DUBAI: Dubai authorities have begun telling owners of high-rise buildings across the emirate to make the facades more resistant to fire, the government said on Saturday, after a string of skyscraper blazes.
The government did not specify how it would ensure that owners complied with the policy, which could be costly, or reveal how many buildings might be affected in the fast-growing city, home to hundreds of high-rise towers, including the world’s tallest skyscraper.
But it said it had already implemented the policy with a number of companies, including Dubai Properties Group, which is the investment vehicle of the emirate’s ruler and operates skyscrapers in Dubai’s business district.
The government’s Real Estate Regulatory Agency “is now strongly encouraging all owners to replace non-fire-resistant building facades in collaboration with the city’s real estate developers,” an official statement said.
Eyewitness reports and investigations have suggested that cladding fixed to the outside of buildings for decoration, insulation or protection may have contributed to the spread of many fires in Dubai over the last three years.
GRENFELL
Global concern about cladding grew after London’s Grenfell Tower fire in June, which killed about 80 people. A public inquiry into the blaze is underway following initial reports that it spread throughout the residential tower because of flammable cladding used as insulation.
The United Arab Emirates, of which Dubai is a member, revised its building safety code in 2013 to require that cladding on all new buildings over 15 meters (50 feet) tall be fire-resistant.
But the new rules did not apply to buildings erected before that year, so the vast majority of the country’s skyscrapers fell outside the regulations.
Among Dubai’s skyscraper fires, a blaze hit the 337-meter, 79-story Torch residential building last month, forcing hundreds of occupants to flee. It was the second fire at the building since 2015.
In August 2016, a fire damaged part of a tall building under construction in Dubai and in July 2016, a blaze broke out in Dubai’s residential, 75-story Sulafa Tower. On the last day of 2015, a fire engulfed a 63-story Dubai luxury hotel, forcing its closure for over a year.
Dubai says skyscraper facades being replaced after series of fires
Dubai says skyscraper facades being replaced after series of fires
Sudan hospital welcomes first patients after war forced it shut
- The Bahri Teaching Hospital, which, before the conflict, treated around 800 patients a day in its emergency department, was repeatedly attacked and looted
KHARTOUM: At a freshly renovated hospital in Khartoum, the medical team is beaming: Nearly three years after it was wrecked and looted in the early days of Sudan’s war, the facility has welcomed its first patients.
The Bahri Teaching Hospital in the capital’s north was stormed by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in April 2023, soon after fighting broke out between the RSF and Sudan’s army.
Bahri remained a war zone until an army counteroffensive pushed through Khartoum last year, recapturing the area from the RSF in March.
FASTFACT
Around 40 of Khartoum’s 120 hospitals, shut during the war, have resumed operations, according to the Sudan Doctors’ Network, a local medical group.
“We never thought the hospital would reopen,” said Dr. Ali Mohammed Ali, delighted to be back in his old surgical ward.
“It was completely destroyed; there was nothing left,” he said. “We had to start from scratch.”
Ali fled north from Khartoum in the early days of the war, working in a makeshift medical camp with “no gloves, no instruments, and no disinfectant.”
According to the World Health Organization, the conflict has forced the shutdown of more than two-thirds of Sudan’s health facilities and caused a world record number of deaths from attacks on health care infrastructure.
Tens of thousands of people have been killed across Sudan since the war began, while 11 million have been left displaced, triggering the world’s largest hunger crisis.
But with the RSF now driven out of Khartoum, Sudan’s government is gradually returning, and the devastated city is starting to rebuild.
Around 40 of Khartoum’s 120 hospitals, shut during the war, have resumed operations, according to the Sudan Doctors’ Network, a local medical group.
The Bahri Teaching Hospital, which, before the conflict, treated around 800 patients a day in its emergency department, was repeatedly attacked and looted.
“All the equipment was stolen,” said director Galal Mostafa, adding that about 70 percent of its buildings were damaged and the power system was destroyed.
“We were fortunate to receive two transformers just days ago,” said Salah Al-Hajj, the hospital’s chief executive.
During the first five days of fighting, Al-Hajj — an affable man with a sharp grey moustache — was trapped inside one wing of the hospital.
“We couldn’t leave because of the heavy gunfire,” he said, saying that anyone “who stepped outside risked being detained and beaten” by the RSF.
Patients were rushed to
safety in dangerous transfers to hospitals away from the fighting across the Nile.
“Vehicles had to take very complicated routes to evacuate patients safely, avoiding shells and bullets,” Al-Hajj said. On April 15, 2023, as the first shots rang out in the capital, RSF fighters seized Ali on his way into surgery.
They held him for two weeks at Soba, an RSF-run detention center in southern Khartoum whose former inmates have shared testimony of torture and inhumane conditions.
“When I was released, the country was in ruins,” he said.
Hospitals were “destroyed, streets devastated, and homes looted. There was nothing left.”
Almost three years on, taxis now drop patients at the hospital’s entrance, while new ambulances sit parked in a courtyard that until recently was strewn with rubble and overgrown weeds.
Inside, refurbished corridors smell of fresh paint.
The renovations and new equipment were funded by the Sudanese American Physicians Association and Islamic Relief USA at a cost of more than $2 million, according to the association.
Services have resumed in newly fitted emergency, surgical, obstetrics, and gynaecology rooms.
Doctors, nurses, and administrators hustle through the halls, the administrators fretting over covering salaries and running costs.
“Now it’s much better than before the war,” said Hassan Alsahir, a 25-year-old intern in the emergency department.
“It wasn’t this clean before, and we were short on beds — sometimes patients had to sleep on the floor.”
On its first day reopened, the hospital received a patient from the Kordofan region — the war’s current major battleground — for urgent surgery.
“The operation went well,” said Ali.









