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Alpha Dhabi H1 profit $1.79bn

Adjusted EBITDA rises to $2.36bn.

Borouge Q2 net profit $193m

The H1 revenue stood at $2.72 billion.

ADNOC Drilling H1 revenue $2.37bn

The company posted a net profit of $692m.

Eni profit falls due to dip in oil prices

Q2 net profit fell by 18% to $637 million.

Emirates NBD H1 profit $3.40bn

Total income rose by 12 percent in the same period.

Syrian refugees to set off in caravan for EU from Turkey

Authorities say Lebanon hosts around two million Syrian refugees, while nearly 830,000 are registered with the United Nations. (AFP)
  • Organizers say the caravan will be split into groups of up to 50 people, each led by a supervisor
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he is preparing to send back one million Syrian refugees on a voluntary basis
Istanbul, Turkey— A group of Syrian refugees in Turkey is planning to form a caravan to reach the European Union, organizers said Saturday. 

Plans are being drawn up online via a Telegram channel, set up six days ago and followed by almost 70,000 people. Organizers are calling on people to bring sleeping bags, tents, life jackets, water, canned food and first aid kits.

“We will announce it when it’s time to go,” one organizer, a 46-year-old refugee who wished to remain anonymous, told AFP.

Some of the organizers already lived in the EU, he added.

Organizers say the caravan will be split into groups of up to 50 people, each led by a supervisor.

“We have been in Turkey for 10 years,” read one message posted on the channel by an administrator. “We are protected… but Western countries must share the burden.”

There are 3.7 million Syrian refugees officially living in Turkey.

Syria’s civil war, which began with a brutal crackdown of anti-government protests in 2011, has killed nearly half a million people and forced around half of the country’s pre-war population from their homes.

Many Syrian refugees in Turkey fear being sent back, especially after a recent shift in Turkey’s stance towards Damascus.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said he is preparing to send back one million Syrian refugees on a voluntary basis.

In February and March 2020, tens of thousands of migrants approached the land border between Turkey and Greece, after Erdogan threatened to keep the borders with Europe open.