City
Epaper

UAE President sends official COP28 Invite to President of Iraq

By ANI | Updated: June 20, 2023 06:55 IST

Abu Dhabi [UAE], June 20 (ANI/WAM): UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has sent a written letter ...

Open in App

Abu Dhabi [UAE], June 20 (ANI/WAM): UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has sent a written letter to Abdul Latif Rashid, President of Iraq, with an official invitation to attend the COP28 climate conference, to be hosted by the UAE at Expo City Dubai this November.

The letter was delivered by Salem Issa Qattam Al Zaabi, the UAE Ambassador to Iraq. (ANI/WAM)

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Latif RashiddubaiUAEDubai PoliceDubai Duty FreeUae Armed ForcesDubai TourismDubai CityIndia UaeVirgin Radio DubaiDubai International Stadium
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketAFG vs BAN 1st T20I LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch Afghanistan vs Bangladesh Match in India

CricketWhy Jasprit Bumrah Is Not Playing in Today’s IND vs SL Asia Cup 2025 Super 4 Match 6?

CricketIND vs SL, Asia Cup 2025 Super 4 Match 6: Sri Lanka Win Toss, Elect to Bowl First in Dubai; Team India Rest Jasprit Bumrah & Shivam Dube

CricketIND vs SL LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch India vs Sri Lanka Asia Cup 2025 Super 4 Match 6

CricketPAK vs BAN, Asia Cup 2025 Super 4 Match 5: Bangladesh Wins Toss, Opts to Bowl Against Pakistan in Virtual Semi-Final – Check Playing XIs

International Realted Stories

InternationalPakistan government escalates crackdown, branding journalists and NGOs as 'enemies of the state'

International'Manohar kahaniyan': IAF chief on Pakistan claims of downing Indian jets in Op Sindoor

InternationalSouth Korea: Lee says North Korea should consider humanitarian exchanges between separated families

InternationalFrom honeytraps to hashtags: ISI eyes 300-400 influencers in India

InternationalPakistan: Two years later, Jaranwala mob violence victims still await justice