Nuclear Explosion Wonderland Entertainment City launches at Sheikh Zayed Festival 2025-2026 Egyptologists find 225 'exceptional' figurines in pharaoh's tomb China debuts new AI model for high-standard farmland protection Breakthrough Alzheimer’s drug ‘could slow disease by 8 years’ 20th Sheikh Zayed Book Award announces longlists for Translation, Literary, Art Criticism UAE flag, portrait of Zayed and Rashid unfurled atop Alps as part of Eid Al Etihad celebrations ACTVET wins 11 medals at WorldSkills Asia Taipei 2025
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Scenarios of an Iranian Strike on Israel

Between the explicit threats made by Iran through official media outlets about the imminent punishment of Israel in retaliation for the killing of Ismail Haniyeh inside a military guesthouse in Tehran, and the subsequent retraction of these threats, a clear wavering in the intensity of the mutual Iranian and Israeli statements about the

Elusive Life – Poetry from Assam, India

Let me feel the enchanting melodies of whispering breeze That blows rhythmically leaving behind the scars of vicious life… Shakil Ahmed, a renowned poet from Assam state of India, shares his poetry Shakil Ahmed was born on 31st January 1969 at Badarpur, Assam, India. Since his boyhood days he has been engaged with social

Book review: ‘My Feudal Lord’ by Tehmina Durrani

‘My Feudal Lord’ is an autobiographical novel that revolves around a prominent politician and a feudal lord, Mustafa Khar and a woman, the author Tehmina Durrani hailing from a wealthy, ultra-modern family Tehmina Durrani, a Pakistani writer, an artist, a human rights activists, was born on 18 February 1953 in an educated and

My Heart Wants to Stay Simple – Poetry from Bengal

My heart rather wants to stay very simple, even not to know what fancy and emotions are. Imdadul Islam, an eminent English and Bengali bilingual poet from Murshidabad, West Bengal, India shares his poetry Imdadul Islam, born on September 6, 1975 is a contemporary Indian English and Bengali bilingual poet and author who lives in the

The Sweetness of the Nineties

Do you remember when we used to rush back from school to see what our mothers had cooked, whether it was stuffed vegetables or koshari with liver, and then we'd play Monopoly, or go to our rooms to play Amr Diab's new tape? When his tapes were released, cassette shops would be busy for a while and the lines would be long. Or we'd