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Qatar’s Awqaf asks residents to look for Ramadan moon on Tuesday night

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Ramadan moon (seven days in)

nkhairil79/Flickr

Ramadan moon (seven days in)

The Moon Sighting Committee of the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs (Awqaf) has requested that Muslims in Qatar look to the sky on Tuesday after sunset to try to spot the new moon.

According to QNA, the committee would like anyone who sees the crescent to head to Awqaf’s headquarters in Dafna to report his/her testimony.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Omar Chatriwala

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

If the moon is spotted on Tuesday night, that means Ramadan has begun, and Wednesday, June 17 will be the first day of fasting.

If it’s not, then Thursday, June 18 will be the first day of fasting – which will mean different working hours for most people, and the closure of many restaurants and coffee shops during the daytime.

See our guide on eight things to know about Ramadan in Qatar for more information about how the country observes the fasting month.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar’s Awqaf asks residents to look for Ramadan moon on Tuesday night is from Doha News.)


Qatar’s health council tests Tang as some stores remove it from shelves

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Tang display at Lulu Hypermarket in Al Gharafa

Chantelle D'mello

Tang display at Lulu Hypermarket in Al Gharafa

With reporting from Scherry Bloul and Zac Schroedl

Some supermarkets in Qatar have removed tubs of the fruit-flavored drink Tang from their shelves as the state’s Supreme Council of Health (SCH) confirmed it is testing the product for possible contamination.

The SCH announced in Arabic on Twitter and Facebook that samples of the drink have been taken from some hypermarkets in Qatar for tests at its central laboratory.

Translation: “The central laboratories at the Supreme Council of Health has received samples of the product Tang, which were collected by other authorities. They are being tested and the results will be announced once these are confirmed.”

The SCH did not state the reason for the tests, but appears to be responding to concerns on social media about possible contamination, after people posted images of holes in the foil security seal that covers the lids of the tubs.

Stores’ response

Speaking to Doha News, a manager of the Al Rayyan branch of Family Food Center (FFC) said that authorities ordered them to remove around 30 cans of the fruit-flavored drink from its shelves over the weekend amid concerns over “stickers on the lid.”

They are currently being kept in a storage room until later today, the manager said, when the SCH is expected to issue the results of its tests.

Meanwhile, a manager at Megamart’s branch at The Center said it did not stock tubs of Tang, but it is still selling 84g sachets of the powdered drink.

The Peninsula reported that municipality inspectors visited a branch of a “leading supermarket” on Friday and asked them to remove all stocks of the product pending lab testing.

“They didn’t clearly explain the reason but showed something on the lid, which was not clear to our staff,” the unnamed staffer is quoted as saying.

However, other hypermarkets have said they are still selling the drink.

A representative of Lulu Gharafa told Doha News this morning that the store had not been told to remove Tang. Tubs of the drink could be seen on the shelves for public sale last night.

Tang concerns

Tang is a powdered drink that comes in different fruit flavors and has been around for more than 50 years.

The product, now owned by North American multinational confectionery, food and beverage conglomerate Mondelez International, is renowned for being very high in sugar.

Concerns about contamination prompted Tang Arabia to post a message and video on its Facebook page advising consumers that the “hole” is not accidental. The “one-way valve” allows air that could build up in the container when it is transported to safely escape, preventing the package from being distorted or bursting.

valve image

Tang Arabia/Facebook

valve image

Tang Arabia states in an online video that the valves allow the air to escape, while “keeping the product 100 percent safe.”

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar’s health council tests Tang as some stores remove it from shelves is from Doha News.)

US travel industry defends Qatar Airways, UAE carriers in subsidy spat

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A Qatar Airways A350

Airbus

A Qatar Airways A350

Coming out in support of the Gulf carriers, a coalition of American tourism businesses has urged its government to reject demands from the country’s largest US airlines to limit the expansion of Qatar Airways, Emirates and Etihad.

The move was made by some of the largest hotel chains and conference organizers in the US, and highlighted the continued debate there over whether the expansion of foreign airlines benefits or harms the country’s economy.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Chantelle D'mello

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The major US carriers – American, Delta and United – have accused the Gulf airlines of receiving government subsidies that allow them to compete unfairly.

The American airlines have asked the US government to renegotiate its Open Skies agreement with Qatar and the the UAE, which currently allows government regulators to determine the frequency and capacity of flights.

All three GCC airlines have denied the unfair competition accusations.

Qatar Airways, however, has not yet provided a detailed response to the specific allegations that it has received US$16.5 billion worth of forgiven loans, free land, grants and other forms of support from the Qatar government since 2004.

Don’t change policy

On Thursday, the U.S. Travel Association sent a sent a letter to several top US officials, including the Secretary of Transportation and Secretary of Commerce, expressing its support of the current Open Skies agreement.

It urged officials not to reopen the international aviation deals with Qatar and UAE, and said that the Gulf airlines actually provide a major boost to the US economy.

The letter was signed by the heads of Hawaiian Airlines, Alaska Airlines and JetBlue Airways, as well as several major hotel chains including Hilton, Intercontinental and Marriott, who say the expansion of the Gulf carriers in the US has led to a dramatic boost in tourism-related business.

In a statement, U.S. Travel president and CEO Roger Dow said:

“I wake up every morning alarmed and sad that the Big Three (US airlines) have staked out this position on Open Skies. Even if I tried hard I couldn’t think of a policy change that would be as utterly terrible for the economy, jobs and consumers.”

Winners and losers

While the major US carriers and their unions argue that the US is losing jobs due to the “subsidized competition,” several American businesses have benefited from the dramatic growth of the Gulf airlines.

Boeing 787 Dreamliner

Simon Boddy/Flickr

Boeing 787 Dreamliner

That includes airplane manufacturer Boeing, which has supplied Qatar Airways with 67 planes to date and received orders for nearly 150 more, according to the Gulf carrier.

“We truly believe in open skies,” said Marty Bentrott, Boeing’s senior vice-president of international sales, according to Gulf Business.

In addition to connecting US cities to new international destinations, making the country more attractive to tourists and helping American hotels fill their rooms, the Gulf carriers have added more competition to existing routes.

According to the U.S. Travel Association, Delta, United, American Airlines and their global alliance partners currently control three out of every four transatlantic flights to and from the US.

By adding additional flights, the Gulf carriers have helped push down fares to the benefit of passengers, the industry association argues.

Critics, however, warn that the low fares won’t last. The large US airlines say that they’ll be forced to reduce service if they continue to be undercut by the Gulf carriers. This, they argue, would ultimately give Qatar Airways, Emirates and Etihad the market power to set higher fares.

Investigation

The US government is currently accepting submissions from the public to respond to the allegations made by the major US airlines and has not set a cut-off date for comments.

But while its investigation does not show any signs of imminently concluding, Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker said last week that one of his US competitors has started to take action on its own and accused it of actively trying to hinder its business in the US.

Qatar joined the oneworld alliance in October 2013.

Brian Candy

Qatar joined the oneworld alliance in October 2013.

He told the Wall Street Journal that American Airlines was withholding information on its bookings system that was hindering the proper transfer of passengers between the two carriers.

He also accused the US carrier of blocking its new A350 from accessing the terminals at JFK airport in New York and threatened to withdraw from the oneworld alliance, of which both Qatar Airways and American Airlines are members.

An American Airlines spokesperson told the WSJ that the constraints on allocating new gate space at JFK was unrelated to the trade dispute.

Thoughts?

(The post US travel industry defends Qatar Airways, UAE carriers in subsidy spat is from Doha News.)

Construction firm fined for negligence in Pearl-Qatar worker’s death

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Abraj Towers 2

Redco Al Mana

Abraj Towers 2

A criminal court in Qatar has found a local company guilty of negligence and violating safety regulations after a worker fell to his death from an under-construction tower at the Pearl-Qatar last year.

The Nepali man worked for Redco Al Mana, which is building two towers for the island’s Abraj Quartier district. That area will eventually consist of 200 waterfront townhouses and seven residential towers – two of which form the “gateway” to the Pearl, according to Redco’s website.

The company was fined QR100,000 ($27,448) over the death, and its head of safety and security was also convicted in the case and fined QR10,000 ($2,744).

Redco and the manager were also ordered to pay QR200,000 ($54,896) in blood money to the victim’s family.

The verdict was handed down in April, but the reasoning behind the court’s verdict was issued only last week, and first published in Al Raya today.

The trial

The incident took place in April 2014, when, according to the coroner’s report, the worker fell off scaffolding on the seventh floor of one of the under-construction Abraj towers, and died of head injuries.

Under-construction Abraj Towers

Redco Al Mana

Under-construction Abraj Towers

According to court documents seen by Doha News, the scaffolding that he fell from was not completely secured, as there should have been metal rods fixed on the sides. Safety harnesses and lighting of the area were also deemed inadequate.

The company and its senior employee were convicted of negligence, not setting up an effective supervision system that prevents serious accidents from taking place, failing to have proper safety procedures in place that led to the worker’s demise and not informing the worker of the dangers that come with the job.

In his written verdict, Judge Yasser Ali Al Zayyat said:

“Based on what was presented (to the court after reviewing) the incriminating evidence, it has been proven that the defendants committed the crime with all its aspects, so the court penalized them with a fine and blood money for the victim’s (family).”

In Qatar and other GCC countries, blood money is an Islamic provision that must be paid if a judge finds a person guilty of causing death or injury to another person, either accidentally or intentionally.

Defense arguments

During the court hearings, the company’s employee denied the charges, saying that he routinely inspected the scaffoldings, but that on the day of the accident, another employee did the inspection.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Marco Zanferrari/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

He added that the victim did not “take permission” from the project’s engineer to go up to the seventh floor, despite being required to do so.

For his part, the project leader, Emad Abdel Rahman, testified that the victim’s death was “destiny and God’s will,” adding that he was willing to pay any compensation and transfer the body back to the victim’s country for burial.

He said that the head of safety and security did not know that the worker had gone up to the seventh floor. He explained that every group of 10 workers had a leader, and that it was this leader who requested the worker go up.

Previous court cases

Qatar’s court has issued similar verdicts in the past, though such decisions appear to be rare.

In late March, a local company was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter after one of its construction workers was killed working on a sewer project near the old airport. The company was fined thousands of dollars.

Amnesty International Researcher Mustafa Qadtri told Doha News at the time:

“This is one tragic case, but there are likely many other construction sites that the authorities need to proactively address. With the workers’ population expected to (keep rising) in the next few years, unless steps are taken, there is a risk that these types of deaths will increase unless more steps are taken.”

In 2013, Qatar’s Labor Inspection Department said that nearly 30 percent of companies working in the country were violating safety standards, the Gulf Times reported. However, they added that most transgressions were minor and simple.

Thoughts?

(The post Construction firm fined for negligence in Pearl-Qatar worker’s death is from Doha News.)

Qatari entrepreneurs to launch new mobile video game Hamad and Sahar

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Hamad and Sahar

Space Crescent

Hamad and Sahar

Fueling Qatar’s growing gaming scene – and hoping to challenge Arab stereotypes in the process – a group of young Khaleeji entrepreneurs are preparing to launch a new mobile platform game this Ramadan.

The game, titled Hamad and Sahar, follows the adventures of a bilingual brother-sister duo as they explore the world of Arabian folktales in a 2D side scroller style akin to the popular Super Mario game series.

Hamad and Sahar

Space Crescent

Hamad and Sahar

Players can choose to be either Hamad or Sahar, and graduate to different levels by breaking blocks to obtain valuable items like keys and recovery items like food.

The game was created by Space Crescent, and is the second edition of an earlier prototype that was launched last March, which has since been reworked to include new features and levels.

Creation

In an interview with Doha News, Faisal Al Kubaisi, CEO of Space Crescent, explained how the concept came to be:

“When we decided to publish a game we decided to make a simple platform game instead of a huge one,” the 26-year-old Qatar University graduate said. “After deciding that, we contacted Girnaas and proposed Hamad and Sahar. They decided to support us and publish the game for us in their accounts on the store and help in marketing it,” he said.

Girnaas, a creative studio established with incubation support from Supreme Council of Information and Communication Technology (ictQatar), is one of the pioneering firms in the local gaming scene, creating Qatar’s first homegrown game, Giddam, in November 2013.

Giddam, by Girnaas

Girnaas

Giddam, by Girnaas

The company has since launched two other projects – Giddam Connect, a upgraded version of the original game, and Go Fahad, which was created to commemorate the 2015 World Handball Championships.

Like Giddam, Hamad and Sahar aims to combat an inherent marginalization of Arabs in popular mainstream games by depicting endearing, calm characters dressed in traditional garb.

“Gaming culture, within its communities and character representation in games, is still sullied by bigotry…Group games were, and often still are, happy to marginalise Arabs. Every other first-person shooter seemed to have you aiming your crosshairs at bearded Arab men and they were always called terrorists,” read a recent article in The National, which also credited other games like Run Camel Run and CSI: Hidden Crimes, both created by UAE-based studios, with changing the narrative.

Looking ahead

The latest edition of Hamad and Sahar, which, according to Al Kubaisi is “80 percent done,” took over a year to develop, with the team creating new levels, backgrounds, scores, and characters from scratch to supplement the existing ones.

Developers included Abdulrahman Al-Thani, Faisal Al-Kubisi, Maryam Al-Khulaifi, Abdulrahman Al-Dossry.

Hamad and Sahar

Space Crescent

Hamad and Sahar

While Giddam cost some $25,000 to make, and was backed in part by the crowdfunding site Indiegogo, Hamad and Sahar was entirely self-funded.

“(We didn’t) have an actual fund or start up costs needed. What we have used are applications which we already owned or were free to us,” Al Kubaisi said.

However, the team did face some organizational hurdles during the game’s creation.

“We didn’t have an office where we can gather and work…Most of us are busy with our jobs or studies. It was hard to find the time or conduct team meetings. Another issue was file sharing, how could we share the game assets? (In the end), we chose Dropbox to share our game files and organized our work by conducting weekly meetings over instant messenger applications such as Skype…and Facebook,” he said.

The team has since established Space Crescent as an independent company, and will be relaunching the game on their own iTunes and Google Play store accounts toward the end of Ramadan.

Over the next five years, the team hopes to increase its gaming roster and presence by releasing more games and establishing courses and materials to raise awareness of game development locally.

“The gaming scene is starting to flourish, (but) Qatar needs to improve the e-commerce services to encourage the investors and game developers,” Al Kubaisi said.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatari entrepreneurs to launch new mobile video game Hamad and Sahar is from Doha News.)

Doha News Ramadan 2015 opening hours guide

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Ramadan decorations at City Center mall.

Chantelle D'mello

Ramadan decorations at City Center mall.

Reporting by Scherry Bloul and Zac Schroedl

Most shops, government offices, restaurants and businesses in Qatar change their opening hours significantly in Ramadan. Fasting during this month will begin either on Wednesday or Thursday, depending on the sighting of the moon.

Here’s our Doha News guide to what’s open, and when, during Ramadan this year.

We will update the hours as more information comes in. If you have details you think we should add, please share them with us in the comments section. You can find out more about Ramadan in Qatar here.

Carrefour

Chantelle D'mello

Carrefour

Supermarkets

  • Lulu Hypermarket – D-Ring, Al Gharafa, Al Khor, Barwa City: Saturday to Thursday, 9am-1am; Fridays, 9am-10:30am, 12pm-1am.
  • Family Food Center (all branches): Saturday to Thursday, 8.30am-12am midnight; Friday not yet announced.
  • Carrefour – (all branches): Saturday to Wednesday, 9am-1am; Thursday, 9am-2am; Friday, 9am-11am then closed for prayers and reopen 12:30pm-2am.
  • Geant at Hyatt Plaza and Al Meera branches: Open every day from 8am-1am; closed Friday from 11.30am-noon for prayer.
  • Monoprix (West Bay): Saturday to Thursday, 8am-11pm; Fridays, 8am-11:30am, 1pm-11pm.
  • Spinneys (all branches): Saturday to Thursday 8am-midnight; Fridays 8am-11:30am, 1pm-midnight.
  • MegaMart The Center, Al Mutazah: Saturday to Thursday 8am-midnight; Fridays 8am-11am, 12.30pm-midnight.
City Center Mall

Chantelle D'mello

City Center Mall

Malls

Although many shopping centers will remain accessible for walks, etc throughout the day, most of the stores situated inside the malls will only be open at specific times. These are:

  • Villaggio mall – Shops and Kiosks (first two weeks) Sunday to Thursday 10am-1:30pm and 7:30pm-midnight;  Fridays: 7:30pm to midnight. Last two weeks: Sunday to Thursday 10am-1:30pm and 7:30pm-1am; Fridays 7:30pm-1am. Food court, restaurants and coffee shops – first two weeks: from iftar to midnight, last two weeks: iftar to 1am.
  • Royal Plaza: Saturday to Thursday, 9am-1:30pm, 8pm-midnight; Fridays, 8pm-1am.
  • Landmark Mall: Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm and 7:30pm-1am; Fridays, 7:30pm-1am.
  • Lagoona Mall: Open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm, 8pm-1am; Fridays, 8pm-1am. Cafes and restaurants, open Saturday to Friday iftar 6:30pm-1:30am.
  • City Center Mall: Open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-1pm then most stores except Carrefour will be closed in the afternoon and will reopen at 7pm-1am; Fridays, 3pm-1am. Food court open Saturday to Friday, 7:30pm-midnight.
  • Ezdan mall:  Open Saturday to Thursday, 9am-2pm and 8pm-midnight; Fridays, 8pm-1am (all food outlets: iftar to suhoor).
  • Dar Al Salam mall: Opening hours to be announced
  • The Mall:  First two weeks, open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-1pm and 8pm-midnight; Fridays, 8pm-midnight. Last two weeks, open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-2pm and 8pm-1am; Fridays, 8pm-1am.
  • The Gate: Open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm, 8pm-1am; Fridays, 8pm-1am.
  • Hyatt Plaza: First two weeks, open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm, 8pm-midnight; Fridays, 8pm-midnight. Last two weeks, open Saturday to Thursday, 10am- 3pm and 8pm-1am; Fridays, 8pm-1am.
  • Centrepoint mall: Open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm, 7.30pm-1am. Fridays, 7:30pm-1am. Food court, cafes and restaurants, iftar-1.30am.
  • Gulf Mall: Hours to be announced.
  • Al Khor Mall: Saturday to Thursday, shops will open 10am-1am; Fridays 2pm-1am; Food court 7pm-2am.
Souq Waqif

Ameer Abdul Razak/Flickr

Souq Waqif

Other shopping options

  • Ikea – Store: Saturday to Thursday, noon to midnight; Friday, 1pm to 1am. Restaurant: Saturday to Wednesday, Iftar to 11:30pm; Fridays, Iftar to 12:30am.
  • Souq Waqif – Shops inside the souq will generally be open from 10am to 1pm, and then again from 7pm to midnight. Restaurants and cafes will open from sunset until the early hours of the morning, eg Damasca One: 5:30pm-4am; Zaatar w Zeit: 5pm-3am; Royal Tandoor: buffet 6:30pm-8pm, a la carte 8pm-1:15am; Tajine: 5:30pm-3am; The Village: 6pm-8pm for iftar, 9pm-2am for suhoor.
Marsa Malaz Kempinski

Marsa Malaz Kempinski/Facebook

Marsa Malaz Kempinski

Hotel restaurants open during the day

  • W Doha:  Market is open for breakfast from 6am-11am, for lunch from noon-4pm and for dinner from 5pm-midnight. La Spiga is also open from 12pm-4pm.
  • Grand Hyatt: Rocca is open for breakfast from 6:30am to 10:30am, for lunch and dinner from 12.30pm to 11:30pm.
  • Intercontinental Beach: Coral is open for breakfast from 6:30am-11am and lunch from 12:30-3:30pm. Iftar from 6:30pm to 8pm, Suhoor from 9pm to 2am. Mykonos is also open from noon-11:30pm.
  • Marriott Marquis: Crossroads Kitchen is open for breakfast from 6am-10:30am and Cucina is open for lunch from noon-3pm. Quick Bites is also open from 6am-11pm.
  • Hilton: Zawaya open for lunch and dinner from 10.30am-12am midnight
  • Four Seasons: Il Teatro is open for breakfast from 6:30am-10.30am, for lunch from 12pm – 3pm, for snacks from 3pm- 6.30pm and for dinner from 6.30pm-11pm. Apres Spa Cafe is open from 8am – 8pm
  • Radisson Blu: Bistro Bistro is open 24 hours. Hyde Park Coffee shop is also open from 6am–11pm.
  • St Regis: Opal by Gordon Ramsay is open for breakfast from 6am–11am, for lunch from noon–4pm and for dinner from 6pm to 12pm.
  • Doha Marriott:  The hotel’s Corniche restaurant is open daily for breakfast from 6am-10:30am and for lunch from 12pm-3pm. Iftar from sunset to 8pm.
  • Kempinski: Gourmet House is open 7am-9pm, and Aroma from 6am-10pm.
  • Marsa Malaz Kempinski, The Pearl: Cafe Murano open daily 8am-12am midnight.
Ramadan at The Intercontinental

Intercontinental Hotel Doha/Facebook

Ramadan at The Intercontinental

Non-hotel restaurants open during the day

  • Paul (all branches): Takeaway only, 9am-noon. Open for dining-in from iftar/6.30pm-1am.
  • J & G Sandwich Cellar: Hours not yet announced.
  • Carluccios: Open from noon onwards for home delivery (Pearl residents only). Open for dining from 5pm-1am.
  • Bread and Bagels: Open for delivery from 9am-11pm daily. Open for dining-in only after iftar at 6pm.
Chris Hoare / Flickr

Chris Hoare / Flickr

Chris Hoare / Flickr

Hamad International Airport

All restaurants and cafes past immigration/security will be open during the day, but eateries “landside,” i.e by check-in and after baggage reclaim, will remain closed until iftar.

Cinemas

There will be no new releases showing in Qatar movie theaters during Ramadan.

  • Royal Plaza: Hours not yet announced.
  • Landmark: Hours not yet announced.
  • The Mall: Hours not yet announced.
  • City Center and Villaggio: Saturday to Thursday: 10am-5pm, 7pm-2:30am;  Fridays 7pm-2:30am
  • Asian Town – Saturday to Thursday: 7pm-2:30am
  • Novo The Pearl – Saturdays to Thursdays, 12pm-1am; Fridays 2pm-1am
Photo for illustrative purposes only.

OSU Medical Center

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Medical care

  • Al Ahli Hospital: Outpatient clinics are open from 8am-3pm and 7:30pm-1am, except for women’s clinic, which is open from 9am-1pm, and 8pm-midnight. Physical and medical rehab is open from 8am-3pm, and 5pm-midnight.
  • Doha Clinic Hospital: Hours to be announced.
  • Hamad Primary Healthcare Centers: Branches will be open 9am-2pm then 7pm-11pm, including Friday and Saturday.
  • Hamad Hospitals:  Hamad General Hospital’s outpatient morning clinics 8am-1pm, 8pm-11.30pm. Meanwhile, Women’s Hospital outpatient clinics will operate from 8am-1pm  (Doctor break 11-11.30), 7:30pm-10:30pm. Hours for outpatient clinics at the Heart Hospital to be announced, Al Wakrah Hospital outpatient clinics will be open to patients from 7am-3pm, The Cuban Hospital and Al Khor Hospital will open to patients from 8am-1pm. Patients requiring any additional information can call 4439 5777.

Government offices

  • Ministries and government departments, public bodies and institutions: Open from 9am-2pm.

Banks

  • Doha Bank: Main branch, Industrial Area, Al Mirqab branch Sunday to Thursday, 8:30pm-10:30pm; City Center, Abu Hamour and LULU branches, Saturday to Thursday 10am-1pm, Saturday to Friday 8:30pm-11:30pm; Woqood Pay office, Saturday to Thursday 8am-4pm; All other areas, Sunday to Thursday 9am-2pm.
  • HSBC: Hours to be announced
  • IBQ: Hours to be announced
  • QNB: Branches at City Center, The Mall, Landmark, Lagoona, Villaggio, Mortgage Loan Center, Gulf Mall and Medina Centrale at The Pearl-Qatar will be open Saturday to Thursday, 10am-3pm then 8pm to 12am midnight, Friday will be 8pm-12am midnight; West Bay Card Center, C-Ring Road Card Center, Vehicle Loan Center and branches in West Bay and Al Rayyan (Shafi Street) will be open Sunday to Thursday 9am-2pm then 8pm-12am midnight. The Doha Exhibition Center branch will open Sunday to Thursday 9am-2pm then 8pm to 12am midnight (evening shift during exhibitions only). ECCH branch Sunday to Thursday 9am-12pm then 8pm-10.30pm; Souq Waqif branch open Saturday to Thursday 9am-2pm then 8pm-12am midnight. Branches at Marriott and e-branches in Al Khor Mall, Dar al Salam Mall and The Pearl will be open daily, 24 hours. All other branches and offices will be open Sunday to Thursday, 9am-2pm only.
  • Commercial Bank: Hours to be announced
  • Al Khaliji: Hours to be announced
MIA

Antony Satheesh/Flickr

MIA

Museums

  • Museum of Islamic Art: Open from 8pm-midnight Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, closed Tuesday and Friday. Closed first day of Eid Al-Fitr on July 17 and first day of Eid Al-Adha on September 23.
  • Mathaf: Hours to be announced

Miscellaneous

  • Aramex: Main office open Saturday to Thursday 9am-3pm; SnS reception open Saturday to Thursday 9am-4pm then 8pm-12am midnight and on Friday 12.30pm-4.30pm then 8pm-12am midnight; Gate Mall reception open Saturday to Thursday 9am-3pm then 8pm-12am midnight, Qatar Foundation branch open Sunday to Thursday 8am-4pm
  • Aqua Park: Open daily, 8pm-2am
  • Ray’s Reef, the children’s play area at Royal Plaza Mall, will open in the morning from 10am-1:30pm then again at night from 8pm-12am midnight.
  • Fun Ville at Ezdan Mall: First 20 days of Ramadan: Saturday to Wednesday 9am-2pm then 8pm-12am midnight, Thursday 9am-2pm then 8pm-1am; Friday 8pm-1am. Last 10 days of Ramadan it will be open Saturday to Wednesday 9am-12am midnight and Thursdays and Fridays 9am-1am.
  • Fun Ville at Al Asmakh Mall (Centerpoint) in Al Sadd: First 10 days of Ramadan-Saturday to Thursday 10am-2pm then 7.30pm-11pm, Fridays 7.30pm-11pm; middle 10 days of Ramadan Saturday to Thursday 10am-2pm then 7.30pm-12.30am and Fridays 7.30pm-12.30pm; while last 10 days of Ramadan open Saturday to Thursday 10am-1am and Fridays 2pm-1am.
  • Fun City at City Center: Every day 7pm-1am
  • Dar Al Salam Mall

What else should we add? Thoughts?

(The post Doha News Ramadan 2015 opening hours guide is from Doha News.)

Users take to Snapchat to tell the world about Qatar

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#DohaLive

Shabina S. Khatri

#DohaLive

After several days of anticipation, Snapchat users in Qatar are finally getting the chance to tell the rest of the world what life is like in the Gulf, thanks to the platform’s “Live Story” feature.

The story option, which the popular time-restricted photo-sharing app unveiled last June, highlights the best photographs and videos from Snapchat users living in selected cities around the world for 24 hours.

Along with Instagram, Snapchat is among the more popular social media applications in Qatar.

Doha Live

Twitter

#DohaLive

Because photos only last for 10 seconds, it is particularly favored by young Qatari women who rely on the app’s privacy to share pictures with friends, participate in public discourse and voice their opinions on popular issues.

To commemorate the day’s live story city, Snapchat releases special filters with characteristics of the cities involved.

Users tag their photos and videos with the designated filters in the hope of being selected by Snapchat to be featured on the story, which can reach audiences upwards of 25 million people.

Four distinct filters were released by the app today, including stamps, Arabic script and a cartoon version of the Corniche skyline, signaling “Doha life” as the Snapchat live story of the day.

Doha is the fourth city in the region to be featured in these live stories, two months behind Dubai.

Backlash

However, not everyone was sold on the idea of the story feature. Over the past few days, some of Qatar’s more conservative residents have warned women here to tread carefully, asserting that participating in the Snapchat event could threaten a woman’s modesty.

Translation: “We don’t want any girl’s video on Doha Live because the people know that our women are covered and modest and that you’re much better than others…

A woman’s voice is private, let alone her face or anything else? You are representing an Islamic state, so represent it without your faces or voices; there are 10 million people watching you, and no one can handle that many sins.”

Others online exhortations included, “please girls don’t show them we are ‘free’ you will ruin the reputation of Doha;” “I believe it is unnecessary for women to appear and men goofing off. Show your respect as Muslims 1st & Qatari 2nd;” and “we don’t want to see any girl on Doha Life. Don’t embarrass us, this unacceptable.”

Several vocal female Qataris challenged these concerns, saying:

Speaking to Doha News about the current debate, Sarah Al Derham, a Qatari student pursuing her master’s in London, said she was excited for the chance to participate in the Snapshot story.

“It’s been such a shame and a shock to see that people who are bringing women down and asking them to not participate are (fellow) women themselves!

This has nothing to do with religion; Islam gives women their rights. It’s a matter of a person’s own cultural and tribal beliefs. Women need to participate because this is a privilege. That 10-second video that a woman posts can be worth more than what any man can say, and the ability to talk to millions of people at once shouldn’t be (something) that should only be given to men.”

Al Derham, who is currently working on a dissertation on the gendered usage and access to social media in the Middle East, conceded that local women with private social media accounts do tend to “goof around.

Nonetheless, they should be afforded the opportunity to “go out there and be good ambassadors for their country, the same way that people are asking men to go out there and say something educational or about the FIFA 2022 World Cup or the 2030 National Vision,” she added.

Representing Qatar

Debate aside, many residents have been tweeting their contributions to the story under the hashtags #DohaLive and #DohaLife, with the encouragement of the Qatar Tourism Authority:

Their posts range from proud to sarcastic to humorous:

Are you participating in today’s event? Thoughts?

(The post Users take to Snapchat to tell the world about Qatar is from Doha News.)

Buses in Qatar must be equipped with AC as of July 1, MOI says

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Richard Messenger / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Buses transporting construction workers as they travel to and from their work sites this summer should become slightly more comfortable next month after authorities mandate new rules for larger passenger vehicles.

Starting July 1, all buses and vans must have air conditioning in order to pass the mechanical inspection required to renew a vehicle’s registration, the Ministry of Interior said this morning on Facebook.

Lights and reflective tape are among the new requirements for buses in Qatar.

Ministry of Interior / Facebook

Lights and reflective tape are among the new requirements for buses in Qatar.

The new rules apply to all vehicles carrying 11 or more passengers.

Other new requirements for buses and vans include having tinted or insulated windows, reflective stickers on the back bumper and – in the case of large buses carrying 50 or more people – blinking lights at the rear of the roof.

Another new safety measure mandates that the bottom of a vehicle cannot be more than 55cm above the ground unless a protective safety bar is installed.

These so-called under-run protection devices are designed to prevent pedestrians and cyclists from falling underneath a large vehicle and being crushed by its wheels, and have been previously been highlighted in Qatar’s National Road Safety Strategy as an important safety feature lacking on older trucks and buses.

The new measures will largely benefit Qatar’s low-income workers, who typically cannot afford to own their own vehicles and are transported from their accommodation to their jobs on buses supplied by their employers.

It’s common to see buses filled with men in blue construction coveralls trying to catch a breeze through an open window even on Qatar’s hottest days, suggesting that many of the buses lack air conditioning.

Changing standards

The new vehicle requirements come as Qatar is making incremental changes to improve the living and working conditions of the country’s blue-collar workforce.

Reforms proposed more than a year ago to Qatar’s controversial kafala sponsorship system – which many human rights activists argue enables unscrupulous employers to abuse expats – are still being studied by politicians. But some smaller improvements have been introduced.

New MOLSA kiosk.

MOLSA/Twitter

New MOLSA kiosk.

These include the rollout of multilingual electronic kiosks that allow expats to lodge complaints with labor ministry officials and forcing employers to pay workers electronically to enable better tracking of late or non-payment of wages, although this requirement has yet to take effect.

The number of labor inspectors has also been increased from 150 in late 2013 to roughly 300, although human rights activists say that’s still an inadequate amount of people to properly monitor Qatar’s massive construction industry.

Government officials have also been keen to showcase new, model labor camps, some of which were recently shown to a group of foreign journalists.

Growing workforce

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Chantelle D'mello

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

But the continuous influx of blue-collar expats to Qatar to work on countless construction projects ahead of the 2022 World Cup has been a severe strain on the availability of labor camps.

Similarly, questions remain over whether companies would be able to comply with the Ministry of Interior’s new rules for buses.

Several mechanics who spoke to Doha News this morning noted that replacing or retrofitting Qatar’s entire fleet of older buses that currently lack air conditioning would be a massive undertaking.

An employee at E2E Fleets said his company currently has about four buses without air conditioning available for lease, along with approximately eight buses with air conditioning.

He said he had not heard of the new ministry rules and he suspected it would be impractical to retrofit the older vehicles, although he added that they typically get little use during the warmer months.

“During the summer, nobody requests (buses without air conditioning),” he told Doha News.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Penny Yi Wang

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

While all of Qatar’s residents typically welcome a cooler air conditioned environment after being outside, Nepal’s labor minister actually argued that it contributes to deaths in Qatar’s construction industry.

Tek Bahadur Gurung said the high number of heart attacks in otherwise healthy young Nepali men was a problem of “orientation” and that some men died after suddenly turning on the air conditioning in their accommodation, according to Channel 4 News.

While health experts say that suddenly going from a hot environment to a cold building can aggravate some medical conditions, the US Department of Labor recommends that those working in hot conditions take frequent breaks in air conditioned or shaded areas.

Thoughts?

(The post Buses in Qatar must be equipped with AC as of July 1, MOI says is from Doha News.)


Qatar University gets new president

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Qatar University

QU/Facebook

Qatar University

For the first time in 12 years, Qatar’s largest university will have a new official at the helms.

According to QNA, Dr. Sheikha Abdulla Al-Misnad has been replaced by Dr. Hassan Rashid Al-Derham as president of Qatar University, following a meeting with the board of Regents today.

Hassan Al Derham

Hassan Al Derham/Twitter

Hassan Al Derham

Al-Derham has held the post of Vice President of Research at QU for the past eight years.

According to his online biography, he is also an assistant professor at the College of Engineering and has a PhD in construction project management from the University of Glamorgan in Wales, UK.

His appointment comes at a time when QU is expanding and putting a greater emphasis on boosting its profile through research.

Al-Misnad was the fifth QU president, taking over the role in 2003. An alumnus of the university, she graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor’s degree in Education and followed that the next year with a diploma.

She got her PhD from Durham University in the UK with a thesis on “The Development of Modern Education in the Gulf States with Special Reference to Women’s Education.”

Criticism

It is not clear why Al-Misnad has been replaced, though she has drawn the ire of the community in the past for her work at QU.

Dr. Sheikha Abdulla Al-Misnad

Qatar University / Facebook

Dr. Sheikha Abdulla Al-Misnad

Under her leadership, the university tightened standards a decade ago, raising the required gradepoint average to graduate from 1.5 to 2.0 out of a 4.0 scale.

That roughly translates into an increase in the minimum standard from a D+/C- average to a C.

Speaking about her efforts to help reform the university to an international publication in 2013, Al-Misnad said:

“Asking students to follow certain standards whereby they could not graduate until they reached a certain level, that created a lot of problems because people were not used to it. When you tell people that in order to achieve they have to follow certain rules, that is not accepted.”

And in a panel session in Canada the same year, she also addressed what she called a widespread motivation problem among local youth, saying:

“I’m always concerned that we live in a blessed society with economic resources and a small population. I’m always thinking how we can motivate our youth. In my country, the national population looks at things as entitlement, not like an opportunity where you need to work hard on it.”

The remarks drew criticism from many students at the time, who called for an apology and her immediate resignation.

Qatar University growth

Since it began in 1973 as Qatar’s College of Education with just 150 students, QU has seen enormous growth over the years.

Upcoming QU lecture halls and car park.

Qatar University

Upcoming QU lecture halls and car park.

Its student body now stands at more than 14,000, a number it hopes to increase to 25,000 by 2019 as it undergoes a massive campus-wide expansion.

QU has eight colleges, including the recently-established College of Medicine, which is due to take its first group of students in September for its MD program.

The majority of students are Qatari, and the university is particularly popular with female students as it operates a segregated campus for male and female students at the undergraduate level.

To cope with increased demand from students for places, the university will renovate or construct 11 new buildings including purpose-built facilities for four colleges in the next five years.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar University gets new president is from Doha News.)

Qatar Airways adds to Boeing 777X order with $4.8 billion purchase

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Qatar Airways A350 at Paris Air Show

Paris Air Show/Facebook

Qatar Airways A350 at Paris Air Show

The 2015 Paris Air Show opened this week with Qatar Airways announcing a major order for more than a dozen new wide-body jets – and its CEO taking another shot at one of his US competitors.

The state-owned national carrier said in a statement that it had purchased 10 Boeing 777-8Xs and four 777 Freighters, an order valued at US$4.8 billion based on the current list prices for the planes.

Qatar Airways Boeing 777

Aero Icarus/Flickr

Qatar Airways Boeing 777

The purchase of the 350-seat 777-8X planes are in addition to the order Qatar Airways previously placed for 50 of the slightly larger 400-seat 777-9X model.

The line of long-haul aircraft is currently under development, with the first passenger planes expected to be delivered in 2020.

The order was announced yesterday at the Paris Air Show, a biannual event where military and commercial planes are demonstrated for customers and manufacturers typically publicize major contracts.

‘We are creating even more jobs’

At this year’s event, the ongoing dispute between the three largest US airlines and the major Gulf carriers also took center stage.

For the past several months, American Airlines, Delta and United have stepped up claims that the governments of Qatar and the UAE unfairly subsidize their national carriers, a charge that the Gulf airlines deny.

Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker

Qatar Airways/Flickr

Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker

During a press conference to announce the 777X orders, Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker highlighted how his purchase from American manufacturer Boeing was helping the US economy.

“I hope that the gentleman at Delta knows that we are creating even more jobs in the United States by ordering more airplanes,” he said in a reference to Delta CEO Richard Anderson, according to USA Today.

Job creation is one of the reasons a major US travel industry association recently appealed to the US government in support of the Gulf carriers.

Al Baker also for the time disclosed a figure for the airline’s annual revenues, telling the Wall Street Journal that Qatar Airways made a net profit of $103 million during its last financial year.

Additionally, the chief reportedly repeated his threat to pull out of the oneworld alliance over claims that fellow member American Airlines is hindering Qatar Airways’ operations by refusing to give it access to terminal gates at JFK airport in New York.

“We are only committed to oneworld provided the spirit in which we joined oneworld exists … If we find that we cannot have a settlement to this very contentious issue, yes we will exit from oneworld,” Reuters quoted Al Baker as saying.

New Bombardier, A380 planes dismissed

Separately, Qatar Airways ruled out several aircraft from joining its fleet in the near future.

Reuters reported that the Gulf airline was no longer interested in Bombardier’s CSeries narrow-body aircraft, which made their debut at the Paris Air Show. Al Baker said earlier this year that the airline “cannot wait indefinitely” for the Canadian-made plane, which has been beset by delays.

Airbus A380

NguyenDai/Flickr

Airbus A380

Elsewhere at the air show, Airbus said it was in talks about developing a new “stretch” version of its double-decker A380 with new engines and 50 extra seats.

The company said it is discussing the new model with Emirates – the world’s largest A380 customer, which has been pushing for a redesign – and at least half a dozen customers, the Wall Street Journal said.

However, Qatar Airways does not appear to be on that list – Al Baker told Bloomberg that the carrier, which lists four A380s in its fleet and has another nine on order, was not one of those prospective customers.

Military purchase

Qatar Airways wasn’t the only customer from the Gulf state purchasing planes in Paris.

Boeing said yesterday that the Qatar Armed Forces was doubling the size of its C-17 Globemaster III airlifter fleet with the purchase of four additional planes.

The military aircraft is primarily used to transport troops or heavy cargo, perform airdrop and medical evacuations as well as deliver humanitarian aid, Boeing said.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar Airways adds to Boeing 777X order with $4.8 billion purchase is from Doha News.)

Some Qatar private schools change Ramadan schedule after SEC letter

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For illustrative purposes only

Håkan Dahlström / Flickr

For illustrative purposes only

At least a handful of private schools in Qatar have announced last-minute changes to their teaching hours in Ramadan after the Supreme Education Council (SEC) issued a circular to all non-government schools and kindergartens yesterday.

The letter from the SEC’s Private Schools Office Director, Hamad Mohammed Al Ghali Al Marri, was received by schools at 1pm yesterday.

It states that a five-hour working day, from 9am until 2pm, should be adhered to during the holy month, which is expected to begin either tonight or tomorrow evening.

“According to the circular No. 4 of the year 2015 of his Excellency the Deputy Prime Minister – Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs- it was decided that the official working hours in the holy month of Ramadan are 5 hours every day, from 9am to 2pm,” an English translation of the letter says.

While no official reason was given in the letter, a later start would mean those who are fasting and up in the early hours of the morning for suhoor would not need to wake so early in the morning to take children to school.

These hours also align with the official working day for those in the public and semi-government sectors during Ramadan.

However, following the 9am to 2pm schedule would have required some private schools to push back the start of their day by 90 minutes to two hours.

And if all schools and ministries followed the same schedule, roads would be particularly busy around these times.

School changes

Some schools, including the International School of London Qatar (ISLQ) and Birla Public School (BPS), confirmed to Doha News that they will change their school day to follow the wording of the letter.

ISLQ

ISLQ/Facebook

ISLQ

ISLQ’s SEC communications coordinator Mirna Shebbani said that the school would operate from 9am to 2pm and had “immediately” informed parents of the new timetable.

It had previously planned for the school day to run for five hours from 8am until 1pm until the last day of its term on June 25.

Most schools in Qatar had already announced measures to shorten the length of their during the hotter weather and for the month of Ramadan, although some had scheduled to operate for more than five hours.

For example, earlier this month, BPS cut its school day by about an hour, to run for five and a half hours from 7am until 12:30pm due to “extreme weather conditions.”

A BPS representative told Doha News that the principal decided this morning to change the school day to run from 9am to 2pm and would be contacting parents today to advise them.

Five-hour day

However, other schools said they have shortened their day to comply with the five-hour rule, but chosen to keep their working hours similar to before.

Doha English Speaking School pupils

DESS/Facebook

Doha English Speaking School pupils

Doha English Speaking School (DESS) headteacher Andy Yeoman sent a letter to its parents late this morning, advising them of a slight change to the school day, with the school set to start around 10 to 20 minutes earlier than usual at 7:20am during Ramadan.

Classes will finish at 12:25pm for children from pre-school to Year 2, and at 12:30pm for children in years 3 to 6.

During the rest of the school year, children from Reception to Year 6 at the school usually finish classes between 1:45 and 2pm.

Advising parents of the change, Yeoman added:

“The SEC message from Mr. Hamad Al Ghali Al Marri, Director of the SEC Private Schools Office, was very apologetic for the late notice, especially as they had previously approved our reduced hours of 7:20am to 1pm.”

Doha College headteacher Mark Leppard also sent a letter to the school community, advising them of new changes to the timetable once Ramadan is officially declared.

Students at Doha College will start at 7am and classes will finish at noon, Leppard stated. The school had previously planned to shift the school day earlier by 10 minutes, with classes scheduled to start at 7:20am and end at 1pm.

Meanwhile, Park House English School told Doha News it would also shorten its day, expecting it to start at 8am until 1pm, rather than 7:30am to 1:30pm.

Has your school been affected by the changes? Thoughts?

(The post Some Qatar private schools change Ramadan schedule after SEC letter is from Doha News.)

Family expert: Qatar should form special body to ensure women’s rights

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

sixoone/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Asserting that it’s time that women’s rights and demands be made a priority in Qatar, a leading local family expert has called on the government to form a national committee to represent the female population.

Noor Al Malki Al Jehani, the executive director of the Doha International Family Institute, said the committee should have a budget, human resources and cooperate with the country’s ministries to improve the status of women’s rights in Qatar and solve any problems they might face.

She made the remarks this week at the official launch of the fourth Human Development report in Qatar.

Al Jehani’s call falls in line with the report, which also recommended establishing a “central government body” for women as part of Qatar’s agreement to join the UN convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women.

The Supreme Council of Family Affairs used to handle women’s issues before it was dissolved last year as part of organizational changes to the government. Its responsibilities were then taken on by the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs.

Challenges

Al Jehani said that while Qatar has taken steps toward achieving gender equality, it still falls short in many areas.

Last year, Qatar retained its spot at the most advanced nation in the region, ranking 31st out of nearly 200 countries in the United Nation’s 2014 Human Development Report (HDR).

But in a separate gender inequality index published in the UN report, Qatar ranked fairly low – 113th out of 187 nations.

2015 CMC Elections

Riham Sheble

2015 CMC Elections

According to Al Jehani, this was due to several reasons, including a lack of female managers in companies here. She also pointed out a lack of parliamentary representation.

Women hold only two of the 19 seats on the Central Municipal Council. There is also no female representation on Qatar’s Advisory (Shura) Council.

To put that in perspective, Saudi Arabia has 20 percent representation and in the UAE, women held 18 percent of the seats, according to the report released this week.

Al Jehani cited social and cultural pressures and norms as hindering women’s progress, adding that females themselves may prefer not to handle a managerial or political position, due to their domestic responsibilities.

Meanwhile, although Qatari women excel in their university studies, they appear to be enrolling in specific fields and steer away from “IT, scientific studies and law,” due to pressure from family and society to stick to certain professions, Al Jehani said.

Family matters

She added that around 10 percent of Qatari families live under the poverty line, and most of these families are provided for by women.

“If a (Qatari) woman gets divorced or widowed, her chances of getting re-married are very limited,” she explained, adding that nearly half of the country’s local female population is unemployed, which would make it difficult for this segment to provide for themselves.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Russ Garcia / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Another issue discussed this week at the conference involved nationality laws.

From 2000-2013, the number of Qatari women who married non-Qataris more than doubled, from 116 to 276, the human development report stated.

But these women cannot pass their citizenship to their children, though Qatari men married to foreigners are allowed to do so.

Last year, Qatar officials told the UN it does not have any plans to grant full citizenship to the children of Qatari mothers and non-Qatari fathers.

Meanwhile, the debate about how the country’s citizenship laws affect the self-identity of so-called “half-Qataris” continues.

During a Twitter campaign on the subject last June, Amal Al-Malki – a university professor born to a Qatari father and a Lebanese mother told Doha News:

“Modernity has brought in an influx of foreigners to the country, making us a minority in our own land. We have developed an anxiety from non-Qataris unfortunately, and we tend to preserve our culture through making it hard for outsiders to ‘invade’ it. We speak of purity of lineage and cultural cohesion as if we live in an island of our own.”

Al Jahani also touched on issues like domestic violence against women and children, in addition to obesity in children.

Elderly expats

The report also called for an amending of the law to allow elderly non-Qataris who have worked to help develop the country for many years to be able to permanently stay here, and be granted pension, health care and social benefits.

Currently, when expats reach retirement age, they must either leave the country or transfer their residency to one of their children, if they work in Qatar.

“The elderly have participated a great deal in the development (of the country), but for the mostly part, that has not been appreciated,” the report stated.

The elderly represented 2 percent of Qatar’s population and mostly consisted of non-Qataris in 2010. However, the report speculates that the numbers have increased by now.

Thoughts?

(The post Family expert: Qatar should form special body to ensure women’s rights is from Doha News.)

Future Medical Center closed following Qatar health council inspection

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Future Medical Center

Peter Kovessy

Future Medical Center

A popular medical clinic in Doha has been temporarily closed after staff said it was inspected by the Supreme Council of Health (SCH).

Future Medical Center abruptly shut yesterday morning, and it is unclear when it will reopen.

Security guards stationed in the courtyard outside the clinic, which is located across the street from Villaggio Mall, were seen turning away a steady stream of patients yesterday and today who had arrived for appointments or walk-in services and had not been notified of the closure.

Future Medical Center

Peter Kovessy

Future Medical Center

Signs posted outside the clinics gates said the health center was “closed for maintenance.”

The remaining on-site staff refused to say why the clinic was closed, although one said it related to defective machinery.

Through a window, a cleaner could be seen scrubbing furniture in a hallway while wearing a surgical mask.

When pressed, a clinic employee told Doha News it was a “special” cleaning above and beyond normal maintenance, but refused to elaborate.

Officials at the Doha HealthCare Group, which owns the clinic, declined to discuss why it was closed when contacted by Doha News, referring questions to the SCH.

A council spokesperson said he was looking into the matter.

The adjacent dental clinic is not affected by the closure and is still accepting patients.

Patient reaction

Many of the residents who pulled up at Future Medical Center over the past few days appeared frustrated and surprised at the clinic’s closure.

Future Medical Center

Peter Kovessy

Future Medical Center

Some had appointments and said they were not informed that the clinic would be closed.

Others who turned up for walk-in sessions were directed to different clinics further up Al Waab Street, including one man who arrived with the intention of having an MRI performed on his back.

He told Doha News that he’d wait to learn the reasons behind the closure before becoming concerned and said he had previously been pleased with the treatment he received at the Future Medical Center.

“I’m surprised (it’s been shut down),” he said. “It’s a good clinic. I bring my son here.”

Thoughts?

(The post Future Medical Center closed following Qatar health council inspection is from Doha News.)

Awqaf: First fasting day of Ramadan 2015 is Thursday

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Irfan Ishak/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

This year, fasting during the month of Ramadan will begin on Thursday, June 18, corresponding with the Islamic calendar year 1436 AH, Qatar’s Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs has announced.

Because the new moon was not sighted tonight, the month of Ramadan officially begins tomorrow night. That means the first taraaweeh (special night) prayers will take place tomorrow at mosques around Qatar.

The same declaration was made in neighboring Saudi Arabia:

The first fast will be on Thursday, which is when shortened work hours (five hours a day for government employees, and six for the private sector), a ban on public eating and drinking during the day and other changes will begin.

To see a comprehensive list of business/restaurant hours, see our guide here. And here are some tips about what you need to know about Ramadan in Qatar.

Thoughts?

(The post Awqaf: First fasting day of Ramadan 2015 is Thursday is from Doha News.)

UN to Qatar Airways: Stop firing flight attendants for becoming pregnant

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Nuccia Faccenda/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Holding Qatar to a UN convention it signed that bans discrimination, the International Labour Organization (ILO) has called on the country’s national carrier to scrap several working stipulations for its female employees.

Specifically, Qatar Airways must do away with its policy of dismissing flight attendants who become pregnant and banning them from accepting rides from male friends to and from their home, the ILO said.

The UN agency highlighted its conclusions in a report released this week that investigated complaints filed by two labor advocacy groups, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and the International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITWF).

The latter group has been a long-standing critic of Qatar Airways, accusing it of “flagrant abuses” and discrimination against women, who comprise 80 percent of the airline’s 9,000 cabin crew employees.

Investigation results

Though the ILO urged the carrier to change some of its policies, the body did not agree with all of the allegations made by the trade groups.

For example, ITUC and ITWF have also accused Qatar’s state-owned airline of discriminating against its female employees by mandating a 12-hour rest period before starting a shift, and by maintaining security surveillance of employee accommodation.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

David Precious/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

However, the ILO concluded that there was insufficient evidence to suggest that either measure has a disproportionately harsh impact on women.

The agency also found that Qatar Airways has removed an employment contract clause that previously required cabin crew to obtain the airline’s permission before marrying.

A revised contract was introduced in December 2014 for new employees, and the carrier told the ILO that it’s in the process of similarly amending employment agreements of all its existing staff.

Labor activists have said their campaign was the driving factor behind the airline’s decision to revise its contract.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Doha Stadium Plus Qatar/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

“Qatar Airways has been shamed into action – and more must come,” stated ITUC general secretary Sharan Burrow, who also advocates on behalf of construction workers in Qatar and wants the Gulf state stripped of the 2022 World Cup unless it introduces drastic reforms.

“We … will not rest until it addresses what many of those workers call the ‘climate of fear’ at (Qatar Airways).”

A spokesperson for the airline was not immediately available to respond to the ILO report.

However, Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker reportedly dismissed its findings while speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the Paris Air Show yesterday.

“I don’t give a damn about the ILO – I am there to run a successful airline. This is evidence of a vendetta they have against Qatar Airways and my country,” Reuters quoted Al Baker as saying.

Flying while pregnant

In its response to the complaint, the Qatar government told ILO investigators that the country’s civil aviation rules effectively prohibit cabin crew from flying while pregnant. This means that these flight attendant would be unable to meet their contractual obligations.

However, the government noted that the women are free to apply to other jobs within Qatar Airways that don’t involve flying, such as working in an airport lounge.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Kelly Hunter/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The ILO countered that argument by saying being forced to apply for an alternative job is a burden on pregnant women and creates inequality in the workplace. The bottom line, it added, is that a woman should not lose her job solely because she becomes pregnant.

Instead, the the airline should change its policy and temporarily transfer pregnant employees who cannot fly to another position within the company, the agency said.

However, Al Baker has previously called that practice impractical.

Qatar Airways only has a limited number of ground roles it can offer pregnant cabin crew members who cannot fly, he said in March 2014:

“We are not in the business where we can guarantee ground jobs or let people stay away … and don’t do anything for the airline,” he said.

‘Cultural norm’

The government also stood by the airline’s prohibition on female employees entering or leaving company premises with a man who is not their father, brother or husband. Such measures, the government said, are needed to comply with “a particular cultural norm in Qatar.”

The ILO countered that since this requirement does not apply to men, it amounts to discrimination based on sex. The agency called for the rule to be scrapped.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Intel Free Press/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The broader issue of employee surveillance and monitoring was also investigated by the ILO.

The government said that security cameras at the entrances of staff accommodation buildings are standard in Qatar, and investigators said there was insufficient evidence to conclude that such measures disproportionately affect female employees.

However, the ILO noted that there were indications that management’s surveillance practices had specifically targeted several women employees.

While it did not provide any specific examples, one incident picked up by international media earlier this year involved a photo taken from security camera footage showing a female Qatar Airways staffer passed out in the doorway of her accommodation.

The picture was emailed throughout the company by an airline executive to remind staff to respect Qatar’s customs, a spokesperson previously said.

But some critics took offense at the suggestion that the long-time employee was drunk, and some observers suggested that she could even have been drugged. Others asked why security personnel, who apparently spotted the woman, did not help her.

Filing complaints

The ILO said its investigation also has raised wider questions about how Qatar Airways deals with allegations of harassment. While the government said there are various dispute settlement mechanisms in place, the ILO noted that no details were provided on how these procedures can be or have been used by cabin crew employees.

“Access to such procedures and remedies by cabin crew members who are migrant workers may be difficult because of the fear of victimization or reprisals, including dismissal and deportation from the country, which may prevent the employees from seeking to obtain redress in case of violation of their rights,” the agency said.

The ILO recommended that Qatar Airways establish a system that allows employees to file a complaint without being sanctioned, and that the government hire more female labor inspectors to monitor discrimination and equality issues at the airline.

Here’s a copy of the full report:

Thoughts?

(The post UN to Qatar Airways: Stop firing flight attendants for becoming pregnant is from Doha News.)


Qatar appeal court sets Oct. 26 date for Villaggio fire verdict

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Villaggio Mall

Omar Chatriwala

Villaggio Mall

It will take another four months for Qatar’s Court of Appeal to decide whether to uphold or overturn the guilty verdicts of several individuals facing jail time after the deadly 2012 Villaggio Mall fire.

Following the final appeal hearing this week, a judge – citing the court’s workload and upcoming summer recess – set a verdict date of Oct. 26. That’s nearly two years after the appeal proceedings first got underway.

In June 2013, a lower criminal court convicted five people for their roles in the shopping center fire that killed 19 individuals, including 13 children. All of the victims died of smoke asphyxiation after being trapped inside an upstairs daycare center called Gympanzee.

The scene inside Villaggio following the fire.

Omar Chatriwala

The scene inside Villaggio following the fire.

Villaggio’s chairman, the mall manager and Gympanzee’s two co-owners were all convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to the maximum penalty of six years in prison.

A fifth defendant, a municipal government employee, was convicted of forgery for renewing Gympanzee’s permit without visiting the premise in person and sentenced to five years in prison.

All remain out of prison pending the appeal verdict, leading to the current trial that concluded with two sessions of closing arguments earlier this month and this week.

‘Scapegoating’

The defense lawyers who spoke on Monday blamed the media for “blowing things out of proportion” after the fire, which allegedly compelled the prosecutor to search for scapegoats to put on trial.

The attorneys also focused on two questions that have recurred during the appeal hearings:

  • Given that the mall fire was caused by the faulty wiring of a fluorescent light in the mezzanine of Nike, why was the sporting good store, its owners or employees not charged?
  • Was Gympanzee an improperly licensed nursery, as prosecutors and several parents argue, or a drop-in recreation area for children, as the co-owners’ defense attorney asserts?

The latter distinction matters, parents previously told Doha News, because if Civil Defense officials had known children were inside when the fire first broke out, they could have worked to get them out more quickly.

‘Say the truth’

The lawyer representing Gympanzee’s owners also introduced a new argument in an attempt to absolve his clients of responsibility for the 19 deaths. He argued that most of the children who were killed actually died in an ambulance or in hospital – not at the mall itself.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

HMC

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

He based this on television footage showing CPR being performed on victims as they were taken out of the mall, as well as the fact that the autopsies were performed late that evening. The fire had broken out in the morning.

The attorney did not say how either suggestion conclusively proved the time of death of any of the victims. His theory also appeared to contradict the official investigation results and outraged several people who lost family members in the fire.

“Untrue!” Raghda Kabbani told Doha News after the hearing. She lost her daughter, three-year-old Hana Sharabati, in the fire. “This is just categorically untrue. I saw with my own two eyes the bodies of children and adults in a blue cover on the ground outside the mall.”

The same sentiment was expressed by the uncle of another victim, three-year-old Yusuf Shata, who voiced his displeasure in the middle of the court session.

“I was there. They were all dead, my nephew included,” he said. As guards started to remove him from the courtroom, he yelled at the judge, “Fear God and say the truth for once.”

The judge instructed the guards to allow the man to remain in court.

Mall manager’s role

The lawyer representing Villaggio manager Tzoulios Tzouliou presented several arguments in his closing arguments specifically related to his client.

Villaggio Mall

Gadget Dan / Flickr

Villaggio Mall

He said Tzouliou moved to Qatar after the mall was constructed and mostly leased. Tzouliou, the attorney said, did not sign the lease with Gympanzee.

Furthermore, the lawyer said it was not the manager’s job to go back and review the government license of each business in the mall and compare it to their actual activities.

The lawyer also said the lower court made several errors in assigning blame to his client. For example, he said Villaggio’s firefighting hoses were of a sufficient length and not too short as the verdict said.

“My client did not leave or flee. He put his life in danger … (and) did all he could to make sure the mall was evacuated,” the attorney said, arguing that Tzouliou – like Villaggio’s assistant mall manager and head of security, both of whom were found not guilty by the lower court – should be exonerated.

The lawyer for municipal government employee Mansour Nasir Fazzaa al-Shahwani submitted his closing arguments in writing, telling the court that his client should have his conviction overturned.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar appeal court sets Oct. 26 date for Villaggio fire verdict is from Doha News.)

Five things to do in Qatar this weekend (June 18 to 20)

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Katara Ramadan decorations

Omar Chatriwala

Katara Ramadan decorations

With the fasting month of Ramadan kicking off tomorrow, things appear to be a bit quiet on the weekend events front.

But there are still a few ways to stay in shape, help the environment, learn from history and other activities over the coming days. Here are our picks:

Katara Ramadan festival

To mark the month of Ramadan, Katara Cultural Village is hosting a slew of activities for families and children under the theme Miracles and Inventions.

This year, the festival will highlight the achievements of Muslim scientists through various workshops, exhibitions and lectures. A puppet theater, heritage market and sports events are also scheduled in the upcoming weeks, along with weekly talks at the Opera House and Katara mosque.

Garangao photo for illustrative purposes only.

Omar Chatriwala/Flickr

Garangao photo for illustrative purposes only.

On offer this weekend are several workshops and exhibitions.

The fourth edition of the Katara Quran Memorization Sessions starts today, June 17th from 10 – 11.30 am every weekday until July 16, and is open for boys and girls (separately) ages 5-13. The course costs QR500, and online registration is on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Katara is also hosting a series of Ramadan Family Workshops every Friday starting on June 19 from 8 to 11pm. The workshops involve Garangao, Islamic personalities, and coloring sessions, and cost between QR100 and 150 per class.

A Garangao packaging workshop will also take place from 8:30 to 10:30pm from June 20 to 22, and costs QR500 to attend. Interested residents are requested to email their names and phone numbers to education@katara.net or call 44080233 or 44080235 to register for the above events.

For more information and details, visit the Katara events schedule here, or view the Ramadan Festival schedule here.

Mangroves cleanup

Local environmental adventure group Entalek is hosting a cleanup of the Qatar mangroves on Friday, June 19, at 7am at Purple Island in Al Khor.

Purple Island

Omar Chatriwala

Purple Island

Interested residents are encouraged to attend the event, work up a sweat and help keep the environment clean at the same time. For more information or to register, call 30233207 or visit the event’s Facebook page here.

Losail Karting experience

For a bit of homegrown thrills and action, head over to the Losail International Circuit and watch riders and drivers from the Qatar Motor and Motorcycle Federation compete on the newly opened Losail Karting Track.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The Leaf Writer/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The event is free and open to the public, and will take place from 8:30 to 11pm on June 22 and 23. For more information, visit QMMF’s Facebook page here.

Hyatt Plaza Ramadan activities

Head over to Hyatt Plaza for a month-long series of children’s programs, activities, bazaars and competitions. While a detailed scheduled has yet to be released, but for the first 20 days of Ramadan, events will be held from 9pm to 11pm in the food court.

Hyatt Plaza Fastathon 2013

Hyatt Plaza

Hyatt Plaza Fastathon 2013

The mall is also expected to feature a Fast-a-thon, a Malaysian Bazaar and a Layaly Al Khair festival.

The latter will be an educational event featuring storytelling competitions in collaboration with the Edad Educational Center, while the Fast-a-thon is a charity event aimed at offering non-Muslims the chance to experience fasting.

The event will take place on June 26 and 27, backed by donations from Qatar Charity towards education in Somalia, and will culminate in a free iftar party for participants on the two days.

Katara beach soccer

Watch some of the best amateur beach soccer teams face off from June 20 until July 18 at the 5th Katara Beach Soccer tournament.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Osama Saeed/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Matches run for a month and are scheduled to take place from 9pm to 11:30pm daily. They are free and open to the public.

Registration is also still open for those who wish to compete. Tournament winners will bag a QR50,000 prize, trophies, and gold medals, while the second and third place teams will win QR40,000 and QR30,000 respectively. For more information, visit the event’s website here.

Bonus:

  • Aspire sports festival: Keep active this month with the help of the Aspire Ramadan Sports Festival, which will be held from Monday, June 22 until July 6. While registration for the various tournaments that will be held is now closed, residents are still encouraged to cheer on competitors at the matches, which will take place daily from 9pm onwards. Starting this week, the Junior Futsal, Men’s Football, American Football, Ladies’ Volleyball, Ladies 3×3 Basketball, and the Embassies Tournament will take place at various venues inside Aspire and the adjacent park. For more information and details, visit the Aspire website here.
  • QSports summer camp: Keep toddlers and youngsters busy this summer and enrol them in a month-long summer camp hosted by QSports. Activities include football, basketball, swimming, tennis, kickboxing, yoga, and arts and crafts. Starting from June 21 until July 30, events will be held daily from 8am to 1pm at the QSports SFQ Sports Academy in Gharafa. Participation costs QR200 per day, QR850 per week, or QR3,200 for the entire month. Interested parents are requested to register their children online via the QSports website, or in person at their offices. For more information, call 4017-6791 or 3308-7381.

What are your weekend plans? Thoughts?

(The post Five things to do in Qatar this weekend (June 18 to 20) is from Doha News.)

Report: Number of millionaires in Qatar on the rise

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Sally Crane Photography

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

More families in Qatar are becoming rich or super-rich due to well-placed investments, and the overall value of their private wealth is continuing to grow, according to a new international report.

The total number of households in the country with private wealth of $1 million or more rose by 3.7 percent during 2014 and is projected to further increase by 4.1 percent by 2019, the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) said in its latest annual report, which charts the financial health of people in 62 countries.

Overall, Qatar was found to be have the world’s third-highest density of millionaires, with 116 per 1,000 households in the country valued at $1 million or more in BCG’s report Global Wealth 2015: Winning the growth game.

For illustrative purposes only

Sally Crane Photography

For illustrative purposes only

Switzerland has the highest percentage of millionaires globally, at 135 per 1,000 households, while Bahrain came in second at 123 per 1,000 households.

In 2013, Qatar took the top spot internationally in terms of millionaire density, with 175 of every 1,000 households estimated to be millionaires.

The drop in rankings can at least be partly explained by Qatar’s massive and ongoing population explosion, with hundreds of thousands of expats moving here each year. Between June 2014 and June 2015, the population reached 2.37 million – a growth of more than 200,000 people (or 9 percent) on the previous year.

As most of the influx is comprised of lower-income workers, the percentage of millionaire households may appear smaller relative to the larger population.

Rich getting richer

However, according to detailed Qatar figures within BCG’s report, the number of millionaires and multi-millionaires households here is growing, while those who are already millionaires are getting richer.

Overall, private wealth in Qatar grew by 6.5 percent last year, mostly driven by more wealth being invested in equities (shares in private companies) – up 10.9 percent between 2013 and 2014.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Omar Chatriwala

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

And the report predicts that private wealth in Qatar will continue to increase, with a rise of 9.6 percent estimated by 2019.

While the total number of households becoming millionaires increased in Qatar last year, it was the super-wealthy who did particularly well.

The private wealth held by Ultra-High Net Worth households (those with $100 million or more) increased by 10 percent due to “dynamic equity markets and a growing economy”, Markus Massi, a partner and managing director at BCG Middle East said.

During 2014, 8.6 per 100,000 households in Qatar were classified as “ultra-high net worth,” and the wealth held by those is set to soar by 22.5 percent in the coming four years, Massi added.

This put Qatar fifth globally in terms of density of the ultra-rich (per 100,000 household):

  1. Hong Kong – 15.3/100,000
  2. Singapore – 14.3/100,000
  3. Austria – 12/100,000
  4. Switzerland – 9/100,000
  5. Qatar – 8.6/100,000

Meanwhile, the upper high net worth sector (households with wealth of $20 million-$100 million) grew 9.3 percent last year, and is predicted to continue to increase in the coming years.

This is due to more families earning enough to qualify to enter this wealth classification, while those already in it are expected to see their fortune increase as the average wealth per household is forecast to rise.

The lower high net worth bracket ($1 million-$20 million) also increased by 7.2 percent last year, and is forecast to grow by 11.6 percent over the coming five years.

Overall, private wealth in the Middle East and America rose by more than 9 percent last year to nearly $6 trillion, and is expected to increase to $9 trillion in 2019.

“Solid savings rates and continued GDP rises in oil-rich countries contributed to newly created wealth, while existing asset performance was solid despite the region’s volatile developments,” Massi added.

Globally, private wealth reached $164 trillion – up 12 percent last year. North America was the world’s richest region, with $51 trillion of private wealth. However Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) is expected to overtake North America in 2016, when the region’s wealth is forecast to rise to $56 trillion.

Thoughts?

(The post Report: Number of millionaires in Qatar on the rise is from Doha News.)

Ramadan Kareem from Doha News

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Ramadan Kareem!

Check Out My Designs

Ramadan Kareem!

The Doha News team wishes everyone a spiritual and blessed month of Ramadan.

The month officially kicked off for residents of Qatar at sundown tonight, and the first fast will be tomorrow (Thursday, June 18).

For those unfamiliar with Ramadan in Doha, here are eight things to know about Ramadan in Qatar. And check out our comprehensive guide to opening hours for businesses and restaurants during the month here.

Happy fasting!

(The post Ramadan Kareem from Doha News is from Doha News.)

Sidra’s Qatar staff told to expect more delays before hospital opens

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Sidra

Sidra

Sidra

After repeated delays, it’s possible that Qatar’s highly anticipated Sidra Medical and Research Center won’t begin conducting inpatient procedures for another three years, a senior board member has said.

Speaking at a staff town hall meeting earlier this month, Lord Darzi – who is also a board member at Qatar’s Supreme Council for Health – speculated that construction of the hospital would take another two years, two people who attended the meeting said.

Sidra

Sidra

Sidra

Commissioning of the building – billed as “an ultramodern academic medical center” dedicated to the care of women and children – could take another year, he added.

The schedule was not a concrete timeline, the attendees told Doha News, but rather an estimate.

Nevertheless, the revised expectations come as a disappointment to many, as the hospital has suffered from repeated delays and is already four years behind schedule.

In a sign of progress, however, Darzi apparently said he hoped construction on Sidra’s outpatient clinic would be completed this year and open sometime next year.

Both Sidra and Qatar Foundation (QF) – which is funding Sidra with an endowment of $7.9 billion – refused to discuss Darzi’s comments with Doha News or speculate when the hospital might open.

“We are evaluating a range of options to ensure the successful delivery of the hospital as soon as clinically feasible and safe to do so,” the organizations told Doha News in identical statements.

Delays

Located near Education City, next to the Qatar National Convention Center, Sidra is expected to handle the delivery of 10,000 babies annually, offer specialized pediatrics, obstetrics and reproductive medicine services and contain nearly 400 patient beds.

Sidra Hospital

Sidra

Sidra Hospital

Its opening is hoped to relieve some of the pressure at other hospitals, many of which are undergoing or scheduled for an expansion as Qatar’s lead health care provider, Hamad Medical Corp., races to keep up with the country’s rapidly growing population.

After missing scheduled completion dates in 2011 and 2012, Sidra officials said they wanted the hospital fully operational by 2015.

Apart from a 2013 fire in the underground car park, the reasons for the ongoing delays are not clear.

Last year, QF suddenly sacked Sidra’s lead construction contractors, OHL International and Contrack International, which had been working on the project since 2008. They were replaced by two new contractors, Midmac and Consolidated Contractors Group.

While neither Sidra or QF publicly explained why the firms had been terminated, a notification of a lawsuit filed by OHL said QF is claiming the project was late and the contractors missed deadlines.

OHL countered it the project was 95 percent when its contract was terminated and that it was scheduled to turn the site over to QF by March 2015.

Recruitment

Hundreds of people have already been hired to work at Sidra, which appears to still be actively searching for staff, with dozens of open positions for researchers, physicians and other professionals advertised on its careers page.

In its statement to Doha News, Sidra addressed the issue of medical staff and researchers who have already been brought to Qatar:

“Sidra’s priority is to use the talent and skills of its staff to deliver world class healthcare to the people of Qatar. That is why more than 100 clinical staff are already working with our partners, including Hamad Medical Corporation … Sidra researchers are also actively involved in groundbreaking research related to breast cancer immunotherapy and genomic sequencing.”

However, some Sidra employees have told Doha News that their contracts are not being renewed and that they’re being forced to look for work elsewhere.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

photologue_np/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Meanwhile, others who have yet to move to Qatar have complained of their jobs being put “on hold” after being offered positions and submitting licensing information and other paperwork.

“It is very frustrating for all of us who have been waiting,” one person posted on one of several threads about Sidra in an online expat forum.

Another said that accepting a position with Sidra involves “putting your life on hold (for) a bit” as without a firm start date, would-be Sidra staff are unsure if they should enroll in professional courses, renew leases on their flat in their home country or pursue other career opportunities lest they be suddenly told to move to Qatar.

While several people report being told by recruiters that Sidra was gearing up for a 2016 opening, others noted that this was just a guess and that recruiters refused to rule out that it could be several more years before the hospital accepts its first patient.

Thoughts?

(The post Sidra’s Qatar staff told to expect more delays before hospital opens is from Doha News.)

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