We can't find results matching your search.

Adjust your search and try again or browse topics and stories below.

Recent stories from sustg

MUST-READS

  • Riyadh Art: Transforming Saudi Arabia’s Capital

    But Riyadh Art is more than just visual appeal; it's a force for societal transformation. By fostering inclusivity and nurturing a dynamic creative community, it enriches lives, inspires creative expression, and fuels a vibrant creative economy. As the city's walls come alive with colorful narratives, residents and visitors alike find joy, forging a sense of shared identity and civic pride.

  • Tyrrell Hatton joins Jon Rahm’s team with LIV Golf after PGA Tour jump

    Three days before its season opener in Mexico, the LIV Golf League on Tuesday announced the signing of England's Tyrrell Hatton to join Jon Rahm's new team, Legion XIII, the first expansion franchise in the circuit's history. Hatton, the 16th-ranked player in the Official World Golf Ranking, will join Zimbabwe's Kieran Vincent and University of Tennessee sophomore Caleb Surratt on Rahm's team. His squad will be the 13th team in a league that plays 54 holes and has shotgun starts.

  • IEA Cuts Oil Demand Forecast for 2024 but OPEC Remains Bullish

    “At the start of 2024, the risk of global oil supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict remains elevated, particularly for oil flows via the Red Sea and, crucially, the Suez Canal,” the IEA noted in its January 18 report. Strikes by the United States and United Kingdom against the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen in retaliation for attacks on ships in the Red Sea “have raised concerns that an escalation of the conflict could further disrupt the flow of oil via key trade chokepoints.”

  • Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert accused of ‘turning backs on women’ by Saudi ambassador

    Al-Saud said the pair should "get your facts straight" on matters of Saudi law affecting women and said their arguments were "based on outdated stereotypes and western-centric views of our culture". She added: "Failing to acknowledge the great progress women have made in Saudi Arabia denigrates our remarkable journey. This not only undermines the progress of women in sports, it sadly undermines women, progress as a whole. "Sports should not be used as a weapon to advance personal bias or agendas or punish a society that is eager to embrace tennis and help celebrate and grow the sport."

  • Saudi Arabia hears dozens of countries critique its human rights record at the UN in Geneva

    Saudi Arabia had its record on human rights including freedoms for women, prosecutions for freedom of speech, use of the death penalty and alleged killing of migrants at its border with Yemen critiqued at the United Nations on Monday. In the kingdom’s first formal review at the UN Human Rights Council since November 2018, the Saudi Arabia delegation said more than 50 reforms had since then been passed in favor of women. Delegates were told Saudi Arabia has abolished flogging as a punishment, that minors can no longer be executed, judges are independent and migrant workers are now better protected by law.

  • Commentary: What Will the United States Do after the Drone Strike in Jordan?

    While some sort of U.S. military action this week can be expected, the prospect of the United States brokering another temporary ceasefire in Gaza will remain the main focus of White House efforts. An agreement in Gaza would lower the regional temperature, rebuild cooperation with U.S. allies in the region, and put some wind in the sails of U.S. diplomacy.

  • Hamas studies new Gaza ceasefire proposal

    Hamas said on Tuesday it would study a new ceasefire proposal in the war with Israel in Gaza, hours after Israeli commandos killed three Palestinian militants in a raid on a hospital in the occupied West Bank. The raid underscored the risk of the Gaza war spreading to other fronts, while Israeli forces fought new battles with Hamas fighters in the Palestinian enclave. Clashes in northern Gaza forced more Palestinian residents to flee to safer areas, and southern parts of the coastal enclave were hit by Israeli air strikes.

  • UN urges reversal of funding pause for Palestinian refugee agency

    U.N. officials urged countries to reconsider a pause in funding for the U.N. agency for Palestinians on Sunday, pledging that any staff found involved in Hamas' attack on Israel would be punished and warning that aid for some two million people in Gaza was at stake. At least nine countries, including top donors the U.S. and Germany, have paused funding for the UNRWA refugee agency after allegations by Israel that a dozen of its 13,000 staff in Gaza were involved in the Oct. 7 rampage.

  • Pakistan court jails ex-PM Imran Khan for 10 years days ahead of polls

    A Pakistan court sentenced Imran Khan to 10 years' jail on Tuesday for leaking state secrets, his party said, the harshest sentence the former prime minister and cricketer has ever received and coming just days before national elections. The special court found Khan guilty of making public the contents of a secret cable sent by Pakistan's ambassador in Washington to the government in Islamabad, his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said. Former foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi was also sentenced to 10 years in the same case.

  • After drone attack on U.S. forces in Jordan, Pentagon sees ‘escalation’ but not ‘widening’ of war

    “I wouldn't say that the conflict is spreading … But this attack was certainly escalatory,” Singh told reporters, adding that Iran “bears responsibility” for Sunday’s attack because of the decision to arm the groups that carried out the attack. But she stopped short of saying Iran played a direct role in planning, directing, or approving the strike.