Event is held by the Ministry of Tourism and seeks to develop the sector through trade and partnerships.
Browsing: damascus
Syrian painter is in Brazil for an art residency. During a visit to the Arab-Brazilian Chamber of Commerce, Layla Ousta said the country’s nature is what amazed her the most. Some of her paintings now feature the fauna and flora of the Atlantic Forest.
Juhaida Al Bitar is in Brazil for a 45-day residency at Kaaysá Art Residency on Boiçucanga Beach in São Sebastião. The Atlantic Forest has dazzled the painter, who said, “Everything here is art.”
The Brazilian Cooperation Agency’s Humanitarian Cooperation general coordinator José Solla visited Brazil’s Syrian Sports Club, where he signed an agreement for the government to collect and send medicine donations by plane to the Arab country hit by earthquakes in February. The emergency campaign Together for Syria is still accepting donations.
Registration is open for four-class courses about The Palestinian Issue and Brazil and Refugees and International Rights, in addition to one-off meetings on the Arab City of Damascus and the Conquest of Constantinople.
The Syrian Investment Agency announced investment opportunities for two provinces with facilitations stimulated by the government.
The Arab country invites investors to participate in the event that will take place from May 15 to 16 in Damascus.
The Syrian administration decided this week to resume passenger flights at the airport on October 1.
As a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, the trade show in Syria’s capital will not run from August 20 to 29 as previously expected. A new date is yet to be announced.
ANBA reporter describes his brief tour to some of the main tourist attractions of Lebanon’s capital city.
Movie about director Otavio Cury’s great-grandfather will be screened at the Chamber’s auditorium on October 2nd at 7 pm. Admission is free.
Marcela Jacques from Recife and Renata Isa from Curitiba live in the Arab country with their husbands and children and were taken aback by the war started in 2011.
Over the course of a week, ANBA visited war-torn cities, historical and religious sites across the country. Damascus is the subject of the first in a series of articles starting this Tuesday.
The opening ceremony took place on Wednesday evening. Forty-eight countries are present, and Brazil is one of them.