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Bank Audi (Arabic: بنك عودة, previously Bank Audi-Saradar) is a Lebanon-based universal bank and financial services company headquartered in Beirut, offering financial products and services in personal banking, business banking, private banking and Treasury and Capital Markets segments.
Q Street Journal, an online news service, online radio and a special media blog focused on Syria. Broadcasting from Dubai, UAE. [24] ARA News, an online news service focussed on the consequences of war in Syria and Iraq, ceased operation in 2017. [25] Syria-News, an Arabic language online press agency intended to report news about Syria. Syria ...
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Sumer Bank; Union Bank of Iraq; Bank Audi ِWorld Islamic Bank ِElaf Islamic Bank; United Investment Bank; Al Janoob Islamic Bank; T.C. Ziraat Bankasi of Turkey (the Turkish state agricultural bank) [4] Bank Mili Iran (the national bank of Iran) [4] Byblos Bank (Lebanese) [4]
The six banks still operate today and are the Central Bank of Syria, Commercial Bank of Syria, Agricultural Co-Operative Bank, Industrial Bank, Popular Credit Bank, and Real Estate Bank. Each bank extends funds to, and takes deposits from a particular sector. Until the 2010s, the Commercial Bank was the only bank in Syria allowed to deal with ...
Raymond Wadih Audi (Arabic: ريمون عودة) (6 October 1932 – 15 July 2022) was a Lebanese banker, politician and businessman. He was the co-founder of Bank Audi . [ 1 ]
In 2002, the Banque Libano-Française initiated a failed negotiated with the management of Saradar Bank to purchase its shares. [2] On March 29, 2004, Bank Audi and Bank Saradar signed an agreement to merge the two banks in a deal valued at that time $159 million, [1] thus the new group became known as Bank Audi Saradar. [3] [2]
Syria had been on Reporters Without Borders' Enemy of the Internet list since 2006 when the list was established. [11] In 2009, the committee to Protect Journalists named Syria number three in a list of the ten worst countries in which to be a blogger, given the arrests, harassment, and restrictions which online writers in Syria faced. [12]