A major thunderstorm hit the Gulf region on
Thursday night with heavy rain lashing parts of Abu Dhabi, Dubai and the Saudi
capital Riyadh, which was the scene of major flooding earlier this week.
Earlier climate forecasts compelled the U.S.
military to move an aircraft on display at the Dubai Airshow to a nearby
maintenance facility, Reuters reported a spokesman for Air Force Central
Command Major David Faggard as saying.
Air show organizers said precautions had being
taken to secure the display area, but they were unaware of plans by other
aircraft owners to move their aircraft.
“It is our understanding that the U.S.
Department of Defense aircraft are due to be moved to the maintenance area at
the Dubai Airshow as a precaution to any adverse weather over night and will be
re-positioned on the static display tomorrow,” Reuters quoted the airshow’s
organizer, F&E Aerospace, as saying in a statement.
The U.S. military brought a wide array of
aircraft to the show, including two helicopters, a stealthy Lockheed Martin
Corp F-22, four V-22 tiltrotor aircraft built by Boeing Co and Bell Helicopter,
a unit of Textron Inc, a Boeing F-15E fighter and a B-1 bomber.
Clouds move over the Riyadh skyline Nov. 17,
2013. (Reuters)
On Sunday, the UAE’s National Center of
Meteorology and Seismology has denied rumors, attributed to the U.S. Navy, saying
that the Gulf region would see its “worst storm in 30 years” this week, the
UAE-based Gulf Business website reported.
“The UAE will experience heavy rain. But there
will be no flooding, cyclones or hurricanes across the Arabian Gulf,” Sufiana
Sarrah, meteorology specialist at NCMS, told Gulf Business.
“We emphasize that the country is currently
under the influence of unstable weather conditions leading to a different
intensity of rain over scattered parts of the country at varied intervals,” he
said.
In neighboring Saudi Arabia, floods sparked by
torrential rain in largely desert kingdom have killed seven people over the
past three days.
Schools and universities in the capital have
been closed since Sunday.
Lightening hits Saudi capital Riyadh on Thursday
night as heavy thunderstorms strike the Gulf region. (Photo credit: Twitter)
Flooding of underpasses on major thoroughfares
has sparked traffic chaos for Riyadh’s more than five million residents.
Also, flooding in central and southern Iraq killed
at least 11 people as rising waters swamped city streets and toppled buildings,
sparking anger over the dilapidated sewage system, AFP reported officials as
saying Wednesday.
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.