Delivering Excellence in Recruitment and Executive Search Services
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Mauritania and in Lebanon by the American University Administration
Arab Trade Union Confederation (ATUC) A special report on the most important trade union rights and freedoms violations recorded in the Arab region during the COVID-19 pandemic period October 2020 2 Introduction The epidemic in the Arab region has not been limited to the Corona pandemic, but there appeared another epidemic that has been more deadly to humans. It is the persecution of workers under the pretext of protection measurements against the spread of the virus. The International Trade Union Confederation of Global Rights Index indicated that the year 2020 is the worst in the past seven years in terms of blackmailing workers and violating their rights. The seventh edition of the ITUC Global Rights Index documents labour rights violations across 144 countries around the world, especially after the Corona pandemic, which has suspended many workers from their work during the current year. The Middle East and North Africa have been considered the worst regions in the world for workers for seven consecutive years due to the on-going insecurity and conflict in Palestine, Syria, Yemen and Libya. Such regions have also been the most regressive for workers’ representation and union rights. "In light of the emerging coronavirus (Covid-19), some countries have developed anti-worker measures and practices during the period of precautionary measures to confront the outbreak of the pandemic," said Sharan Burrow, The Secretary-General of the International Trade Union Confederation. Bangladesh, Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Honduras, India, Kazakhstan, the Philippines, Turkey and Zimbabwe turned out to be the ten worst countries for working people in 2020 among other 144 countries that have been examined. -
Security Council Distr.: General 27 January 2020
United Nations S/2020/70 Security Council Distr.: General 27 January 2020 Original: English Letter dated 27 January 2020 from the Panel of Experts on Yemen addressed to the President of the Security Council The members of the Panel of Experts on Yemen have the honour to transmit herewith the final report of the Panel, prepared in accordance with paragraph 6 of resolution 2456 (2019). The report was provided to the Security Council Committee established pursuant to resolution 2140 (2014) on 27 December 2019 and was considered by the Committee on 10 January 2020. We would appreciate it if the present letter and the report were brought to the attention of the members of the Security Council and issued as a document of the Council. (Signed) Dakshinie Ruwanthika Gunaratne Coordinator Panel of Experts on Yemen (Signed) Ahmed Himmiche Expert (Signed) Henry Thompson Expert (Signed) Marie-Louise Tougas Expert (Signed) Wolf-Christian Paes Expert 19-22391 (E) 070220 *1922391* S/2020/70 Final report of the Panel of Experts on Yemen Summary After more than five years of conflict, the humanitarian crisis in Yemen continues. The country’s many conflicts are interconnected and can no longer be separated by clear divisions between external and internal actors and events. Throughout 2019, the Houthis and the Government of Yemen made little headway towards either a political settlement or a conclusive military victory. In a continuation from 2018, the belligerents continued to practice economic warfare: using economic obstruction and financial tools as weapons to starve opponents of funds or materials. Profiteering from the conflict is endemic. -
Jurassic Sequence Stratigraphy of the Western and Southern Arabian Gulf
GeoArabia, Vol. 2, No. 4, 1997 Jurassic Sequence Stratigraphy, Arabian Gulf Gulf PetroLink, Bahrain Jurassic Sequence Stratigraphy of the Western and Southern Arabian Gulf Moujahed I. Al-Husseini Gulf PetroLink ABSTRACT The Jurassic sequence stratigraphic scheme for Central Saudi Arabia is extrapolated to the formations of the western and southern Arabian Gulf region resulting in a tentative chronostratigraphic framework. The framework is tentaively constrained as follows: (1) Upper Triassic-?Lower Jurassic continental clastics (Minjur and equivalents) and the subsequent pre-Toarcian unconformity indicate regional erosion and non-deposition over the Arabian platform. (2) A Toarcian sequence (Marrat and equivalents) provides a basal Jurassic regional datum, except in Oman. (3) The late Toarcian and Aalenian correspond to a substantial sea- level lowstand and a regional depositional hiatus. (4) The Middle Jurassic Dhruma Formation corresponds to four different sequences with a major intervening hiatus. The Upper Dhruma Member, together with the Tuwaiq Mountain form the topmost sequence. The correlation between the Dhruma, Tuwaiq Mountain, Hanifa and Jubaila formations, to their equivalents in other Arabian Gulf countries, requires clearer definitions. (5) The Arab and Hith Anhydrite formations are Tithonian based on their sequence assignment, while the Sulaiy Formation is Berriasian and straddles the Jurassic- Cretaceous boundary. (6) The four Tithonian Arab carbonates may have been deposited as transgressive and early highstand deposits. The Tithonian Arab, Gotnia and Hith anhydrites may be late highstand deposits which overstep inland "salinas" (Gotnia and western Rub’ Al-Khali). Each carbonate and overlying anhydrite sequence appear to correspond to a complete third-order cycle. (7) The equivalents to the Kimmeridgian Jubaila Formation and Tithonian Arab carbonates are absent by non-deposition in Kuwait. -
Creating Incentives for More Effective Wastewater Reuse in the Middle East and North Africa
CREATING INCENTIVES FOR MORE EFFECTIVE WASTEWATER REUSE IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA Marc Jeuland Working Paper 626 September 2011 This author thanks the Economic Research Forum in Egypt for supporting this work, and particularly Hala Abou-Ali. Thanks are also due to the anonymous reviewers of this paper’s initial concept as well as the three reviewers for the full paper. Send correspondence to: Marc Jeuland Sanford School of Public Policy and Duke Global Health Institute; Duke University [email protected] First published in 2011 by The Economic Research Forum (ERF) 21 Al-Sad Al-Aaly Street Dokki, Giza Egypt www.erf.org.eg Copyright © The Economic Research Forum, 2011 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. The findings, interpretations and conclusions expressed in this publication are entirely those of the author(s) and should not be attributed to the Economic Research Forum, members of its Board of Trustees, or its donors. Abstract The reuse of treated wastewater is often discussed as an attractive option for addressing water scarcity, yet systematic water recycling remains rare in many arid and semi-arid countries, for example in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). This paper addresses how the economics of reuse may contribute to this paradox, emphasizing the role played by unresolved incentive problems with management of the externalities associated with wastewater discharges. A simple conceptual model with two users—one high-value (e.g. -
Swat District !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Overview: Swat District ! ! ! ! SerkiSerki Chikard Legend ! J A M M U A N D K A S H M I R Citiy / Town ! Main Cities Lohigal Ghari ! Tertiary Secondary Goki Goki Mastuj Shahi!Shahi Sub-division Primary CHITRAL River Chitral Water Bodies Sub-division Union Council Boundary ± Tehsil Boundary District Boundary ! Provincial Boundary Elevation ! In meters ! ! 5,000 and above Paspat !Paspat Kalam 4,000 - 5,000 3,000 - 4,000 ! ! 2,500 - 3,000 ! 2,000 - 2,500 1,500 - 2,000 1,000 - 1,500 800 - 1,000 600 - 800 0 - 600 Kalam ! ! Utror ! ! Dassu Kalam Ushu Sub-division ! Usho ! Kalam Tal ! Utrot!Utrot ! Lamutai Lamutai ! Peshmal!Harianai Dir HarianaiPashmal Kalkot ! ! Sub-division ! KOHISTAN ! ! UPPER DIR ! Biar!Biar ! Balakot Mankial ! Chodgram !Chodgram ! ! Bahrain Mankyal ! ! ! SWAT ! Bahrain ! ! Map Doc Name: PAK078_Overview_Swat_a0_14012010 Jabai ! Pattan Creation Date: 14 Jan 2010 ! ! Sub-division Projection/Datum: Baranial WGS84 !Bahrain BahrainBarania Nominal Scale at A0 paper size: 1:135,000 Ushiri ! Ushiri Madyan ! 0 5 10 15 kms ! ! ! Beshigram Churrai Churarai! Disclaimers: Charri The designations employed and the presentation of material Tirat Sakhra on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Beha ! Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, Bar Thana Darmai Fatehpur city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the Kwana !Kwana delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Kalakot Matta ! Dotted line represents a!pproximately the Line of Control in Miandam Jammu and Kashmir agreed upon by India and Pakistan. Sebujni Patai Olandar Paiti! Olandai! The final status of Jammu and Kashmir has not yet been Gowalairaj Asharay ! Wari Bilkanai agreed upon by the parties. -
Facts & Figures
Under the Patronage of H.H. General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the U.A.E. Armed Forces Hosted by Principal Associate Sponsor Sponsor WORLD FUTURE ENERGY SUMMIT 2016 FACTS & FIGURES Organised by POWERING THE FUTURE OF ENERGY For nearly a decade the World Future Energy Summit has built a solid reputation as the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region’s most influential annual event dedicated to advancing future energy, energy efficiency and clean technology. WFES is where government leaders, thought leaders, entrepreneurs, policymakers and thousands of visitors come together to uncover the latest advances in future energy. EXHIBITORS companies600 32 countries ATTENDEES CONFERENCE 30,050 125 from expert speakers countries 1,200 150 delegates INTERNATIONAL OPENING PAVILIONS CEREMONY 3,500 14country pavilions attendees NETWORKING CO-LOCATED5 FEATURES EXHIBITIONS Solar Village ACROSS TechTalk ENERGY, WATER Business Connect AND WASTE LOCAL PLATFORM GLOBAL AUDIENCE Bringing together global industry leaders and sector specialists, WFES is not only the leading platform for innovations, product launches and valuable business networking, but also the event for making connections that will lead you into new sector markets. KEY EXHIBITOR SECTORS CARBON ADVANCED BUILDING BIOENERGY MANAGEMENT TRANSPORTATION MATERIALS & STORAGE (CCS) ENERGY ENERGY FINANCE / ENGINEERING EFFICIENCY STORAGE BANKING IN BUILDINGS NUCLEAR HYDROPOWER OIL & GAS UTILITY ENERGY DISTRIBUTION / WASTE TO CONVENTIONAL CONSULTANCY / TRADE / ENERGY ENERGY CONTRACTING BUSINESS ENGINEERING ENERGY PROCUREMENT & GEOTHERMAL PRIVATE EFFICIENCY CONSTRUCTION ENERGY EQUITY (EPC) RENEWABLE RESEARCH & ENERGY PROJECT SMART GRIDS SOLAR ENERGY DEVELOPMENT DEVELOPERS URBAN POWER PLANNING WIND ENERGY GENERATION & DESIGN “There has never been a greater opportunity to make real progress towards sustainable development and to create an economic potential that could drive sustained growth for future generations. -
General Assembly Distr
UNITED NATIONS A _..._-------_.._- -------------- General Assembly Distr. G~ERAL A/42/669/Add.l 23 November 19ti7 ORIGINAL' ENGLISH Forty-sec~nd session Agenda item 62 3ENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT Report of ~hc First Committee (part 11) Rapporteur I Mr. Kazimierz TOMASZEWSKI (Poland) t. INTRODUCTION 1. Part I of the report of the First Committee on item ~2 (A/42/669) dealt witt\ a dralt resolution entitled "General and complete disarmamerltl nuclear disacmament" and a draft decision entitled "General and complet,e dlaarmamert", part I1 deals with all other proposals submitted under item 62. 2. As indicated ill pl'\rt I, at ita 2nd meeting, on 1 October, the First Committee decidcn to hold a general debate on the disarmament items alloc6ted to it, namely, hems 48 to 69, ':ollowed by statements on specific disarmament· agenda items and a continu&tion of the general debate, as necessary. The deliberations on those items took place between the 3rd and the 31st meeting, from l? October to 3 November (see A/C.l/42/PV.3-31) • 3. In connection with item 62, in addition to the documents listed in part 1, the First Committee had before it the following documentsl (a) Letter dated 19 October 1987 from the Permanent Representative nf Canada to the united Nations addressed to the Secretary-General, transmitting the Vancuuvor Declaration on World Trade, the Okanagan Statement on ~~uthern Africa and PruqrallUlIt! of Action and the convnunique of the Meeting of the CORlllonwealth Hpads of Governlllent, beld at Vancouver, Canada, from 13 to 17 october 19&7 (A/42/6 77) , (IJ) Letter dated 23 OCtober 1907 from the Permanent Representative of Zimbabwe to the United Nations adciresued to the Secretary-General, transmitting the final l:ol1l1\unique of the Meetinq of NinilitlO:rs for Foreign Affairs and Heads of De legation of the ~'ovement of Non-Aligned Countries to the for ty-second session of the Gp-fleral Assembly, held in Ne\>' York from t; to 7 OCtoher 1987 (\142/681» 97-3U794 0589P (B) / ... -
Qatari Businessmen Delegation to the US April 2018
Qatari Businessmen Delegation to the US April 2018 /Qatar_chamber /QatarChamber /qatarchamber.com /[email protected] Qatari businessmen delegation to the US | April 2018 H.E Sheikh Khalifa bin Jassim Al Thani Chairman of Qatar Chamber President of the International Chamber of Commerce - Qatar Vice-President of the Islamic Chamber It is with a great honour and pleasure to co-organise the Qatar-US Business Forum which provides a brilliant opportunity for Qatari and American private sectors to explore investment and business cooperation for the advantage of our friendly countries. On behalf of the Qatari private sector, I seize this opportunity to extend my deepest gratitude and appreciation to our American counterparts, hoping this forum will serve as a platform to establish long-term partnerships and help find new areas of cooperation in all economic and trade sectors. Qatar and US enjoy profound and distinct relations. They exert strenuous efforts to upgrade these relations in the areas of trade , investment, education and cultural exchanges. This year marks the 45th anniversary of the establishment of the Qatari-US relationship. And today’s forum is a booster to our economic and trade relations. It paves the ways for further cooperation and mutual investments between both sides. I therefore welcome you all to the Qatar-US Business Forum and hope it will add new impetus to our discussions and prepare the ground for concrete action and fruitful results. /Qatar_chamber /QatarChamber /qatarchamber.com /[email protected] Qatari businessmen delegation -
International Directory of Deposit Insurers
A listing of addresses of deposit insurers, central banks and other entities involved in deposit insurance functions. Division of Insurance and Research Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Washington, DC 20429 The FDIC thanks the countries listed for their cooperation, without which the directory would not have been possible. Please direct any comments or corrections to: Donna Vogel Division of Insurance and Research, FDIC by phone +1 202 898 8703 or by e-mail [email protected] FDIC INTERNATIONAL DIRECTORY OF DEPOSIT INSURERS ■ OCTOBER 2018 Table of Contents AFGHANISTAN ......................................................................................................................................6 ALBANIA ...............................................................................................................................................6 ALGERIA ................................................................................................................................................6 ARGENTINA ..........................................................................................................................................6 ARMENIA ..............................................................................................................................................7 AUSTRALIA ............................................................................................................................................7 AUSTRIA ................................................................................................................................................7 -
GCC Report for Survey Respondants
VALUE OF PROJECT OPPORTUNITIES WITHIN THE GCC AVAILABLE ON ZAWYA.COM $ VALUE OF PROJECTS ONGOING 800,000,000,000 700,000,000,000 600,000,000,000 500,000,000,000 400,000,000,000 300,000,000,000 200,000,000,000 100,000,000,000 0 Saudi UAE Kuwait Bahrain Oman Qatar Arabia $ TOTAL VALUE OF PROJECTS 11% Saudi Arabia 3% 6% 28% UAE Kuwait 11% Bahrain Oman Qatar 41% DATA EXTRACTED FROM ZAWYA.COM PROJECTS DATABASE OCTOBER 2012 UAE $Value Projects $Value Projects $Value $Value Projects on $Value Projects $Value of all projects cancelled completed Projects hold ongoing delayed 61,964,230,000 119,751,234,830 811,000,000 345,139,771,000 758,166,580,000 1,285,832,815,830 DATA EXTRACTED FROM ZAWYA.COM PROJECTS DATABASE OCTOBER 2012 ADFEC - Masdar Carbon Free City Phase: Also Known As : Zero - Carbon City Construction - Country : UAE Execution Project Value : USD 22,000,000,000 Completion: 2025 Sector : Real Estate | Community Development Start Date : 2006 Consultants : Foster and Partners (Master Plan) | WS Atkins and Partners Overseas (Infrastructure Concept Design) | WSP Middle East Limited (Engineering) PMCs : CH2M Hill (Phase 1) | Parsons Brinckerhoff Middle East Contractors : Al Jaber Group - UAE (Infrastructure) | Soletanche Bachy (Piling) Profile Type : Master Project | Related Projects (4) Overview Owner : Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company - UAE Location : Abu Dhabi , Abu Dhabi , UAE Contract Type : Construction Facility Type : Science and technology green community Capacity : Total land area: 6 million sq.m. 50,000 residents 1,500 businesses Main Usage : Community Development Background Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (ADFEC), also known as Masdar, plans to build an energy, science and technology green community in Abu Dhabi, between Khalifa City and Abu Dhabi International Airport. -
Indonesia Appeals for Foreign Investment
University of Nebraska at Omaha DigitalCommons@UNO Kabul Times Digitized Newspaper Archives 11-5-1967 Kabul Times (November 5, 1967, vol. 6, no. 182) Bakhtar News Agency Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/kabultimes Part of the International and Area Studies Commons Recommended Citation Bakhtar News Agency, "Kabul Times (November 5, 1967, vol. 6, no. 182)" (1967). Kabul Times. 1633. https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/kabultimes/1633 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Digitized Newspaper Archives at DigitalCommons@UNO. It has been accepted for inclusion in Kabul Times by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. .f:\ .'• '-r- " ., /' '. : . , . .t~, ,I 1 ....:: .. 1 I.,). • .~ . '. .' . '., ,I 4 - '. ,. r ~: ., .. ",' 'tt" \ ...., (' . ") -.. -'L\a'~ '!l'IMEs ,,",,:' " ",,' ", .,;"J ,. NOvEMBER'i4;'l96'i ::, PAGE 4 _ _ ...:.....;,......:...;;,... ,.,...-.,..;- ~ ~~_,.,..~,_,~:---:. '" ~.';";"";;;;""';;,...~.'!1""."""~I,,; "~",:,"""',;,' ) • • r'~',' ... __:;...-,.,..__ ..;:;... .............';"";"":---'_ '\, '. " ., .' I, I t '\ ,r I,: , -I l-. V r ' .' .' , I'" • ',', , f ~ t'1 ' , ,,;.. ~(\, ... ("'J'7~ ~#'l I" j .j.'" .... " ( l ,~; .. ,I \.' ,,I, '/ •• ,"'1' ( ..tD"'~TnAL '~ij-:' "r"'l~' ''1\.l~~"b,~l'h'l "n~l·e"rr,ii;",,~' ".:i~'4t"''1~,~~·,'~ "I;':', MAN' ERLt, "D'e'ad' Sol'di'"e'r" ,: ': ".:', \ , . ::t1n'.J.·:J.F1U ' . ',J <,.,j , ;'" '.~, ,y,~::i~~~:'YI~:\:.Af:~i.'P~" . ~~¥j'!r ;", : ,)::, D:om~),!»nel~' " ',,!d' " > >'''/,9 " (€ontd.,jrom paNt 2) nq close' a 'match as lppssible can 1~:"l'''''IJ:.~'''e' .'l.~',;Ii'''' T' .;: .' ~hf{ ·':~&'\·~'!1.ff~ic~\\'·7.:"\,(.-';·~'r"\I'i,\Ji,}~<,,~L':,· ," ,... ~. " ". ' ,," • '. ,. ::: \,',',/ ." I~'i':> 'erly' l·rre'''"lous. Bu··r'do belle- bE: obtained between' host and 1ll, ,f "~'..f, . -
EURASIA TUNNEL: CONNECTING CONTINENTS Turkey Commissions New Infrastructure Masterpiece Linking Asia and Europe; Will Improve Commuting Times and Promote Cost Savings
ISSUE 35JANUARY 2017 Image: Courtesy of Architect, GMW MIMARLIK of Architect, Image: Courtesy EURASIA TUNNEL: CONNECTING CONTINENTS Turkey commissions new infrastructure masterpiece linking Asia and Europe; will improve commuting times and promote cost savings The Eurasia Tunnel, a mega project Bridge on the Bosphorus in August, and route from 100 minutes to roughly 15 linking Istanbul’s Anatolian side to the now the Eurasia Tunnel, is the future minutes. In addition to the time-saving heart of its historical district on the of these projects. We are attending the benefit, the project should also help European side, was officially opened opening ceremonies for projects in lower pollution while increasing mobility, on December 20 during a ceremony the fields of energy, education, health, all of which will bring an economic attended by President Recep Tayyip sports, and infrastructure with the same boost along with social, cultural, and Erdoğan, Parliament Speaker İsmail excitement. Investments in basic services environmental benefits to the citizens Kahraman, Prime Minister Binali constitute the groundwork for other of Istanbul and to the whole city. The Yıldırım, and a number of guest enterprises needed for the growth and environmentally-friendly Eurasia statesmen. With the addition of the development of a country,” said Erdoğan. Tunnel has been built to withstand a Eurasia Tunnel to the three bridges The Eurasia Tunnel was constructed 7.5-magnitude earthquake and can even currently spanning the Bosphorus, in 4.5 years with a total investment be used as a shelter if required. Istanbul now boasts four intercontinental of USD 1.25 billion and a total length The contractors have the right to run motorways.