UAE to open 6,000 rest stations for delivery drivers taking summer midday breaks

The initiative is a continuation of last year’s pioneering project wherein 365 rest stations were provided for delivery workers during their midday break. (WAM)
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Updated 08 June 2024
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UAE to open 6,000 rest stations for delivery drivers taking summer midday breaks

DUBAI: Delivery riders in the UAE will have more comfortable midday breaks during the hot summer months with 6,000 rest stations to be opened across the Emirates, in partnership with various government entities and private-sector companies.

An interactive map of these stations will help delivery drivers to easily locate and access them during the nationwide midday outdoor work ban, which starts from June 15 and runs until Sept. 15. During that period, any task or work performed under direct sunlight or open-air areas is not allowed from 12:30 p.m. until 3 p.m. to protect workers from occupational hazards and injuries due to the extreme summer heat.

“Delivery services are a key logistical sector, unique in nature, given that its workers do not stay in one place while the Midday Break is enforced, and due to the nature of certain materials being transported that need to be delivered on time,” a statement from the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratization said.

The initiative is a continuation of last year’s pioneering project where 365 rest stations were provided for delivery workers during their midday break. Delivery companies, including Talabat, Deliveroo, Noon and Careem, have previously partnered with government agencies, while restaurants, shopping centers, retail stores and cloud kitchens this year are also joining the effort to offer rest areas for delivery drivers.

Now in its 20th year, the annual noon break provides respite for outdoor workers during summer months when temperatures could reach 50 degrees Celsius or even higher. Companies are required to provide shaded areas and cooling equipment for workers during the three-hour break.

Companies face fines of up to Dh5,000 ($1,360) per worker and a maximum of Dh50,000 for multiple violations if they do not observe the regulation, although there are some exemptions to it.


Israel says man’s capture sabotaged secret Hezbollah naval unit

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Israel says man’s capture sabotaged secret Hezbollah naval unit

  • Israel’s military said Friday a man seized last year in Lebanon was a Hezbollah operative who played a key role in planning a covert maritime force for the militant group
JERUSALEM: Israel’s military said Friday a man seized last year in Lebanon was a Hezbollah operative who played a key role in planning a covert maritime force for the militant group.
The military said special unit troops apprehended Imad Amhaz in November 2024 from the north Lebanese city of Batroun, and transferred him to Israel.
“During his questioning, Amhaz stated that he held a central role in the ‘covert maritime portfolio’,” which the military called “one of Hezbollah’s most classified and sensitive projects.”
It said the portfolio’s “core objective is the establishment of organized maritime terrorist infrastructure, under civilian cover, in the maritime domain against Israeli and international targets.”
The military added that it had disrupted the portfolio’s advancement by dismantling its chain of command and through its questioning of Amhaz.
In November 2024, a Lebanese judicial official told AFP that a preliminary probe found that Israeli commandos used a speedboat equipped with radar-jamming devices to abduct Amhaz.
The official called his capture “a war crime that violated national sovereignty” because it involved the kidnapping of a Lebanese citizen in an area far from the fighting.
Amhaz was studying to become a sea captain at the Maritime Sciences and Technology Institute (MARSATI) in Batroun, Lebanon’s primary training college for the shipping industry.
Israel says Amhaz was an “invisible” Hezbollah operative who joined the Lebanese armed group in 2004 and was trained in Iran in 2007.
Hezbollah has not claimed Amhaz as a member of the group.
Despite a November 2024 ceasefire supposed to end more than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, Israel has kept up strikes on Lebanon and has also maintained troops in five areas of south Lebanon it deems strategic.
Israel says the strikes target Hezbollah members and infrastructure, and aim to stop the group from rearming.