandralal Senadhira, a manager who has served over 30 years working with the Saudi food and beverage giant Almarai and was set to retire and return to Sri Lanka.

The Sri Lankan Embassy held a reception in his honor last week and plans to host more as part of the new tradition of recognizing and showing gratitude to nationals who contribute to Saudi-Sri Lankan ties and their homeland’s economy.

“In the spirit of demonstrating our gratitude … the Embassy of Sri Lanka in Riyadh, as an initial step, introduced felicitating long-served Sri Lankan migrant workers in Saudi Arabia who leave the Kingdom for good, in recognition of their vital contributions,” Ajwad said.

Expats have for decades been a main source of Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange. More than 1 million of them — or over half of the country’s overseas workforce — are employed in Gulf countries.

“Sri Lankan migrant workers serving in the Middle East region are a vital component of Sri Lanka’s economy. The largest amount of foreign exchange generated for Sri Lanka comes from the Sri Lankan migrant workers who serve in the Middle East,” Ajwad said.

“This is a significant contribution to Sri Lanka’s financial stability, social welfare and development.”

With new opportunities available to expats in Saudi Arabia under its Vision 2030 megaprojects, more and more Sri Lankan professionals were finding employment in the Kingdom.

Ajwad, who took office earlier this year, has made boosting their involvement in the projects one of his priorities.

“With the economic boom in Saudi Arabia in the recent past, the number of Sri Lankan migrant workers finding employment opportunities in the Kingdom is on the increase,” he said.

“We are grateful to the government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for opening new channels for employment opportunities.”


Indian PM Modi tells Putin he supports end to Ukraine war

Indian PM Modi tells Putin he supports end to Ukraine war
Updated 57 min 54 sec ago
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Indian PM Modi tells Putin he supports end to Ukraine war

Indian PM Modi tells Putin he supports end to Ukraine war
  • New Delhi has avoided explicit condemnations of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022
  • Russia has also become a major supplier of cut-price crude oil to India since the Ukraine conflict began

New Delhi: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday that he supports a swift end to the grinding conflict in Ukraine after visiting the war-hit country.
Modi, 73, has trodden a delicate balance between maintaining India’s historically warm ties with Russia while courting closer security partnerships with Western nations as a bulwark against regional rival China.
New Delhi has avoided explicit condemnations of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, instead urging both sides to resolve their differences through dialogue.
Modi said he had “exchanged perspectives on the Russia-Ukraine conflict” with Putin and shared “my insights from the recent visit to Ukraine,” in a post on social media.
He said he had “reiterated India’s firm commitment to support an early, abiding and peaceful resolution of the conflict.”
Modi, who angered Ukrainians by hugging Putin in Moscow recently, visited Kyiv on Friday and told President Volodymyr Zelensky that “no problem should be solved on the battlefield.”
His chat with Putin comes a day after a call with US President Joe Biden, where Modi reiterated New Delhi’s “consistent position in favor of dialogue and diplomacy,” an Indian foreign ministry statement said.
India and Russia have maintained close links since the Cold War, which saw the Kremlin become a key arms provider to the South Asian country.
Russia has also become a major supplier of cut-price crude oil to India since the Ukraine conflict began, providing a much-needed export market after the imposition of Western sanctions.
That has dramatically reconfigured their economic ties, with India saving billions of dollars while bolstering Moscow’s war coffers.
India is part of the Quad grouping, with the United States, Japan and Australia, that positions itself against China’s growing influence in the Asia-Pacific region.


Chinese military stages live-fire drills by Myanmar border

Chinese military stages live-fire drills by Myanmar border
Updated 27 August 2024
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Chinese military stages live-fire drills by Myanmar border

Chinese military stages live-fire drills by Myanmar border
  • Myanmar’s northern Shan state has been the site of repeated clashes since late June

BEIJING: China’s army and air force began live-fire exercises Tuesday next to its border with Myanmar, local authorities said, following recent bilateral talks on security in the area.
Myanmar’s northern Shan state has been the site of repeated clashes since late June after ethnic rebel groups renewed an offensive against the military along a vital trade highway to China.
Beijing is a major ally and arms supplier to Myanmar’s junta, but analysts say it also maintains ties with ethnic armed groups that hold territory near its border.
Earlier this month Myanmar’s embattled junta chief hosted China’s foreign minister in Naypyidaw for talks on the “stability of the border regions.”
Shan state borders China’s Yunnan province and is a vital piece of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.
Local authorities in Yunnan said the drills, held according to an “annual training plan,” would last until Thursday.
The exercises “aim to test the command’s reconnaissance, early warning, multi-dimensional control and strike capabilities,” according to a spokesperson for the People’s Liberation Army, quoted by state news agency Xinhua.
Troops involved “are prepared to handle various emergencies and are committed to safeguarding national sovereignty, border stability and the safety of people’s lives and property,” the report said.


France’s Macron back to square one as left plans protests over political crisis

France’s Macron back to square one as left plans protests over political crisis
Updated 27 August 2024
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France’s Macron back to square one as left plans protests over political crisis

France’s Macron back to square one as left plans protests over political crisis

PARIS: France’s Socialists and Greens will not participate in further talks with President Emmanuel Macron to find a way out of political deadlock, their leaders said on Tuesday, calling on their supporters to hold peaceful protests instead.
Macron slammed the door on a potential leftist government on Monday, saying it would be immediately removed from power by a majority of lawmakers from other camps. Instead, he embarked on another round of talks with party leaders on Tuesday.
But facing a hung parliament in which each of the three almost equal groupings — the left, Macron’s centrist bloc and the far-right National Rally — have ruled out forming a coalition, the president appeared to be back to square one.
“This election is being stolen from us,” Green party chief Marine Tondelier told local radio.
“We’re not going to continue these sham consultations with a president who doesn’t listen anyway ... and is obsessed with keeping control. He’s not looking for a solution, he’s trying to obstruct it,” Tondelier said.
Socialist Party president Olivier Faure told France 2 television he would not engage in what he called a “parody of democracy” now the prospect of a leftist-led government was off the table.
The LFI, a hard-left party within the leftist New Popular Front (NFP) alliance that won the most seats in a snap parliamentary election this summer, called for a mass protest against Macron on Sept. 7.
NFP leaders have repeatedly asserted that France’s next prime minister should come from their ranks, but Macron has ignored their claims. Macron, a pro-business centrist, thinks the balance of power lies more with the center or center-right.


Indian police fire teargas at hundreds protesting over Kolkata doctor’s rape, murder

Indian police fire teargas at hundreds protesting over Kolkata doctor’s rape, murder
Updated 27 August 2024
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Indian police fire teargas at hundreds protesting over Kolkata doctor’s rape, murder

Indian police fire teargas at hundreds protesting over Kolkata doctor’s rape, murder
  • Junior doctors have refused to see non-emergency patients in many parts of the country since the incident
  • India’s Supreme Court has created a hospital safety task force and has requested protesting doctors return to work

KOLKATA, India: Police in India fired teargas and water cannon to disperse hundreds of protesters marching in the eastern city of Kolkata on Tuesday to demand the resignation of a top state minister in the wake of a gruesome rape and murder of a trainee doctor.
Protesters led by university students broke through the iron barricades set up on the route of their march to the West Bengal state secretariat, television footage showed, resulting in a baton charge by the police, who had earlier declared the protest illegal.
The Aug. 9 attack on the 31-year-old doctor has caused nationwide outrage, similar to the widespread protests witnessed after a 2012 gang-rape of a 23-year-old student on a moving bus in New Delhi, with campaigners saying women continue to suffer from high levels of sexual violence despite tougher laws.
A police volunteer has been arrested for the crime and the federal police have taken over the investigation.
Junior doctors have refused to see non-emergency patients in many parts of the country since the incident at Kolkata’s state-run R.G. Kar Medical College, as they launched protests demanding justice for the victim and greater safety for women at hospitals.
India’s Supreme Court has created a hospital safety task force and has requested protesting doctors return to work, but some have refused to budge, including in West Bengal, of which Kolkata is the capital.
On Tuesday, more than 5,000 policemen were deployed in Kolkata and the neighboring city of Howrah, a senior officer said, as the protests led by some university students took off, demanding the resignation of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.
Kunal Ghosh, a spokesperson for Banerjee’s ruling Trinamool Congress Party, blamed the police crackdown on “lawlessness” created by workers of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, which is the main opposition party the state, as well as groups affiliated to it.
The BJP has extended its support to the protesting students, while senior state leader Suvendu Adhikari told reporters that Banerjee’s administration was trying to suppress the rape and murder incident — a charge the state government has denied.


UK’s Starmer says things will get worse before they get better

UK’s Starmer says things will get worse before they get better
Updated 27 August 2024
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UK’s Starmer says things will get worse before they get better

UK’s Starmer says things will get worse before they get better
  • Starmer vowed to rebuild the fabric of British society after anti-migrant riots
  • Government determined to tackle a multitude of problems ranging from overflowing prisons to a shortage of housing and long waiting lists for health services

LONDON: Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Tuesday it would take a long time to rebuild Britain and rid it of the rot he says took hold under the previous Conservative government, warning “things will get worse before they get better.”
Starmer, elected in a July landslide election victory, has vowed to rebuild the fabric of British society, saying this month’s anti-migrant riots reflected the divisions that built up during the Conservative Party’s 14 years in power.
He made his speech in the Rose Garden at Downing Street, where former prime minister Boris Johnson held one of many parties during COVID lockdowns, events that Starmer said shattered the trust between the public and its politicians.
“We have inherited not just an economic black hole but a societal black hole and that is why we have to take action and do things differently. Part of that is being honest with people about the choices we face and how tough this will be,” he said.
“Frankly, things will get worse before we get better.”
Addressing an audience of people he met during this year’s election campaign such as apprentices, teachers, nurses and small business owners, Starmer said change would not happen overnight.
But, speaking a week before Britain’s parliament returns from a summer break, he said his government was determined to tackle a multitude of problems ranging from overflowing prisons to a shortage of housing and long waiting lists for health services.
The former director of public prosecutions was forced to cancel his summer holiday this month to tackle far-right riots that targeted Muslims and migrants. The riots began after the killings of three young girls in northern England was wrongly blamed on a Muslim migrant based on online misinformation.
Starmer said the Conservative government’s failure to tackle problems, and its focus on the “snake oil” of populism, had widened cracks in society, divisions that would take time to heal.