'Shohheef Season' to kick off September 20 in Ras Al Khaimah 'Kuwaiti Cultural Days in UAE' kicks off in Abu Dhabi Scientists find smarter way to activate immune system against cancer Study warns childhood high blood pressure linked to adult heart disease China launches internet technology test satellite NYUAD scientists use AI to forecast harmful solar winds days in advance Emirates tips-off as Official Main Sponsor of Real Madrid Basketball NASA study reveals possible biosignatures on Mars
Business Middle East - Mebusiness

beauty

Travelogue: Enchanting Malta Unveiled – 1

Welcome to Malta! Inspired by the vivid descriptions of Malta in the preface of my first travel book, Musafaton by Altaf Shaikh, my friends—Sunil Lohano, Jibran Baladi, Vickey Wadhwani—and I decided to visit this fascinating country. Malta is a place you could visit time and again. Jibran had even booked the flight tickets, but

Opinion: Let the River Indus flow

It is need of the time to shelve the canals’ project for good and let the River Indus flow Azhar “Azad” Mughal The widespread protests and massive rallies erupted in Sindh since the approval to the unconstitutional and illegal construction of canals on river Indus in Punjab by the federal and Punjab governments

Short Story: The Curious Frogs

Two little frogs began to dream of a world much bigger than they had ever imagined. Just like many humans who dared to step outside their comfort zones, they were beginning to realize that the truth was out there, waiting to be discovered. A piece of fiction based on some true events related to the frogs and a Field Water Engineer By

A Journey into Sufism’s Mystical Soul

Delhi’s Sufi Heritage Festival is an ode to Delhi’s diverse traditions, faiths, and histories that seamlessly blend in a timeless harmony that defines the city’s soul By Suman Bajpai Writer and poet Saumya Kulshrestha launched Delhi’s Sufi Heritage Festival by reciting a verse from Amrita Pritam’s poignant

Climate Change: End of Eternal Ice

Many glaciers will not survive this century Glaciers in many regions will not survive the 21st century if they keep melting at the current rate, potentially jeopardizing hundreds of millions of people living downstream, UN climate experts said on the first World Day for Glaciers. Together with ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica,