Abu Dhabi prepares for students’ return to campus for second term

The return to campus covers all levels, the education authority said. (File/AFP)
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Updated 23 December 2020
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Abu Dhabi prepares for students’ return to campus for second term

  • Students and staff of private schools who wish to physically attend classes must have a negative COVID-19 test result

DUBAI: The Abu Dhabi Department of Education has released a new set of guidelines when schools reopen on January 3, including limiting classroom capacity to just 15 students.

“The maximum number of students per class is 15 with social distancing at 1.5 meters and mandatory masks for Grade 1 and above... The maximum of 15 only applies to areas where the students are socially distancing and wearing masks,” local daily Khaleej Times has reported, quoting the education department.

The return to campus covers all levels, the education authority said, but schools will be subject to strict precautionary measures to avoid an outbreak.

Schools in Abu Dhabi had started receiving students in campus on Aug. 30 in phases.

Students and staff of private schools who wish to physically attend classes must have a negative COVID-19 test result, which could be obtained for free until December 31 at drive-through centers across the city.

Abu Dhabi has earlier announced a city-wide vaccination drive using the Chinese COVID-19 vaccine by Sinopharm.

The Gulf nation is one of the first countries to start widespread inoculation, after Britain became the first to roll out a campaign using a vaccine by US pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech.


Israeli military says unintentionally struck UN agency truck in Gaza

Updated 07 March 2026
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Israeli military says unintentionally struck UN agency truck in Gaza

  • “Our teams are taking extraordinary risks every day to keep humanitarian operations and life-sustaining services running,” UNOPS Executive Director Jorge Moreira da Silva said in ⁠a statement, calling for an investigation ‌into the incident

TEL AVIV: Israel’s ‌military said on Friday that a “firing component” launched by its navy unintentionally struck a fuel truck belonging ​to a United Nations agency in Gaza the previous day, an incident that prompted the agency to publicly call for a full investigation.
The United Nations Office for Project Services, which oversees fuel distribution in Gaza, said that the empty fuel truck ‌was struck ‌on Thursday around 5 ​a.m. ‌from ⁠the ​direction of the ⁠sea, causing damage to the vehicle. There were no injuries.
“Our teams are taking extraordinary risks every day to keep humanitarian operations and life-sustaining services running,” UNOPS Executive Director Jorge Moreira da Silva said in ⁠a statement, calling for an investigation ‌into the incident.
“They ‌should not have to do ​that under fire,” ‌he said.
In response to Reuters questions, ‌the Israeli military said that the incident occurred during defensive naval activity, and that a firing component deviated from its intended trajectory.
The fuel truck ‌sustained “minor damage,” the military said in a statement. The military did not ⁠say ⁠what type of munitions had been fired, or what had been the navy’s intended target.
“The incident was reviewed, and lessons were learned accordingly,” it said, without providing further details.
The fuel truck had been on its way to the Kerem Shalom crossing when it was struck, and the truck’s movements had been coordinated with Israeli ​authorities in advance, ​UNOPS said.