Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In recent years, many Sri Lankans have been coming to Singapore. Sri Lankan domestic workers form a large number of the 150,000 maids in Singapore. [7] Many students from Sri Lanka have also been coming to Singapore for further education. [8] On 31 July 2010, the Singapore Ceylon Tamils' Association celebrated its 100-year anniversary. [9]
Singapore Sri Lanka Business Association; Singapore Tamil Teachers' Union; Social and cultural community groups ... Society of Indian Students (formerly: Society of ...
The numbers began to increase greatly from 1980 to 2010. Foreigners constituted 28.1% of Singapore's total labour force in 2000, to 34.7% in 2010, [17] which is the highest proportion of foreign workers in Asia. Singapore's non-resident workforce increased 170% from 248,000 in 1990 to 670,000 in 2006 (Yeoh 2007).
The Sri Lankan diaspora are Sri Lankan emigrants and expatriates from Sri Lanka that reside in a foreign country. An estimate in 2013 by the United Nations concluded that the diaspora numbered around three million, with large concentrations in Europe, Middle East, East Asia, Australia and North America.
Virtusa at Orion City Sri Lanka. Virtusa Corporation is an American-based global information technology services company that provides digital engineering and technology services for companies in the financial services, healthcare, communications, media, entertainment, travel, manufacturing, and technology industries worldwide.
The Faculty of Computing Students' Community of SLIIT is a leading student organization within the Faculty of Computing, consisting of undergraduate students. Established to enhance students' academic and professional skills, FCSC aims to prepare its members for the competitive job market in Sri Lanka’s IT and computing sectors.
Indian Singaporean are grouped according to their respective ethnolinguistic backgrounds in the Indian subcontinent or 'dialect group'. Most Indians in Singapore have ancestral links to Southern India and Sri Lanka, with substantial groups from Northern India and Western India accounting for most of the remainder.
He was formerly a Colombo Plan scholar and the CEO of Singapore Indian Development Association, the Indian community self-help group as well as managing director of Temasek Holdings. Ms Indranee Rajah (1963– ) – Born to an ethnically Tamil father and a Cantonese origin Chinese Singaporean mother, Ms Indranee is a lawyer by training.