Connect with us

Published

on

The Afghan Youth Orchestra (AYO) will be allowed to perform in the UK after the Home Office was forced to U-turn on its decision to deny the group entry visas.

The AYO was due to perform at the Southbank Centre in London on Thursday as part of its Breaking the Silence tour before performing in Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham, and had expressed its “profound disappointment” over the visa refusal.

The group – an ensemble of the Afghanistan National Institute of Music (ANIM) – had called on the government department to reconsider its decision in a statement on ANIM’s website.

“The visa refusal not only dealt a significant blow to the young musicians’ aspirations but also deprived these young musicians an opportunity to raise awareness through music about the gender apartheid against Afghan women and denial of cultural rights of the Afghan people by the Taliban,” the statement read.

Members of the Afghan Youth Orchestra
Pic: PA
Image:
Pic: PA

The group fled Afghanistan after the Taliban regained control of the country.

Its musicians have lived and studied in Portugal, where they were granted asylum, since December 2021, and the orchestra has toured in Switzerland, Germany, Italy and Tajikistan in recent months.

Diana Johnson, chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee, celebrated the “excellent news” in a post on X.

It is understood the Southbank Centre performance will be rearranged, with relevant organisations looking at a possible date next week.

It is understood the Home Office is working with organisers to ensure the appropriate consent is obtained for the minors to travel.

Read more:
Two men publicly executed in killing ordered by Taliban

A Home Office spokesperson said: “Musicians and performers are a valued and important part of UK culture.

“Applications have to be considered on their individual merits in accordance with the immigration rules with the responsibility on applicants to demonstrate they meet these rules.”

Continue Reading

Politics

Crypto bank AMINA gets Hong Kong license to launch institutional trading

Published

on

By

Crypto bank AMINA gets Hong Kong license to launch institutional trading

Swiss crypto bank AMINA Bank AG said it has secured regulatory approval in Hong Kong to offer crypto trading and custody services to institutional clients in the region, adding its the first international bank to receive such permission.

AMINA said the “Type 1 license uplift” received from the Securities and Futures Commission would help it address a gap in the Hong Kong institutional crypto market, which has faced limited access to bank-grade crypto services due to the region’s high regulatory compliance standards.

The license will allow AMINA’s Hong Kong subsidiary to offer 13 cryptocurrencies — including Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), USDC (USDC), Tether (USDT) and major decentralized finance tokens. 

It comes as AMINA reported a 233% increase in trading volume on Hong Kong crypto exchanges in the first half of 2025 compared to the same period last year, indicating that both retail and institutional traders are increasingly embracing the asset class.

Michael Benz, head of AMINA for Hong Kong, stated that the license would enable the company to expand into private fund management, structured products, derivatives and tokenized real-world assets, thereby providing a wider range of crypto offerings for its client base.

Hong Kong courts international crypto firms

Hong Kong has been positioning itself as a global crypto hub, and the latest approval could encourage other foreign firms to consider the market.