I have a new plan tonight. I bought a ticket to fly to Kuwait and will fly space available from Kuwait to Dulles, where there are lots of open seats and a good chance I will get business class. Just to prove that good things happen to people who wait, it turns out that coincidentally my twin sister Janet is in Kuwait at this very moment preparing to fly the plane I will soon be taking back to the good old USA. So I will be assured of one friendly face in the friendly skies of United!
Since we finished our scuba dive in the sandstorm, it has been raining off and on in Dubai. The worst rains are at night with lots of thunder and lightning. The rain was so bad the first night we went to the airport that a lot of roads flooded and it took us 2 hours to make the 30 minute trip. But this was nothing compared to the 6+ hours that people spent stranded in traffic in the neighboring emirate of Sharjah where the roads are much narrower with no drainage. Three people were electrocuted due to fallen wires and one person was hit by a truck and killed. Six other people died in Dubai in a 13-hour span when an SUV hit a truck that had run out of gas and been left on the road with no flashers, and another truck overturned as the driver was trying to avoid a hazard in the road. I myself saw many road hazards coming home last night from the airport, as signs and temporary barriers had blown into the road. You definitely don't want to be on the roads here in the middle of a storm, and the aftermath can be deadly, too, if you're not extremely careful!
Add to the rain-related woes the recent news that the observation deck on the 124th floor of the Burj Khalifa remains closed due to mechanical issues; the massive new aquarium at the Dubai Mall sprang a leak; one person was killed and 13 others injured when a pavilion at the Global Village collapsed; fire broke out on the track of the Dubai Metro, disrupting service; and it seems that cracks are spreading everywhere you look across Dubai's glossy veneer. Maintenance personnel seem to be handling these crises as they arise, but will they be able to repair the damage so things look as good as new, and how long will residents and visitors put up with this? I'm hoping it stops raining soon (me who came here thinking that it never rained!) and that I can finally get out of here tonight!
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