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Report: Dubai Ports World inks deal with Israel Shipyards

The two companies plan to submit a joint bid for the tender to purchase the Haifa Port from the Israeli government.

The United Arab Emirates-based maritime company Dubai Ports World recently inked a deal with Israel Shipyards Ltd., Globes reported on Tuesday.

According to the report, the two companies are planning to submit a joint bid for the tender to purchase the Haifa Port from the Israeli government.

The report also states that the agreement was signed a few days ago, during a visit to the UAE by Shlomi Fogel, a key controller of Israel Shipyards.

Fogel, according to the report, is among the many Israeli businesspeople moving quickly to forge deals with the Gulf state in the wake of the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords that were formally signed between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain at the White House on Tuesday.

DP World says its “operations include ports and terminals, but also industrial parks, logistics and economic zones, maritime services and marinas,” and that its goal is “to be essential to building the bright future of global trade, ensuring everything we do leaves a long-lasting positive impact on economies and the world.”

Israel’s Ministerial Committee for Privatization approved plans in January to sell the Haifa Port to a “strategic buyer.”

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“Just as we cannot tolerate racist statements against any group or rhetoric that incites violence, we cannot accept discriminatory speech directed at Jewish Americans,” Rep. Dan Goldman wrote. “For these reasons, I voted to censure Rep. Tlaib.”
“Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel,” the U.S. president stated.
Maj. Gen. Roman Gofman’s selection was contested by several left-wing NGOs, despite a 3-1 majority decision in April by the Advisory Committee on Senior Civil Service Appointments, the professional body that reviews such appointments.
Tehran stated that it has halted indirect negotiations with Washington, arguing that Israel’s military campaign in Lebanon violates the terms of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire.
The scheduled resumption of service comes at an opportune moment for Israel’s flagship carrier, with United’s service on the route indefinitely suspended.