Dubai is set to modify more than a 1,000 existing buildings to cater for those with disabilities, including schools, hospitals and hotels. Last year new wheelchair-friendly paths at Kite Beach were unveiled. Satish Kumar / The National
Dubai is set to modify more than a 1,000 existing buildings to cater for those with disabilities, including schools, hospitals and hotels. Last year new wheelchair-friendly paths at Kite Beach were unveiled. Satish Kumar / The National
Dubai is set to modify more than a 1,000 existing buildings to cater for those with disabilities, including schools, hospitals and hotels. Last year new wheelchair-friendly paths at Kite Beach were unveiled. Satish Kumar / The National
Dubai is set to modify more than a 1,000 existing buildings to cater for those with disabilities, including schools, hospitals and hotels. Last year new wheelchair-friendly paths at Kite Beach were un

Dubai beach’s access ramp is a boon for wheelchair users and parents


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Soft sand and wheelchairs make a visit to the beach an arduous, if not impossible, venture for the disabled and those with children in pushchairs. But now a beach in Dubai has changed all that with an access walkway.

DUBAI // Going to the beach is a big part of many people’s lives in the UAE, but spare a thought for the disabled because, clearly, wheelchairs and sand do not work well together.

So wheelchair users and even parents with pushchairs were pleased with the opening of a 135-metre accessibility walkway at the popular Kite Beach.

The walkway takes people close to the seafront without the stress of battling through sand, while another pathway leads from the public car park to the beach walkway.

Alona Markova, 32, has a three-year-old and a six-month-old. The Bulgarian expatriate said the ramp made a huge difference to her being able to go to the beach without having to depend on others.

“When you have little ones, you always leave the house with so many bags and things to remember,” she said. “You never travel light, so a day at the beach can end up a very heavy, hard day when you’re by yourself.

“This pathway has meant I can take the buggy all the way down the beach now rather than trying to carry everything, so it makes me feel a lot more independent without my husband or friends with me.”

Until now, the beach had been out of bounds for many wheelchair users and disability activists said the new walkway marked a turning point.

Dr Hibah Shata, director of the Child Early Intervention Medical Centre in Dubai Healthcare City, is an advocate for those with special needs and disabilities.

“All the government departments are starting to put things into place for this [accessibility],” she said. “It’s moving from regulation into application. For so long we didn’t see disabled people empowered in the community at all and the way people looked at them was just to give them charity or money.

“But today, the whole vision is that they’re individuals with rights and have to access places to be able to be integrated.”

Briton James Price, founder of accessallrooms.com, a website for wheelchair-bound and disabled travellers, is himself in a wheelchair. The former rugby player has been to Dubai every year since 2003 for the Rugby 7s tournaments and features many of the city's resorts on the website.

“I think it is extremely important to have a beach access ramp, because most tourists to Dubai from the UK go for the weather and beach,” he said. “As a wheelchair user myself, not being able to get on the beach independently or with a little help, is very frustrating. I want to be able to advise our clients that Dubai is a great all-round destination for disabled people, so this is a big tick and I am pleased to hear it.”

Since his first visit, much had changed, he said. “When I first came, few hotels had quality wheelchair access but now you can find lots of hotels with excellent wheelchair access facilities,” Mr Price said.

“In the early days of coming over to the Dubai Rugby 7s in 2003 they had zero disabled facilities or viewing platforms. Fast forward to this year’s event and there are air-conditioned disabled toilets and ramp access into the main stands.”

But there was still more work to be done on Dubai’s streets, he said. “Sadly, too, it is also difficult to find any information online from the tourism department of disabled facilities, transport, et cetera,” he said. “Customers need information to travel, and a lack of it ruins confidence, so if they can’t find the info they need to make their trip comfortable they will go somewhere that does.”

Fernando Gibaja, general manager at Zabeel Saray hotel, on The Palm Jumeirah, agreed the disabled market was vital. All its restaurants, bars, spa, beach and pool are accessible from the ground floor.

“It’s very important for five-star hotels to accommodate every type of guest, regardless of disability,” he said. “We are constantly adapting and evolving our offerings to suit all disabilities.”

mswan@thenational.ae

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Gertrude Bell's life in focus

A feature film

At one point, two feature films were in the works, but only German director Werner Herzog’s project starring Nicole Kidman would be made. While there were high hopes he would do a worthy job of directing the biopic, when Queen of the Desert arrived in 2015 it was a disappointment. Critics panned the film, in which Herzog largely glossed over Bell’s political work in favour of her ill-fated romances.

A documentary

A project that did do justice to Bell arrived the next year: Sabine Krayenbuhl and Zeva Oelbaum’s Letters from Baghdad: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Gertrude Bell. Drawing on more than 1,000 pieces of archival footage, 1,700 documents and 1,600 letters, the filmmakers painstakingly pieced together a compelling narrative that managed to convey both the depth of Bell’s experience and her tortured love life.

Books, letters and archives

Two biographies have been written about Bell, and both are worth reading: Georgina Howell’s 2006 book Queen of the Desert and Janet Wallach’s 1996 effort Desert Queen. Bell published several books documenting her travels and there are also several volumes of her letters, although they are hard to find in print. Original documents are housed at the Gertrude Bell Archive at the University of Newcastle, which has an online catalogue.
 

The story in numbers

18

This is how many recognised sects Lebanon is home to, along with about four million citizens

450,000

More than this many Palestinian refugees are registered with UNRWA in Lebanon, with about 45 per cent of them living in the country’s 12 refugee camps

1.5 million

There are just under 1 million Syrian refugees registered with the UN, although the government puts the figure upwards of 1.5m

73

The percentage of stateless people in Lebanon, who are not of Palestinian origin, born to a Lebanese mother, according to a 2012-2013 study by human rights organisation Frontiers Ruwad Association

18,000

The number of marriages recorded between Lebanese women and foreigners between the years 1995 and 2008, according to a 2009 study backed by the UN Development Programme

77,400

The number of people believed to be affected by the current nationality law, according to the 2009 UN study

4,926

This is how many Lebanese-Palestinian households there were in Lebanon in 2016, according to a census by the Lebanese-Palestinian dialogue committee

It Was Just an Accident

Director: Jafar Panahi

Stars: Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ebrahim Azizi, Hadis Pakbaten, Majid Panahi, Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr

Rating: 4/5

Match info

Bournemouth 0
Liverpool 4
(Salah 25', 48', 76', Cook 68' OG)

Man of the match: Andrew Robertson (Liverpool)