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Hotels in Tamil Nadu to boycott US drinks over tariffs on Indian goods

Special Hotels in Tamil Nadu to boycott US drinks over tariffs on Indian goods
An Indian beverage delivery man, driving a vehicle adorned with a hand-painted Coca-Cola logo, drives past a mural of a Pepsi bottle in the suburbs of New Delhi on June 25, 2009. (AFP)
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Updated 04 September 2025

Hotels in Tamil Nadu to boycott US drinks over tariffs on Indian goods

Hotels in Tamil Nadu to boycott US drinks over tariffs on Indian goods
  • Hotel association calls on members who own 100,000 restaurants to stop contributing to US economy
  • It is not the first time that major US soft drink producers face boycott campaign in southern India

NEW DELHI: Hotel owners in India’s southern state of Tamil Nadu have announced a statewide boycott of American beverage products across their properties, following the US move to impose steep tariffs on Indian exports.

Last month, as a part of his escalating global trade war, US President Donald Trump hiked the total duty on Indian exports to 50 percent — the highest in Asia and one of the greatest ever imposed on a major trading partner by any American administration.

As India braces for the tariff’s impact, which is expected to reduce its gross domestic product growth by up to 1 percentage point, the Tamil Nadu Hotel Owners Association wants to encourage its members — who own 100,000 hotel restaurants across the state — to stop contributing to the US economy.

Venkada Subbu, the association’s president, who announced the boycott campaign on Wednesday, told Arab News the hotels are preparing to enforce it in the next two weeks.

“This is the first step. We will implement it here. Then we are going to take it to all-India levels,” Subbu said.

“American beverages are manufactured in India. They are using our water. They are all using our packaging products. They are selling it to us, and they are taking the profit for their country. That’s why we are against it.”

India has dozens of home-grown cola, soda, and bottled water brands, and does not have to depend on American soft drink giants such as PepsiCo or Coca-Cola.

“This is easily manufactured in India. Even better products available here, even healthier products are available here ... There are so many competitors with equally good quality products available in India. We want to encourage them,” Subbu said.

“Many companies are available, even the leading brands like Tata and Reliance are also doing it. So, there is no problem. It won’t affect our industry in any way.”

It is not the first time that the private sector in Tamil Nadu — a state of 70 million people, which is also one of the country’s most prosperous — announces a boycott of US beverage companies.

Coca-Cola and PepsiCo were restricted from using the Thamirabarani River as their water supply in November 2016, when a local consumer protection association argued they deprived farmers of vital irrigation and drinking water.

The restriction imposed by the Madras High Court’s interim order was lifted in March 2017.

Soon afterward, the main trade unions in Tamil Nadu targeted Pepsi and Coca-Cola with a boycott campaign, in which most of the associated traders stopped restocking their beverages, but it was short-lived and fizzled out within a few weeks.


Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker

Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker
Updated 13 sec ago

Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker

Djibouti parliament removes presidential age limit: speaker
  • Vote opens the way for leader Ismail Omar Guelleh to run for a sixth term
  • Guelleh, 77, has held power since 1999 in the tiny Horn of Africa nation
ADDIS ABABA: Djibouti’s parliament removed the age limit for presidents with a unanimous vote on Sunday, its speaker said, opening the way for leader Ismail Omar Guelleh to run for a sixth term.
Guelleh, 77, has held power since 1999 in the tiny Horn of Africa nation, a major port that hosts military bases for the United States, France, China, Japan and Italy.
Djibouti’s lawmakers unanimously approved the change to the constitution to remove a bar on running for president past the age of 75.
The move allows Guelleh to run in the next election in April 2026, likely facing minimal opposition in a country with limited freedom of expression and press.
“The National Assembly ratified the removal of the age limit today, so it is official,” said parliament speaker Dileita Mohamed Dileita.
Parliament had already passed the motion a week earlier in an initial vote that was then approved by Guelleh and sent back to lawmakers for the final vote.
Dileita earlier said the constitutional change was necessary to ensure “the stability of the small country, in a troubled region, the Horn of Africa, with Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea.”
Guelleh won the last election in 2021 with 97 percent of the vote while his party, the Union for the Presidential Majority, holds the majority of parliamentary seats.
He succeeded Hassan Gouled Aptidon, the father of Djibouti’s independence, in 1999 after serving as his chief of staff for 22 years.
Djibouti has only around one million inhabitants but lies on the strategic trade route of the Bab El-Mandeb Strait on the Red Sea.

Political violence kills almost 300 since Hasina’s fall: rights group

Political violence kills almost 300 since Hasina’s fall: rights group
Updated 18 min 28 sec ago

Political violence kills almost 300 since Hasina’s fall: rights group

Political violence kills almost 300 since Hasina’s fall: rights group
  • Human rights had improved since the fall of Hasina’s government but law enforcement agencies were still not being held accountable

DHAKA: Nearly 300 people have been killed in political violence in Bangladesh in the year since student-led protests toppled autocratic former leader Sheikh Hasina, the country’s main human rights group said on Sunday.
A report by Odhikar, a Dhaka-based rights organization, said at least 281 people had been killed in violence involving political parties from August 2024, when Hasina’s rule ended and she fled to India, to September 2025.
On top of those, there were another 40 victims of extrajudicial killings who had been suspected of crimes, while another 153 were lynched, the quarterly report released last week said.
Odhikar director ASM Nasiruddin Elan said adherence to human rights had improved since the fall of Hasina’s government but law enforcement agencies were still not being held accountable.
“Yes, we don’t see the frequent extrajudicial killings or enforced disappearances that we witnessed during the Hasina era, but deaths in custody, bribery, and harassment of victims are still ongoing,” Elan said.
He said that “innocent people fall prey to atrocities” for their alleged involvement with the Awami League, Hasina’s political party that is now banned.
Hasina’s 15-year rule saw widespread human rights abuses, including the mass detention and extrajudicial killing of her political opponents.
The Odhikar report also said many people had fallen victim to extortion by political parties, regardless of their financial or social standing, in the year since Hasina’s fall.
Those included the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, seen as the frontrunner in elections slated for February 2026, and the Anti-Discrimination Student Movement, which was credited with starting the protests that toppled Hasina.
Jamaat-e-Islami, Muslim-majority Bangladesh’s largest Islamist party, was also included in reports of extortion, the report said.
Odhikar also said mob attacks had been relatively frequent during the period, mainly because of inefficient policing.
“Police have been used to achieve party interests and were given impunity, which eventually led them to kill and torture activists affiliated with the opposition,” the report said.
It said “the police largely became dysfunctional and lost their morale,” after Hasina fell.
Bangladesh’s interim government nor any of the political parties have responded yet to Odhikar’s report.


Blaze at Mexico store kills 23, including children

Blaze at Mexico store kills 23, including children
Updated 02 November 2025

Blaze at Mexico store kills 23, including children

Blaze at Mexico store kills 23, including children
  • Most of the deaths appeared to have been from inhalation of toxic gases, said Gustavo Salas, the state’s attorney general

MEXICO CITY: A festive holiday weekend turned tragic for families in northwestern Mexico on Saturday when a deadly blaze engulfed a discount store in the city center of Hermosillo, killing at least 23 people and injuring a dozen.
Mexico is celebrating the Day of the Dead this weekend with colorful festivities in which families honor and remember deceased loved ones.
“I have ordered a thorough and transparent investigation to clarify the causes of the accident,” Alfonso Durazo, governor of the state of Sonora home to the city, said in a video on social media, adding that children were among the victims.
Most of the deaths appeared to have been from inhalation of toxic gases, said Gustavo Salas, the state’s attorney general, citing its forensic medical service.
“My heartfelt condolences to the families and loved ones of those who lost their lives,” President Claudia Sheinbaum said in a post on X, adding that she had directed support teams to be sent to help victims’ families and the injured.
Sonora’s Red Cross said its 40 staff and 10 ambulances joined in the effort, making six trips to the hospital.
The cause of the fire, now doused, was still unclear, though some media blamed an electrical failure. City officials said the store, part of popular discount chain Waldo’s, was not the target of an attack.
The chief of the city’s firefighters said it was still being investigated whether there was an explosion.


Thousands lose power supply after Russia attacks frontline region, Ukraine says

Thousands lose power supply after Russia attacks frontline region, Ukraine says
Updated 02 November 2025

Thousands lose power supply after Russia attacks frontline region, Ukraine says

Thousands lose power supply after Russia attacks frontline region, Ukraine says
  • Nearly 60,000 people were deprived of power supply after Russia’s overnight air attack
  • Zaporizhzhia endures near-daily Russian artillery, missile and drone strikes

Nearly 60,000 people were deprived of power supply after Russia’s overnight air attack on Ukraine’s frontline region of Zaporizhzhia, while two people were killed in the southern region of Odesa, Ukrainian authorities said on Sunday.
As winter nears, Russia has stepped up missile and drone strikes on Ukraine’s power grid, triggering outages and forcing Kyiv’s emergency crews to race to repair damage and manage rolling blackouts.
The attack on Zaporizhzhia left two people wounded and reduced buildings to rubble, the regional governor, Ivan Federov, said on the Telegram messaging app.
“Crews will restore power as soon as the security situation allows,” Fedorov said on Telegram, where he posted nighttime photographs of buildings with facades and windows torn off.
Zaporizhzhia endures near-daily Russian artillery, missile and drone strikes that have destroyed homes, crippled utilities and killed scores, as Moscow pressures Ukraine’s defenses and disrupts links between its south and the rest of the country.
Fedorov said the overnight attack wounded two people. Russia’s 800 strikes on 18 settlements in the region killed one person and injured three over the 24 hours into Sunday morning, he added.
Two people died as a result of Russia’s overnight drone attack on Odesa on Ukraine’s Black Sea coast, Ukraine’s state emergency service said on Telegram.
Separately, the death toll from a Russian air attack that set ablaze a shop in the Dnipropetrovsk region on Saturday has risen to four and includes two boys aged 11 and 14, the region’s acting governor said.
There was no immediate comment from Russia about the attacks.
Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched with a full-scale invasion on Ukraine in 2022, but thousands have been killed in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian.


Tourists return to Vietnam’s Hoi An as cleanup efforts progress after floods

Tourists return to Vietnam’s Hoi An as cleanup efforts progress after floods
Updated 02 November 2025

Tourists return to Vietnam’s Hoi An as cleanup efforts progress after floods

Tourists return to Vietnam’s Hoi An as cleanup efforts progress after floods
  • Tourism and services, driven by accommodation, dining and ticket sales, form the backbone of Hoi An’s economy
  • The historic floods last week submerged Hoi An’s lantern-lit streets and centuries-old wooden houses

HANOI: Tourists are returning to Vietnam’s ancient town of Hoi An as residents clean up mud and debris to reopen the UNESCO-listed site following floods that devastated the central region and killed at least 35 people.
Tourism and services, driven by accommodation, dining and ticket sales, form the backbone of Hoi An’s economy and contributed nearly two-thirds of regional income last year as the town welcomed more than 4.4 million visitors, including 3.6 million foreigners, official data showed.
Domestic and international visitors were seen strolling along the riverfront and visiting heritage landmarks from Saturday, despite most hotels, lantern shops and restaurants undergoing extensive cleaning to prepare for a full reopening ahead of the peak travel season.
The historic floods last week submerged Hoi An’s lantern-lit streets and centuries-old wooden houses, forcing hundreds of businesses to temporarily close.
While no official financial damage estimates have been released, small shop owners reported losses in the hundreds of millions of dong, which equates to thousands of US dollars.
The nearby city of Thua Thien Hue, also impacted by the heavy rains, reopened its iconic citadel to tourists on Friday.
Authorities, however, continue to warn of rising river levels and potential renewed flooding as prolonged rains are expected in the coming days.
The floods also left five people missing and inundated more than 16,000 houses and 5,300 hectares (13,100 acres) of crops. Around 75,000 people are still experiencing power shortages, the government’s disaster agency said in a report.
Vietnam, prone to severe storms and flooding, frequently faces widespread property damage during its storm season, which typically lasts from June to October.