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Rains lash some desert Gulf states as others shiver

Traffic comes to a stand still at Sheikh Zayed Road due to heavy rain in the Gulf emirate of Dubai, 16 January 2008. Rare torrential rains in the United Arab Emirates forced schools to close today and created traffic nightmares in the desert country, while neighbouring Saudi Arabia and Kuwait shivered. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Dubai (AFP) Jan 16, 2008
Rare torrential rains in the United Arab Emirates forced schools to close on Wednesday and created traffic nightmares in the desert country, while neighbouring Saudi Arabia and Kuwait shivered.

Pupils received an unexpected day off in Dubai, and five other emirates in the seven-member UAE were also ordered by the education ministry to shut on Wednesday and Thursday because of unstable weather.

Abu Dhabi, the largest emirate and federal capital, was excluded.

The traffic chaos and frigid weather also led to a number of deaths around the region.

"Under Water," blazoned a banner headline in the Dubai-based daily Gulf News over a picture of motorists and pedestrians braving rivers of rain water.

Rain is a boon in the UAE and other Gulf oil-rich desert countries, but the downpour of the past few days has caused chaos on the streets, trapping drivers for hours, flooding main avenues and cutting off some roads.

Hundreds of accidents were reported as vehicles skidded and nerves frayed.

Within a few hours on Wednesday, Dubai police recorded 584 accidents that killed two people in the emirate, usually a destination for tourists seeking a sunny break from cold weather at home.

Five people were killed and 1,307 accidents recorded on Tuesday amid forecasts of more rain, according to the Abu Dhabi-based daily Al-Ittihad.

Heavy rains have also lashed tiny gas-rich Qatar for nearly a week as temperatures dropped to an unusually low seven degrees Celsius (45 Fahrenheit), and authorities reported 1,200 drainage operations.

In Bahrain, which had its lowest recorded temperature of 2.7 degrees Celsius (37 Fahrenheit) in 1964, the mercury dropped to between five and seven degrees Celsius over the past few days, but there were only scattered showers.

In Kuwait, where temperatures soar to above 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in July and August, the mercury dropped to sub-zero temperatures, but the state has had virtually no rain this winter.

The temperature in the open desert dropped to minus three Celsius (27 Fahrenheit) at dawn on Wednesday for the second straight day, while passengers landing at Kuwait airport were greeted by minus one Celsius (30 Fahrenheit).

According to Kuwait's meteorological department, the lowest temperature ever recorded in the open desert was minus four Celsius (25 Fahrenheit) in 1964. The cold spell was expected to continue until the weekend.

Saudi Arabia, a vast country with an area of 2,240,350 square kilometres (865,000 square miles) covering most of the Arabian peninsula, has also been hit by a unprecedented cold spell.

"Kingdom finds itself in icebox," headlined the Saudi daily Arab News on Sunday as the capital Riyadh officially reached zero Celsius (32 Fahrenheit).

Snow has fallen on some northern Saudi cities where at least two people died from the cold. One was an Asian worker, and the other an Egyptian who froze to death in his room on the farm where he worked, newspapers said.

Another Egyptian worker died from inhaling the fumes of a coal fire he lit in his room.

Papers said King Abdullah ordered emergency relief supplies, including foodstuffs and blankets, to be distributed to needy citizens hit by the weather.

burs-lg/al

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