At ‘The Africa We Want’ Debate, Deputy Secretary-General Says More Investment, Stronger Policies Vital To Create Greener Future, Maintain Continent’s Development Gains

Following are UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed’s remarks, as prepared for delivery, to the joint high-level debate “The Africa We Want — Reconfirming the Development of Africa as a Priority for the United Nations”, today:

It is a privilege to be with you today on behalf of the Secretary-General.

The “Africa We Want” — as outlined in Agenda 2063 — embodies the African Union’s bold vision of an integrated, prosperous, and peaceful continent.  An Africa shaped by its own narrative, informed by its own citizens and representing a dynamic force on the world stage.  The United Nations shares this vision and its realization through the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Today’s event provides a global platform for African Member States and the United Nations and partners to share progress and reaffirm that giving light to this vision remains our shared priority.  Sadly, Africa’s development gains are at risk, as a consequence of the current three ongoing crises.

First, the COVID-19 pandemic.  The effects of the pandemic have reversed progress made over the past two decades, and further shrank an already limited fiscal space.  Social inequalities have been exposed and exacerbated in nearly every sphere:  in vaccine distribution, in economic growth, in access to education and health care, and in terms of job and income losses.  For the first time in over 20 years poverty has increased.  Women and informal workers have been disproportionately affected.

Second, climate change continues to threaten Africa’s future.  Droughts, floods and hurricanes are growing in number and severity and African countries are on the front line.  Even though this week, we are witnessing record high temperatures in Europe and the United Kingdom, where forest fires and homes burning have taken lives.  The twenty-seventh Session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27) in Egypt will be the African Conference of the Parties.  It will be the opportunity to build on the outcomes of Glasgow and to signal the ambition of the stock to take at COP28.

There is a unique opportunity to lift the ambition and keep the promise of the 2030 Agenda, including the Paris Agreement and the promise of the Agenda 2063.   To scale-up and speed-up investments in climate adaptation solutions that protect people and ecosystems, building resilience for the crises to come.

Third, the war in Ukraine.  The war is not only causing immense human suffering — it is now precipitating a global food, energy, and finance crisis.  Seventy-one million people in developing countries have fallen into poverty in the space of just three months, as a direct consequence of global food and energy price surges.  People living in regions like the Sahel and the Horn of Africa are particularly vulnerable to food insecurity.  As the Secretary-General has warned, “there is a real risk that multiple famines will be declared in 2022.  And 2023 could be even worse.”

The Africa we want is still within reach.  To get there, we need to change our mindsets and turn the triple crisis into an opportunity.  To do so, we must focus on five amongst many of our key issues.

First, building effective and reliable policy frameworks and institutions.  To be clear:  policy choices have the capacity to make or break this world.  Without a forceful policy response to today’s challenges, there is a risk that inequality will become entrenched.  For an inclusive economic recovery, policy responses need to put human capital and future resilience at the centre of policy making.  We need to promote the complementarity between formal and informal social protection networks as tools to achieve income distribution.

Second, we must future-proof Africa’s infrastructure by investing in connectivity and digital technologies.  The launch of the African Continental Free Trade Area provides an exciting opportunity for African countries to industrialize, diversify and digitize their economies, and enhance regional cooperation and resilience.

Third, education and skills-development are enablers of Africa’s industrialization.  Digital skills, science, technology, engineering and mathematics need to be integrated into the curricula of African schools and education institutions.  This is the only way that the continent will be able to build a skilled workforce that is able to realize the fourth industrial revolution.  The Transforming Education Summit that the Secretary-General will convene in September will help to radically redesign our education systems for the world of tomorrow, today.

Fourth, achieving sustainable energy for all across the continent.  The global rise in energy prices that we are witnessing should prompt African countries to accelerate energy access and a just transition, including through scaled-up domestic renewable energy production and energy efficiency.  But this is an opportunity for foreign direct investment in many of these economies that will pave a way for that industrialization that we speak to.

Finally, we need an overall reform of our approach to financing.  In the short term, African countries need immediate relief to ensure they can survive the immediate next years — through the re-channelling of unused Special Drawing Rights, increased concessional grants, and the renewal of the Debt Service Suspension Initiative.

In the long term, we will need to reprioritize where and how investments get made.  This requires massively scaling up investments in the sectors that remain critical to bolstering resilience and inclusive growth.  And this requires redistributing funds away from sectors that undermine these efforts — while supporting a just transition for all in the process.

The Africa We Want is not only good for the Continent — it is good for the world.  Building the Africa We Want means delivering the urgent scale in the support that Africa needs, it also means putting at the centre our youth and women.  Now is the time to urgently rescue the Sustainable Development Goals in Africa, and lay the foundation for the ambition of the 2063 Agenda — and in the world at large.

Today, let us recommit to our ambitious vision and to continue to work alongside African countries to realize a greener, more sustainable, and more inclusive future for all.

Source: United Nations

Joint Statement on the COVID-19 Global Action Plan Foreign Ministerial Meeting

The following is the joint statement released by the Secretary of State of the United States and the Foreign Minister of Japan.

Begin Text:

As the world continues to grapple with COVID-19’s far-reaching impacts and new variants, there remains an urgent need to maintain and strengthen political engagement and coordination to end the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Building on the June 15th COVID-19 Senior Officials Meeting, H.E. Hayashi Yoshimasa, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan and the Honorable Antony Blinken, Secretary of State of the United States of America, convened a virtual COVID-19 Global Action Plan (GAP) Foreign Ministerial Meeting on July 19 with over 25 countries, the African Union, World Health Organization (WHO), and World Bank.  Foreign ministers and senior leaders from countries, regions, and international organizations reaffirmed the need for coordinated international leadership and political will to end the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic and strengthen readiness for future pandemic threats.

The participants discussed the need for equitable and sustainable access to safe, effective, quality assured and affordable vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics as well as the actions countries can take to increase vaccine confidence.  Participants reviewed actions to support the effective production, distribution, and use of diagnostics and therapeutics.  In seeking to close the financing gap for pandemic preparedness and response, participants also discussed how countries can support and fund new endeavors such as the Financial Intermediary Fund (FIF) and paths forward for mechanisms like ACT-A and COVAX.

In his remarks, Minister Hayashi reiterated the importance for the whole world to maintain and accelerate countermeasures to overcome the pandemic, and presented Japan’s contributions to ensure equitable access to vaccines through financial contributions to COVAX, dose donations, and its “Last One Mile” support. Minister Hayashi emphasized the importance of the GAP which facilitates information sharing and coordination on the ground to implement assistance to meet the needs of each recipient country. He stated that we have to address the fragility in governance and financing related to global health, and strengthen the foundations for better prevention, preparedness, and response (PPR) to future health crises. He also announced Japan’s decision to contribute seed-funding of 10 million USD to the FIF at the World Bank. Moreover, Minister Hayashi shared his intention to strengthen international partnerships for PPR in Africa at the 8th Tokyo International Conference on African Development on August 27-28 in Tunisia, and to actively contribute to strengthening the global health architecture as the host of the G7 Summit next year, toward the overall goal of achieving universal health coverage (UHC).

Secretary Blinken emphasized that new variants continue to pose a risk to COVID-19 response and that the world’s work to end this acute phase of pandemic is not done, despite other demands and crises straining global attention.  He called on GAP partners to continue advancing GAP lines of effort and to maintain high-level political attention on delivering concrete outcomes in advance of the United Nations General Assembly in September.  Secretary Blinken also called on partners to improve coordination for, and equitable access to, vaccines and treatments, especially with an increased focus on the delivery of doses for boosters and increased demand and uptake for pediatric doses. Secretary Blinken urged participants to focus on the collective commitment to strengthen the global health security architecture to prevent and prepare for future health threats.  He also emphasized the need to simultaneously combat other ongoing health threats, including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria that continue to claim lives and urged countries to contribute toward the Global Fund replenishment.  Lastly, he thanked partners for their support of the new FIF established with the World Bank and World Health Organization and called on other countries to contribute.

WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reiterated alarm for rising global COVID-19 cases, applauded the establishment of a FIF at the World Bank, and the urgency of ending the acute phase of the pandemic.  The Director General emphasized focusing on vaccinating all health workers, all older people, and all at-risk groups, on the way to achieving the WHO’s goal of 70% vaccination coverage in all countries.

Through ministerial remarks and discussions, the participants identified the progress and remaining challenges, and reconfirmed their commitment to strengthen efforts across the GAP’s six lines of effort: to get shots in arms, bolster supply chain resilience, address information gaps, support health care workers, expand access to testing and treatment, and strengthen the global health security architecture in collaboration with multilateral efforts.

Participants joining Japan and the United States in the COVID-19 Global Action Plan Foreign Ministerial Meeting included the Argentine Republic, the Commonwealth of Australia, People’s Republic of Bangladesh, Belize, Canada, the Republic of Colombia, the Republic of Costa Rica, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Republic of India, the Republic of Indonesia, the State of Israel, the Italian Republic, Jamaica, the Republic of Korea, the Republic of Maldives, the Kingdom of Morocco, the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Kingdom or Norway, New Zealand, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the Republic of Senegal, the Republic of South Africa, the Kingdom of Spain, the Kingdom of Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, the African Union/Africa Centres for Disease Control, Heads of the World Health Organization, and the World Bank.

Source: US State Department

State Department Announces 27th Experience America Visit to Delaware

The U.S. Department of State and the Office of the Chief of Protocol are proud to announce the 27th Experience America trip to Wilmington, Delaware with members of the foreign Diplomatic Corps, July 21, 2022.  More than 50 foreign ambassadors – representing countries across 5 continents – will join Chief of Protocol of the United States Rufus Gifford to engage local business and community leaders and spotlight a vibrant American city.

Led by the U.S. Department of State, Experience America connects foreign ambassadors with academic, business, community, and cultural leaders.  The goal is to build relationships to promote economic investment, commerce, and dialogue. Experience America takes diplomats out of Washington to show them our remarkable country and everything it has to offer.  More than 100 countries have participated in Experience America trips since its inception in 2008 and the foreign ambassadors have visited over 20 cities and states including Austin, Little Rock, San Diego, Atlanta, and throughout the state of Alaska. Experience America trips have yielded tangible results at home and around the world, including the establishment of ports in U.S. cities and sister-port agreements across the globe. Delta Airlines established direct flights from Atlanta to South Africa; Kosovo worked to open its first McDonalds; and an Iraqi delegation visited Chicago to discuss trade opportunities.

For the Administration’s first Experience America, the program will travel to the state of firsts – Delaware, the first state to ratify the U.S. Constitution, and one of the best places to understand the Biden Administration.  Whether traveling the same railroad tracks President Biden took up and back every day on the Amtrak train as a Senator, to visiting companies and institutions at the forefront of American ingenuity and innovation, ambassadors will witness a state committed to solving our toughest problems – from cancer to climate – through science, technology and public service.

Over the course of the day, participating diplomats will hear how research, technology, and entrepreneurship have transformed the region and powers development that changes and improves individuals, countries, and societies. Experience America will help to build relationships between the visiting ambassadors and companies and leaders across Delaware, and in the process, open doors for local organizations eager to develop global partnerships and investment possibilities.

The following events are open to the press:

Thursday, July 21, 10:00 a.m. – STAR Campus Presentation and Laboratory Tour at the University of Delaware – Foreign ambassadors will learn about the cutting-edge research taking place at the University of Delaware by America’s next generation of talented students, and inventive faculty, with a kickoff presentation and tour of the STAR Campus facilities.  A hub for innovative activities, UD’s Science, Technology and Advanced Research (STAR) Campus combines top academics and research with industry and community partnerships.

Speakers include:

Ambassador Gifford, Chief of Protocol of the United States

Valerie Biden Owens, chair of the UD Biden Institute

Laura Carlson, UD provost

Kelvin Lee, UD interim vice president for research, scholarship and innovation

Brian Coll, site manager, Chemours Discovery Hub

Following remarks, tours of the campus’ health design studio, VR cave and nursing simulation lab will commence.  There, ambassadors will experience first-hand how UD is transforming new knowledge into positive impacts for the world.

Thursday, July 21, 12:00 p.m. – Delaware Business Leaders Roundtable – Diplomats will hear about the unique attributes of Delaware and its role in the global economy from Kurt Foreman, CEO of the Delaware Prosperity Partnership, and Delaware Secretary of State Jeffrey W. Bullock before getting the opportunity to interact and converse with local business leaders to discuss economic opportunities, initiatives and industries.

Thursday, July 21, 2:00 p.m. – Visit to DuPont Experimental Station and Global Innovation Center – Foreign ambassadors will learn about DuPont’s transformation to a premier multi-industrial company and how it is reshaping and strengthening its business portfolio and commitment to innovation and sustainability in areas where its technologies and capabilities can make a difference, such as electronics, clean water, protection, and next-generation automotive. Ambassadors will exchange views with technology leaders, business executives and research scientists to learn about innovation challenges and DuPont’s customer-oriented solutions. The event will feature remarks from DuPont Executive Chairman & CEO, Ed Breen and DuPont Chief Technology & Sustainability Officer, Alexa Dembek. Ambassadors will then tour six areas that highlight the company’s key innovation platforms.

The ambassadors’ visit to Delaware will include additional closed-press activities, such as a reception with local and state officials at Hagley Museum and Library, before returning to Washington.

For more information and to RSVP for one or multiple events, please contact the Office of the Chief of Protocol at summitmedia@state.gov by Wednesday, July 20 at 6:00 p.m.

Source: US State Department

University of Toronto’s Reach Alliance expands its network by partnering with academic institutions in Africa, Asia and Australia

— Global initiative brings together researchers and practitioners from across disciplines and around the world to accelerate the achievement of the UNs’ Sustainable Development Goals —

TORONTO, July 20, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The Reach Alliance announces partnerships with four leading universities, including the University of Cape Town (South Africa), Ashesi University (Ghana), Singapore Management University (Singapore) and the University of Melbourne (Australia). This scale up sees the Alliance grow from four to eight major global universities, with original partners including the University of Toronto (Canada), Tecnológico de Monterrey (Mexico), University College London (UK), and the University of Oxford (UK).

Founded at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, in partnership with the Mastercard Center for Inclusive Growth, the Reach Alliance is a global research and leadership initiative investigating how critical interventions reach those who are hardest to reach. The Alliance then partners with cross-sectoral organisations to translate actionable research insights for impact.

“The work of the Reach Alliance can only be done by strengthening international partnerships to achieve global reach,” says Marin MacLeod, Executive Director at the Reach Alliance.

Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng, Vice-Chancellor, University of Cape Town, comments “the Reach Alliance is a brilliant concept that aligns closely with the mission of the University: to ensure that our research meets the needs of even the most marginalized communities in Africa, that it has real impact, and that we produce the leaders of tomorrow who are committed to social justice.”

Sentiments shared by Ashesi University’s Provost, Professor Angela Owusu-Ansah, “engaging students in research of the lived experiences of marginalized groups is likely to amplify students’ ethical, entrepreneurial, and critical thinking; their concern for others and the courage to act for change.”

Scaling to universities in Africa, Asia and Australia will expand the scope and depth of Reach research, enhance the student researcher and faculty experience and accelerate production of actionable insights about some of the world’s most complex development issues.

“The Reach Alliance enables a global network of partner universities to collaborate on research and develop interdisciplinary solutions”, says Professor Elvin Lim, Dean, College of Integrative Studies, Singapore Management University. “Through student research and faculty mentorship drawn from the Alliance, we aim to deepen our engagement with the city and to create meaningful impact for communities around the world.”

Professor Adrian Little, Pro Vice Chancellor (International), University of Melbourne highlights the university’s social mission as a key reason for joining the Alliance, “by engaging with the Reach Alliance, we can tackle problems within Australia and in the wider Asia-Pacific region in collaboration with an outstanding group of university partners.”

To date, the Reach Alliance has published 30 case studies spanning 20 countries. Actionable research insights have informed practitioners and policymakers – accelerating achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals and establishing the next generation of global leaders. Reach findings have been published in leading outlets, such as The Lancet, Stanford Social Innovation Review and WHO Bulletin.

“We’re thrilled to welcome these leading universities to the Alliance and to learn from their unique and diverse perspectives. Their faculty and students will make a tremendous contribution to our global network of experts on how to reach the hardest to reach,” says MacLeod.

About the Reach Alliance 

Reach recruits students across global universities – equipping the next generation of leaders to conduct research, produce actionable insights – and catalyzes impact through institutional partners. Learn more at www.reachalliance.org.

Media contact: Fadumo Faarah, Communications & Events Officer at the Reach Alliance, University of Toronto, Phone: 1-226-606-7895, Email: fadumo.faarah@utoronto.ca

INGOT Obtains FSA License and Opens New Office in Seychelles

PLAISANCE, Republic of Seychelles, July 20, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via InvestorWire — INGOT Global Ltd. (“INGOT”) today announces the recent obtainment of a Seychelles Financial Service Authority (FSA) license and the opening of its first physical office in the island country. The Seychelles office will strengthen INGOT’s worldwide presence while presenting premium trading services to investors from all walks of life.

The FSA license protects investors’ rights by ensuring the fair implementation of all regulations and compliance requirements of companies within Seychelles’ non-bank financial services sector. INGOT continuously strives to raise investor awareness by offering vital tips on smart trading and risk management, aligning with its mission to provide traders with a safe investing environment for achieving financial goals free from scams and fraud.

“What sets trusted brokers apart from unscrupulous ones,” says INGOT Founder Iman Mutlaq, “is having a legitimate financial license. And at INGOT, our main objective is to provide clients with an exceptional trading experience built on trust and marked by innovation, where clients can rest assured that they are trading with a reliable brokerage firm. For this reason, we are adamant about obtaining licenses from the best regulatory bodies out there, such as the FSA Seychelles, which is known for its strict restrictions designed to protect investors.”

“We are very excited to have reached this milestone,” says INGOT Director Hossam Abdelaziz, “opening a new chapter for INGOT characterized by broad growth and rapid development. Attaining this license brings us closer to realizing our vision of expanding into all regions around the world and having a robust global presence that allows us to serve clients from various countries.”

About INGOT Global Ltd.
INGOT Global Ltd. is a regulated online brokerage firm serving as middlemen between traders and global financial markets, facilitating access to premium investment opportunities. This covers varied financial instruments, including commodities, stocks, indices, ETFs and currencies. INGOT Global presents investors a unique trading experience through its competitive trading services and conditions.

Contact:
INGOT Global Ltd.
Dekk Complex, Unit 3, 2nd Floor
Plaisance, Mahe, Seychelles
+2484345580
www.ingotbrokers.com

‫ بعد بيع وحدات المرحلة الأولى بالكامل”الحمرا” تطلق المرحلة الثانية من مشروع “جزيرة فالكون”

  •  بيع جميع فلل المرحلة الأولى للمشروع الذي تبلغ تكلفته مليار درهم في غضون أسبوع من إطلاقها
  •  المرحلة الثانية تتضمن فللاً منفصلة ذات إطلالة بحرية ساحرة بأسعار تبدأ من 6.2 مليون درهم
  •  من المقرر بدء عمليات الإنشاء في سبتمبر 2022 على أن يتم استكمال المشروع خلال عامين من إطلاقه
  •  الحمرا تواصل التزامها بنهج البناء المستدام من خلال هذا المشروع

رأس الخيمة، الإمارات العربية المتحدة،, 20 يوليو / تموز 2022/PRNewswire/ —

 أعلنت “الحمرا”، شركة التطوير والاستثمار العقاري الرائدة في إمارة رأس الخيمة، عن إطلاق المرحلة الثانية من مشروعها السكني الراقي “جزيرة فالكون” بأسعار تبدأ من 6.2 مليون درهم إماراتي.

Falcon Island by Al Hamra

يأتي ذلك عقب الإطلاق الناجح للمرحلة الأولى من المشروع وبيع جميع وحداتها، والتي تضمنت فللاً مكونةً من غرفتين إلى أربع غرف نوم بأسعار تبدأ من 1.2 مليون درهم.

يقع مشروع “جزيرة فالكون” وسط جزيرة خاصة في “قرية الحمرا” الحائزة على الجوائز، والتي تقع بدورها ضمن ممر النمو في رأس الخيمة الممتد من جزيرة الحمرا إلى جزيرة المرجان. وتتضمن المرحلة الثانية من المشروع 127 وحدة سكنية تشمل منازل “تاون هاوس” شبه متصلة مطلة على القناة، وفللاً مستقلة ذات إطلالة بحرية، ويمكن للمستثمرين الاستفادة من خيارات الدفع المرنة بما يشمل خطط ما بعد التسليم.

وعدا عن تصاميمه العمرانية المهيبة ومساحاته الواسعة المفعمة بالهدوء والسكينة ومرافقه المتطورة ، يعتمد مشروع “جزيرة فالكون” نهجاً صديقاً للبيئة في تصميم وإنشاء وحداته السكنية مع اتباع أعلى المعايير المعتمدة في مجال كفاءة الطاقة، وترشيد استهلاك المياه، والحد من التلوث. وسيتم تنفيذ ذلك عبر إطلاق العديد من المبادرات المبتكرة والصديقة للبيئة مثل استثمار موارد الطاقة الشمسية، والاستفادة من المنتجات الخضراء المعتمدة والمواد منخفضة الانبعاثات. وسيتم تزويد كل وحدة سكنية بمحطات شحن مخصصة للسيارات والعربات الكهربائية.

وفي هذا السياق، قال بينوي كوريان، المدير التنفيذي لـمجموعة “الحمرا”: “يعكس الإقبال القوي للمستثمرين الدوليين على وحدات المرحلة الأولى من مشروع ‘جزيرة فالكون’ مدى جودة عروضه، وعوائده طويلة الأجل، وشعبية رأس الخيمة كوجهة جذابة للإقامة وقضاء العطلات؛ ونحن واثقون من تحقيق استجابة مماثلة لوحدات المرحلة الثانية. ويعتبر هذا المشروع الطموح جزءاً من خارطة طريقنا الإستراتيجية للأعوام من 2023-2027، والتي تهدف إلى حفز النمو المستدام من خلال إطلاق مشاريع تتماشى مع رؤية الإمارة بأن تصبح واحدة من الوجهات الاستثمارية والتجارية والسكنية والسياحية الرائدة”.

التركيز على المساحات المفتوحة

يخصص المشروع 70% من الجزيرة للمساحات المفتوحة لتقديم أنماط حياة متفوقة في الإمارة، وسيكون قريباً أيضاً من ملعب جولف عالمي المستوى ومسار للتنزه بطول ثلاثة أميال إضافة إلى مجموعة من مشاريع “الحمرا” الفاخرة في قطاع الضيافة على غرار “والدورف أستوريا رأس الخيمة” و”ريتز كارلتون رأس الخيمة، شاطئ الحمرا” و”منتجع سوفيتيل شاطئ الحمرا” المرتقب، وفندقي “ماكس” و “شتيجنبرجر” التابعين لشركة “دويتشه للضيافة”.

ومن المزايا الرائعة الأخرى للمشروع قربه من “مرسى ونادي الحمرا لليخوت” الذي يضم عبّارة من المرسى وإليه، حيث يمكن لسكانه الرسو بقاربهم والاستمتاع بركوب العبارة إلى منزلهم. ويشتمل المجمع أيضاً على مرافق متميزة مثل مسبح مخصص للسيدات، ونادٍ رياضي مزود بأحدث المعدات، ومركز اجتماعي، ومسارات للمشي وملعب تنس.

وتعتبر رأس الخيمة إحدى الإمارات السبع التي تشكل دولة الإمارات العربية المتحدة، وتعد اليوم أسرع وجهات السياحة والاستثمار نمواً في الدولة، وبفضل موقعها الحيوي المطل على مياه الخليج العربي الفيروزية، تعتبر الإمارة وجهة مثلى للاستمتاع بمختلف الرياضات المائية، بدءاً من الزلاجات المائية “جيت سكي” إلى ركوب الأمواج وتجارب مغامرات الإبحار. وعلاوة على طبيعتها الخلابة، تحتضن الإمارة أطول مسار انزلاقي في العالم ومجموعة من المواقع التاريخية الأصيلة. وبفضل تاريخها الذي يعود لنحو 7 آلاف عام، تتواجد في إمارة رأس الخيمة مجموعة من المواقع الثقافية المميزة، والمساجد والقلاع القديمة، إلى جانب قرية تاريخية. كما تقدم أيضاً بيئة منافسة وجذابة لمزاولة الأعمال وتضم أكثر من 16 ألف شركة مسجلة.

نبذة عن “الحمرا”

“الحمرا” للتطوير العقاري هي شركة استثمار وتطوير عقاري رائدة في دولة الإمارات العربية المتحدة، تتخذ من إمارة رأس الخيمة مقراً لها وتعنى بتطوير المشاريع العقارية الرائدة لأنماط الحياة، إلى جانب الاستثمار في قطاعات الضيافة وتجارة التجزئة، والعقارات، والخدمات ذات الصلة.

وكشفت الشركة عن خارطة طريق خمسية للأعوام من 2023-2027، بما يساهم في حفز النمو المستدام من خلال المشاريع الاستراتيجية. ويتماشى ذلك مع رؤية قيادة رأس الخيمة في ترسيخ مكانة الإمارة كواحدة من أبرز الوجهات الاستثمارية والتجارية والسكنية والسياحية.

ومنذ انطلاقها عام 2003 لعبت “الحمرا” دوراً مهماً في بلورة مشهد القطاع العقاري في رأس الخيمة. وينطوي تحت مظلة العلامة التجارية “الحمرا” كل من “نادي الحمرا للجولف”، و”مرسى ونادي الحمرا لليخوت”، و”منار مول”، والواجهة البحرية للحمرا، ونادي الإبحار في رأس الخيمة ، و”قرية الحمرا” الحائزة على جوائز عدة، و”الحمرا” للتطوير العقاري.

ومن العلامات التجارية الرائدة في قطاع الضيافة ” شتيجنبرجر ريزدينسيز” و “ماكس” التابعة لشركة “دويتشه للضيافة”، و “والدورف أستوريا رأس الخيمة ” و”ريتز كارلتون رأس الخيمة، شاطئ الحمرا” و”منتجع سوفيتيل” المقرر أن تفتحه شركة “آكور” في عام 2023.

لمعرفة أحدث المستجدات والأخبار، تابعوا “الحمرا” على انستغرام ؛ تويتر ؛ فيسبوك ؛ لينكدإن .

نبذة عن إمارة رأس الخيمة

تقع رأس الخيمة في شمال دولة الإمارات العربية المتحدة، وتشتهر بتاريخها الثري الذي يعود إلى 7000 عام، ومناظرها الطبيعية المتنوعة، وشواطئها الرملية التي تمتد على مسافة 64 كم، وصحرائها البديعة التي تظللها خلفية جبلية مهيبة، وتضم رأس الخيمة أعلى قمة في الإمارات، وهي قمة جبل جيس الذي يوجد به أطول مسار انزلاقي (زيب لاين) في العالم بطول يبلغ نحو 3 كم.

وتتمتع إمارة رأس الخيمة أيضاً بموقع استراتيجي بين أوروبا وآسيا وأفريقيا، يمكن لثلث سكان العالم الوصول إليه في غضون أربع ساعات طيران، ما يجعلها موقعاً مثالياً للأعمال والشركات الراغبة في التوسع في الإمارات والشرق الوسط وأفريقيا. وقد صنف البنك الدولي الإمارة في المركز الثلاثين من أصل 190 مدينة في تقرير سهولة ممارسة الأعمال.

يتواجد في الإمارة العديد من الشركات الكبرى في مختلف القطاعات الاقتصادية بما يشمل شركة سيراميك رأس الخيمة، بنك رأس الخيمة، وشركة جلفار للصناعات الدوائية، وموانئ رأس الخيمة، وشركة أحجار رأس الخيمة، وشركة ستيفن روك، ومناطق رأس الخيمة الاقتصادية، وشركة غاز رأس الخيمة. وتدعم هذه القطاعات بنى تحتية حديثة ومناطق صناعية متطورة ومجمعات للأعمال وفنادق عالمية من الطراز الرفيع، علاوة على معالم الجذب السياحي .

وعلى مدار السنوات العشر الماضية حافظت رأس الخيمة على تصنيف ائتماني مستقر “ A ” من قبل العديد من وكالات التصنيف الدولية (مثل فيتش، وستاندرد أند بورز). وتضم الإمارة في الوقت الراهن أكثر من 38 ألف شركة متعددة الجنسيات تنتمي لأكثر من 100 دولة من حول العالم، تعمل في أكثر من 50 قطاعاً. وتعد محاكم رأس الخيمة أسرع محكمة في العالم في إنفاذ العقود في المنازعات التجارية.

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