UAE runner Mohammed Al Musabbi wins gold in 1000m youth race at Monaco Diamond League Emerging Poets Face Off in Showdown Geoarchaeology: Harnessing the Heritage Bots Challenge Young Poets: A Literary Showdown Walking Alone – Poetry from China Sandstorms affect 330 million people globally: WMO Swiss authority approves first drug to treat infants sick with malaria My Venice – Poetry from Italy
Business Middle East - Mebusiness

International

Sierra Leone confirms first Mpox case

Sierra Leone has recorded its first case of Mpox since the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared it a public health emergency of international concern in August last year, the country's health authorities announced late Friday. According to a statement by Sierra Leone's National Public Health Agency (NPHA), the infected

Novel: The Interpreter – Chapter-7

‘The Interpreter’ is the English version of Arabic novel ‘Al Tarjuman’, authored by Ashraf Aboul Yazid, an eminent writer and poet of Egypt “You built your glory on facts, and I will destroy it with rumors.” Ashraf Aboul-Yazid This is the curse of “Mustafa Sanad,” O Translator. The

Unreal – Mystic Poetry from India

What stays with man finally, is his essential being The unreal sheds off, like this body, upon our death. Dr. Jernail Singh Anand, a renowned poet and writer from Chandigarh, India, shares his mystic poetry Dr. Jernail Singh Anand, based in Chandigarh, is an Indian poet and scholar credited with 170 plus books of English

Novel: The Interpreter – Chapter-5

‘The Interpreter’ is the English version of Arabic novel ‘Al Tarjuman’, authored by Ashraf Aboul Yazid, an eminent writer and poet of Egypt “In the cold, we will taste the bitterness of exile for the first time. And in exile, we will taste the cold for the first time.” Here you are, alive before me

Novel: The Interpreter – Chapter-2

‘The Interpreter’ is the English version of Arabic novel ‘Al Tarjuman’, authored by Ashraf Aboul Yazid, an eminent writer and poet of Egypt “In exile, beginnings are difficult, but endings are like earthquakes—unpredictable to their victims.” I felt a sense of awe that transcended the threshold of