
UAE, Syrian Presidents exchange Eid Al Adha greetings
Exchanging warm Eid wishes
Both leaders conveyed their warm wishes for health and happiness to all, praying that the occasion would bring blessings, peace, and prosperity to their peoples and to both countries.
Shared hopes for the future
They also expressed their hopes for continued development and growth, and for lasting security, stability, and wellbeing across the Muslim world and the wider international community.
Strengthening bilateral relations
The call also touched on the close relations between the UAE and Syria and ways to strengthen cooperation in a manner that serves the interests and aspirations of both nations.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sharjah 24
5 hours ago
- Sharjah 24
UAE, Syrian Presidents exchange Eid Al Adha greetings
Exchanging warm Eid wishes Both leaders conveyed their warm wishes for health and happiness to all, praying that the occasion would bring blessings, peace, and prosperity to their peoples and to both countries. Shared hopes for the future They also expressed their hopes for continued development and growth, and for lasting security, stability, and wellbeing across the Muslim world and the wider international community. Strengthening bilateral relations The call also touched on the close relations between the UAE and Syria and ways to strengthen cooperation in a manner that serves the interests and aspirations of both nations.


Gulf Today
6 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Who cares that Britain is on course to be ‘minority white'?
Anand Menon, The Independent Language is a funny thing. This week, a new report appeared to warn that the white British population could be a minority in the UK within 40 years. And it has brought out the worst in some of us. An analysis of migration, birth and death rates by the University of Buckingham suggests the white British population is set to fall from its current 73 per cent, to 57 per cent by 2050, before becoming a minority by 2063. One newspaper's report explained, rather curiously, that white British is 'defined as people who do not have an immigrant parent'. Bad luck, then, all you non-white kids of an Irish, French or German parent. Unlucky, too, King Charles, Winston Churchill and Boris Johnson. By this metric, it seems that you no longer qualify as white British. Beyond this rank stupidity, there is of course something else going on here. This is less dog whistle than plain old whistle. Dodgy extrapolations posing as predictions. Few people are spared. We're informed, presumably with some regret, that there is going to be a rise in the number of foreign-born people and of second-generation immigrants, all of whom could well be British. Further on, Matthew Goodwin, the author of the report, shifts the goalposts one more time, asserting that by 'the end of the current century, most of the people on these islands will not be able to trace their roots in this country back more than one or two generations'. And then, of course, we have the equating of 'foreign-born and Muslim populations', implying, presumably, that if you're Muslim, you just don't cut it wherever you happen to have been born. If the problem that this country simply isn't white enough, someone may as well just come out and say it. Because it's clear the issue here isn't Britishness. There is a serious debate to be had not only about immigration, but also about integration. Happily, the country that most of us inhabit is a place where both ethnic and religious integration is a daily reality for millions of families, including my own. While I think we in the UK do rather better at this than many of our Western peers, there is still more that can and should be done. There is also a conversation worth having about what a manageable level of immigration might be, and whether immigration policy is fit for purpose. This, however, is not the way to have those conversations. Indeed, potentially inciting distrust and dislike between different communities is not how anyone sensible would go about, in the words of the report itself, 'informing, rather than polarising'. That is the only conclusion that I can draw from their sloppiness. If, after all, their aim really was to 'inform, rather than polarise', they might spend more time explaining that forecasts are not predictions. They might explain that there is good evidence that the total fertility rate among immigrants tends to fall over time. That the population projections Goodwin has used — calculations based on assumptions about fertility, mortality and migration — are already massively outdated, and become even less reliable the further forward one projects. But no, there is no such nuance to be found. Merely certainty that the findings are certain to spark a 'considerable degree of anxiety, concern and political opposition' from those who oppose immigration. And let's think about this in a global context for a moment. The world is changing, its balance of power is shifting steadily eastwards. Demographically — and I'm sorry about this — it is becoming less, not more, white. Relatively small countries like the UK will have to work ever harder to compete and to attract talent in this new world order. Do we really think that bemoaning the insidious impact of non-white foreigners who cannot trace their ancestry back several generations is going to help us in this task? But what I do know is that I'm not only not white, but apparently not British, either.


Al Etihad
7 hours ago
- Al Etihad
UAE President receives phone call from Syrian President exchanging Eid Al-Adha greetings
8 June 2025 19:53 ABU DHABI (WAM) UAE President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan on Sunday received a phone call from His Excellency Ahmad Al-Sharaa, President of the Syrian Arab Republic, during which they exchanged Eid Al-Adha leaders conveyed their warm wishes for health and happiness to all, praying that the occasion would bring blessings, peace, and prosperity to their peoples and both also expressed their hopes for continued development and growth, and for lasting security, stability, and wellbeing across the Muslim world and wider international community. The call also touched on the close relations between the UAE and Syria, and ways to strengthen cooperation in a manner that serves the interests and aspirations of both nations.