Plans for a new airport in Riyadh capable of accommodating 120 million passengers a year were also announced
Al Murooshid had laid the foundation stone of the state-of-the-art health centre in April 2011. Construction has been completed and the centre will be operational this year. The centre is located on a 65,000sq-ft plot in Al Barsha 2, and will serve approximately 60,000 people in the vicinity.
Al Murooshid said the initiative to add new health centres and strengthen primary health care is as per the instructions of His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, and the directions of Shaikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Deputy Ruler of Dubai, UAE Minister of Finance and President of the DHA. Al Murooshid said: “We recognise that primary healthcare is the first line of care for the members of our community and therefore it is our strategy to focus on further strengthening them. In 2011, we inaugurated two new centres — the Nadd Al Hamar and Al Mizhar health centres — and this year the Al Barsha centre will be operational for the people living in the vicinity. It is our aim to add at least one new primary healthcare centre each year.”
Plans for a new airport in Riyadh capable of accommodating 120 million passengers a year were also announced
The Dubai International recorded its highest annual traffic in 2018 with 89.1 million passengers
A drunk 17-year-old driving a Porsche, collided with a motorcycle, instantly killing two individuals, including a young woman
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the international court's move 'could jeopardise' efforts for a ceasefire in Gaza
Parking illegally and ignoring a smoking ban, visitors would cram a pavement to shoot the snow-capped mountain
Photos shared on social media worldwide purporting to show the wreckage of the stricken chopper, in fact show a different crash years ago
Residents can also expect a slight increase in temperature today
Some residents believe that landlords are exorbitantly charging rents for their properties and becoming 'greedy'