Search Site

Trends banner

TSMC Q2 profit up 60%

TSMC is the world's largest contract maker of chips.

ADNOC shifts OMV stake to XRG

XRG is ADNOC's wholly-owned international investment company.

SIB H1 net profit $189m

The bank's total assets increased by $1.49 billion.

TSMC’s H1 revenue up 40 percent

Robust demand for AI technology behind the surge.

‘Wadeem’ sold out for $1.49bn

This is the highest Abu Dhabi real-estate release to date.

Protestors demand end of fossil fuels, Gaza war at COP28

Climate activists raise banners and the colors of the Palestinian flag, during a joint 'climate justice' and 'ceasefire now' march, demanding an end to the violence in the Gaza Strip, at UN climate summit in Dubai. (AFP file)
  • The 'Blue Zone' where the COP28 talks are taking place is currently under UN control.
  • At least 17,490 people, mostly women and children, have been killed in Israeli attacks

Dubai, United Arab Emirates– Hundreds of people joined the biggest protest yet at COP28 in Dubai on Saturday, chanting for the end of fossil fuels and a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war.

Holding pro-environment banners painted in the colors of the Palestinian flag, the demonstrators shouted for “Climate justice!” and “Ceasefire now!”

The Gaza war has been a lingering presence at the United Nations meeting in Dubai, where negotiators from around the world are trying to strike a new agreement on global warming.

“It’s the same fight, it’s the same thing — it’s colonialism, it’s genocide,” said Mexican activist Isavela Lopez, describing the links between climate injustice and the war.

“They are taking away what is rightfully ours, what is rightfully our resources, they are taking away our land, our biodiversity… and then they use it for themselves and to make themselves richer.”

Protests are a rare occurrence in the United Arab Emirates, where demonstrations need official authorization.

The ‘Blue Zone’ where the COP28 talks are taking place, on the sprawling site that housed Expo 2020, is currently under UN control.

“I stand for everybody that is oppressed,” said American Claire Charlo of the Just Transition Alliance.

“I feel for everybody that is experiencing genocide right now because it happened to us in the United States in 1492.”

The Gaza war was triggered by an unprecedented attack on October 7 by Palestinian Hamas fighters who killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took around 240 hostage, according to Israel authorities.

Israeli reprisals aimed at rooting out Hamas have killed at least 17,490 people, mostly women and children, Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry says.