The number of teenagers driving without a licence has dropped significantly in Dubai in the past two years, authorities said.
The legal age of driving in the emirate is 18 but a person can start taking lessons at 17 years and six months.
Between January and June this year, 56 different cases that involved teenagers were reported to the prosecutors but only eight were related to underage driving.
“Generally, the number of traffic offences committed by youngsters in this age group is not alarming,” said Mohammed Ali Rustom, Dubai's advocate general and head of Family and Juvenile Prosecution.
“The majority of juveniles cases we deal with are mutual assault or theft incidents.”
Of all the cases registered against minors last year, about 25 per cent were related to underage driving, according to Dubai’s Family and Juvenile Prosecution.
“Throughout 2020, we dealt with 37 such cases [underage driving] which involved 39 young drivers,” said the senior Dubai prosecutor.
It was a sharp drop from 64 cases registered in 2019 that involved 67 young drivers aged between seven and 17.
In 2019, young drivers caused 24 crashes, resulting in one death and three injuries. In two cases, teenagers were caught driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
In some cases, teenagers caught driving without a licence were also charged with other offences such as damaging property, endangering lives, defying police orders, and fleeing the scene of an accident.
“If our investigations reveal that an adult has given the car to a teenager and allowed him to drive, they will also be charged, which has happened in some cases,” Mr Ali Rustom said.
But in most cases, adult members of the family have claimed their teenage children or siblings took the keys without the family’s knowledge or consent.
“Parents know better and should be more careful about where they place their car keys. No one knows a child more than his parents,” he said.
“As a parent, I know exactly what my son is like and if he loves cars or not.”
Car keys should not be accessible to children, he said.
Drivers aged between 18 and 35 were responsible for about 64 per cent of collisions leading to severe injury and deaths in 2019, the emirate's chief traffic prosecutor had said earlier.
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Conflict, drought, famine
Estimates of the number of deaths caused by the famine range from 400,000 to 1 million, according to a document prepared for the UK House of Lords in 2024.
It has been claimed that the policies of the Ethiopian government, which took control after deposing Emperor Haile Selassie in a military-led revolution in 1974, contributed to the scale of the famine.
Dr Miriam Bradley, senior lecturer in humanitarian studies at the University of Manchester, has argued that, by the early 1980s, “several government policies combined to cause, rather than prevent, a famine which lasted from 1983 to 1985. Mengistu’s government imposed Stalinist-model agricultural policies involving forced collectivisation and villagisation [relocation of communities into planned villages].
The West became aware of the catastrophe through a series of BBC News reports by journalist Michael Buerk in October 1984 describing a “biblical famine” and containing graphic images of thousands of people, including children, facing starvation.
Band Aid
Bob Geldof, singer with the Irish rock group The Boomtown Rats, formed Band Aid in response to the horrific images shown in the news broadcasts.
With Midge Ure of the band Ultravox, he wrote the hit charity single Do They Know it’s Christmas in December 1984, featuring a string of high-profile musicians.
Following the single’s success, the idea to stage a rock concert evolved.
Live Aid was a series of simultaneous concerts that took place at Wembley Stadium in London, John F Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia, the US, and at various other venues across the world.
The combined event was broadcast to an estimated worldwide audience of 1.5 billion.
UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
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A timeline of the Historical Dictionary of the Arabic Language
- 2018: Formal work begins
- November 2021: First 17 volumes launched
- November 2022: Additional 19 volumes released
- October 2023: Another 31 volumes released
- November 2024: All 127 volumes completed