Covid-19 Global Travel Restrictions 10 November 2020 17:00 UTC
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An Analysis of the Afar-Somali Conflict in Ethiopia and Djibouti
Regional Dynamics of Inter-ethnic Conflicts in the Horn of Africa: An Analysis of the Afar-Somali Conflict in Ethiopia and Djibouti DISSERTATION ZUR ERLANGUNG DER GRADES DES DOKTORS DER PHILOSOPHIE DER UNIVERSTÄT HAMBURG VORGELEGT VON YASIN MOHAMMED YASIN from Assab, Ethiopia HAMBURG 2010 ii Regional Dynamics of Inter-ethnic Conflicts in the Horn of Africa: An Analysis of the Afar-Somali Conflict in Ethiopia and Djibouti by Yasin Mohammed Yasin Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree PHILOSOPHIAE DOCTOR (POLITICAL SCIENCE) in the FACULITY OF BUSINESS, ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES at the UNIVERSITY OF HAMBURG Supervisors Prof. Dr. Cord Jakobeit Prof. Dr. Rainer Tetzlaff HAMBURG 15 December 2010 iii Acknowledgments First and foremost, I would like to thank my doctoral fathers Prof. Dr. Cord Jakobeit and Prof. Dr. Rainer Tetzlaff for their critical comments and kindly encouragement that made it possible for me to complete this PhD project. Particularly, Prof. Jakobeit’s invaluable assistance whenever I needed and his academic follow-up enabled me to carry out the work successfully. I therefore ask Prof. Dr. Cord Jakobeit to accept my sincere thanks. I am also grateful to Prof. Dr. Klaus Mummenhoff and the association, Verein zur Förderung äthiopischer Schüler und Studenten e. V., Osnabruck , for the enthusiastic morale and financial support offered to me in my stay in Hamburg as well as during routine travels between Addis and Hamburg. I also owe much to Dr. Wolbert Smidt for his friendly and academic guidance throughout the research and writing of this dissertation. Special thanks are reserved to the Department of Social Sciences at the University of Hamburg and the German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) that provided me comfortable environment during my research work in Hamburg. -
Republic of Yemen Air Transport Sector Review Note
Republic of Yemen Air Transport Sector Review Note May, 2009 Middle East and North Africa Region Energy and Transport Unit CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange rate effective on January, 2009) Currency Unit = Yemeni Rial (YER) 1 YER = 0.005 USD 1 USD = 200 YER Fiscal Year: January 1 – December 31 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ACAC Arab Civil Aviation Commission ADE Aden International Airport AOC Air Operator Certificate ATC Air Traffic Control ATIS Automated Terminal Information System BASA Bilateral Air Service Agreements CAMA Civil Aviation and Meteorological Authority of Yemen FIR Fligths Information Region GNSS Global Navigation Satellite Systems GoY Government of Yemen GPS Global Positioning System IATA International Air Transport Association ICAO International Civil Aviation Organization ILS Instrument Landing Approach MoT Ministry of Transport RIY Al-Mukalla Airport SAH Sana’a International Airport SARP Standards and Recommended Practices UAE United Arab Emirates USOAP Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme VOR - DME VHF Omni-Directional Radio Range - Distance Measuring Equipment 2/65 January 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................................... 4 I. THE AIR TRANSPORT SECTOR AT A GLANCE ....................................................................... 9 II. AIR TRANSPORT SERVICES AND COMPETITION POLICY..........................................10 A. DOMESTIC AIR TRANSPORT ...............................................................................................................10 -
Immigration Situation Overview
COVID-19 Pandemic – Immigration Situation Overview This is a summary of the confirmed immigration restrictions and/or concessions that global jurisdictions are currently imposing in an effort to contain the novel coronavirus (COVID-19). It includes: (1) the operational status of government authorities; (2) travel restrictions; (3) entry, quarantine, and health requirements; and (4) government concessions. Where a jurisdiction is not listed, Fragomen cannot reliably confirm it is currently imposing restrictions or concessions of this type. The novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak is a rapidly changing event; this summary is for reference only. It does not attempt to cover other developments that may be relevant to travelers, such as airline route cancellations, the closing of consular posts, or national travel advisories. For the latest on global confirmed coronavirus disease cases, review the World Health Organization’s latest situation report here. Individuals considering travel should consult their country’s consular posts and seek case-specific advice from their travel and /or immigration providers. Employers whose staff have moved to remote work arrangements may need to complete additional labor law requirements, such as employment contract amendment. User Tip: country names act as bookmarks in this document – open your bookmarks pane to navigate the document. Last updated at 6/1/2020 11:11:00 AM ET Table of Contents Afghanistan Congo (DR) Hong Kong (SAR) Moldova Slovakia Albania Congo (Republic) Hungary Mongolia Slovenia Algeria -
Abstracts Book Igc 2015 (Pdf)
34th International Gemmological Conference IGC August 2015 Vilnius, Lithuania 34th IGC 2015 – Vilnius, Lithuania Introduction 34th International Gemmological Conference IGC August, 2015 Vilnius, Lithuania Dear Participants, We are really honored for the first time to host IGC Conference here, in Lithuania – “Lonely Planet“ Best in Travel destination for 2015. Thank you for taking this great opportunity to come to Europe’s Northern Baroque pearl – capital Vilnius and our Amber land, Lithuania. Many of you are coming from afar to share great ideas and experiences, all in the single love to gemmology. Since I joined IGC, I have been impressed by high level of intelligence and the pool of knowledge of great IGC community that was built almost 90-ty years ago and still continuing to grow. From Greenland to Japan, from France, Germany to India, Sri Lanka to Australia, from Tanzania, Switzerland to Vietnam, USA, Canada and many more – the community’s in-depth research and awareness in science of gemmology shines through. I am truly delighted that our worldwide dialogue and exchange in gemmological research will be held with the highest-level standard here, at Vilnius University, one of the oldest Alma Mater in Europe, developing its deep scientific traditions for over 430 hundred years. I wish all of you an inspiring conference and great discoveries and emotions visiting our charming Vilnius and beautiful Lithuania – the country where World Amber Road starts. Dr. Arūnas Kleišmantas Chairman of 34th IGC 2015 2 34th IGC 2015 – Vilnius, Lithuania Introduction Organising Committee for the 34th IGC Conference Organisers Dr. Arūnas Kleišmantas, Chairman of 34th IGC’2015, Vilnius – IGC programme development Dr. -
Reference List Safety Approach Light Masts
REFERENCE LIST SAFETY APPROACH LIGHT MASTS Updated: 24 April 2014 1 (10) AFRICA Angola Menongue Airport 2013 Benin Cotonou Airport 2000 Burkina Faso Bobo Diaulasso Airport 1999 Cameroon Douala Airport 1994, 2009 Garoua Airport 2001 Cap Verde Praia Airport 1999 Amilcar Capral Airport 2008 Equatorial Guinea Mongomeyen Airport 2010 Gabon Libreville Airport 1994 M’vengue Airport 2003 Ghana Takoradi Airport 2008 Accra Kotoka 2013 Guinea-Bissau Bissau Airport 2012 Ivory Coast Abidjan Airport 2002 Yamoussoukro Airport 2006 Kenya Laikipia Air Base 2010 Kisumu Airport 2011 Libya Tripoli Airport 2002 Benghazi Airport 2005 Madagasgar Antananarivo Airport 1994 Mahajanga Airport 2009 Mali Moptu Airport 2002 Bamako Airport 2004, 2010 Mauritius Rodrigues Airport 2002 SSR Int’l Airport 2011 Mauritius SSR 2012 Mozambique Airport in Mozambique 2008 Namibia Walvis Bay Airport 2005 Lüderitz Airport 2005 Republic of Congo Ollombo Airport 2007 Pointe Noire Airport 2007 Exel Composites Plc www.exelcomposites.com Muovilaaksontie 2 Tel. +358 20 754 1200 FI-82110 Heinävaara, Finland Fax +358 20 754 1330 This information is confidential unless otherwise stated REFERENCE LIST SAFETY APPROACH LIGHT MASTS Updated: 24 April 2014 2 (10) Brazzaville Airport 2008, 2010, 2013 Rwanda Kigali-Kamombe International Airport 2004 South Africa Kruger Mpumalanga Airport 2002 King Shaka Airport, Durban 2009 Lanseria Int’l Airport 2013 St. Helena Airport 2013 Sudan Merowe Airport 2007 Tansania Dar Es Salaam Airport 2009 Tunisia Tunis–Carthage International Airport 2011 ASIA China -
Russia's Role in the Horn of Africa
Russia Foreign Policy Papers “E O” R’ R H A SAMUEL RAMANI FOREIGN POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE • RUSSIA FOREIGN POLICY PAPERS 1 All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Author: Samuel Ramani The views expressed in this report are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, a non-partisan organization that seeks to publish well-argued, policy- oriented articles on American foreign policy and national security priorities. Eurasia Program Leadership Director: Chris Miller Deputy Director: Maia Otarashvili Editing: Thomas J. Shattuck Design: Natalia Kopytnik © 2020 by the Foreign Policy Research Institute July 2020 OUR MISSION The Foreign Policy Research Institute is dedicated to producing the highest quality scholarship and nonpartisan policy analysis focused on crucial foreign policy and national security challenges facing the United States. We educate those who make and influence policy, as well as the public at large, through the lens of history, geography, and culture. Offering Ideas In an increasingly polarized world, we pride ourselves on our tradition of nonpartisan scholarship. We count among our ranks over 100 affiliated scholars located throughout the nation and the world who appear regularly in national and international media, testify on Capitol Hill, and are consulted by U.S. government agencies. Educating the American Public FPRI was founded on the premise that an informed and educated citizenry is paramount for the U.S. -
The Travel Guide
Travel 1. Arriving by airplane Minsk National Airport (MSQ) There are several Airlines that operate at Minsk National Airport, such as Belavia, Aeroflot, Airbaltic and Lufthansa. The airport is about 50 km from Minsk. An alternative low-budget connection to Minsk is to fly to Vilnius International Airport (VNO) and take the train from Vilnius to Minsk. Several low-cost airlines operate at Vilnius International Airport. The Vilnius International airport is about 200 km from Minsk and train are frequently operating between Minsk and Vilnius (see information below). Important! If you will choose this option you need to have a valid visa or a valid passport allowing to stay visa-free in Belarus. Information about visa process is in General information. Transport from the airport (MSQ) to the Minsk Central station (Minsk Tsentralnyi) Minsk Tsentralnyi is a bus stop near Minsk Central Train station (Babrujskaja 6). By bus: BUS № 300Э You can buy a ticket via the ticket machine at the airport, at the bus station by credit card, from a ticket agent at the bus stop or from bus driver by cash (BYN only). You can exchange money at the airport. The bus stop is located in front of Gate 5-6 (arrival hall). Journey time: 1 hour. Bus timetable: From National Airport Minsk (MSQ) to Minsk Central (Minsk Tsentralnyi) 4:50, 6:25, 7:20, 8:00, 9:00, 9:40, 10:20, 11:20, 12:00, 12:40, 13:20, 14:20, 15:00, 15:40, 16:20, 17:00, 17:40, 18:20, 19:00, 20:00, 20:40, 21:20, 22:05, 23:00, 00:05, 1:45, 3:15 By taxi: You can pay by credit card and order taxi online. -
The Red Plaques of Gibraltar
THE RED PLAQUES OF GIBRALTAR This document has been compiled by: Julia Harris Contact on: [email protected] Date completed: May 2014 THANKS TO: - Gail Francis-Tiron for her help when needed - Pepe Rosado for reading this and making his valued comments - Claire Montado for giving me some of the older photos to use - My parents for their gentle ‘reminders’ to get this finished and proof reading! INTRODUCTION: These cast iron red plaques were placed around Gibraltar between 1959 and 1975 in possibly the first attempt to present the rocks history to visitors and residents. They were the work of the Gibraltar Museum Committee which at the time was under the chairmanship of the Hon. Mrs Dorothy Ellicott O.B.E., J.P. (see appendix III). Modern information boards will perhaps replace them (see ‘Future’ section below), but I hope this will not happen. They are their own piece of Gibraltar’s history. When I first noticed and started taking photos of these red plaques I looked for a record of how many there were to find. After speaking to The Heritage Trust and Tourist Board I was told there was not an up to date, completed list. So, here is mine, consisting of 49 plaques, some in situ, some not. There could be more around the rock, or in storage, as there are details of up to 53 in a document attached, dated October 1977, (see Appendix I). From this list there are 43 that I have found and are on mine, another 10 I did not find (some I know have been removed from site with no details of where they are stored) and there are 4 that I found that are not on it. -
Airport of the Future — 2020 Moscow, November 11, 2020 10.10 Session
Airport of the Future — 2020 Moscow, November 11, 2020 Draft agenda 10.00 - 10.10 Opening speech. International review: airlines and airports on the way to recovery Kurt Hofmann, journalist, aviation expert, Air Transport World 10.10 Session 1. AIR FIELD IN NEW REALITY Moderators: Alexey Sinitsky, Research and Development Director, Infomost Consulting 10.10 - 10.30 Airport of the future: new world, new trends Pierre Charbonneau, Director, Passenger at International Air Transport Association* 10.35 - 10.55 Air traffic restart roadmap TBC, NACO 10.55 - 11.55 Cases. On the way to recovery Herbert M.Keffel, Practice Leader and Management Consultant, Munich Airport International Radek Zabransky, Director Aviation & Strategic Marketing, Bratislava Milan Rastislav Stefanik Airport* Marius Gelzinis, CEO, Lithuanian Airports Aboudy Nasser, CCO, London Stansted Airport Liene Freivalde, Director Aviation Services and Business Development, Riga International Airport 11.55 - 12.20 Coffee break 12.20 - 12.40 Cases. Russian airport experience: growth area of route networks and passenger flows TBC, Domodedovo* Evgeny Ilyin, Commercial Director, Pulkovo Airport * 12.45 - 13.30 Dialogue with experts. The airport in the new reality Opening speech: Support of the state in international practice Speaker TBC Key topics: State participation: what airports expected in Russia and international overview Airports’ sources of income: adaptation to the new reality. Ways to restore non-aviation revenues Air Cargo Development: a long-term trend or short-term reaction? -
World Air Forces Flight 2011/2012 International
SPECIAL REPORT WORLD AIR FORCES FLIGHT 2011/2012 INTERNATIONAL IN ASSOCIATION WITH Secure your availability. Rely on our performance. Aircraft availability on the flight line is more than ever essential for the Air Force mission fulfilment. Cooperating with the right industrial partner is of strategic importance and key to improving Air Force logistics and supply chain management. RUAG provides you with new options to resource your mission. More than 40 years of flight line management make us the experienced and capable partner we are – a partner you can rely on. RUAG Aviation Military Aviation · Seetalstrasse 175 · P.O. Box 301 · 6032 Emmen · Switzerland Legal domicile: RUAG Switzerland Ltd · Seetalstrasse 175 · P.O. Box 301 · 6032 Emmen Tel. +41 41 268 41 11 · Fax +41 41 260 25 88 · [email protected] · www.ruag.com WORLD AIR FORCES 2011/2012 CONTENT ANALYSIS 4 Worldwide active fleet per region 5 Worldwide active fleet share per country 6 Worldwide top 10 active aircraft types 8 WORLD AIR FORCES World Air Forces directory 9 TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT FLIGHTGLOBAL INSIGHT AND REPORT SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES, CONTACT: Flightglobal Insight Quadrant House, The Quadrant Sutton, Surrey, SM2 5AS, UK Tel: + 44 208 652 8724 Email:LQVLJKW#ÁLJKWJOREDOFRP Website: ZZZÁLJKWJOREDOFRPLQVLJKt World Air Forces 2011/2012 | Flightglobal Insight | 3 WORLD AIR FORCES 2011/2012 The French and Qatari air forces deployed Mirage 2000-5s for the fight over Libya JOINT RESPONSE Air arms around the world reacted to multiple challenges during 2011, despite fleet and budget cuts. We list the current inventories and procurement plans of 160 nations. -
Public Health Act
Public Health 1950-07 PUBLIC HEALTH ACT Principal Act Act. No. 1950-07 Commencement 1.4.1950 Enactment 30.3.1950 Amending Relevant current Commencement enactments provisions date Acts 1951-02 s.287 1954-18 s.265(2) 1955-07 s.279 1955-20 – 1955-21 – 1956-12 s.1 1957-06 ss.2, 26, 55, 81, 153, 178(1), 236(1) and 169 1958-07 s.279 1959-11 s.294 1960-15 s.303(1) 1961-12 ss.19(1), 20(4), 24(3), 25(2), 26(3), 27(5), 28(3), 30(2), 36(1), 40(2), 58-60, 77(4), 82(2), 236(4), 255(2), 262(2), 284, 287(3), 293(6), 302(1), 302(1), 303(2) and (3), 306(2) and 330 1961-16 s.143 1961-21 – 1963-03 s.211(1) 1963-19 – 1964-07 – 1964-13 s.269 1965-07 ss.214, 250(2) and 266(1) 1965-30 s.280 1966-07 s.218 1967-12 – 1968-04 ss.214, 216 and 280(10) 1968-21 s.294 Order of 14.10.1969 © Government of Gibraltar (www.gibraltarlaws.gov.gi) 1950-07 Public Health 25.11.1969 Regs. of 28.5.1970 Acts 1971-02 s.282 1972-05 ss.13(12), 21(3), 25(3), 29(2), 30(3), 31(2), 32, 33(6), 37(4), 38(1), 39(2), 40(4), 41(2), 42(2), 43(2), 55(2), 61(3), 65(2), 66(3), 72(2), 77(1), 78(2), 83(2), 84(1), 94, 111, 124, 126(1), 127, 128(1), 129, 130(1), 131(2), 141, 143(4), 144(2), 147, 154(2), 156(1), 157, 158(1), 159(3), 160(4), 163(3), 164, 165, 170(3), 173(4), 174(2), 190, 207, 233, 253(2), 254(2), 257, 259(2), 261(2) and (3), 263(3), 314, 321, 322(2) and 330(6) 1973-08 – 1973-18 s.242 1974-04 s.258 1975-17 ss.100(2), 103-109, 112(1), 116, 117, 119-121, 124, 218, 258 and 337 1976-19 – 1976-20 ss.273, 275, 282(1), 294(1), (4) and (5), 295 and 297(2) 1977-03 ss.113(3), 117(2) and (4), 120(3), 271(1) and (2), 272(3) and Schs. -
December 2012/January 2013
INTERNATIONAL EDITION DECEMBER/JANUARY 2013 Blazing New Trails December/January 2013 Volume 15, Number 11 EDITOR Jon Ross contents [email protected] • (770) 642-8036 ASSOCIATE EDITOR Keri Forsythe [email protected] • (770) 642-8036 SPECIAL CORRESPONdeNT Martin Roebuck Back Pages March 1958: “What shippers are putting into the air” CONTRIBUTING EDITORS 20 Roger Turney, Ian Putzger CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER Rob Finlayson Leaders COLUMNIST Blazing new trails Brandon Fried 22 PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Ed Calahan CIRCULATION MaNAGER Advertising Feature Nicola Mitcham Time critical [email protected] 28 ART DIRECTOR CENTRAL COMMUNICATIONS GROUP [email protected] Directory PUBLISHER Airports . 33 Steve Prince Air carriers . 40 [email protected] 33 Air forwarders . 43 ASSISTANT TO PUBLISHER Susan Addy [email protected] • (770) 642-9170 DISPLAY ADVERTISING TRAFFIC COORDINATOR Cindy Fehland [email protected] WORLD NEWS AIR CaRGO WORLD HeadQUARTERS 1080 Holcomb Bridge Rd., Roswell Summit 6 Europe Building 200, Suite 255, Roswell, GA 30076 (770) 642-9170 • Fax: (770) 642-9982 10 Middle East WORLdwIde SaLES U.S. Sales Japan 14 Asia Associate Publisher Masami Shimazaki Pam Latty [email protected] (678) 775-3565 lobe.ne.jp 17 Americas [email protected] +81-42-372-2769 Europe, Thailand United Kingdom, Chower Narula Middle East [email protected] David Collison +66-2-641-26938 +44 192-381-7731 Taiwan [email protected] Ye Chang Hong Kong, [email protected] Malaysia, +886 2-2378-2471 DEPARTMENTS Singapore Australia, Joseph Yap New Zealand +65-6-337-6996 Fergus Maclagan 4 Editorial 61 Bottom Line [email protected] [email protected] 54 5 Questions/People/Events 62 Forwarders’ Forum India +61-2-9460-4560 Faredoon Kuka Korea 58 Classifieds RMA Media Mr.