Khaleej Times

AC walkways in Sharjah to beat summer lethargy

- Asma Ali Zain

sharjah — Is hot weather one of your excuses to skip workout sessions? If you are a Sharjah resident, that excuse won’t work anymore! The Sharjah Ruler has announced air-conditione­d walkways for residents to beat the five months of intense summer that prevent people from being active.

His Highness Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Member of the Supreme Council and Ruler of Sharjah, said the walkways have already been designed and would soon be in the implementa­tion stage. “We will have the (world’s) best air-conditione­d walkways because during five months of the year, the temperatur­es are so high that people are unable to exercise,” he said at the Global NonCommuni­cable Diseases (NCD) Alliance Forum on Saturday.

At the forum, José Luis Castro, president of the alliance, called NCDs such as cancer, cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes, chronic respirator­y disease and mental and neurologic­al disorders the global health tsunami of the 21st century.

sharjah — In a first, the city of Sharjah will soon have air-conditione­d walkways to beat the five months of intense summer that prevent people from being active and causing obesity, said His Highness Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Member of the Supreme Council and Ruler of Sharjah, at the two-day global Non-communicab­le Diseases (NCD) Alliance Forum 2017 that began on Saturday.

Addressing the opening session of the NCD forum along with Sheikha Jawaher bint Mohammed Al Qasimi, wife of Sheikh Sultan and patron of the Global NCDA Forum, the Sharjah Ruler said that the walkways had already been designed and would soon be in the implementa­tion stage.

“We will have the first, best airconditi­oned walkways because during five months of the year, the temperatur­es are so high that people are unable to exercise,” he said, adding that rubber-paved paths had been made available for the public already.

“We have implemente­d a ban on smoking in many public plac- es, which has led to a decrease in smoking deaths and for 32 years, Sharjah has taken the lead in the prohibitio­n of alcohol, which is responsibl­e for 10 per cent of all cancer deaths, in any place within the emirate,” Dr Sheikh Sultan added.

The Sharjah Ruler said that the Global NCD Alliance Forum is more than an event — it is a catalyst for change. “People thought that this forum may be about grand speeches and plans, with everything then forgotten… this is not the case. This is a place of practical action.

Sawsan Jafar, chairperso­n of the Friends of Cancer Patients’ board of directors, remarked on the progress made since the inaugural NCD Alliance Forum in 2015.

“Today’s convention is a significan­t stride towards perpetuati­ng the achievemen­ts of the forum’s first edition, which culminated in the ‘Sharjah Declaratio­n for Non-Communicab­le Diseases’, emphasisin­g the importance of supporting

We will have the first, best air-conditione­d walkways because during five months of the year, the temperatur­es are so high that people are unable to exercise.” Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed

the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Agenda for 2030,” Jafar said.

The current forum’s theme ‘Stepping up the Pace for NCDs’ reaffirms its commitment to put intentions into action, said the speakers and dignitarie­s.

José Luis Castro, president of the NCD Alliance, said: “Noncommuni­cable diseases such as cancer, cardiovasc­ular disease, diabetes, chronic respirator­y disease and mental and neurologic­al disorders are the global health tsunami of the 21st century. These are devastatin­g communitie­s, crippling health systems and thwarting economies through widespread sickness, disability, and untimely and often avoidable deaths. No country is immune, and no country has this tidal wave under control.

“The data speaks volumes. If the world continues down the current path of ‘business as usual’, one-third of the world’s population will be living with obesity by 2025. Diabetics will be close to 500 million; over 320 million people will have died from an NCD; that is equivalent to the entire population of the US, and over 120 million of those deaths will have been preventabl­e.

“The amount it will have cost developing countries alone since 2011 will be $7 trillion, equivalent to the combined GDP of France, India, and Brazil last year.”

 ?? Photo by M. Sajjad ?? Dr Sheikh Sultan during the opening of the second Global NCD Alliance Forum 2017 at Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre in Sharjah . —
Photo by M. Sajjad Dr Sheikh Sultan during the opening of the second Global NCD Alliance Forum 2017 at Jawaher Reception and Convention Centre in Sharjah . —

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