海角直播

India seeks to strengthen energy ties with 海角直播 during Modi鈥檚 visit

Special India seeks to strengthen energy ties with 海角直播 during Modi鈥檚 visit
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, right, shakes hand with 海角直播's Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman ahead of the G20 Leaders' Summit in New Delhi on Sept.9, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 20 April 2025

India seeks to strengthen energy ties with 海角直播 during Modi鈥檚 visit

India seeks to strengthen energy ties with 海角直播 during Modi鈥檚 visit
  • Saudi-India trade worth nearly $43bn in 2023-24; energy alone worth $25.7bn
  • Modi, crown prince to co-chair second meeting of Saudi-India Strategic Partnership Council聽

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will travel to 海角直播 on Tuesday for his third visit, as India seeks to strengthen strategic ties with the Kingdom, particularly in the energy sector.

During his two-day trip, Modi is scheduled to meet Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Jeddah, where they will hold bilateral talks and co-chair the second meeting of the Saudi-India Strategic Partnership Council.

鈥淭he visit is important also on account of the obvious significance of 海角直播 as a strategic partner for India 鈥 海角直播 is a leading voice in the Islamic world, and is increasingly playing an important role in regional developments,鈥 Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri told a press briefing on Saturday.

As premier, Modi made his first trip to 海角直播 in 2016. Following the crown prince鈥檚 first visit to India in February 2019, the Indian leader made his second trip to the Kingdom that October, when the two countries established the Strategic Partnership Council.

In 2023-24, Saudi-India trade reached nearly $43 billion, making India 海角直播鈥檚 second-largest trading partner, while the Kingdom stands as New Delhi鈥檚 fifth-largest.

海角直播 is 鈥渁 key player鈥 in India鈥檚 energy scenario, Misri said.

鈥淲e are looking at infusing an even more strategic outlook in the energy partnership between the two countries. And we expect that the forthcoming visit will have some developments related to this as well,鈥 he added.

Bilateral energy trade alone was worth $25.7 billion in 2023-24, with 海角直播 being the third-largest source of India鈥檚 LPG, crude and petroleum imports.

Modi鈥檚 upcoming visit is a follow-up to the crown prince鈥檚 trip to India in 2023, when he attended the summit of the Group of 20 biggest economies.

This was followed by the crown prince鈥檚 state visit, which saw the two leaders co-chairing the first meeting of the Strategic Partnership Council, and both countries signing around 50 initial pacts and agreeing to form a joint task force for a $100 billion Saudi investment in India.

鈥淭his is a very important visit as 海角直播 is one of the most important partners of India in the Gulf and Middle East region,鈥 Muddassir Qamar, associate professor at the Center for West Asian Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University, told Arab News on Sunday.

鈥淚t is also important as the visit to 海角直播 comes at a time of great regional turbulence and uncertainty in international politics, given that 海角直播 and India are two of the G20 members and have a similarity of views in regional and global issues.鈥

Two-way flow of investments, energy security, food security and defense cooperation are likely to be high on the agenda, he said, adding that discussions on the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor Agreement are likely to be 鈥渢op on the priority list,鈥 referring to the trade connectivity plan.

As both countries are working on their respective development plans, namely the Saudi Vision 2030 and India鈥檚 Viksit Bharat 2047, they have 鈥渁mple opportunities to collaborate among businesses and the private sector鈥 across various sectors, including energy, logistics and infrastructure, he added.

Modi鈥檚 trip will also boost India鈥檚 role in geopolitics, according to Mohammed Soliman, senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington D.C.

鈥淢odi鈥檚 visit to 海角直播 marks a pivotal moment in the deepening of the India-Saudi strategic partnership 鈥 strengthening economic ties with $40 billion in trade, securing vital energy supplies, and elevating India鈥檚 voice in West Asian geopolitics,鈥 he told Arab News.聽

鈥淭he visit positions India as a key player in West Asia.鈥澛


Floods in Punjab kill 30, half a million people evacuated as Indus threat rises

Floods in Punjab kill 30, half a million people evacuated as Indus threat rises
Updated 39 sec ago

Floods in Punjab kill 30, half a million people evacuated as Indus threat rises

Floods in Punjab kill 30, half a million people evacuated as Indus threat rises
  • Three transboundary rivers that cut through Punjab province have swollen to exceptionally high levels
  • Overall, more than 1.5 million people have been affected by the flooding

ISLAMABAD: At least 30 people have been killed and more than 1.5 million affected as high floods in the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers submerged over 2,300 villages across Pakistan鈥檚 breadbasket province of Punjab this week, the provincial disaster management authority (PDMA) said on Saturday.

The deluge, driven by record monsoon rains and water releases from upstream India, has inundated swathes of Pakistan鈥檚 most populous province, crippling rescue and relief operations and forcing the evacuation of nearly half a million people. Officials said nearly half a million residents had been evacuated to safer areas, while millions more remained affected through damaged homes, livestock losses and flooded farmland.

Officials now warn that the flood threat is likely to spread further south, with the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) cautioning that the Indus River at Guddu and Sukkur barrages is expected to reach very high flood levels between September 4鈥5.

According to the NDMA鈥檚 most recent monsoon toll, more than 830 people have died across Pakistan since June 26.

鈥淒ue to severe flooding in rivers Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab, 2,308 villages have been affected,鈥 Punjab Relief Commissioner Nabeel Javed said in a statement released by the PDMA. 

In Lahore, the provincial capital, the PDMA official confirmed two lightning-related deaths during the latest thunderstorms, while 30 people had died across Punjab. 

鈥淎 total of 1.516 million people have been impacted while 481,000 trapped residents were rescued to safer places.鈥

He said 511 relief camps and 351 medical camps had been set up in flood-hit districts, along with 321 veterinary camps. Around 405,000 animals have also been shifted to higher ground.

鈥淐ompensation for citizens鈥 losses will be ensured under the instructions of the Punjab chief minister,鈥 Javed said, adding that damages to farmers would also be assessed.

The NDMA said it had dispatched emergency rations to Sialkot and Narowal, some of the worst-affected districts, at the request of Punjab authorities. 鈥淣DMA has provided 500 ration bags each for flood-hit areas of Sialkot and Narowal,鈥 the agency said. 鈥淎 convoy of eight trucks has been sent carrying relief goods 鈥 while more consignments are planned for Wazirabad, Hafizabad, Chiniot and Jhang in the coming days.鈥

RISING WATERS

Flood Forecasting Division (FFD) data on Saturday showed exceptionally high flood levels at Ganda Singh Wala on the Sutlej and at Balloki on the Ravi, with the Chenab at Trimmu projected to rise to similar levels within 24 hours and Panjnad expected to reach very high flood on September 3. The Indus at Guddu was also forecast to swell dangerously by September 5.

鈥淓xceptionally high flood level will continue in river Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala,鈥 the FFD bulletin warned, adding that the Chenab at Trimmu was on track to reach the same threshold within a day.

DG PDMA Irfan Ali Kathia told reporters in Lahore 303,000 cusecs of water were flowing at Ganda Singh, where the army and local administration had evacuated 20 villages overnight. He added that more than 175,000 cusecs were flowing at Head Marala on the Chenab, while dangerous levels were expected at Head Islam in the next 24 hours.

Punjab鈥檚 flooding crisis comes amid what the Met Office described as the ninth spell of monsoon rains, expected to continue until September 2. Heavy showers were recorded in Mandi Bahauddin (81 mm), Hafizabad (63 mm), Jhelum (50 mm), Sialkot (47 mm), and other districts over the past 24 hours.

The PDMA also reported that India鈥檚 Bhakra Dam is currently 84 percent full, Pong 94 percent, and Thein 92 percent, raising concerns of further cross-boundary water surges. Pakistan has repeatedly accused India of releasing excess flows into downstream rivers during monsoon peaks, intensifying flood risks in Punjab鈥檚 agricultural belt.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Meteorological Department said hot and humid weather would persist across Sindh, with scattered rain and thunderstorms forecast in Jacobabad, Kashmore, Ghotki, Khairpur, Kamber Shahdadkot, Sanghar, Umerkot and Tharparkar. 

The Indus at Guddu and Sukkur barrages was already at medium flood levels, with 鈥渧ery high flood鈥 expected in coming days.


Rohingya refugees in India decry 鈥榠nhumane鈥 deportation to Myanmar聽

Rohingya refugees in India decry 鈥榠nhumane鈥 deportation to Myanmar聽
Updated 31 min 8 sec ago

Rohingya refugees in India decry 鈥榠nhumane鈥 deportation to Myanmar聽

Rohingya refugees in India decry 鈥榠nhumane鈥 deportation to Myanmar聽
  • An estimated 40,000 Rohingya live in India, over 20,000 of whom are registered with UNHCR
  • UN expert, HRW said Indian authorities have deported scores of Rohingya refugees since May

NEW DELHI: After more than a decade of living in India as a refugee, 55-year-old Nobel Hussain 鈥 whose real name has not been used due to concerns over his safety 鈥 was among dozens of Rohingya who were forced off an Indian naval vessel into the Andaman Sea in May, amid a crackdown on 鈥渋llegal immigrants鈥 that has seen hundreds being unlawfully forced out of India. 

Hussain said he and his wife were detained in New Delhi along with at least 40 other Rohingya refugees. After being forced onto a military plane and flown to another location, they were forced onto a naval vessel and cast into the sea near Myanmar.

鈥淚t was 4 a.m., we were asked to put on life jackets, our legs and hands were tied, and we were put (into) boats,鈥 he told Arab News. 鈥滱fter some time, they untied us and threw us in the sea. We had to swim for 30 minutes before we saw land and were rescued by the locals.鈥 

Hussain and his wife, who are both registered with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, have been living in hiding ever since and face an uncertain future in Myanmar 鈥 a country they fled years ago in fear for their lives. 

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have any documents. Myanmar is always attacking our area. My wife, who has cancer, has sleepless nights. We live in constant fear and don鈥檛 know what will happen to us when we are caught,鈥 he said. 

鈥淲hat the Indian government did to us is inhumane 鈥 We thought that we had escaped the danger when we landed in India in 2013, but the Indian government has brought us back to the same predators we thought we escaped.鈥 

India鈥檚 Ministry of Home Affairs did not respond to Arab News鈥 request for comment. 

Tom Andrews, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, started a probe in May into what it called 鈥渦nconscionable, unacceptable acts,鈥 following 鈥渃redible reports鈥 of Indian authorities rounding up Rohingya refugees and expelling them, which included the case of the Rohingya refugee group of which Hussain was a part. 

A report by Human Rights Watch published on Friday stated that Indian authorities have deported more than 200 ethnic Rohingya refugees to Bangladesh and Myanmar since May 2025, while hundreds of others have been arbitrarily detained. 

India does not have a national policy or a law on the status and treatment of refugees. It is also not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention, which outlines the rights of refugees and the legal obligations of states to protect them.

Most Rohingya refugees fled Myanmar in 2017, when its military launched a brutal crackdown 鈥 widely regarded as ethnic cleansing 鈥 on Rohingya Muslims in western Rakhine State. 

While most of them sought safety in neighboring Bangladesh, many also escaped to Hindu-majority India, where an estimated 40,000 now live, more than 20,000 of whom are registered with the UNHCR. 

The increasing crackdown against Rohingya in India appears to be part of a broader campaign led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi鈥檚 Bharatiya Janata Party, which has been expelling the persecuted minority and Bengali-speaking Muslims for being 鈥渋llegal immigrants,鈥 HRW said. 

One Rohingya refugee living in Delhi, who asked not to be identified, said his brother was in the same group as Hussain. In early May, he and others were taken to the local police station under the guise of collecting biometric data, but were later detained by authorities. 

Since then, he has only managed a single brief call with his brother, who is also registered with the UNHCR and had lived in Delhi since 2017. 

鈥淢y brother and others escaped the brutal Myanmar army to save their lives. The Indian government has pushed them into the hands of the same predator 鈥 What is our crime? We don鈥檛 want to live in India but we are persecuted in our country. Such arbitrary detention breaks the family, it brings the unimaginable pain of separation and utter helplessness,鈥 the man told Arab News. 鈥漌e want India to show some humanity. We are not illegal. We are registered with the UNHCR and want to live like refugees with respect.鈥

Sabber Kyaw Min, founder of Delhi-based NGO Rohingya Human Rights Initiative, said the deportations of Rohingya are a 鈥渧iolation鈥 of the Indian constitution. 

鈥淢yanmar is not safe for Rohingya. To send refugees back to the same place where they are under attack is not on par with humanitarian law and human values. There are so many other refugees, like Afghans, Africans and others, who are living in India,鈥 he told Arab News. 鈥淲hy is India targeting Rohingya? 

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to criticize India. India should show humanity towards the women, children and unfortunate people of Rohingya,鈥 he continued. 

While Indian policy has historically been in favor of refugees, activist Priyali Suri of the Azadi Project, an NGO that works for refugees, said the government鈥檚 approach to refugees has changed in the last decade. 

鈥淚ndia has never been a signatory of the Refugee Convention, but we have welcomed refugees in our land. We have welcomed Sri Lankan refugees, we鈥檝e welcomed Tibetan refugees, we鈥檝e welcomed Afghan refugees, refugees who鈥檝e made this their home,鈥 she told Arab News. 

鈥淚t is very sad, and rather infuriating, that human beings who are already persecuted, who are fearing for their lives, have been deported in such a merciless manner. These deportations are clearly a political message that this current establishment stands for a certain kind of political ideology that does not support human rights, does not support refugee rights, and does not adhere to international conventions.鈥 


EU urges US to reconsider ban on Palestinian officials attending UN assembly

EU urges US to reconsider ban on Palestinian officials attending UN assembly
Updated 30 August 2025

EU urges US to reconsider ban on Palestinian officials attending UN assembly

EU urges US to reconsider ban on Palestinian officials attending UN assembly
  • Kallas said she had asked EU governments to submit proposals for new sanctions against Russia

COPENHAGEN: European Union foreign ministers have urged the United States to reconsider its decision not to allow Palestinian officials to take part in the UN General Assembly in New York, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Saturday.

Speaking after a meeting of the ministers in the Danish capital Copenhagen, Kallas also said she had asked EU governments to submit proposals next week for another package of sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine.


China鈥檚 support for multilateralism is vital, says UN鈥檚 Guterres

China鈥檚 support for multilateralism is vital, says UN鈥檚 Guterres
Updated 30 August 2025

China鈥檚 support for multilateralism is vital, says UN鈥檚 Guterres

China鈥檚 support for multilateralism is vital, says UN鈥檚 Guterres
  • Xi in turn said China would always be a 鈥渞eliable partner鈥 to the UN
  • 鈥淚n this moment in which multilateralism is under fire, the support of China...is an extremely important element to preserve,鈥 Guterres said

TIANJIN, China: China鈥檚 role in upholding multilateralism is fundamental, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told Chinese president Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a security forum meeting on Saturday.

Xi in turn said China would always be a 鈥渞eliable partner鈥 to the UN and continue to provide 鈥渟tability and certainty.鈥

Guterres is in China鈥檚 northern port city of Tianjin for a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, where Russian President Vladimir Putin and leaders from Central Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia and the Middle East will gather with Xi in a powerful show of Global South solidarity.

鈥淚n this moment in which multilateralism is under fire, the support of China...is an extremely important element to preserve,鈥 he said, according to a media pool report.

鈥淲e see new forms of policy that are sometimes difficult to understand, that sometimes look more like a show than the serious diplomatic efforts and in which business and politics seem sometimes also mixed,鈥 Guterres said.

鈥淭he role of the People鈥檚 Republic of China as a fundamental pillar of the multilateral system is extremely important and we are extremely appreciative and grateful for that,鈥 he added.

Xi promised China鈥檚 support.

鈥淐hina is willing to deepen cooperation with the United Nations, supports its central role in international affairs, and jointly shoulder its responsibilities in maintaining world peace and promoting development and prosperity,鈥 Xi told Guterres.


Ukrainian former parliamentary speaker Parubiy shot dead in Lviv

Ukrainian former parliamentary speaker Parubiy shot dead in Lviv
Updated 30 August 2025

Ukrainian former parliamentary speaker Parubiy shot dead in Lviv

Ukrainian former parliamentary speaker Parubiy shot dead in Lviv
  • The Prosecutor General鈥檚 office said a gunman had fired several shots at Parubiy, killing him on the spot
  • Officials gave no immediate indication whether the murder had any direct link to Russia鈥檚 war in Ukraine

KYIV: Ukrainian former parliamentary speaker Andriy Parubiy was shot dead in the western city of Lviv on Saturday and a search was under way for the killer.

The Prosecutor General鈥檚 office said a gunman had fired several shots at Parubiy, killing him on the spot. The attacker fled and a manhunt was launched, it said.

Parubiy, 54, was a member of parliament, had been parliamentary speaker from April 2016 to August 2019, and was one of the leaders of protests in 2013-14 calling for closer ties with the European Union.

He was also secretary of Ukraine鈥檚 National Security and Defense Council from February to August 2014, a period when fighting began in eastern Ukraine and Russia annexed the Crimea peninsula.

Officials gave no immediate indication whether the murder had any direct link to Russia鈥檚 war in Ukraine.

鈥淢inister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko and Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko have just reported on the first known circumstances of a horrific murder in Lviv. Andriy Parubiy has been killed,鈥 President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on X.

He sent his condolence to Parubiy鈥檚 family and loved ones, and added: 鈥淎ll necessary forces and means are engaged in the investigation and search for the killer.鈥

National police said the shooting in Lviv was reported at around noon (0900 GMT). Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovyi said finding the killer and establishing the circumstances of the attack was of outmost importance.

鈥淭his is a matter of security in a country at war, where, as we can see, there are no completely safe places,鈥 he wrote on Telegram.

TRIBUTES POUR IN

Tributes poured in from colleagues in parliament and the government, praising Parubiy鈥檚 contribution to Ukraine鈥檚 fight for sovereignty and independence as one of the leaders of what became known as the Euromaidan protests in 2013-14.

Former President Petro Poroshenko said on Telegram that the killing of Parubiy, who was a member of the parliamentary committee on national security, defense and intelligence, was 鈥渁 shot fired at the heart of Ukraine.鈥

鈥淎ndriy was a great man and a true friend. That is why they take revenge, that is what they are afraid of,鈥 he said, lauding Parubiy鈥檚 contribution to building out the Ukrainian army.

In a statement on Telegram, Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha described Parubiy as 鈥渁 patriot and statesman who made an enormous contribution to the defense of Ukraine鈥檚 freedom, independence and sovereignty. He was a man who rightfully belongs in the history books.鈥

Ukrainian law enforcement provided no information on the killer鈥檚 identity or motives.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko called for a prompt investigation of the murder, calling it 鈥渁 profound loss鈥 for the country.

鈥淵ou always remained a patriot of Ukraine and made a great contribution to the formation of our state,鈥 she wrote on X.