Follow for live UN General Assembly coverage
For New Yorkers, the gridlock and street closures of late September mean one thing: the UN General Assembly is back in town, signifying a return to normality with hundreds of world leaders and their entourages.
This time last year, even the most jaded residents would have welcomed the cacophony of angry horns and police sirens flooding the eastside of Manhattan near the UN headquarters.
In 2020, the assembly was held online and streets were almost deserted. Even ambulance drivers stopped using warning signals.
UNGA 2021 is a hybrid event due to the Delta variant surge, with 100 world leaders attending in person and many others choosing to stay home.
Leaders attending were encouraged to reduce their groups to seven on-site attending and access to the event has been pared down.
But there is a determination to take small steps towards a return. The traffic is just one indicator of this.
“There’s always a lot of police and traffic is deadlocked,” said Karnail Singh, who has driven a New York City yellow cab for 30 years.
And even though it is not a full slate of world dignitaries, it is a welcome return for many New Yorkers who view it as a harbinger of the end of the pandemic.
“On the one hand, I’m not a fan of the traffic, of having to show my ID just to get back into my apartment,” said Taimur Dar, who lives within the expanded police perimeter that is set up every year around the UN complex on the East River.
“On the other hand, after 2020, you kind of miss that kind of disruption and that normality, as annoying as it may be in your daily lives.”
New York City was hit extraordinarily hard by Covid-19. Since the start of the pandemic, more than 1 million New Yorkers have been infected with the virus and 34,000 have died.
The city has also experienced a mass departure as many left for employment and financial reasons, and pandemic restrictions have heavily reduced tourism, a major part of the city’s economy.
In 2020, 22.3 million people visited the city, a decrease of 67 per cent from the previous year.
The economic impact was even more devastating. The state comptroller reported that the economic impact from tourism has plummeted 75 per cent from $80.3 billion in 2019 to $20.2bn in 2020.
Those numbers are expected to climb slightly in 2021, said NYC & Company, the city’s tourism agency, with 38.3 million people expected to visit the Big Apple this year.
New Yorkers appear to be cautiously optimistic that events like the general assembly, even hybrid ones, signal the welcome return of a city still struggling with the pandemic.
Other ways to buy used products in the UAE
UAE insurance firm Al Wathba National Insurance Company (AWNIC) last year launched an e-commerce website with a facility enabling users to buy car wrecks.
Bidders and potential buyers register on the online salvage car auction portal to view vehicles, review condition reports, or arrange physical surveys, and then start bidding for motors they plan to restore or harvest for parts.
Physical salvage car auctions are a common method for insurers around the world to move on heavily damaged vehicles, but AWNIC is one of the few UAE insurers to offer such services online.
For cars and less sizeable items such as bicycles and furniture, Dubizzle is arguably the best-known marketplace for pre-loved.
Founded in 2005, in recent years it has been joined by a plethora of Facebook community pages for shifting used goods, including Abu Dhabi Marketplace, Flea Market UAE and Arabian Ranches Souq Market while sites such as The Luxury Closet and Riot deal largely in second-hand fashion.
At the high-end of the pre-used spectrum, resellers such as Timepiece360.ae, WatchBox Middle East and Watches Market Dubai deal in authenticated second-hand luxury timepieces from brands such as Rolex, Hublot and Tag Heuer, with a warranty.
How to wear a kandura
Dos
- Wear the right fabric for the right season and occasion
- Always ask for the dress code if you don’t know
- Wear a white kandura, white ghutra / shemagh (headwear) and black shoes for work
- Wear 100 per cent cotton under the kandura as most fabrics are polyester
Don’ts
- Wear hamdania for work, always wear a ghutra and agal
- Buy a kandura only based on how it feels; ask questions about the fabric and understand what you are buying
Email sent to Uber team from chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi
From: Dara
To: Team@
Date: March 25, 2019 at 11:45pm PT
Subj: Accelerating in the Middle East
Five years ago, Uber launched in the Middle East. It was the start of an incredible journey, with millions of riders and drivers finding new ways to move and work in a dynamic region that’s become so important to Uber. Now Pakistan is one of our fastest-growing markets in the world, women are driving with Uber across Saudi Arabia, and we chose Cairo to launch our first Uber Bus product late last year.
Today we are taking the next step in this journey—well, it’s more like a leap, and a big one: in a few minutes, we’ll announce that we’ve agreed to acquire Careem. Importantly, we intend to operate Careem independently, under the leadership of co-founder and current CEO Mudassir Sheikha. I’ve gotten to know both co-founders, Mudassir and Magnus Olsson, and what they have built is truly extraordinary. They are first-class entrepreneurs who share our platform vision and, like us, have launched a wide range of products—from digital payments to food delivery—to serve consumers.
I expect many of you will ask how we arrived at this structure, meaning allowing Careem to maintain an independent brand and operate separately. After careful consideration, we decided that this framework has the advantage of letting us build new products and try new ideas across not one, but two, strong brands, with strong operators within each. Over time, by integrating parts of our networks, we can operate more efficiently, achieve even lower wait times, expand new products like high-capacity vehicles and payments, and quicken the already remarkable pace of innovation in the region.
This acquisition is subject to regulatory approval in various countries, which we don’t expect before Q1 2020. Until then, nothing changes. And since both companies will continue to largely operate separately after the acquisition, very little will change in either teams’ day-to-day operations post-close. Today’s news is a testament to the incredible business our team has worked so hard to build.
It’s a great day for the Middle East, for the region’s thriving tech sector, for Careem, and for Uber.
Uber on,
Dara
SERIE A FIXTURES
Friday Sassuolo v Torino (Kick-off 10.45pm UAE)
Saturday Atalanta v Sampdoria (5pm),
Genoa v Inter Milan (8pm),
Lazio v Bologna (10.45pm)
Sunday Cagliari v Crotone (3.30pm)
Benevento v Napoli (6pm)
Parma v Spezia (6pm)
Fiorentina v Udinese (9pm)
Juventus v Hellas Verona (11.45pm)
Monday AC Milan v AS Roma (11.45pm)