We were economists and bankers and University Professors and parliamentarians, like, we have skills. But theyre so focused on who is actually fighting, that theyre not reaching out to people who have, you know, as mandi like mentioned, this expertise in this set. So i think figuring that problem out is going to help prevent this from becoming because youre seeing the refugee population becoming a radicalization problem as well now. Because really they have nowhere else to go. And its the way and again i think this goes to how good a lot of these radical groups are at actually their propaganda and their recruitment ability, theyre saying, well offer you a solution, well offer you a place when we win. And thats something that theyre doing that no other side is doing. No other side is saying, well, if you come join us, well ensure that you have a socioeconomic role when this conflict is over. And unfortunately what the u. S. And other International Militaries have been doing, theyve been
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07 Apr 2021 - 11:00
Qatar Airways Group Chief Executive, H E Akbar Al Baker
By Lani Rose R Dizon I The Peninsula
Doha: Qatar Airways is now positioned to come out of the COVID-19 pandemic extremely strong, and has set its sights to emerge as one of the top airlines in the world post-pandemic, Qatar Airways Group Chief Executive, H E Akbar Al Baker said yesterday.
Addressing a webinar organised by the US Chamber’s US-Qatar Business Program, Al Baker said that the airline, which expects to receive its first three Boeing 777X passenger jets in 2023, has already surpassed the number of destinations in its pre-COVID US network. After launching flights to Seattle and San Francisco recently, Qatar Airways will resume its flights to Atlanta in June, bringing its US network reach to 12 destinations. Qatar’s national carrier plans to expand its global weekly flights to over 140 destinations during the summer.