Page 6 - அகதி நிதி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from அகதி நிதி. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In அகதி நிதி Today - Breaking & Trending Today
COLUMBIA - While the COVID-19 vaccination rollout promises a new beginning, many questions remain among the refugee community in mid-Missouri. âIf you get vaccinated, ⦠how many do you have to take so that you can be 100% [immune]?â said Mahinga Tubirori, owner of the African Market on Old Highway 63. âI want to know about my kids. I have four kids, so I donât know when theyâll get [vaccinated], how theyâre going to do it,â said Soethu Hlamyo, manager and founder of Shwe Market International Foods on Vandiver Drive. Tubirori and Hlamyo both came to the U.S. from over a decade ago and both are entrepreneurs who started their own businesses from scratch. Tubirori came from the Democratic Republic of Congo where economic instability is widespread, and Hlamyo came from Myanmar, where military dictatorship has been a problem for many decades. ....
6254224786001 A 10-year-old refugee named Tani Adewumi has just earned an elite ranking in the world of chess, winning the title of National Chess Master. Just a few years ago, little Tani had a very uncertain future as a refugee whose homeless family had fled to the U.S. to escape from an Islamic terrorist death threat in Nigeria. Now, he has just won all four of his matches at the Fairfield County Chess Club Championship tournament in Connecticut. The U.S. Chess Federation says that victory on May 1st earned him the title of chess master , making him the 28th youngest person to achieve that high ranking. ....
Japan Processes Record Number of Chinese Refugees in 2020 11 May 2021 Chinese nationals accounted for nearly one-quarter of the foreigners granted refugee status in Japan in 2020, a record high number despite a significant drop in overall refugee applications in Japan last year due to the Chinese coronavirus pandemic. “A total of 47 foreigners were recognised as refugees and permitted to remain in Japan in 2020, of whom 11 were Chinese, according to the Immigration Services Agency of Japan. However, none of the 11 are from Hong Kong,” the South China Morning Post reported on Tuesday. The number of Chinese nationals granted refugee status in Japan last year “was the highest figure since Japan began accepting refugees in 1982,” according to the Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK). ....
War crimes cases on the rise despite Covid-19 Russian and Chinese officials voted against a resolution calling for the International Criminal Court to investigate alleged war crimes in Syria at a meeting of the United Nations Security Council in 2014. Keystone / Justin Lane Universal jurisdiction cases are on the rise around the world. The fight to bring justice to victims of international crimes is not over, says a Geneva NGO. This content was published on May 5, 2021 - 09:00 May 5, 2021 - 09:00 RTS/swissinfo/dbu Covid-19 did not stop war crimes being tried by international jurisdictions. In its annual report, Trial International, a Geneva-based non-governmental organisation (NGO) even points to a rise in the number of cases being tried. ....
M Sakhawat Hossain Published: 05 May 2021, 17:41 I was speaking at a digital seminar at the Bangladesh Institute of International Strategic Studies (BIISS) on 21 April. The topic of the seminar was ‘Rohingya Crisis: Response of the International Community and Repatriation Process’. My presentation was on ‘ASEAN, Myanmar and the Rohingya Crisis’. In other words, I discussed the stance of the ASEAN member states on the Rohingya crisis and Myanmar. BIISS is better known as the foreign ministry’s think tank and so naturally the ministry’ s Myanmar desk director was present at the seminar. State minister for foreign affairs Shahriar Alam, as chief guest, gave the concluding speech. The issue was discussed quite openly and the general consensus was that Bangladesh would have to actively step up pressure on Myanmar. While keeping the doors open to continued bilateral talks and repatriation, diplomatic efforts would also have to be increased in the international a ....