Kingdom ravaged by rain, dust storms

January 29, 2013

People_sit

Jeddah, Jan 29: Torrential rains and dust storms have swept the Kingdom, resulting in evacuations from wadis and other threatened areas of Tabuk and the closure of Tabuk schools on Monday.

Weather forecasters are saying that the bad weather could stay around for the next couple of days.

Clearly, the hardest hit area was Tabuk where schools were also closed for the week out of concern for the safety of children and teachers.

“Due to the heavy rain in the region, we decided to suspend school classes for the safety of our students,” said Mohammad bin Abullah Al-Lhedan, general director of education in Tabuk.

At least, one death has been attributed to the weather. A baby boy died in Wadi Rawafa when he fell from the hands of his mother after the family’s car was trapped in floodwaters. Civil Defense rescued the family and recovered the child’s body, according to Prince Fahd bin Sultan, governor of Tabuk.

Some roads leading into flooded valleys in the region have been closed and residents of the southern district of Tabuk evacuated in anticipation of heavy rains. Twenty-five cars and three school buses were saved by Civil Defense, the buses as they were about to be swept away to the Salw Valley. Numerous agricultural roads connecting villages in the region were also flooded.

Col. Mamdouh Al-Anazi, spokesman for Civil Defense, said his forces had rescued 23 people, including women and children in Damj district, using helicopters on Sunday.

Al-Anazi said the civil defense had called for evacuation of the southern districts of Abu Sabaa, Kuraim and Abu Dumaik. “We have received reports of some 273 people and cars trapped in floods,” he said. The worst hit districts were Abu Sabaa, Kuraim, Raheel, Rwuaieyat and Waha. Civil Defense forces and Red Crescent officers have been camping in these areas to help victims.

At the port of Dhuba, all cruises were stopped and Naval Guards there issued warnings to fishermen and vacationers not to venture out into the sea.

Mahmoud Al-Huwaiti from Dhuba said the situation in the city has become worse as a result of the heavy rains. He urged government agencies to put more effort into containing the situation, which is on the verge of catastrophe. The Sharma Dam has collapsed and many roads have become unusable, he added.

Although Jeddah managed to avoid rainstorms yesterday, the city was swept by brisk winds and enveloped in a dust cloud that cut visibility to just a few hundred meters in some sections of the city. Rain is expected to fall on Jeddah today.

According to Hussain Al-Qahtani, spokesman for PME, the expected rains will be "at the medium level for Jeddah.”

The weather is a result of a cold air mass to the north that began exerting its influence in the north and west of the Kingdom yesterday, according to PME. Winds are expected to shift to northeasterly, which could result in temperatures falling some 5 to 10 degrees Celsius. In the northern areas of the Kingdom, temperatures could plummet to 0 degree Celsius.

PME is forecasting continued dusty weather in Makkah and Madinah for today.

In the event that power outages occur, the Saudi Electric Company warned customers to use caution and ensure the safety of all electrical devices once power is restored.

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Agencies
July 30,2020

Kuwait will allow citizens and residents to travel to and from the country, starting August 1, the government communication center tweeted on early Thursday, citing a cabinet decision.

The decision excludes residents coming from Bangladesh, Philippines, India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Iran, Nepal.

Last month, Kuwait announced it would partially resume commercial flights from August, but does not expect to reach full capacity until a year later, as its aviation sector gradually recovers from a suspension sparked by the Covid-19 crisis.

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News Network
April 5,2020

Beirut, Apr 5: The novel coronavirus has put global trade on hold, placed half of the world population in confinement and has the potential to topple governments and reshape diplomatic relations.

The United Nations has appealed for ceasefires in all the major conflicts rocking the planet, with its chief Antonio Guterres on Friday warning "the worst is yet to come". But it remains unclear what the pandemic's impact will be on the multiple wars roiling the Middle East.

Here is an overview of the impact so far on the conflicts in Syria, Yemen, Libya and Iraq:

The COVID-19 outbreak turned into a pandemic just as a ceasefire reached by the two main foreign power brokers in Syria's nine-year-old war -- Russia and Turkey -- was taking effect.

The three million people living in the ceasefire zone, in the country's northwestern region of Idlib, had little hope the deal would hold.

Yet fears the coronavirus could spread like wildfire across the devastated country appear to have given the truce an extended lease of life.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the month of March saw the lowest civilian death toll since the conflict started in 2011, with 103 deaths.

The ability of the multiple administrations in Syria -- the Damascus government, the autonomous Kurdish administration in the northeast and the jihadist-led alliance that runs Idlib -- to manage the coronavirus threat is key to their credibility.

"This epidemic is a way for Damascus to show that the Syrian state is efficient and all territories should be returned under its governance," analyst Fabrice Balanche said.

However the pandemic and the global mobilisation it requires could precipitate the departure of US-led troops from Syria and neighbouring Iraq.

This in turn could create a vacuum in which the Islamic State jihadist group, still reeling from the demise of its "caliphate" a year ago, could seek to step up its attacks.

The Yemeni government and the Huthi rebels initially responded positively to the UN appeal for a ceasefire, as did neighbouring Saudi Arabia, which leads a military coalition in support of the government.

That rare glimmer of hope in the five-year-old conflict was short-lived however and last week Saudi air defences intercepted ballistic missiles over Riyadh and a border city fired by the Iran-backed rebels.

The Saudi-led coalition retaliated by striking Huthi targets in the rebel-held capital Sanaa on Monday.

Talks have repeatedly faltered but the UN envoy Martin Griffiths is holding daily consultations in a bid to clinch a nationwide ceasefire.

More flare-ups in Yemen could compound a humanitarian crisis often described as the worst in the world and invite a coronavirus outbreak of catastrophic proportions.

In a country where the health infrastructure has collapsed, where water is a rare commodity and where 24 million people require humanitarian assistance, the population fears being wiped out if a ceasefire doesn't allow for adequate aid.

"People will end up dying on the streets, bodies will be rotting in the open," said Mohammed Omar, a taxi driver in the Red Sea port city of Hodeida.

Much like Yemen, the main protagonists in the Libyan conflict initially welcomed the UN ceasefire call but swiftly resumed hostilities.

Fierce fighting has rocked the south of the capital Tripoli in recent days, suggesting the risk of a major coronavirus outbreak is not enough to make guns fall silent.

Turkey has recently played a key role in the conflict, throwing its weight behind the UN-recognised Government of National Accord.

Fabrice Balanche predicted that accelerated Western disengagement from Middle East conflicts could limit Turkish support to the GNA.

That could eventually favour forces loyal to eastern-based strongman Khalifa Haftar, who launched an assault on Tripoli one year ago and has the backing of Russia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.

Western countries have been hit hardest by the pandemic, which could prompt them to divert both military resources and peace-brokering capacity from foreign conflicts.

A report by the International Crisis Group said European officials had reported that efforts to secure a ceasefire in Libya were no longer receiving high-level attention due to the pandemic.

Iraq is no longer gripped by fully-fledged conflict but it remains vulnerable to an IS resurgence in some regions and its two main foreign backers are at each other's throats.

Iran and the United States are two of the countries most affected by the coronavirus but there has been no sign of any let-up in their battle for influence that has largely played out on Iraqi soil.

With most non-US troops in the coalition now gone and some bases evacuated, American personnel are now regrouped in a handful of locations in Iraq.

Washington has deployed Patriot air defence missiles, prompting fears of a fresh escalation with Tehran, whose proxies it blames for a spate of rocket attacks on bases housing US troops.

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News Network
April 20,2020

Riyadh, Apr 20: Six more people have died in Saudi Arabia after contracting coronavirus as 1,122 new coronavirus cases were reported on Monday.

The Saudi health ministry said that total number of cases in the Kingdom had increased to 10,484. It also recorded 92 new recoveries, raising the total to 1,490.

The ministry said precautionary measures shall remain to limit the virus spread.

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