Saudi legend Mohammad Noor announced in EA SPORTS FC 25 hero team

Saudi legend Mohammad Noor announced in EA SPORTS FC 25 hero team
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Updated 13 August 2024
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Saudi legend Mohammad Noor announced in EA SPORTS FC 25 hero team

Saudi legend Mohammad Noor announced in EA SPORTS FC 25 hero team

RIYADH: Saudi football legend Mohammad Noor has been included in a team of heroes for the upcoming EA SPORTS FC 25 release, the game maker annouced.
The retired player’s inclusion will mark the third time a Saudi player has been included in the set, officially called the Ultimate Team, which are usable game cards featuring retired players.
Noor spent the majority of his career with Al-Ittihad Club and is renowned for his illustrious career and numerous accolades.
His tenure at the Jeddah club is marked by his pivotal role in securing back-to-back AFC Champions League titles in 2004 and 2005. Representing the Green Falcons, he participated in multiple AFC Asian Cups and World Cups, contributing significantly to the national team's successes on the international stage.
EA SPORTS FC 25 has featured legendary players from the world’s game as in-game Heroes, including Saudi players Sami Al-Jaber and Saeed Al Oweiran.  Noor’s addition continues this tradition, celebrating the rich history of Saudi football and its impact on the global stage.
SPORTS FC 25 is due to be released on Sept. 27, 2024.


Review: Hulu’s ‘Muslim Matchmaker’ has heart, but not enough spark

Review: Hulu’s ‘Muslim Matchmaker’ has heart, but not enough spark
Hoda Abrahim and Yasmin Elhady are trying to find love for the show's participants. Supplied
Updated 1 min 3 sec ago
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Review: Hulu’s ‘Muslim Matchmaker’ has heart, but not enough spark

Review: Hulu’s ‘Muslim Matchmaker’ has heart, but not enough spark

TORONTO: “Muslim Matchmaker” premiered on Hulu this week. The series is directed and produced by Smriti Mundhra (of Netflix’s “Indian Matchmaking” fame).

But this time around it’s not Sima Aunty and her outrageous comments, but rather two older sister types – Hoda Abrahim and Yasmin Elhady – who are helping eight Muslim Americans find love.

The premise of their matchmaking business is the “Rules of Three: Three dates, three months, and three hundred questions.” In an era of dating apps and superficial swipes, the duo urges couples to approach their search for love with intention. They emphasize the importance of giving the relationship time and space to grow while asking the right questions.

The eight-episode show provides a fresh perspective on Muslim Americans as they navigate both their Muslim and cultural identities in the West. It offers captivating discussions on topics like cultural expectations when dating an older woman, the appropriate timeline to “date,” and finding a partner with an equal “halal-to-haram ratio.” These discussions are sure to resonate with many. And perhaps, offer a glimpse into a Muslim world that’s rarely seen in mainstream Western media.

The show comes with good intentions. For one, it acknowledges dating app fatigue. It offers a refreshing take with matchmakers who approach singles’ choices without judgment or sacrilegious remarks about “wanting too much” (looking at you, Sima Aunty).

But that’s also probably the biggest failing of the show. Dating shows thrive on drama – and there’s none here.

Tension doesn't surface until episode four. A Bengali-American woman is older than the man she’s dating, and cultural norms deem this unacceptable. We’re left on a cliffhanger, wondering how the Bengali-American man will disclose the relationship to his family.

It shouldn’t take that long to get us hooked.


UN chief: Renewed hostilities in Gaza must be avoided at all costs

UN chief: Renewed hostilities in Gaza must be avoided at all costs
Updated 13 min 47 sec ago
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UN chief: Renewed hostilities in Gaza must be avoided at all costs

UN chief: Renewed hostilities in Gaza must be avoided at all costs
  • Hamas on Monday announced it would stop releasing Israeli hostages until further notice
  • It claimed Israeli violated ceasefire agreement in Gaza, raising the risk of reigniting the conflict

GENEVA: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Hamas to continue with the planned release of hostages on Tuesday, a day after the Palestinian militant group announced its intention to halt the exchange.
“We must avoid at all costs the resumption of hostilities in Gaza that would lead to an immense tragedy,” he said in a statement.
Hamas on Monday announced it would stop releasing Israeli hostages until further notice over what it called Israeli violations of a ceasefire agreement in Gaza, raising the risk of reigniting the conflict.


Erdogan to visit Pakistan from Feb. 12-13 to strengthen cooperation in bilateral trade and investment

Erdogan to visit Pakistan from Feb. 12-13 to strengthen cooperation in bilateral trade and investment
Updated 19 min 38 sec ago
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Erdogan to visit Pakistan from Feb. 12-13 to strengthen cooperation in bilateral trade and investment

Erdogan to visit Pakistan from Feb. 12-13 to strengthen cooperation in bilateral trade and investment
  • Turkish president to co-chair Pakistan-Turkiye High Level Cooperation Council session with PM Shehbaz Sharif, says FO
  • HLSCC focuses on trade, investment, banking, finance, culture, tourism, energy, defense, agriculture and other sectors

ISLAMABAD: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will visit Pakistan with a high-level delegation from Feb.12-13, Pakistan’s foreign office said on Tuesday, during which he will co-chair the session of a high-level strategic cooperation council focusing on bilateral trade, investment and other priority sectors between the two countries, and oversee the signing of several agreements. 
The Pakistan-Turkiye High Level Cooperation Council (HLSCC) was established in 2009 as a framework for consultations at the highest political level between the two sides. Several joint standing committees under the HLSCC cover vital sectors such as trade, investment, banking, finance, culture, tourism, energy, defense, agriculture and others. 
Six sessions of the HLSCC have been conducted since it was founded, with the last one held in Islamabad from Feb. 13-14, 2020. 
Erdogan’s high-level delegation will comprise ministers, senior officials and corporate leaders, the foreign office said. 
“During the visit, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and President Erdogan will co-chair the 7th Session of the Pakistan-Turkiye High Level Strategic Cooperation Council (HLSCC),” the foreign office said. “At the conclusion of the Session, a Joint Declaration and a number of important agreements/MoUs are expected to be signed. The two leaders will also address a joint press stakeout.”
Erdogan will hold bilateral meetings with Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari, the foreign office said, adding that the Turkish president will address the Pakistan-Turkiye Business and Investment Forum with Sharif. The forum will bring together leading investors, companies and businesspersons from both sides, the statement said. 
“The visit of Turkish President and the holding of the 7th Session of the HLSCC would serve to further deepen the brotherly relations and enhance multifaceted cooperation between the two countries,” the foreign office said. 
Turkiye and Pakistan enjoy cordial relations with one another that has expanded to cooperation in several sectors between the two nations. Both agreed to enhance the bilateral trade volume to $5 billion last year in May when Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan arrived in Pakistan’s capital on a two-day visit. 
Pakistan has been eagerly reaching out to international partners and close allies since last year in its quest to escape a prolonged macroeconomic crisis by strengthening cooperation in business, investment and other sectors. 
Pakistan’s economic crisis has drained its financial resources, weakened its national currency and triggered inflation in the country. The South Asian country has repeatedly stated its desire to achieve sustainable economic growth through foreign trade and investment, long-term reforms and by promoting exports.


Suicide bomber kills five outside bank in Afghanistan: police

Suicide bomber kills five outside bank in Afghanistan: police
Updated 22 min 9 sec ago
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Suicide bomber kills five outside bank in Afghanistan: police

Suicide bomber kills five outside bank in Afghanistan: police
  • Attack targeted a queue of people waiting to collect their salaries

KABUL: A suicide bomber killed five people including Taliban security forces on Tuesday in an explosion outside a bank in northern Afghanistan, police said.
Seven people were also wounded in the attack which targeted a queue of people waiting to collect their salaries from a bank in the city of Kunduz, the capital of Kunduz province.
“A suicide bomber, who had improvised explosive devices, detonated himself,” said Jumadin Khaksar, police spokesman for Kunduz province.
He said civilians, civil servants and members of the Taliban security forces were among those killed.
“The Kunduz Province Police Command is working with relevant organizations to find the perpetrators of the incident and bring them to justice.”


Sustainable living should focus on comfort over beauty, says climate-focused architect 

Sustainable living should focus on comfort over beauty, says climate-focused architect 
Updated 25 min 54 sec ago
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Sustainable living should focus on comfort over beauty, says climate-focused architect 

Sustainable living should focus on comfort over beauty, says climate-focused architect 

RIYADH: Architects need to shift their focus toward comfortable, climate-friendly designs rather than reaching for the stars with often unsustainable skyscrapers, said Sarah El-Battouty, founder of ECOnsult at a conference in Riyadh. 

According to El-Battouty, who is also a UN Climate Change High-Level Champions global ambassador, buildings are the most used product on Earth, so modern designs must reflect modern needs. 

“Everything is moving forward — machines, products, food, communication — except buildings,” she said.   

ECOnsult, an Egypt-based architecture company specializing in green building and environmental strategy, developed the People’s Brief, which examines the essential components people need in daily living. At the top of that list is comfort. 

“We’re no longer building things to impress. The future is to get the one target that is very difficult to achieve,” she said. 

“I know it sounds simplistic, but it’s really difficult to get people to sleep well, to feel firmer comfort when they’re not too cold or too hot, to predict what is happening in the near future and accommodate the changes in seasonality, and fit all of that into an affordable, accessible, scalable, repeatable building.”    

The next step, she said, is integrating sustainable development goals into people’s homes and using that foundation to design climate-resilient communities. 

Two years ago, ECOnsult introduced the Green Guidelines document, a set of standards for green architecture in rural, low-income communities.   

“No one is sitting and figuring out how they’re going to put these very advanced concepts and apply them to a completely different client… and whether these building technologies are actually scalable in rural communities.”  

El-Battouty emphasized the need for a direct connection between technology, forecasting, and accessible adaptation strategies, making them usable for everyone rather than a select few. 

Today, ECOnsult has developed the first World Green Building Council-certified small villages for green economies in Egypt. 

Five villages have been built so far, housing a total population of 500,000 in energy-, water-, and habitat-saving environments. 

By localizing goals and understanding the client, available technology at small scales has made a tremendous impact, El-Battouty said. 

ECOnsult has also built the first net-zero rural communities project in the Middle East and North Africa region: a mosque. 

Constructed from recycled brick and rammed earth and powered entirely by solar energy, the mosque’s architecture supports 90 percent water recycling, material reduction, construction waste recycling, and the use of local materials. 

Governments worldwide are committing to net-zero pledges, such as Saudi Arabia’s goal of achieving 50 percent renewable power by 2030 on its path to net-zero emissions by 2050. 

Developers in both the architectural and finance sectors are exploring green buildings and energy; however, “why does it have to begin with the most expensive, large-scale?” El-Battouty asked.  

“We are not there yet. We need to perfect this scale. 

“Anyone who works in mitigation or quality assurance can understand that small is beautiful because you can test it,” she said. 

In most of ECOnsult’s projects, they have achieved up to 10-degree cooling without mechanical assistance. 

With fresh air, adequate lighting control, stone, and strategic color usage, much can be accomplished affordably, El-Battouty noted. 

“We need to use technologies that partner in informing us: today is a very hot day, your building is not doing well, I will adjust.” 

Some of the company’s other projects include the Pavilion Café in Italy, a net-zero building constructed entirely from discarded refrigerator casings and waste food. 

Another project is a nursery/kindergarten in China, designed to combat outside air pollution by eliminating plastic casings, placing floor tiles on the ceiling, and ensuring an airtight structure.  

Royal Herbs Village is also the first carbon-neutral project in the Middle East and North Africa region. Located on a 4,200-sq.-meter plot in the Western Desert, where temperatures can reach up to 50 degrees Celsius, eight buildings have been constructed to accommodate 120 people in a complex that operates without energy-intensive air conditioning units. 

Other projects include a net-zero vocational school repurposed from an old structure using affordable local materials and a model for efficient tiny homes tailored to suit local climates. 

Rather than relying solely on advanced technology to solve the climate crisis, El-Battouty stressed that the real solution, with high market return and economic value, lies in catering to local communities. 

“We’re not innovators. Villages and people have been building for thousands of years, understanding exceptionally well what to do in the winter, what to do in drought. Otherwise, they wouldn’t have survived.  

“Our job is to integrate all of this so we don’t come out on one end, isolated in a much smaller market, and then clap for ourselves that we have succeeded in changing the way we are building.” 

A small company with only 20 employees, ECOnsult has been working closely with the Saudi government, particularly in relation to UNCCD COP16, as well as with the Scottish government at the Glasgow climate conferences, to introduce climate-friendly and people-centric architecture into modern buildings and city plans.