Chinese firm tests electric flying taxi in Dubai

A XPeng X2, an electric flying taxi developed by the Guangzhou-based XPeng, Inc's aviation affiliate, is tested in front of the Marina District in Dubai, UAE, Oct. 10, 2022. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)
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Updated 12 October 2022
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Chinese firm tests electric flying taxi in Dubai

DUBAI: A Chinese firm tested out an electric flying taxi in Dubai on Monday, offering a glimpse of futuristic technology that could one day whisk people through cities high above any traffic, according to Associated Press.

The XPeng X2, developed by the Guangzhou-based XPeng Inc’s aviation affiliate, is one of dozens of flying car projects around the world.

Only a handful have been successfully tested with passengers on board, and it will likely be many years before any are put into service.

Monday’s demonstration was held with an empty cockpit, but the company says it carried out a manned flight test in July 2021.

The sleekly designed vehicle can carry two passengers and is powered by a set of eight propellers. The company says it has a top speed of 130 kilometers (80 miles) per hour.

Unlike airplanes and helicopters, eVTOL, or “electric vertical takeoff and landing,” vehicles offer quick point-to-point personal travel, at least in principle.

The pilot-less vehicles could one day ferry passengers across town high above congested roadways. But the sector still faces major challenges, including battery life, air traffic control and safety, and infrastructure issues.

 


12 Palestinians killed in Israeli attack on school shelter, Gaza Civil Defence says

Updated 9 min 20 sec ago
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12 Palestinians killed in Israeli attack on school shelter, Gaza Civil Defence says

At least 12 Palestinians were killed on Saturday in an Israeli attack on a school housing displaced people west of Gaza's Deir al-Balah, Gaza's Civil Defence service said.


Sevilla beat Al-Ittihad 1-0 to take Antonio Puerta Trophy

Updated 16 min 23 sec ago
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Sevilla beat Al-Ittihad 1-0 to take Antonio Puerta Trophy

  • La Liga club host annual match in honor of former player who died aged 22 in 2007
  • Match is latest pre-season friendly for both clubs ahead of the start of their domestic leagues in August

DUBAI: La Liga club Sevilla FC defeated Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ittihad 1-0 to claim the Antonio Puerta Trophy at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan Stadium in Seville on Friday night.

Lucas Ocampos  scored the only goal of the game from the penalty spot after 42 minutes.

The annual friendly has been hosted by the Andalusian club since 2008 in honor of former player Antonio Puerta who died from heart disease in 2007 at the age of 22.

This was the 13th hosting of the match, which was not contested in 2015, 2018, 2020 or 2021. Sevilla now have won won the trophy 11 times.  

The match was also the latest outing for both clubs ahead of start of their respective domestic campaigns.

Al-Ittihad will play two more friendlies against Real Betis (Aug. 3) and Inter Milan (Aug. 7) before kicking off their Saudi Pro League season with a match against Al-Kholood on Aug. 24.

Sevilla will launch their La Liga campaign on Aug. 16 at Las Palmas.


Yusra Mardini champions Refugee Olympic Team in Paris

Updated 20 min 53 sec ago
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Yusra Mardini champions Refugee Olympic Team in Paris

DUBAI: Syrian Olympic swimmer Yusra Mardini will champion the Refugee Olympic Team at the Olympic Games in Paris this week.

She took to Instagram to post a message encouraging support for the team.

In a video shared with her 804,000 followers, Mardini said: “I am here to introduce you to a very special team that have fought harder and traveled further to be here tonight. They are the Refugee Olympic Team.

“Please support them with all your hearts, and when you see them, show your support by sharing your heart with them.”

The Olympian also gave fans a behind-the-scenes glimpse of her career highlights. One snap shows her posing next to a sign reading “Brazil,” with the caption: “Where it all started eight years ago,” a nod to her participation in the 2016 Rio Olympics.

On Wednesday, Mardini carried the Olympic flame while representing the Refugee Olympic Team.

The Olympic torch tradition dates back to the 1936 Berlin Olympics when Carl Diem, secretary-general of the Olympic organizing committee, proposed the idea of a relay carrying the symbol from the founding site of the ancient Olympics to the Games.

Yusra and her sister Sarah’s journey from Syrian war refugees to Olympic athletes has been chronicled in the BAFTA-nominated film “The Swimmers.”

The sisters fled their war-torn home in 2015, making a perilous journey to Europe that included swimming for three hours to push a sinking boat to safety. Settling in Germany, Yusra resumed her training and joined the Refugee Olympic Team, competing in the 2016 Rio Olympics and 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

She is also a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador, and focuses on her Yusra Mardini Foundation, which facilitates education and sports opportunities for refugees.


’God save Dua Lipa’: festival puts Kosovo on music map

Updated 43 min 55 sec ago
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’God save Dua Lipa’: festival puts Kosovo on music map

PRISTINA: Amid a sea of denim shorts, selfies, sequins and thumping bass lines, the setting could easily be mistaken for Coachella or Glastonbury.
But the Sunny Hill festival in Pristina is helping turn Kosovo into a go-to destination during Europe’s summer festival season, thanks in large part to its founder: Dua Lipa.
For years, Kosovo was associated with its bloody war against Serbia that pitted ethnic Albania insurgents against Serb forces in the late 1990s, leaving thousands dead and triggering a refugee crisis.
But the arrival of Lipa on the international pop scene has helped showcase Kosovo’s other side — young, talented and full of ambition.
With more than 87 million followers on Instagram and more than 25 million albums sold, the British-born singer of Kosovo descent is one of the biggest pop stars in the world.
Alongside an endless tour schedule, film roles and hosting a popular podcast, Lipa remains one of the most vocal promoters of all things Kosovo.
Launched in 2018 with her father, the Sunny Hill festival she created has brought some of the biggest names to perform in this tiny corner of the Balkan.
Late Thursday afternoon, as the first notes echoed from the main stage, a young crowd passed through the festival entrance, ever grateful to Lipa for bringing another star-studded line up to the capital Pristina.
“I’m very happy that she’s promoting our country with these big, big artists and bringing them to our country,” said Rita Ramadani, 19.
For its fifth edition, Sunny Hill boasts a roster of performers that rivals more established festivals.
Headliners this year include British rap sensation Stormzy and the king of afrobeat, Burna Boy.
Bebe Rexha — who is also of ethnic Albanian origin — electrified the crowd as she sang her global hit “Me, Myself and I,” while speaking Albanian with the audience in between songs.
Albania and Kosovo flags dotted the stages and were scattered across the audience during performances, where festival goers regularly hold two crossed hands in the sign of the Albanian eagle aloft.
This is a festival in Kosovo, afterall.
“We are all very happy that this is happening right now and people from all the world got to hear about Kosovo, and about Sunny Hill. Thanks to Dua Lipa,” said festival attendee Nita Krasniqii.
And while the festival attracts thousands of locals, music lovers from abroad are also making their way to Pristina.
“We’re here because it’s amazing music,” said Michael Maguire, who traveled to the festival from Brussels with friends.
“Kosovo’s an amazing country, full of young people, and very vibrant.”
But hosting a concert in Kosovo has not always been easy.
“In the first years it was more difficult to invite artists as their managers would look online for information about Kosovo and see it might be risky,” Lipa’s father and festival co-founder Dukagjin Lipa told local media.
“Now we don’t have that problem because we have built a name!“
According to organizers, around 45 percent of the festival’s tickets this year were sold abroad.
Priced at 200 euros a ticket — which is nearly half the average monthly salary in Kosovo — few local youngsters are able to afford entry to the four-day festival.
To help control costs, Pristina’s municipal government provided the land, security, transportation and garbage collection for free.
“It is miraculous that it happens in Pristina,” mayor Perparim Rama told AFP.
“It provides us with the fantastic opportunity to showcase our people, our culture, our heritage.”
And even though Lipa is not officially scheduled to perform this year as she manages the festival from the sidelines and watches performances from the VIP section, the spotlight remains fixated on her.
“In the United States, we say God save America,” rapper Mozzik shouted to the audience during his set.
“I say ‘God Save Dua Lipa’.”


After court intervention, police lodge case in ‘kidnapping’ of prominent Karachi businessman

Updated 26 sec ago
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After court intervention, police lodge case in ‘kidnapping’ of prominent Karachi businessman

  • Zulfiqar Ahmed, owner of Paracha Textile Mills and Mezan Group, was abducted from Karachi’s Mauripur area
  • Official says high-powered police teams formed to investigate the matter, hoping that it will be resolved soon

KARACHI: Police have registered a case into the “kidnapping” of a prominent Pakistani businessman in Karachi on the intervention of a high court, his lawyer said on Saturday, three days after the incident.
Zulfiqar Ahmed, managing director of Paracha Textile Mills and Mezan Group, was kidnapped from Mauripur Road on July 23 after he left his office in Sher Shah area, according to the police report. A white Toyota Surf vehicle intercepted their car and eight armed men forced Ahmed and his friend, Qaiser, into it before dropping Ahmed’s friend off a short distance away.
Ahmed’s friend informed about the kidnapping his family and the company, which submitted an application in the Kalri police station on the same day. When the police refused to register a complaint, the family requested the Sindh High Court (SHC) to intervene in the matter. Mian Ali Ashfaq, the counsel representing Ahmed and his family, said police registered a case after the court orders.
“The news [of Ahmed’s abduction] somehow gained traction on social media,” Ashfaq told Arab News on Saturday. “After social media spotlight about court order and my protest, my team of office associates went to the police station, where, after four hours, the FIR [First Information Report] was finally registered and a copy was provided to us by Friday afternoon.”
Pakistanis widely shared news about Ahmed’s abduction across social media platforms, calling on authorities to take steps for the release of the businessman, who is also widely regarded for his charity work.
Asad Raza, deputy inspector-general (DIG) of Karachi’s South district where the incident occurred, dismissed the allegations of police inaction in the case and said they had been working on it since it was first reported to them.
“It is insubstantial whether the FIR is registered instantly or after one day’s delay as long as we were working on the case when the abduction took place,” he told Arab News.
Ashfaq, counsel of the Ahmed family, said the SHC had issued notices to respondents and fixed the matter for a hearing on Tuesday. “We hope that Zulfiqar Ahmed will be recovered and reunited with the family before the next hearing,” he added.
On Friday, Karachi Police Chief Javed Alam Odho said two high-powered teams were investigating the case.
“A high-powered team, under the supervision of the DIG of the CIA [Crime Investigation Agency of police] and another under the DIG of the area, are working on it,” Odho told Arab News. “I am confident this case will be resolved soon.”