VIDEO: Articulated truck in UAE near miss at red light

Lorry skids off the road in Sharjah, UAE (Sharjah Police, Twitter)
Updated 18 September 2017
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VIDEO: Articulated truck in UAE near miss at red light

DUBAI: The UAE continues in its efforts to crackdown on dangerous drivers. In the northern Emirate of Sharjah the police have tweeted a short piece of CCTV footage which shows how a lorry driver’s efforts to beat a red light ended in near disaster.
In the footage of the traffic junction the lights change from green to amber, and then suddenly the truck appears. As the light turns to red the driver breaks suddenly, causing the truck to veer off the road and around the traffic light, finally coming to a standstill in the middle of the junction.
The tweeted video footage then shows a warning from Sharjah Police which reads in English: “Dear drivers, a yellow light doesn’t necessarily mean Hurry!”
In neighboring Dubai 19,270 penalties were issued to drivers jumping red traffic signals in the first seven months of 2017, according to data published in national daily Gulf News.
Surprisingly that was an improvement on the same period the previous year, when 29,328 tickets were issued for the same offense.
Motorists in light vehicles face a 1,000 dirham fine ($272) and 12 black points for jumping a red traffic light. They also have their vehicle impounded for 30 days.
But truck drivers face a bigger 3,000 dirhams fine ($816) and the offending drivers’ have their license suspended for a year.


Britain’s Harris Dickinson on John Lennon, directing and news overload

Updated 11 February 2026
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Britain’s Harris Dickinson on John Lennon, directing and news overload

  • He’s acted as Nicole Kidman’s love interest, delivered an acclaimed directorial debut, and been cast in Sam Mendes’ upcoming “The Beatles” films

PARIS: He’s acted as Nicole Kidman’s love interest, delivered an acclaimed directorial debut, and been cast in Sam Mendes’ upcoming “The Beatles” films, but Britain’s Harris Dickinson insists he’s keeping his feet on the ground.
The modest Londoner, who turns 30 later this year, has had a whirlwind year that has seen his stock rise further as an actor who can straddle both art house cinema and more commercial TV and film work.
But the “Babygirl” star and upcoming on-screen John Lennon insists he won’t be swapping Hollywood for his beloved home in the British capital — now or ever.
“It feels like I’m grounded by London, east London specifically. It feels like a very important place,” he told AFP in an interview.
“I have my people. I have my family. I have my own little community there,” he added.
The city is the backdrop to “Urchin,” his first film as a director which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last May and which includes a cameo from his mum.
’Stay on track’
The premiere in Cannes, where he starred in 2022 prize-winner “Triangle of Sadness” by Ruben Ostlund, was so stressful Dickinson felt sick before the screening.
But his film, about a homeless man struggling after his release from prison, won over critics with the strength of the acting and directing, as well as its wry humor.
Dickinson sees it as containing an important message about community: the importance of it, as well as the dangers for drug users of “exhausting (their) support networks.”
“It’s very common, even for people with good family setups, or friends and family, they get to a point where no one wants to help them anymore,” he said.
Keeping destructive behavior at bay is a battle he relates to, having seen the ravages of alcohol in his family — but also as a member of the notoriously addiction-prone entertainment industry.
“Ultimately no one’s safety or path is guaranteed. You have to do a certain amount of work in order to stay on track, especially if you’ve got addictive tendencies or destructive tendencies,” he explained.
’Get obsessed’
Dickinson is currently in the middle of an exhausting filming schedule for four biographical films about “The Beatles” from “American Beauty” and James Bond director Mendes.
Each one is shot from the perspective of one of the Fab Four, with Dickinson landing what is arguably the plum role as Lennon.
Paul Mescal (“Hamnet,” “Gladiator II“) plays Paul McCartney.
“I’m getting up at 4:45 am every day, and I’m getting home at 8:00 pm,” Dickinson explained.
Working with Mendes has made a big impression — “he’s a big canvas director” — but one of the hardest things is pulling himself out of the daily news doom cycle and his research into the 1960s.
“I do go through periods where I tune out from news a little bit because I can get obsessed with it. I go deep, and I get very troubled by it,” Dickinson explained.
“I don’t think our brains and our systems are designed to be that tuned into injustice and tragedy and darkness.”
The troubled post-war era “doesn’t feel any different to what we’re going through today, that’s the alarming thing really,” he added.
“The Beatles” is a long-term job that will keep him busy until December.
After that?
“I’m quite interested in anything apocalyptic, anything dystopian, or a survival film,” he explained.
“I’m interested in the idea of what happens when society falls, what happens when we are left with nothing or we’re stripped of everything.”