Tag: Russia

  • Ukraine seeks Pakistan’s support over conflict with Russia | The Express Tribune

    President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy recently called President Dr Arif Alvi to discuss Pakistan\’s support on the draft resolution being tabled in the United Nations General Assembly for ending the Ukraine-Russia conflict. The two leaders discussed Pakistan-Ukraine political and economic ties and the need for enhancing economic and trade relations for the mutual benefit of the two countries. Pakistan has maintained a delicate balance since Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago and Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has emphasised for the early resolution of the Russia-Ukraine conflict through dialogue and diplomacy. Follow our Facebook group for the latest updates on the conflict between Ukraine and Russia.



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  • Taliban sets up investment consortium with firms from Pakistan, Russia, Iran

    KABUL: Afghanistan’s Taliban-led administration has set up a consortium of companies, including some in Russia, Iran and Pakistan, to create a investment plan focusing on power, mining and infrastructure, the acting commerce minister said on Wednesday.

    The consortium included 14 Afghan businessmen and his ministry had signed a memorandum of understanding with the foreign companies who would send delegates to Kabul to look into projects worth up to $1 billion, Nooruddin Azizi told Reuters.

    Afghanistan’s economy has been severely hampered since the Taliban took over in 2021, sparking the international community to cut most development funding and enforce sanctions on the banking sector.

    US judge rules 9/11 victims cannot seize Afghan central bank funds

    A series of attacks waged by the Islamic State against foreign targets has also worried some investors.

    Azizi said the administration was focused on launching several long-term business plans including the consortium and special economic zones, and that it was working on ensuring security.

    “Lots of discussions on security have taken place in cabinet meetings also, commissions have been established and … the hiding places (of militants) have been destroyed,” he said.

    “The Islamic Emirate will ensure security and will support the private sector in the security field,” he said, referring to the Taliban administration.

    As well as mining and power projects, he said the consortium was eyeing the possibility of building a second tunnel through the Salang pass that connects Afghanistan’s north to the rest of the country, and a project to divert water from northern Panjshir province to the capital as well as re-building the main highway connecting Kabul to western Herat province.

    FM underscores need for capacity-building of Afghan authorities

    The minister said the Taliban administration was planning to focus on building special economic zones it hoped would attract foreign investment.

    His ministry has helped develop a plan to convert foreign bases into the zones, and a board was being set up with representatives of different ministries. He declined to elaborate while the details were finalised with other ministries and senior leadership.

    Shipments of oil, gas and wheat under a major deal with Russia last year had begun arriving in Afghanistan by road and rail through Central Asia, he said, after the payments were made via banking channels despite sanctions that have limited many international payments.

    He did not elaborate on which banks had facilitated the payment.



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  • China, Russia could target Canada’s AI sector, spy agency warns – National | Globalnews.ca

    [

    Canada’s spy service warns that adversaries will turn to espionage and foreign interference tactics to target the country’s increasingly important artificial-intelligence sector.

    The Canadian Security Intelligence Service says in a newly released analytical brief that countries including China and Russia can be expected to “pursue Canada’s AI through all available vectors” _ from state-sponsored investment to the use of covert operatives.

    The analysis by the spy agency’s intelligence assessments branch, marked CSIS Eyes Only, was completed in July 2021 but only recently released to The Canadian Press in response to an access-to-information request filed in October of that year.

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    It is the latest signal from the intelligence community that Canada’s technological innovation and resulting economic advancement are vulnerable to foreign forces out to co-opt or pilfer valuable research.

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    CSIS says emerging artificial intelligence capabilities and machine-learning tools are seen as key to developing ways to reduce plastic in the oceans, find a vaccine to treat the next looming pandemic, stem emissions that cause climate change and find safe navigation methods for self-driving cars.

    The analysis notes artificial intelligence is a priority for Canada, considered central to Ottawa’s domestic innovation and prosperity goals.

    “However, many other nations, including hostile state actors, have established their own national Al strategies and goals,” the brief says. “Some of these countries, particularly China and Russia, will resort to espionage and foreign-influenced activity to advance their national interests, at Canada’s expense.”


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    As a result, artificial intelligence has been reflected in the federal government’s intelligence priorities for several years, CSIS says.

    It finds Canada faces two main types of threats related to artificial intelligence.

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    The first entails espionage and foreign interference in attempts to gain access to proprietary Al technology and know-how via trade (such as exports and reverse engineering), state-sponsored foreign investment, joint ventures (including transfer of technology), cyberespionage, intelligence operatives, insider threats, talent spotting and recruitment.

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    “Much of those efforts are aimed at Canada’s academia and vulnerable startups, which are responsible for the majority of our Al innovation but which also represent a permissive espionage environment.”

    The second threat involves safety and security risks to individual Canadians and the country’s Armed Forces when adversaries obtain and use AI capabilities for intelligence or military purposes.

    Aaron Shull, managing director and general counsel at the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont., said he agrees with CSIS’s assessment, but would go even further.

    Shull cited other foreign threats in this realm, including AI-enabled cyberattacks that swiftly find gaps in computer code, use of facial recognition and surveillance by authoritarian regimes, automated bots that spread disinformation in cyberspace and dependence on international supply chains that are partly controlled by adversaries.


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    “I think we need a full-scale review of our national security and intelligence capabilities and services, our legislative structures, and take a more strategic view in terms of where we want the country to be 20 years from now,” Shull said in an interview.

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    Canada could then make the needed investments and legislative changes to get there, he said.

    “Other countries have their elbows up, and they’re trying to take what’s ours.”

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    CSIS says the importance of protecting Canadian artificial intelligence and the Big Data underpinning it goes beyond simply protecting the privacy of citizens, and involves “securing the future of our nation against the actions of hostile state actors with the intent to leverage their capabilities against us.”

    The brief stresses the importance of Big Data to artificial intelligence, saying the more data a country possesses, the more it can be fed into that country’s Al systems, accelerating their capabilities, making better decisions faster and ensuring a leg-up on the competition.

    “This will determine the victor in the modern world,” the brief says.

    “All nations will find themselves on a grid ranging from ignorance to control, based on how much data they have and how fast they can process it.”


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    Foreign state actors ‘can move a needle’ in certain ridings, Conservative MP questions during committee hearing


    The West faces “the threat of growing authoritarian dominance of the internet” by Beijing, given the high number of internet users in China and a government focused on gaining complete and centralized collection and retention of data, CSIS says.

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    “Moreover, China houses acres of data centres that store data from around the world, obtained both licitly and illicitly. This makes the data that China possesses valuable in both quantity and variety,” the brief adds.

    “One can confidently say this gives China an advantage in the Al industry, and the decisions that follow.”

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press





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  • One year after war, Ukrainian newcomers in Canada weigh future options – National | Globalnews.ca

    [

    Yuliia Kleban remembers waking up to a message from her manager on Feb. 24, 2022, telling her Russia had started invading her country.

    A few minutes later, Kleban heard air-raid sirens go off in Lviv, the Ukrainian city where she used to live.

    “It was a hard day,” she said in a recent interview. “I started packing an emergency backpack. I started checking whether I can go in a walking distance to some shelter.”

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    Kleban is among the more than 150,000 Ukrainians who made their way to Canada under a special program announced after the conflict began.

    As the war enters a second year, many of those newcomers are assessing whether they should focus on establishing a life in Canada, hope to return to Ukraine one day, or move to another country entirely.

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    For Kleban, Canada holds the most appeal right now.

    “For my future and for my family … for my future kids, it is better to be in a safer country,” she said. “Because in Ukraine we will always end up having a neighbour to the east that wants Ukrainians not to exist in this world.”

    The 37-year-old said she decided to apply to come to Canada to stay with extended family in Barrie, Ont., when Ottawa announced its special visa program for Ukrainians last March.


    Yuliia Kleban, from Ukraine, poses for a photograph near her work in Toronto on Wednesday, February 8, 2023. Kleban along with other Ukrainian refugees are living in Canada as the first anniversary of the Russian war nears.


    THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

    She spent about two months in the Czech Republic and four months in the United kingdom waiting for her Canadian visa before arriving in September. Her 40-year-old husband couldn’t accompany her because of Ukraine’s general mobilization law that bars men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country.

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    Kleban, who was the director of an IT and business analytics program at the Ukrainian Catholic University, said she moved to Toronto about two months ago to work as project manager for a program that helps Ukrainian newcomers find jobs.

    While she feels safe in Canada, she worries about loved ones in Ukraine.

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    “I’m hosted warmly by the country, by the people here.” she said, adding she hopes her husband will eventually get an opportunity to join her.

    “Everybody is very supportive and tries to use empathy as much as they can to understand the circumstances for Ukrainians now, the war that is continuing still.”

    Ihor Michalchyshyn, the executive director of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress _ a non-profit umbrella organization of Ukrainian Canadian organizations _ said Ukrainian newcomers are trying to figure out what path might work best for them in the future.

    “People are looking to understand their options,” he said.

    “As people fled a year ago, they thought they would be able to go back in a couple of weeks and then it turned into a couple of months and now it’s a year, right? And so I think none of us know.”

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    Michalchyshyn said Ukrainians in Canada will be gathering for vigils, marches and demonstrations on Friday evening to mark the first anniversary of the war.

    The war has had a huge effect on the Ukrainian Canadian community as many of its members, including those who have been in Canada for decades, still have family in Ukraine, he said.

    “Most of us have some family connections, direct family connections or have been to Ukraine and understand it, been there, seen it, touched it,” Michalchyshyn said. “It’s shocking to see … the tremendous violence by Russian invading forces on civilians.”

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    Almost 1.4 million people, or four per cent of Canada’s population, said at least one of their ethnic origins is Ukrainian in the 2016 census.

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    Ukrainian Canadians have donated more than $50 million to help people in Ukraine, Michalchyshyn said, and have also worked hard to help settle Ukrainian newcomers who have fled the war.

    “We’re seeing more and more people who are arriving. They don’t know anybody, they don’t know anything about Canada,” he said.

    “It’s very difficult to find child care in Canada for everybody. It’s very difficult to find affordable housing for everybody in Canada, so they are facing those same challenges as well.”


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    Volunteer group helping Ukrainian refugees makes plea for host families


    The federal government has offered a temporary visa for Ukrainians fleeing the war and a three-year work permit, along with one-time payment of $3,000 per adult and $1,500 per child and a two-week hotel stay for those who need it.

    Immigration Department spokesman Stuart Isherwood said Ottawa is working closely with provinces, territories and municipalities to support Ukrainian newcomers.

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    Ukrainians arriving under the temporary visa, as well as Ukrainian temporary residents who were in Canada when the war broke out, have access to settlement services typically only available to permanent residents, Isherwood said. Ottawa also launched an online portal for Canadian businesses to offer high-priority goods and services to support Ukrainians and organizations providing aid in Canada, he said.

    “We will also continue working with settlement organizations and (non-governmental organizations) across the country to support Ukrainians and their family members before, during and after their arrival in Canada,” he said.

    “(The Immigration Department) is continuing to assess how our immigration programs can best support Ukrainian nationals now and in the future, including potential new pathways to permanent residence.”





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  • Pakistan, Russia to assess Kabul’s performance | The Express Tribune

    [


    ISLAMABAD:

    Pakistan and Russia would review progress of the interim Afghan government in fulfilling the commitments made with the international community for forming an inclusive government, and to denying terrorist outfits a space to operate from its soil, official sources said on Sunday.

    The sources, familiar with the development, said that Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto, who is currently undertaking his maiden visit to Moscow, would meet his Russian counterpart, Sargey Lavrov in Moscow on Monday (today) and one of the major issues that would top the agenda would be Afghanistan.

    Bilawal’s first visit to Moscow as the foreign minister comes at a time when Pakistan is concerned over the Afghan Taliban’s failure in controlling the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and its affiliates which have stepped up attacks in the country.

    Russia too is worried over the growing footprint of Daesh terrorist group, which poses a threat to Moscow. Russia is also worried over the Afghan Taliban’s recent moves, such as banning female education and resorting to other measures that have raised the spectre of return of hard line Taliban rule of the late 1990s.

    Ahead of the Bilawal-Lavrov meeting, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a tweet that the two top diplomats would discuss the fight against terrorism and a number of regional topics, including the state of affairs in Afghanistan, Syria and Ukraine.





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  • Ukraine war: The Canadian ‘suburban mom’ arming Ukraine against Russia | Globalnews.ca

    [

    Kate McKenna starts her days much like the other parents on her street. She drives her kids to school and returns to her bungalow on a cul-de-sac south of Vancouver.

    But once she sits at her kitchen counter, pours coffee and opens her laptop, she becomes a global weapons supplier, helping the Ukrainian military fight off the Russian invasion.

    A volunteer with United24, a non-profit organization established by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, McKenna is one of many supporters around the world helping arm Ukraine.

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    She has tracked down armoured vehicles, missile defence systems and drones – whatever Ukraine needs to repel President Vladimir Putin’s forces.


    Kate McKenna, a volunteer with Ukrainian support charity United 24, at her home in B.C.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    “Kate is doing an incredible job for Ukraine,” said an advisor to Ukraine’s deputy prime minister. Global News is not naming the advisor, who was not authorized to speak.

    “She is an ambassador, helper, supporter and contributor.”

    Her neighbours have no idea.

    “It is very weird,” McKenna said in an interview at her home in North Delta, B.C. “I’m a suburban mom, and I’m planning Russian death. I do have moments like that.”

    Since Russia launched its invasion one year ago this week, a global network has come together to make sure Ukraine is properly outfitted for victory.

    They are not all like McKenna. Many are veterans with military expertise and contacts. But as civilians, they have proven able to get things done, and fast.


    Aerorozvidka members test Ukrainian armed forces drones near Kyiv, Jan. 25, 2023.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    While Western governments have walked a fine line, supporting Ukraine’s armed forces without becoming directly involved, volunteers have no such constraints.

    Arming Ukraine Through Donations and Bargain Hunting

    A former drone-company employee, McKenna focuses on filling the gaps governments aren’t, like finding the parts to develop the drones that have become a central weapon in the war.

    McKenna was born in Zimbabwe and came to Canada in 2008 after working as a banking executive in Tokyo and Singapore.

    She was employed at a Vancouver-area drone firm, and raising two children, when Russian troops launched their full-scale invasion.

    “I was born in Africa during civil war so I really understand what it’s like to lose your home and to live, as a child, scared,” McKenna told Global News.

    “So it really resonated with me.”


    Wooden ‘bombs’ used to test Ukrainian attack drones, near Kyiv, Jan. 25, 2023.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    She started out by helping Ukraine with commercial drones, something she knew well. Easy to use, they require little training and have become invaluable observation tools and weapons for Ukrainian forces.

    She also looks for mothballed military equipment. One of her successes was locating hundreds of armoured vehicles that were sitting unused in an Alabama warehouse after they proved ineffective for their intended mission in Alaska.

    Another challenge was finding drones that could work in the Black Sea, where the Russian navy launches its ship-based missiles at Ukraine. The solution was to fit a jet ski engine onto a kayak, she said.

    The result was a fleet of makeshift marine surface drones that can target Russian ships. McKenna called it “a beautiful Ukraine story,” and typical of the way the country is defending itself.

    “A lot of what we do is a lot of duct tape and putting things together and finding unique ways to achieve the mission,” she said.

    Created with Sketch.

    “They’re fighting a war against Russia by donation and bargain-basement hunting. It’s ridiculous, but they’re succeeding.”


    Aerorozvidka member tests drone near Kyiv, Ukraine, Jan. 25, 2023.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    In August, she left her job and began to devote her full attention to the cause.

    Recently, she learned that Canada had a cache of counter-rocket, artillery and mortar systems, known as C-RAMs, that had been put in storage during a naval refit, and she began trying to get them to Ukraine.

    Since she has no military background, she relies on a network of veterans for their advice. They talk on messaging applications like Signal. Working with contacts in Ukraine, she tries to locate the parts and gear they need, reaching out to manufacturers.

    Now that Russia has begun launching swarms of Iranian-made Shahid attack drones at Kyiv, she has shifted to finding equipment that can detect them and shoot them down.

    “Right now we’re focused on counter-UAVs,” she said, referring to technology that allows Ukrainians to destroy Russia’s unmanned aerial vehicles.


    Team testing drones that have been pivotal in Ukraine’s war against the Russian invasion.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    The advantage of the non-profit sector is that it can move more speedily than the bureaucracy, said Ruslana Velychko, who works with the Ukrainian Veteran Fund and Come Back Alive, which equips the country’s armed forces.

    “We can work faster than government and we are more dynamic,” she said. As an example, she said her group had imported armoured vehicles that Ukraine’s ministry of defence had been unable to buy.

    While immediately following the invasion volunteers were searching for helmets and body armour, now they are in pursuit of drones, radio gear and de-mining equipment, Velychko said in an interview.

    “We need to be creative all the time.”

    Created with Sketch.

    “Our creativeness gives us results and impact.”

    On a farm northeast of Kyiv, a white van followed frozen ruts before coming to a stop in a pasture. Three men got out and unloaded hard black cases like the kind roadies haul around when bands tour.


    A member of Aerorozvidka tests an armed forces drone near Kyiv, Ukraine, Jan. 25, 2023.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    The patches on their uniforms said they were with Aerorozvidka, a non-profit developing attack drones for the Ukrainian armed forces, and one of the groups that McKenna works with from Canada.

    They had come to the remote spot to test the “night hunter,” an eight-rotor octocopter they have been building at a nearby workshop, using money and parts provided by foreign supporters.

    After attaching three wooden dummies that looked like bombs to a drone, they flew it up above their mock target. The operator sat in their van, staring at a screen. “Let’s go,” he said. He flipped a switch and the bombs plunged into the brown grass.

    The AR18 drones they were testing will allow the Ukrainian armed forces to attack Russian tanks and armoured vehicles — a relatively low-tech method of self-defence.

    “They are very important in this war,” said Oleh, who is in charge of drone testing. Global News is not publishing his full name for security reasons.

    “The person who dominates in the air is winning the war.”

    Created with Sketch.


    Oleh, a member of Aerorozvidka, testing military drones near Kyiv, Ukraine, Jan. 25, 2023.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    Before the war, Oleh was a sales manager at a car-parts company. Now he is one of a team of civilians working on the AR18 drone, modifying it “on a constant basis” amid the urgency of Russia’s invasion.

    Each kit costs about $45,000, and they get shot down so have to be replaced, he said. But Oleh believes Ukraine is winning the drone war, thanks partly to money and parts coming from abroad.

    “It really helps,” he said.

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    McKenna’s said she got to know Aerorozvidka when the non-profit was looking for drones. Working through United24, she helped them find parts and “test all the new technologies,” she said.

    “Generally, once a drone, antenna or electronic warfare gun is delivered to United 24 in Kyiv, it’s sent to them to test. If it’s complex, I set up a group chat on Signal,” she explained.

    “They share any issues with the manufacturer’s engineering team, and I monitor the conversations to make sure each team is understanding the other.”


    Drones fitted with bombs are used to attack Russian tanks and armoured vehicles in Ukraine.


    Stewart Bell/Global News

    When the military jargon goes over her head, McKenna consults her network, which includes a retired U.S. general, she said. “He explains a lot of things.”

    She is confident Ukraine will win, and when the war is over, she hopes to help the country rebuild. Until then, she is approaching companies and asking if they have anything to offer.

    In May, she will give a presentation at a conference in Washington, D.C. on counter-drone technology. In the audience will be senior members of the military and industry.

    McKenna’s speech begins: “Hi, I’m a Canadian mom with internet access.”

    Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca





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  • Ottawa urged to expel Russian diplomats as Ukraine war anniversary nears – National | Globalnews.ca

    [

    A House of Commons’ committee says Canada should expel Russian diplomats who are participating in activities not “consistent” with their roles — but whether Ottawa will commit to doing so is up in the air.

    The Canadian government hasn’t expelled any Russian diplomats since Moscow’s full-scale war in Ukraine began nearly a year ago on Feb. 24, 2022.

    In studying the war, the Foreign Affairs and International Development committee released a report last week detailing its impacts, and made 14 recommendations to the federal government on how it can continue to strengthen its support for Ukraine.

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    Among those was for the government “to expel Russian diplomats involved in any activities that are not consistent with their official diplomatic status.”

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    In March 2022, four European Union nations expelled several Russian diplomats accused of spying; the last time Canada expelled Russian diplomats was in March 2018, in lockstep with the United Kingdom over a nerve agent attack.

    “There is no definitive stance on whether we’re going to accept all the recommendations and whatnot, or on each recommendation specifically, but what I can say is that on expelling Russian diplomats, our thinking hasn’t changed,” a government source, speaking on background, told Global News.

    “The concept of reciprocity in diplomacy and the fact that what our folks in Moscow do is really important, that thinking hasn’t really changed.”


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    Grantly Franklin, a spokesperson with Global Affairs Canada (GAC), told Global News in an email that it’s “important” to maintain the Canadian embassy in Moscow.

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    “This keeps open channels of communication, allows for on the ground monitoring of developments to counter Russian disinformation, and permits the delivery of consular services to Canadian citizens,” Franklin said.

    “This in turn requires allowing the Russian Embassy to remain open on a reciprocal basis.”

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    In April 2022, Russia’s ambassador in Ottawa said any diplomatic expulsion will be met in kind by expelling Canadian officials in Russia, the Hill Times reported. Earlier that month, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called diplomatic expulsion a “symbolic gesture,” and said that Canadian diplomats in Moscow play too important of a role.

    Orest Zakydalsky, senior policy advisor with the Ukrainian Canadian Congress (UCC), told Global News his organization doesn’t see a reason why Russia should still have a diplomatic mission in Canada.

    “In terms of this recommendation, this is something the government should be doing anyway. Diplomats who are engaged in things that aren’t part of their diplomatic work ought to be thrown out regardless of any recommendations of a committee,” he said.

    “Their expulsion would not be symbolic, but would actually strengthen Canadian security.”


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    The government source told Global News that Ottawa is reviewing the recommendations, and that the government will “always follow the Geneva Convention and the rules and expectations set out by that,” adding that the Russian ambassador has been summoned six times since the full-scale war began.

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    “As long he keeps parroting Russian propaganda, he’s going to continue to be summoned,” they said.

    “On our side, our folks in Moscow matter a lot. They do crucial work, and we want to make sure that they remain in a position where they’re able to do that work.”

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    In its report, the foreign affairs committee said GAC officials who testified as part of the study expressed “a cautionary note about cutting off the opportunity for … high-level contact, whether it’s with the Russian ambassador here or through our ambassador in Moscow.”

    Marta Dyczok, an associate professor of history and political science at Western University, told the committee that Canada could still do more to scale down its “diplomatic relations” with Russia.

    “They need to keep the embassy and consulates open — diplomatic channels need to remain open — but the size of its diplomatic missions does not need to be the same as during peacetime,” Dyczok said during testimony.


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    Trudeau said in April that Ottawa reduced the size of its diplomatic staff in Moscow following President Vladimir Putin’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, and after the 2018 poisoning in Salisbury, England, of a former Russian intelligence officer, and his daughter.

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    Zakydalsky said the UCC will continue to press Ottawa on this issue.

    “We will keep making the point to the government that it is a matter of both security for Canadians, and … that there should not be Russian diplomats here in Canada fomenting, trying to destroy … our society,” he said.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.





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  • FirstFT: Russia will ‘never’ prevail, says Joe Biden

    صبح بخیر. یہ مضمون ہمارا آن سائٹ ورژن ہے۔ فرسٹ ایف ٹی نیوز لیٹر ہمارے لیے سائن اپ کریں۔ ایشیا, یورپ/افریقہ یا امریکہ ایڈیشن حاصل کرنے کے لیے اسے ہر ہفتے کی صبح سیدھا آپ کے ان باکس میں بھیجا جاتا ہے۔

    جو بائیڈن نے ولادیمیر پوتن پر الزام لگایا \”انتخاب\” کی جنگ یوکرین میں کہ روس \”کبھی نہیں\” جیت سکے گا، جیسا کہ امریکی صدر نے کیف میں جمہوریت کے دفاع کے لیے ایک طویل اور خونی مہم کے لیے مغرب کو اکٹھا کرنے کی کوشش کی۔

    وارسا کے رائل کیسل کے پس منظر میں بات کرتے ہوئے، بائیڈن نے ایک کلیدی تقریر کی جس میں روس کے صدر کی طرف سے منگل کے روز کیے گئے امریکی جنگجوؤں کے دعووں کو براہ راست چیلنج کیا گیا۔

    اپنے ٹیلی ویژن خطاب میں ولادیمیر پوتن نے کہا کہ روس کرے گا۔ اپنے باقی ماندہ جوہری ہتھیاروں کے معاہدے کو معطل کر دیں۔ امریکہ کے ساتھ، ایک اقدام مغربی حکام نے کہا کہ سرد جنگ کے بعد ہتھیاروں پر قابو پانے والی حکومت کے خاتمے کی علامت ہے۔

    \”مغرب روس پر حملہ کرنے کی سازش نہیں کر رہا تھا، جیسا کہ پوٹن نے آج کہا۔ . . بائیڈن نے کہا کہ یہ جنگ کبھی بھی ضرورت نہیں تھی، یہ ایک المیہ ہے۔ \”ہر روز جنگ جاری رہنا اس کا انتخاب ہے۔\”

    دریں اثناء چین نے مغربی ممالک کو خبردار کیا ہے۔ \”آگ میں ایندھن شامل کرنا\” یوکرین میں اور بیجنگ کے سب سے سینئر سفارت کار وانگ یی کے متوقع دورہ ماسکو سے قبل امن مذاکرات کا اعادہ کیا۔

    FT اس جمعرات کو سبسکرائبرز کے لیے ایک خصوصی ویبینار کا انعقاد کرے گا تاکہ FT کے نامہ نگاروں اور خصوصی مہمانوں کے ساتھ یوکرین پر روس کی وحشیانہ جنگ کے مستقبل پر تبادلہ خیال کیا جا سکے۔ یہاں مفت میں رجسٹر ہوں۔.

    1. HSBC پنگ این بریک اپ پریشر کا مقابلہ کرنے کے لیے ڈیویڈنڈ کو بڑھاتا ہے۔ ایچ ایس بی سی نے اپنے منافع کو چار سالوں میں بلند ترین سطح تک بڑھا دیا۔ اور کہا کہ یہ اگلے سال ایک خصوصی ادائیگی کر سکتا ہے، کیونکہ وہ اپنے سب سے بڑے شیئر ہولڈر پنگ این سے بریک اپ کالوں کو روکنا چاہتا ہے۔ یہ اقدام اس وقت سامنے آیا جب برطانیہ اور ہانگ کانگ میں درج بینک نے چوتھی سہ ماہی کا قبل از ٹیکس منافع تقریباً دوگنا ہو کر 5.2 بلین ڈالر تک پہنچ گیا۔

    2. وینگارڈ چیف موسمیاتی اتحاد سے باہر نکلنے کا دفاع کرتا ہے۔ وینگارڈ کے ٹم بکلی نے دنیا کے دوسرے سب سے بڑے اثاثہ مینیجر کو نکالنے کے اپنے فیصلے کا دفاع کیا ہے۔ نیٹ زیرو اثاثہ مینیجرز کے اقدام سے باہر، 301 اثاثہ مینیجرز کے اتحاد نے گرین ہاؤس گیسوں کے اخراج کو کم کرنے کا عہد کیا، یہ کہتے ہوئے کہ گروپ کی \”آواز ختم کی جا رہی ہے\”۔

    3. کریڈٹ سوئس کے حصص نئی کم ترین سطح پر پہنچ گئے۔ کریڈٹ سوئس کے حصص ریکارڈ کم ترین سطح پر گر گیا۔ کل اس رپورٹ کے بعد کہ سوئٹزرلینڈ کا مالیاتی ریگولیٹر بینک کے چیئرمین کی طرف سے اس بات پر کیے گئے تبصروں کی جانچ کر رہا ہے کہ کلائنٹس نے بینک سے کتنی رقم نکالی تھی۔

    4. اسرائیلی ارکان پارلیمنٹ احتجاج کے باوجود عدالتی اصلاحات کے ذریعے ووٹ دیتے ہیں۔ اسرائیل کی پارلیمنٹ نے پیش قدمی کے حق میں ووٹ دیا ہے۔ ایک تلخ مقابلہ شدہ عدالتی تبدیلی جس نے ملک بھر میں بڑے پیمانے پر مظاہروں کو جنم دیا ہے اور امریکی حکام کی طرف سے تشویش کا اظہار کیا ہے۔ دسیوں ہزار اسرائیلیوں نے ووٹنگ سے پہلے کے منصوبوں کے خلاف پارلیمنٹ کے باہر ریلی نکالی، جو بالآخر کل ہوئی۔

    5. ہانگ کانگ نے خوردہ سرمایہ کاروں کو کرپٹو تجارت کرنے دینے کے منصوبوں کی نقاب کشائی کی۔ علاقے کو منصوبوں کے ساتھ آگے بڑھایا ہے۔ خوردہ سرمایہ کاروں کو کرپٹو کرنسیوں کی تجارت کرنے دیں۔ جیسا کہ یہ ڈیجیٹل اثاثوں کے مرکز کے طور پر بالادستی کے لیے سنگاپور کے ساتھ مقابلہ کرتا ہے۔ ہانگ کانگ سیکیورٹیز اینڈ فیوچر کمیشن کے ذریعے شروع کیے گئے منصوبوں کے تحت، صنعت کے دو سب سے بڑے کرپٹو ٹوکنز خوردہ صارفین کے لیے کھولے جائیں گے۔

    کیا آپ کو لگتا ہے کہ ہانگ کانگ کو خوردہ سرمایہ کاروں کو کرپٹو کرنسیوں کی تجارت کرنے دینا چاہئے؟ ذیل میں ہمارے پول میں ہمیں بتائیں۔

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    آنے والا دن

    جی 20 فنانس سمٹ G20 ممالک کے وزرائے خزانہ اور ان کے مرکزی بینک کے سربراہان آج سے ہفتہ تک بنگلورو میں ایک سربراہی اجلاس شروع کریں گے۔

    انڈونیشیا میں چین کے وزیر خارجہ کن گینگ تیار ہے۔ جکارتہ میں ملاقاتیں عہدہ سنبھالنے کے بعد آج ان کا پہلا غیر ملکی دورہ ہے۔ (جکارتہ پوسٹ)

    کمائی نتائج متوقع ہیں۔ Lloyds, Nvidia, Stellantis, Baidu, Danone, Ebay اور Rio Tinto سے۔

    کے لیے آج ہی ہمارے ساتھ شامل ہوں۔ بزنس ایجوکیشن کا مستقبل: ایم بی اے پر اسپاٹ لائٹ، آج اپنی تعلیم جاری رکھنے کے بارے میں سوچ رہے ہیں؟ تک سائن اپ کریں۔ ایم بی اے 101بزنس اسکول میں داخلے کے لیے ہماری گائیڈ۔

    ہم اور کیا پڑھ رہے ہیں۔

    روس کب تک اپنی جنگ جاری رکھے گا؟ یہ اندازہ لگانے کے لیے کہ روس کب تک یوکرین کے خلاف اپنی جنگ جاری رکھ سکتا ہے، ایف ٹی چار شعبوں کی جانچ کرتا ہے۔: میدان جنگ میں موجود افواج، روس کا اسلحہ کا ذخیرہ، کریملن کا معاشی جنگ کا سینہ اور جنگ کے بارے میں عام روسیوں کے جذبات۔

    \"\"/

    سنگاپور کے بڑھتے ہوئے کرایوں نے فنانس ہب کے عزائم کو نقصان پہنچایا شہری ریاست میں رہائشی کرایے ریکارڈ کی بلند ترین سطح پر پہنچ گئے ہیں، کیونکہ نئے آنے والوں کی لہر نے مکانات کی محدود فراہمی پر قیمتوں کو بڑھا دیا ہے۔ صورتحال اس بات کی نشاندہی کرتی ہے۔ ہانگ کانگ کو تبدیل کرنے کے لیے سنگاپور کی مہم کی قیمت پیسے اور سرمایہ کاری کے لیے ایشیائی منزل کے طور پر۔

    انسانی برڈ فلو وبائی مرض کا کتنا امکان ہے؟ اگرچہ برڈ فلو نے نسبتاً کم انسانوں کو متاثر کیا ہے، لیکن بیماریوں کی روک تھام اور کنٹرول کے یورپی مرکز کے مطابق، اس کی اموات کی شرح تقریباً 50 فیصد ہے۔ اب، سائنس دان مزید سخت کارروائی پر زور دے رہے ہیں۔ انتہائی متعدی H5N1 تناؤ کی گردش کو کم کریں۔.

    کیوسیرا کا کہنا ہے کہ چین اب دنیا کی فیکٹری کے طور پر قابل عمل نہیں ہے۔ چین کی جدید ٹیکنالوجی تک رسائی پر امریکی پابندیاں ہیں۔ مینوفیکچرنگ بیس کے طور پر اس کی عملداری کو ختم کرنا برآمدات کے لیے، جاپان کے Kyocera کے سربراہ کے مطابق، چپ کے اجزاء بنانے والے دنیا کے سب سے بڑے اداروں میں سے ایک کے طور پر اپنی پیداوار کو کہیں اور منتقل کرتا ہے اور گھریلو سہولیات میں بہت زیادہ سرمایہ کاری کرتا ہے۔

    ورلڈ بنک نے گرینر مشن کی تیاری کر لی ڈونالڈ ٹرمپ کے مقرر کردہ ڈیوڈ مالپاس کی رخصتی کے ساتھ، حصص یافتگان عالمی بینک سے توقع کرتے ہیں۔ اس کے مرکز میں آب و ہوا رکھو. کم دولت مند قومیں قرضے کی بہتر شرائط اور دیگر مدد کے لیے زور دے رہی ہیں تاکہ انھیں شدید موسم کے مطابق ڈھالنے میں مدد مل سکے۔ کچھ لوگوں کو خدشہ ہے کہ نیا مشن بینک کے روایتی ترقیاتی مینڈیٹ سے توجہ ہٹا سکتا ہے۔

    خبروں سے وقفہ لیں۔

    ہانگ کانگ شاید ماحولیاتی دوستی میں سب سے آگے نہ ہو، لیکن اس کے کچھ سرکردہ شیف اس کا ازالہ کرنے کی کوشش کر رہے ہیں – مزیدار اثر کے لیے۔ اس کو دیکھو شہر کے پانچ بہترین پائیدار ریستوراں.

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    ہانگ کانگ کے موکسی ریستوراں کے شیف مائیکل اسمتھ © Mike Pickles | ہانگ کانگ کے موکسی ریستوراں کے شیف مائیکل اسمتھ

    آپ کے لیے تجویز کردہ نیوز لیٹر

    اثاثہ جات کا انتظام – ملٹی ٹریلین ڈالر کی صنعت کے پیچھے موورز اور شیکرز کی اندرونی کہانی معلوم کریں۔ سائن اپ یہاں

    اگلا ہفتہ – ایجنڈے میں کیا ہے اس کے پیش نظارہ کے ساتھ ہر ہفتے شروع کریں۔ سائن اپ یہاں

    پڑھنے کے لئے آپ کا شکریہ اور یاد رکھیں کہ آپ کر سکتے ہیں۔ FirstFT شامل کریں۔ میرے ایف ٹی کو آپ ایپ پر ہر صبح فرسٹ ایف ٹی پش نوٹیفکیشن حاصل کرنے کا انتخاب بھی کر سکتے ہیں۔ کو اپنی تجاویز اور آراء بھیجیں۔ firstft@ft.com



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  • Ambassador calls for Russia to be recognised as ‘terrorist state’

    آئرلینڈ میں یوکرین کے سفیر نے Oireachtas سے روس کو ایک \”دہشت گرد ریاست\” کے طور پر تسلیم کرنے کا مطالبہ کیا ہے۔

    یوکرین پر روسی حملے کی پہلی برسی سے چند روز قبل ڈیل فارن افیئرز کمیٹی سے خطاب کرتے ہوئے لاریسا گیراسکو نے یوکرائنی مہاجرین کے لیے اپنی سرحدیں کھولنے پر آئرش ریاست کا شکریہ ادا کیا۔

    آئرلینڈ دسیوں ہزار یوکرائنی پناہ گزینوں کو رہائش فراہم کر رہا ہے جو پچھلے 12 مہینوں میں اپنے گھروں سے بھاگ گئے ہیں۔

    محترمہ گیراسکو نے اپنے ملک پر روسی حملے کے بارے میں اپ ڈیٹ دینے کے لیے کمیٹی میں شرکت کی۔

    روس ایک خودمختار ریاست کے طور پر ہماری قانونی حیثیت سے انکار کرتا رہتا ہے اور یوکرین کی ریاست اور قوم کو تباہ کرنے کے اپنے مقصد کو برقرار رکھتا ہےلاریسا گیراسکو، آئرلینڈ میں یوکرین کی سفیر

    انہوں نے کہا: \”میں، یوکرین کے لوگوں کی طرف سے، آئرلینڈ کی غیر متزلزل حمایت کے لیے تعریفی الفاظ میں اضافہ کرتی ہوں جو ہمیں اپنے ملک اور اپنے لوگوں کے لیے اس بے مثال اور چیلنجنگ وقت میں مل رہی ہے۔

    \”تین دنوں میں، یوکرین کو ایک سال مکمل ہو جائے گا جب روس نے ہمارے ملک پر مکمل حملہ شروع کیا ہے۔

    اس بلا اشتعال جارحیت کی واحد وجہ روسی ریاست اور اس کی قیادت کے سامراجی اور توسیع پسندانہ عزائم تھے۔

    \”روس ایک خودمختار ریاست کے طور پر ہماری قانونی حیثیت سے انکار کرتا رہا ہے اور یوکرین کی ریاست اور قوم کو تباہ کرنے کے اپنے مقصد کو برقرار رکھتا ہے۔\”

    سفیر نے کہا کہ روسی اقدامات نے پناہ گزینوں کے بحران کو جنم دیا ہے، لاکھوں یوکرائنی بے گھر ہو گئے ہیں۔

    اس نے کہا: \”اس سلسلے میں ہم آئرلینڈ کے بہت مشکور ہیں کہ اس نے اپنی سرحدیں یوکرینیوں کے لیے کھولنے والے پہلے ممالک میں سے ایک ہیں، ان میں سے دسیوں ہزار افراد کو عارضی تحفظ فراہم کرنے کے ساتھ ساتھ رہائش، تعلیم اور صحت کی دیکھ بھال تک رسائی، زبان کے کورسز۔ اور بہت سی دوسری چیزیں۔ اس کے لیے شکریہ.\”

    سفیر نے جاری رکھا: \”روس واضح طور پر ایک دہشت گرد ریاست ہے اور ہم Oireachtas سے مطالبہ کرتے ہیں کہ وہ اسی طرح کی تحریک میں اسے تسلیم کریں۔

    اس کے علاوہ ہر روسی جنگی مجرم کو سزا ملنی چاہیے۔ ایک خصوصی ٹربیونل کے قیام سے روس کی سیاسی اور عسکری قیادت کو اس قابل بنائے گا کہ وہ سنگین ترین جرم، جارحیت کے جرم میں مقدمہ چلایا جا سکے۔

    \”اور ہم آئرلینڈ سے مطالبہ کرتے ہیں کہ وہ اس کے قیام کی حمایت کرے۔\”

    روس کو اب روکنا ہوگا کیونکہ جارح کو مطمئن کرنے سے کہیں اور مظالم بڑھیں گے۔لاریسا گیراسکو

    محترمہ گیراسکو نے نتیجہ اخذ کیا: \”ہم کسی بھی قیمت پر امن کو قبول نہیں کریں گے۔

    \”ہم کسی بھی ایسی چیز سے اتفاق نہیں کریں گے جو یوکرین کے علاقوں کو اپنے قبضے میں رکھے اور ہمارے لوگوں کو جارح کے رحم و کرم پر رکھے۔

    \”روس کو اب روکنا چاہیے کیونکہ جارح کو مطمئن کرنے سے کہیں اور مظالم بڑھیں گے۔

    \”ایک طرف روس امن مذاکرات کے لیے تیار ہونے کا ڈرامہ کرتا ہے، تو دوسری طرف وہ جنگ کی لہر کو اپنے حق میں کرنے کی کوشش میں میدانِ جنگ میں اپنی کوششیں تیز کرتا رہتا ہے۔

    \”یوکرین اپنے اس مطالبے کا اعادہ کرتا ہے کہ روسی فیڈریشن فوری طور پر، مکمل طور پر اور غیر مشروط طور پر یوکرین کی سرزمین سے اپنی تمام فوجی افواج کو واپس بلائے اور دشمنی کے خاتمے کا مطالبہ کرے۔

    \”یہ جنگ بین الاقوامی قانون اور اقوام متحدہ کے چارٹر کی فتح کے ساتھ ختم ہونی چاہیے۔ یوکرین، یورپ اور پوری دنیا کے لیے انصاف بحال ہونا چاہیے۔‘‘

    بند کریں

    خارجہ امور کی کمیٹی کے سربراہ چارلس فلاناگن نے کہا کہ آئرلینڈ کے لوگ یوکرین کی حمایت میں اٹل ہیں (نیال کارسن/PA)

    کمیٹی کے سربراہ چارلس فلاناگن نے سفیر کو آئرلینڈ کے لوگوں کی جانب سے اپنے ملک کے لیے غیر متزلزل حمایت کا یقین دلایا۔

    انہوں نے کہا: \”ہم یہاں ایک پارلیمانی کمیٹی کے طور پر آپ کی حکومت اور آپ کے لوگوں کو ہماری حمایت اور یکجہتی کا یقین دلانے کے لیے بہت پرجوش ہیں، اور آج سہ پہر آپ کی مصروفیت کی اہمیت کو کم نہیں سمجھا جانا چاہیے۔\”

    Sinn Fein TD جان بریڈی نے مزید کہا: \”یہ ایک تکلیف دہ سالگرہ ہے۔

    \”یہ یقین کرنا مشکل ہے کہ یوکرین پر روس کے مکمل غیر قانونی حملے کو تقریباً ایک سال گزر چکا ہے۔\”



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  • G7 finance chiefs to meet on Feb 23 to discuss measures against Russia

    جاپان کے وزیر خزانہ شونیچی سوزوکی نے منگل کو کہا کہ گروپ آف سیون (جی 7) کے مالیاتی رہنما 23 فروری کو روس کے خلاف ان اقدامات پر بات چیت کریں گے جو یوکرائن کی جنگ کے خاتمے کے لیے اس پر دباؤ ڈالیں گے۔

    جاپان بھارتی شہر بنگلورو میں G7 ممالک کے وزرائے خزانہ اور مرکزی بینک کے گورنرز کے اجلاس کی صدارت کرے گا۔ یہ ملاقات تقریباً ایک سال بعد ہو گی جب روس نے یوکرین پر حملہ کیا تھا اور اسے \”خصوصی فوجی آپریشن\” قرار دیا تھا۔

    G7 اور دیگر ممالک کی جانب سے روس کے خلاف متعدد تعزیری اقدامات کے باوجود جنگ جاری ہے۔

    سوزوکی نے ایک نیوز کانفرنس میں بتایا کہ \”یوکرین کی حمایت اور روس کے خلاف پابندیاں بحث کے اہم موضوعات ہوں گے۔\” \”ہم پابندیوں کے اثر کو بڑھانے کے لیے G7 اور بین الاقوامی برادری کے ساتھ قریبی رابطہ قائم کرتے رہیں گے تاکہ روس کو دستبردار ہونے کے حتمی مقصد کو حاصل کیا جا سکے۔\”

    جاپان اس سال G7 وزارتی اجلاسوں کی صدارت کر رہا ہے جو ہیروشیما میں 19-21 مئی کو ہونے والے G7 سربراہی اجلاس کے سلسلے میں ہے۔ G7 میں برطانیہ، کینیڈا، فرانس، جرمنی، اٹلی، جاپان اور امریکہ شامل ہیں۔

    G7 اجلاس کے بعد ہفتے کے آخر میں دنیا کی بڑی معیشتوں کے G20 مالیاتی رہنماؤں کا ایک وسیع اجتماع ہوگا، جس کی میزبانی ہندوستان بنگلورو میں کرے گا، جس میں G20 کی صدارت ہے۔

    یوکرین کی جنگ اور عالمی معیشت جی 20 مذاکرات کا مرکز بننے کی توقع ہے۔

    اس میں افراط زر پر تبادلہ خیال کیا جائے گا جو روس کی جنگ، توانائی اور اشیائے خوردونوش کی قیمتوں کی وجہ سے بڑھی ہے، اور ابھرتی ہوئی مارکیٹ کی معیشتوں کو قرضوں کے مسائل کا سامنا ہے۔ ایک سینئر جاپانی اہلکار نے پہلے کہا کہ ابھرتی ہوئی مارکیٹ کے قرضوں سے نمٹنے میں ناکامی مالی بحران کا باعث بن سکتی ہے۔

    سوزوکی نے کہا، \”ان مسائل پر بات چیت میں حصہ ڈال کر، ہم ایسے اہم نتائج حاصل کرنے کی امید کر رہے ہیں جو مستحکم اور پائیدار عالمی نمو کا باعث بنیں گے۔\”



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