CENTRAL BANKS of the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last week inked a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to advance Islamic banking and finance andCENTRAL BANKS of the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last week inked a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to advance Islamic banking and finance and

PHL, UAE central banks ink partnership on Islamic finance, cross-border transactions

2026/02/24 00:01
Okuma süresi: 2 dk

CENTRAL BANKS of the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last week inked a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to advance Islamic banking and finance and modernize transactions between the two countries.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. on Feb. 18 led the virtual signing of the MoU with Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) Governor Khaled Mohamed Balama.

“This occasion reflects our shared goals in Islamic banking and finance, and in modernizing cross-border payment and messaging systems,” Mr. Remolona said in a speech at the ceremony.

“This partnership supports the BSP’s push to digitalize payments and make cross-border transactions more efficient.”

He said the agreement with the CBUAE will allow overseas Filipino workers and other migrant Filipinos in the UAE to have access to improved remittance platforms.

“For Filipinos in the UAE, especially our overseas Filipino workers (OFWs), this means better remittance channels, and more efficient financial services for their families back home,” Mr. Remolona said.

He added that the partnership also opens more avenues for both central banks to work together on initiatives for Islamic banking and finance.

“We also see strong opportunities for collaboration in Islamic banking and finance,” Mr. Remolona said. “By sharing knowledge and strengthening regulation, we can build a sound and inclusive ecosystem that supports financial innovation and inclusion.” — Katherine K. Chan

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Modern applications demand high availability and the ability to scale reads without compromising performance. One of the most common strategies to achieve this is Replication. In this setup, we configured a single database to act as the leader (master) and handle all write operations, while three replicas handle read operations. In this article, we’ll walk through how to set up MySQL single-leader replication on your local machine using Docker. Once the replication is working, we’ll connect it to a Node.js application using Sequelize ORM, so that reads are routed to the replica and writes go to the master. By the end, you’ll have a working environment where you can see replication in real time Prerequisites knowledge of database replication Background knowledge of docker and docker compose Background knowledge of Nodejs and how to run a NodeJS server An Overview of what we are building Setup Setup our database servers on docker compose in the root of our project directory, create a file named docker-compose.yml with the following content to setup our mysql primary and replica databases. \ \ name: "learn-replica" volumes: mysqlMasterDatabase: mysqlSlaveDatabase: mysqlSlaveDatabaseII: mysqlSlaveDatabaseIII: networks: mysql-replication-network: services: mysql-master: image: mysql:latest container_name: mysql-master command: --server-id=1 --log-bin=ON environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: master MYSQL_DATABASE: replicaDb ports: - "3306:3306" volumes: - mysqlMasterDatabase:/var/lib/mysql networks: - mysql-replication-network mysql-slave: image: mysql:latest container_name: mysql-slave command: --server-id=2 --log-bin=ON environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: slave MYSQL_DATABASE: replicaDb MYSQL_ROOT_HOST: "%" ports: - "3307:3306" volumes: - mysqlSlaveDatabase:/var/lib/mysql depends_on: - mysql-master networks: - mysql-replication-network mysql-slaveII: image: mysql:latest container_name: mysql-slaveII command: --server-id=2 --log-bin=ON environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: slave MYSQL_DATABASE: replicaDb MYSQL_ROOT_HOST: "%" ports: - "3308:3306" volumes: - mysqlSlaveDatabaseII:/var/lib/mysql depends_on: - mysql-master networks: - mysql-replication-network mysql-slaveIII: image: mysql:latest container_name: mysql-slaveIII command: --server-id=3 --log-bin=ON environment: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: slave MYSQL_DATABASE: replicaDb MYSQL_ROOT_HOST: "%" ports: - "3309:3306" volumes: - mysqlSlaveDatabaseIII:/var/lib/mysql depends_on: - mysql-master networks: - mysql-replication-network In this setup, I’m creating a master database container called mysql-master and 3 replica containers called mysql-slave, mysql-slaveII and mysql-slaveIII. I won’t go too deep into the docker-compose.yml file since it’s just a basic setup, but I do want to walk you through the command line instructions used in all four services because that’s where things get interesting.
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const Sequelize = require("sequelize"); const sequelize = new Sequelize({ dialect: "mysql", replication: { write: { host: "127.0.0.1", username: "root", password: "master", database: "replicaDb", }, read: [ { host: "127.0.0.1", username: "root", password: "slave", database: "replicaDb", port: 3307 }, { host: "127.0.0.1", username: "root", password: "slave", database: "replicaDb", port: 3308 }, { host: "127.0.0.1", username: "root", password: "slave", database: "replicaDb", port: 3309 }, ], }, }); async function connectdb() { try { await sequelize.authenticate(); } catch (error) { console.error("❌ unable to connect to the follower database", error); } } connectdb(); module.exports = { sequelize, }; \ We can now create a User table in the model.js file
const {DataTypes} = require("sequelize"); const { sequelize } = require("./connection"); const User = sequelize.define("User", { name: { type: DataTypes.STRING, allowNull: false, }, email: { type: DataTypes.STRING, unique: true, allowNull: false, }, }); module.exports = User \ and finally in our index.js file we can start our server and listen for connections on port 3000. from the code sample below, all inserts or updates will be routed by sequelize to the master server. while all read queries will be routed to the read replicas.
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