Search Site

Trends banner

DEWA okays $843m in H2 2024 dividend

DEWA had posted a net profit after tax of $1.96 billion for the full year 2024.

Dar Alarkan 2024 profit up 32%

The company's net profit increased by 81.5 percent in Q4 2024.

ADNOC Drilling approves $788m dividend

The final cash dividend of $394m for 2024 was approved at the AGM.

Google says to buy Wiz for $32 bn

The all-cash deal brings Wiz into the Google Cloud operation.

Borouge proposes share buyback

The company had posted a 24% YoY increase in net profit to $1.24bn.

Macron announces new Ukraine ‘coalition’ summit in Paris on March 27

France's President Emmanuel Macron addresses the media following a European Union Summit in Brussels on March 20, 2025. AFP
  • Macron, together with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, has been leading efforts to form a coalition in support of Ukraine
  • Starmer on Thursday hosted talks with around 30 senior military planners from nations interested in the coalition
Brussels, BelgiumFrench President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday said the leaders of a coalition of Ukraine backers would meet again in Paris next week, as it seeks to finalise plans to secure a potential truce in the war with Russia.
“We will hold another meeting of the coalition of the willing next Thursday in Paris in (the) presence of President (Volodymyr) Zelensky,” Macron told reporters following an EU summit in Brussels.”We will finalise our work on short-term support for the Ukrainian army, on defending a sustainable model for Ukraine’s armed forces to prevent Russian invasions, and security guarantees that European armies can provide,” he said.

“The entire process will be finalised in the next few days.”

Macron, together with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, has been leading efforts to form a coalition in support of Ukraine since US President Donald Trump opened direct negotiations with Russia last month to end the three-year-long war.

“We have done a lot of work with the British on ways to support the ceasefire,” Macron said. “That is important to ensure any ceasefire is credible, as and when it comes.”

“This will be a chance to discuss and fine-tune,” added the French leader.

Starmer on Thursday hosted talks with around 30 senior military planners from nations interested in the coalition, saying afterwards that the “political intention” of security guarantees for Ukraine was becoming “reality”.

“Whether that’s in relation to what might happen at sea or air or defending borders, and those plans are coming together,” the British leader said.

Questions remain over what the group might be able to do after Russian President Vladimir Putin demanded an end to Western military aid to Ukraine as a condition for any end to fighting.

Both Starmer and Macron say they are willing to put their own troops on the ground.

Russia, however, has said it will not accept the presence of any NATO troops in Ukraine and Washington has given no indication it would be willing to provide a security backstop for a deployment of boots on the ground.