Notice Board

Kuwait imports KD 227 mn worth phones in 9 months

 

Kuwait imported phones worth KD 227 million, including those used on cellular networks (mobile phones) and those used for other wireless networks, in just nine months, reports Al-Anba daily. According to official data, during the period from January 1, 2021 to March 31, 2021, phones worth KD 90 million were imported. The import of phones decreased during the period from April 2021 to June 2021 to KD 57.6 million, but it rose again during the period from July 2021 to September 2021 to KD 79.2 million.

Meanwhile, according to official figures, the average expenditure of each citizen and resident in Kuwait on imported meat, fish and animal products is about KD 9 per month, reports Al-Anba daily. In detail, the volume of Kuwait’s imports of live animals and animal products in the first nine months of 2021 amounted to about KD 378 million.

 

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The Liberation Tower Exhibition Attracted 14,000 Visitors

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During the month of February, when the Liberation Tower reopened to the general public after a long period of closure, approximately 14,000 visitors, including citizens, residents, and members of the diplomatic corps, visited the exhibition organized by the Ministry of Communication on the 150th floor of the Liberation Tower.

The Ministry of Communications held an exhibition of historic devices and modern technologies at the Liberation Tower last month.

According to sources, they intend to hold another two-week show at the Liberation Tower during Ramadan.

 

 

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Women to head all police stations in Avadi Commissionerate for a day

 

A step to recognise, honour, celebrate and cherish the role of women in uniform

Perhaps for the first time in India, all police stations in a police commissionerate will be headed by women for a day. The newly created Avadi Police Commissionerate will observe International Women's Day on Tuesday by a novel, even if symbolic delegation of power, to women officers.

It was Avadi Commissioner of Police Sandeep Rai Rathore who hit upon this idea to recognise, honour, celebrate and cherish the role of women in uniform.

Mr. Rathore said: "Since it is international Women's Day, we are deputing women inspectors to handle 25 police stations as station house officers for a day. It was never done anywhere. They will be holding the post for 24 hours from midnight of Monday. We can say proudly how much we worked for gender parity in Tamil Nadu. We do our part to do a little bit. The idea is basically to commemorate the day and say women are in charge of most things. Maybe it's a thing of gender parity it looks like."

Inspector-General and Additional Commissioner of Police (Headquarters and Traffic) B. Vijayakumari will hold additional charge as Joint Commissioner of Police for a day on March 8. Similarly, G. Umayal, Deputy Commissioner of Police, Headquarters and Administration, will function as the Deputy Commissioner of Police, Avadi and Red Hills districts. The present Deputy Commissioner J. Mahesh has been assigned other duty.

The Commissioner of Police instructed the officers to ensure that no grievance putforth by women remained unattended.

Senior Advocate Geetha Ramashesan said, “It is an interesting move and should not be restricted to one day. However, ideally there has to be gender parity in police stations and in all wings of the department with equal number of men and women.”

 

 

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Unlicensed companies providing postal services cause loss in millions of dinars

 

Assistant Undersecretary for the Postal Sector at the Ministry of Communications Khaled Al-Qasba said the State incurs annual losses estimated at millions of Kuwaiti dinars due to the unlicensed operations of 40 companies providing postal services, reports Al- Rai daily. In an interview with the daily, Al-Qasba also unveiled a plan to study the possibility of amending some articles of the Postal Service Law, which was ratified more than 50 years ago.

In a related development, he announced the mid-year plan to award a contract for customs clearance, delivery, transportation and distribution to a private company that made a qualitative leap in postal services. He told the daily that the long-term plan includes conducting a study, in coordination with Kuwait Authority for Partnership Projects (KAPP), on the vision for structuring the sector – privatize the sector, establish a company or the Kuwait Postal Corporation or other suggestions.

He affirmed as well that another project will be implemented soon to regulate services for urgent postal parcels and packages. He said nominal fees will be charged for packages; considering the successful operation of a delivery company in Siddiq Center and Mumtaz Mail in Hittin Center. He added the plan is to open two parcel delivery centers to reduce pressure on Al-Siddiq Center. He said the country has 83 post offices with a total of 1,254 employees; while unveiling the plan to establish Safat Postal Tower next to Liberation Tower. He believes this will be a qualitative leap for post offices and their use of technology, indicating the Postal Administration will be transferred to the tower along with Safat Post Office as the current structure will be demolished. Regarding the discrepancy in the number of employees in the 83 offices, Al-Qasba disclosed the post offices in Hawally and Capital governorates currently need employees. “We are working hard to fill up vacancies in various post offices. Women constitute 60 percent of the total workforce in the sector,” he concluded.

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Cabinet approves 11 new areas’ names

 

The Cabinet approved renaming 11 new areas in Kuwait as follows:

  • South Saad Al-Abdullah will be renamed ‘Nawaf Al-Ahmad City’.
  • South Sabah Al-Ahmad will be renamed ‘Al-Istiqlal City’.
  • Nawaf Al-Ahmad City will be renamed ‘Al-Bawadi’.
  • South Khaitan (Blocks 1 and 2) will be renamed ‘Al-Tahrir’.
  • Northwest Sulaibikhat will be renamed ‘Al-Boom’.
  • East Sabah Al-Ahmad will be renamed ‘Al-Khuzama’.
  • West Abdullah Al-Mubarak will be renamed ‘Al-Majd’.
  • Low cost homes’ project will be renamed ‘Al-Lewan’.
  • East Taima will be renamed ‘Al-Dana’.
  • South Abdullah Al-Mubarak will be renamed ‘Al-Soor’.
  • South Qairawan will be renamed ‘Al-Nuwair’.

 

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A proposal to exempt residence violators to exit Kuwait without paying fines

 

A proposal has been submitted by the Residence Affairs department of the Ministry of Interior to exempt residence violators to leave Kuwait without paying fines due to residence violation, reports Al Anba. This proposal is accepted to be approved due to an increase in residence violators which are currently 150,000 violators in the country who are residing illegally. 

 

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MoH cancels exemptions, flexible working hours

 

 

The Assistant Undersecretary of the Ministry of Health for Administrative Affairs, Marzouq Al-Rashidi, has issued a circular stipulating the return to the regular official working system in the ministry, starting from Sunday, March 13, reports Al-Qabas daily. The circular indicated that the ministry has already started holding meetings, conferences and internal courses will full participation of the concerned people in person thus doing away with the remote communication.

This circular cancels the earlier circular which was issued by the Civil Service Commission regarding reducing the workforce in government institutions, applying flexible working hours and schedules, and holding meetings, conferences and courses remotely to contain the spread of the coronavirus. The circular pointed to the abolition of all cases of exemption from work, and the employee’s absence from work is only within the limits of the legally authorized leaves, the abolition of the flexible working systems and the rotation system and the return to work with the entire official workforce 100%.

 

 

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Saudi lifts most COVID curbs

 

Saudi Arabia said Saturday it was lifting most COVID restrictions including social distancing in public spaces and quarantine for vaccinated arrivals, moves that could facilitate the arrival of Muslim pilgrims. The decision includes suspending “social distancing measures in all open and closed places” including mosques, the official Saudi Press Agency cited an interior ministry source as saying.

Masks will only be required in closed spaces, according to the decision, which came into effect on Saturday. The Saudi kingdom, which is home to Islam’s two holiest places in Makkah and Madinah, will no longer require vaccinated travelers to provide a negative PCR or rapid test before their arrival in the kingdom or to quarantine, SPA said.

The COVID-19 pandemic has hugely disrupted Muslim pilgrimages, which are usually key revenue earners for the kingdom, bringing in some $12 billion annually. Hosting the pilgrimages is a matter of prestige for Saudi rulers, for whom the custodianship of Islam’s holiest sites is their most powerful source of political legitimacy.

In 2021, the coronavirus outbreak forced Saudi authorities to dramatically downsize the hajj for a second year, and just 60,000 fully vaccinated citizens and residents of the kingdom took part. Since the start of the pandemic, Saudi Arabia has registered more than 746,000 coronavirus cases, 9,000 of them fatal, in a population of some 34 million.

 

 

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Students back to school for start of second semester

 

 

Students returned to public and Arabic private schools around Kuwait for the start of the second semester of the 2021/2022 academic year. The Ministry of Education has maintained the two-group system for students until further notice. Under the system, each class of over 20 students is split into two groups that alternate in going to school every other day. – Photos by Fouad Al-Shaikh

 

 

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Govt assures it has enough strategic food reserves

 

The National Assembly is scheduled to hold a special session today to debate the fallout of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on Kuwait and the Gulf. The government has given assurances that it has sufficient food stocks and warned it will punish those who raise prices artificially. Assembly Speaker Marzouq Al-Ghanem said he received two requests from the government and 10 MPs to hold the special session, adding that the government demanded that the debate be held behind closed doors.

The speaker said the government wants to discuss the current global situation and the implications of the military confrontation between Russia and Ukraine. He said he also received a motion signed by 10 lawmakers to hold a special session today to debate the implications of the Russia-Ukraine war and its impact on the Arabian Gulf and Kuwait.

The lawmakers said in their motion that they want to know the government’s position on a possible increase in food prices, a shortage in the state’s food strategic stockpiles and preparations for the possibility of nuclear pollution from nuclear plants. MP Abdullah Al-Turaiji, one of the signatories of the motion, said he believes there is no need to hold the session behind closed doors and the government should state its opinions publicly.

Meanwhile, Minister of Commerce and Industry Fahad Al-Shuraian said the government has prepared the necessary strategic plans to ensure the continuity of the flow of commodities and foodstuff to the domestic market and the stability of their prices amid global fears of disruptions of supplies as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The minister said in a statement that the state has huge strategic stocks of basic food and consumer goods spread across the country’s various governorates. He said supply chains to the Gulf and Kuwait have not been affected by the war. He said that the ministry’s emergency teams are monitoring the markets round the clock to ensure that prices are not artificially raised, adding that legal measures will be taken against violators.

 

 

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Man arrested over killing of Kuwaiti family

 

Police arrested the prime suspect in the killing of three members of a Kuwaiti family in Ardiya recently, the interior ministry announced. The suspect is an Indian who was arrested in Sulaibiya following investigations after he was identified using CCTV camera footage from nearby homes.

Police found KD 300 in cash plus gold the suspect is believed to have stolen from the house after allegedly stabbing to death the three victims – a couple and their daughter. The suspect was taken to the authorities where he faces premeditated murder charges, the interior ministry indicated in a statement.

According to media reports, the victims, an 80-year-old man, his 50-year-old wife and their 18-year-old daughter were discovered dead at their house, each with multiple stab wounds. Their Ethiopian maid, who worked at their home part-time, was initially apprehended by the authorities, but was later released.

Security officials had earlier ruled out theft after gold and other valuables were found intact at the property, but later discovered that gold and KD 300 in cash were missing. The crime was discovered by the woman’s brother, who discovered the bodies at their home, a security source told local media, and initial investigations revealed that the crime had occurred four days earlier.

 

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Kuwait International Rally to take place on March 17-19

 

 

Head of Kuwait International Motorsport Club, Chairman of the organizing committee of Kuwait International Rally 2022 Emad Bukhamseen said the rally will be held under the patronage of Public Works Minister, State Minister for Youth Affairs Ali Al-Mousa during the period of March 17-19. He thanked Minister Mousa for his patronage as this comes out of his support of such championships and caring for the youth as they make up a large part of the society.

Bukhamseen said the rally is the fifth round of the Middle East Championship and expressed confidence in the Kuwaiti youth to organize and host such events successfully. He said motorsport is highly popular among youth in Kuwait and the Gulf. “The state had a sense of that and built Kuwait City for Motorsports which is an outstanding structure with its racing tracks and buildings,” he said. He also appreciated the role of the Amiri Diwan which supervises its administration.
Emad Bukhamseen

The rally competitions are distributed over 10 speed rounds with a distance of 180.60 km while the total distance of the rally is 517.62 km. Kuwait Rally is on the agenda of the Middle East Championship since 1984 but the crises that went through and the two Gulf wars prevented it from happening between 1990-1994 and 1997-2007. Qatar’s Nasser Al-Atiya holds the largest number of wins as he made his seventh win in 2018, superseding UAE’s Mohammad bin Sulayem who has four wins.

 

 

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242,000 traveled in holidays

 

 

About 242,000 citizens and expatriates traveled during the national holidays; thereby, reviving the money exchange market in the country; considering the remarkable increase in remittances and currency exchange for spending abroad, reports Al-Anba daily. In separate statements to the daily, a number of money changers confirmed that the market is witnessing a great recovery; considering the high demand among citizens and expatriates who purchased different currencies.

The Turkish Lira still constitutes more than 50 percent of the total transactions in the exchange market, especially since Turkey continues to be on top of the most preferred destinations for travelers from Kuwait. Money changer Habibullah Nazat said the pace of work in the exchange market has been good. He confirmed that the Turkish Lira controls 50 percent of the total currencies being purchased and sold in the sector.

He explained that changes in the value of the Turkish Lira contribute to increasing the demand for it as a type of investment. Another money changer who introduced himself as Muslim disclosed the most in demand currencies now include the Turkish Lira, US Dollar, Euro, British Pound and Emirati Dirham. He revealed the Turkish Lira is witnessing the highest demand among market leaders. This year’s demand for Turkish Lira has been the highest so far as Turkey is the most preferred destination among travelers from Kuwait, while the exchange rate of the Lira makes the cost of the trip lower for citizens and expatriates, he added.

 

 

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Commercial visas on hold

 

 

At a time the Ministry of Interior is planning to issue all types of visit visas, particularly the families of expatriates, a security source revealed that verbal instructions were given to stop the issuance of commercial visit visas, especially for the citizens of an Arab country except if it is extremely necessary, reports Al-Anba daily. According to the source, several nationals of the abovementioned country were arrested for begging and the Interior Ministry discovered that they arrived in Kuwait before the holy month of Ramadan.

On the other hand, the source explained the procedures for ensuring that a visitor has been vaccinated against Coronavirus with the vaccines approved in Kuwait before the issuance of the visit visa. He said the Residency Affairs Department will issue the visit visas, while the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and airlines must check the vaccination certificates. Also, the ministry is expected to announce new measures soon in view of the continuous improvement of the health conditions; such as stopping the renewal of residencies for expatriates who are outside the country and remote work

 

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Hand over illegal guns

 

 

The Public Relations and Security Media Department of the Ministry of Interior stated that, based on the directives of the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Interior, Lieutenant-General Anwar Al-Barjas, to address the crimes of possessing weapons without a license, and to arrest anyone who violates Law No. 6 of 2015 regarding regulating the collection of weapons, ammunition and explosives, and as part of the efforts of the criminal security sector to impose the prestige of the law, the criminal security sector, represented by the General Department of Weapons Investigation, has issued statistics for the period Jan 1, 2022 to 28 Feb, 2022, reports Al-Rai daily.

The administration indicated that Article No. 4 of Law No. 6 of 2015 regulating the collection of weapons, ammunition and explosives stipulates that “anyone who possesses unlicensed or prohibited weapons, ammunition or explosives shall be punished by imprisonment for a period not exceeding five years, and a fine not exceeding ten thousand dinars or any one of these penalties after the expiry of the period prescribed in Article 6 and Article No. 5 of the same law which stipulates that “Whoever trades in firearms shall be punished with imprisonment for a period not exceeding ten years and a fine of not more than fifty thousand dinars including unlicensed ammunition, explosives, or components for their manufacture, smuggling or storage, or contracting with terrorist organizations or cells to sell or purchase from them. The department emphasized the continuation of security efforts to seize unlicensed weapons and ammunition, and called on citizens to cooperate with the efforts of security men in this regard, by calling the emergency No 112 or 1888830 of the Weapons Investigations Operations to report any violation.

 

 

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Indian Govt proposes 10% tree cover at construction sites

 

 

The Centre has issued a draft rule that at least one tree for every 80 square meter of land needs to be planted within construction sites for both residential and commercial buildings, ensuring 10 per cent green cover for every plot.

The draft notification of the Building Construction Environment Management Regulations, 2022, was issued on February 28 by the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change, which has invited suggestions and objections over the next two months before the final rules are issued.

The new rules will be applicable for buildings having a built-up area of or greater than 5000 square metres, and this covers expansion, renovation or repair of existing buildings also.

The notification says that for buildings, roads, paved areas, and external services, topsoil should be stripped only up to a maximum depth of 20 cm. The soil should be stockpiled in designated areas and reapplied during the plantation of the proposed vegetation on the sites.

Certain other regulations without abiding by which projects will not get completion or occupancy certificates are also part of the notification. If a common sewage plant is not available, on-site plants with 100 per cent waste water treatment capacities will need to be installed. Rainwater harvesting or ground water recharge systems will also be mandatory.

No construction will be allowed on wetland and waterbodies, and no groundwater should be used for building construction without the Central Ground Water Authority’s approval.

Projects will need to put in place dual plumbing systems—one for supplying fresh water for drinking, cooking and bathing, and another for supplying treated water for toilets, landscapes, fire-fighting etc. Projects above 20,000 square meters will require on-site solid waste management facilities with arrangements with authorized recyclers or municipal agencies for disposing non-biodegradable waste.

The ministry constituted an expert committee in January 2021 to examine state by-laws and other existing rules and to recommend new regulations for building construction and township projects. The new rules are based on its recommendations.

“Standardized, outcome-based and quantifiable environmental regulations”, according to the draft notification, are necessary for effective environment protection and management and “to bring in transparency in approach and encourage ease of doing business”.

 

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Kuwait Has The Best Drinking Water Quality In The World

 

 

Water resources and their value are an invaluable wealth, according to Assistant Undersecretary for Water Projects Sector Hammoud Al-Roudhan, and Kuwait, represented by the Ministry of Electricity, Water and Renewable Energy, is eager to participate in Arab Water Day, which takes place on March 3 every year.

"We take this occasion to remind our Arab peoples and those concerned with water affairs in the Arab world of the importance and worth of water resources and that they are the source of life," Al-Roudhan said in a press statement.

"Our Arab countries suffer from a water shortage, and are ranked last in terms of the availability of freshwater resources," he continued, "and the per capita share of water is the lowest internationally compared to other regions of the world, putting us in front of major challenges compared to the rest of the world's population, and the reasons for these are multiple and overlapping, some of which have natural, environmental, and climatic dimensions, such as the aridity of the Sahara Desert."

He noted that the gap is widening year after year and that Arab countries have made significant efforts to address the issue, establishing priorities in the distribution of water resources and rationalization of their use, as well as the localization of techniques used in the field of water resource preservation, and achieving the stated goal.

"Making sure the provision of water and sanitation services for all, and their sustainable management,” are according to the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.

Kuwait has placed a high value on the issue of water, and it is shown in the fact that many of the Ministry's strategies and action plans incorporate water-related operations.

Kuwait has cooperated with all Arab and international institutions, he continued, in addition to its participation in Arab, regional, and international meetings on water and the environment, and its contribution to enriching and exchanging scientific knowledge and experience, working to improve human relations to deal with these vital issues, raising awareness of their importance, and contributing to the dissemination of successful experiences and their dissemination to benefit from them.

According to World Health Organization and UNICEF studies, Kuwait has been able to ensure its water needs for more than 70 years by purifying seawater in a variety of ways, making it one of the top countries in the world for the quality of drinking water it has generated.

He emphasized the significance of properly consuming water and conserving it without wasting it, as well as making the best use of water resources and protecting them from contamination, as well as changing individual behavior when it comes to water use and conservation.

 

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Kuwaiti team won gold, silver in full-contact Karate tournament

 

 

Kuwait's Kyokushin-Kan karate team won late Friday gold and silver medals at an international full-contact Karate tournament held in Antalya, Turkey, on March 3-6.
Kuwait's Hamza Al-Bahbahani and Dhari Al-Shimiri came in first and second respectively in the 85 and 75 kg kumite competitions held at the second Ashihara World Championship.


Speaking to KUNA, head of delegation Sensei Hassan Al-Kandari said the tournament saw the participation of 141 Karatekas representing 17 countries, including Kuwait.


The Kuwaiti fighters had to go through tough competition before earning their places at the winners' podium, affirmed Al-Kandari, adding that the adequate preparation prior to the competitions enabled the team to achieve its goal.


On future tournaments, Al-Kandari revealed that the Kuwait Kyoukshin-Kan team was now preparing for Saida Fighting Championship (SFC) in Lebanon later this month.


Both the Kyokushin and Ashihara styles belong to the full-contact and bareknuckle school of Karate where fighters must win by knockout, point advantage or judges' decision. 

 

 

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Environmental week in Kuwait from March 6 to 12

 

The Environment Public Authority (EPA) announced on Friday the organization of environmental week in Kuwait from March 6 to 12 of each year to educate people about protection of the environment and natural resources in the country.

In a press statement, EPA Chairman and Director General Sheikh Abdullah Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah said that the environment week would feature a variety of activities including workshops, planting and awareness-raising events, etc.
Sheikh Abdullah expressed his hope the participation of all segments of the society in the environment week activities to raise level of people's awareness about the environment.

He added that next Sunday, the activities of the Environment Week would be launched with a visit to Al-Jahra Natural Reserve to plant several diverse seedlings in celebration of this occasion.
He pointed out that the week would be themed "protecting it begins with you".

 

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Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem Cultural Center, a civilized beacon in Kuwait

Abdullah Al-Salem Cultural Center (ASCC)

IFL  Indians in Kuwait

 

Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem Cultural Center (ASCC) has attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors since its establishment, solidifying the cultural movement in Kuwait and becoming one of the country’s scientific and cultural monuments.

ASCC, which opened in February 2018, has attracted over 580,000 visitors as of March 2020, affirming its high status on the cultural arena as one of Kuwait’s latest intellectual-educational beacon. The center has organized 88 activities, which ranged from exhibitions, lectures and workshops to festivals, camps and plays, touching on interests of different segments of the society.

Around 500 international organizations visited ASCC, which was also keen on establishing partnerships with embassies and similar international agencies. ASCC held cultural and scientific workshops about rocks, recycling, plants and energy sources among others, a camp for children during Ramadan, summer camps, space academy, Eid festivals and events in the Planetarium. ASCC participated in two events abroad, the first was in Venice, Italy, in 2019, and the second was last October in Berlin, Germany.

The center won the prestigious ABB LEAF award as the Public Building of the year 2018, as well as four international awards. ASCC, named after late Amir Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem Al-Sabah, is situated on the seaside Arabian Gulf Road and was built in the same place where Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem High School, one of Kuwait first government schools.

ASCC, occupying 127,000 square meters with a parking lot for 1,231 cars, consists of eight buildings, six museums, one conference hall and documents’ facility. The center, which has 25 water fountains, comprises 22 display halls with over 1,100 pieces of relics and unique items. The center, built in 20 months, consists of many facilities like theaters, green areas, gift shops, restaurants, coffee shops and outdoor sitting areas. Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem Theater hosts local and international events, in addition to specialized conferences and exhibitions. It is designed to trigger inspiration for exhibitors, artists and students. The six family-friendly exhibitions depict historic, cultural, intellectual, scientific and technological worlds.

One exhibition enlightens visitors about the natural world for better comprehension of ecosystems and how they influence development of biodiversity of in the planet over millions of years. The exhibition enables visitors to explore Southeast Asia’s rainforests and see how mangroves help the ecology. Visitors can dive into an underwater wonderland and witness the wildlife, particularly in Kuwait. The visitors can also test their skills in the exhibition’s interactive displays and learn about how humans can keep the coastal community alive and help sustain the planet. In the “Our Earth” museum, the visitors are welcomed into the world of the dinosaurs.

They see the amazing reptiles and mammals that lived on earth up to 65 million years ago and also be bedazzled at the size of the huge creatures that inhabited Kuwait’s prehistoric seas, how did they sound? What did they eat? The exhibition allows visitors to become paleontologists for the day in the Dino Lab and try to unearth their own dinosaur. Visitors will see the world of geology and geography come alive as they delve below the earth’s crust to its fiery core. How does Kuwait’s industry and climate affect the world and how can we affect changes in the environment, at home and in the community to ensure a cleaner, greener planet.

The Transportation and Robots museum display how through centuries transportation has taken people from elementary hot air balloons to jet engines, horse-drawn carriages to cars and small boats to oil tankers. Learn about Kuwait’s maritime heritage and its long history of boat building. Also in the exhibition, visitors could meet the resident Giant Robot and discover the latest ways robotic technology is assisting humans. Visitors are welcomed to the demonstration area to learn about Artificial Intelligence (AI) and interact with robots, or learn about basic scientific processes in the Experiment Gallery.

Innovators will enjoy the Maker Space where creative ideas and scientific innovation is encouraged. Visitors can get acquainted at the Human Body and Mind Museum with how human body and mind work, their secrets and will realize how the brain act as super-computers with encapsulating exhibits explain how the brain and body work in tandem. The importance of health becomes clear when visitors learn how human bodies are tested when under attack. Through a 4D show, the interactive character Kashef enlightens audiences to the marvels of the body’s indefatigable defense mechanisms.

 

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IFL  - Kuwait 2024