Taher Al Moqdad, owner of Hashi Bashi restaurant in Al Khodh, says much of the country has shut down for mourning.
'Today, half the market’s shops are closed. Yesterday it was 90 per cent,' he says. Reem Mohammed / The National
A group of men watch the news on a projector outside a restaurant in Al Khodh, Muscat, on Sunday night. Reem Mohammed / The National
'It was not just Omanis who were sad, all people in Oman felt the same,' says Chandram Marulla Prambath, a restaurant manager from Kerala who moved to the country in about 1990. Reem Mohammed / The National
Men eat at Hashi Basha restaurant in Al Khodh, Muscat. Reem Mohammed / The National
Beneath a photo of Sultan Qaboos, Omanis talk about a future without the revered ruler. Reem Mohammed / The National
Taher Al Moqdad, owner of Hashi Bashi restaurant in Al Khodh, says much of the country has shut down for mourning.
'Today, half the market’s shops are closed. Yesterday it was 90 per cent,' he says. Reem Mohammed / The National
A group of men watch the news on a projector outside a restaurant in Al Khodh, Muscat, on Sunday night. Reem Mohammed / The National
'It was not just Omanis who were sad, all people in Oman felt the same,' says Chandram Marulla Prambath, a restaurant manager from Kerala who moved to the country in about 1990. Reem Mohammed / The National
Men eat at Hashi Basha restaurant in Al Khodh, Muscat. Reem Mohammed / The National
Beneath a photo of Sultan Qaboos, Omanis talk about a future without the revered ruler. Reem Mohammed / The National
Taher Al Moqdad, owner of Hashi Bashi restaurant in Al Khodh, says much of the country has shut down for mourning.
'Today, half the market’s shops are closed. Yesterday it was 90 per cent,' he says. Reem Mohammed / The National
'Everyone was in tears': Omanis describe heart-wrenching loss of Sultan Qaboos
With much of Muscat shut down for mourning, Omanis and expats look to the future