106 professional women’s soccer players have signed an open letter encouraging FIFA, the sport’s governing body, to end its partnership with Saudi Aramco, a Saudi-Government-owned oil conglomerate.
Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index <.EGX30> jumped 3.1%, snapping three sessions of losses, as almost all the stocks on the index were in positive territory including Commercial International ...
More than 100 professional women's footballers sign an open letter urging Fifa to end a sponsorship deal with Saudi oil giant ...
Leaked WhatsApp messages appear to contradict the ‘legally binding assurances’ of separation between the Public Investment ...
October 22 – More than 100 internationals in the women’s game are calling on FIFA to reconsider allowing Saudi Arabian oil company Saudi Aramco to be a sponsor. In an open letter to FIFA president ...
Oil prices eased on Tuesday as the top U.S. diplomat renewed efforts to push for a ceasefire in the Middle East and as ...
Former U.S. national team captain Becky Sauerbrunn and Netherlands forward Vivianne Miedema are among more than 100 women's ...
The CEO of the world's biggest oil company said the energy transition is "way off the pace" and necessary investment in ...
Oil gained — after losing more than 8% last week — as China moved again to bolster its economy and traders tracked the risk ...
HOUSTON: Oil prices rose nearly 2 percent on Monday, recouping some of last week’s more than 7% decline, with no let-up of ...
DUBAI: Stock markets in the Gulf were mixed on Monday amid rising geopolitical tensions in the region, while investors await ...
Oil prices dropped on Tuesday, retracing a portion of the previous day's nearly 2% gain, as U.S. diplomatic efforts to ...