Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
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A tourist takes a picture of a cow on the hill Gubalowka, a hill from which there is a view of Zakopane and the Tatra Mountains, on August 4, 2025. Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer destination for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with as many as seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport. (AFP)
Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
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Tourists walk on Gubalowka hill, a hill from which there is a view of Zakopane and the Tatra Mountains, on August 4, 2025. Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer destination for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with as many as seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport. (AFP)
Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
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Tourists stand on the hill Gubalowka, a hill from which there is a view of Zakopane and the Tatra Mountains, on August 4, 2025. Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer destination for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with as many as seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport. (AFP)
Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
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Tourists sit in a chairlift on the hill Gubalowka, a hill from which there is a view of Zakopane and the Tatra Mountains, on August 4, 2025. Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer destination for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with as many as seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport. (AFP)
Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
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A tourist takes a picture of a dessert on Krupowki, the main pedestrian zone of Zakopane, on August 4, 2025. Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer destination for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with as many as seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport. (AFP)
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Updated 13 August 2025

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
  • Thousands of Gulf residents spending their summer vacation in Zakopane, a resort known for its ski lifts and hiking trails, where historic wooden houses mix with modern hotels

ZAKOPANE: Saudi photographer Fahad Alayyash gazed over the Alpine-like panorama of the Tatras, Poland’s highest mountain range — and a surprising new hotspot for Arab tourists.
The 38-year-old is among thousands of Gulf residents spending their summer vacation in Zakopane, a resort known for its ski lifts and hiking trails, where historic wooden houses mix with modern hotels.
“We’ve completely taken over the place,” Alayyash said while standing on Gubalowka, a peak overlooking Zakopane, where dozens of visitors drink coffee, shop for souvenirs and enjoy the view.
Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer draw for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, with up to seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport.
The boom started with a Saudi travel agency representative, said Agata Wojtowicz, head of the Tatra chamber of commerce.
She said the official came to Zakopane to scout for a new destination with a direct connection to the Gulf and “was astonished” by the town.
Flydubai launched the first Dubai-Krakow connection in 2018 and Emiratis are now coming in droves — helped by their visa-free access to the European Union.
Last year they were Poland’s fastest-growing tourist group, according to the tourism ministry, with numbers 66 percent higher than in 2023.
Manal Alanazy, a 45-year-old educational technology professor at King Saud University, said Zakopane is well-known among Saudis.
“When I told my dad and my brother that I’m going to Poland, my brother didn’t like it. He said: ‘It’s all Gulf people there,’” she told AFP.
Zakopane uses social media to attract Gulf tourists who have created “a snowball effect” of growing interest, said Wojtowicz.
Over the past three years, Arab influencers have been invited on promotional visits, according to Grzegorz Biedron, chairman of its tourism organization.
Both Alanazy and Abdullah Alotaibi, a 30-year-old Kuwaiti ship captain, learnt about Zakopane from X.
“I saw on Twitter (X) a thread about Zakopane, and how it treats all people the same, and there is no racism about religions, so I liked it and I came,” said Alotaibi.
Arab tourists cite the feeling of safety as one of Zakopane’s key assets.
“It was dark and I was walking... I’m like, ‘You’re not in Poland, you’re in one of the Gulf countries. Just look. Nothing will happen,’” said Alanazy.
For Zakopane’s business owners, the Gulf clientele has been a blessing.
“This year, around two-thirds are Arabs,” Anna Stoch-El Einen, who owns a kebab restaurant and souvenir shop, said of her customers.
“We have very few Polish tourists in the region, perhaps because of the weather,” she added.
The hospitality industry has adapted fast to the preferences of Middle East visitors.
Stoch-El Einen offers menus in Polish and Arabic, and has a “halal” certificate displayed over the counter.
“We also make sure that we have a halal menu,” said Wiktor Wrobel, CEO of the region’s Nosalowy hotel group.
Arab customers constitute up to 30 percent of all summer guests at his five-star hotel in Zakopane.
City mayor Lukasz Filipowicz told AFP “local entrepreneurs are very happy about the presence of tourists from the Middle East.”
He said the biggest challenge was the difference in driving cultures, with visitors often breaking parking and entry laws.
“Every municipal police patrol is equipped with a handbook in Arabic... so that tourists from the Middle East can understand and comply with the applicable regulations,” Filipowicz said.
The day is rainy, but the drizzle did not deter Gulf visitors escaping the infernal summer heat in their home region. Temperatures sometimes top 50C in the Gulf, whereas Polish summers are generally mild.
Alanazy initially wanted to vacation in Paris.
“I canceled because the heatwave hit the European countries,” she told AFP, adding that “the weather is perfect” in Zakopane.
Wrobel said climate change is a reason behind the surge in Zakopane’s popularity.
“The respite that visitors from Arab countries are looking for cannot be found in Italy or Spain, where temperatures have also risen significantly,” he told AFP.
Hanka Krzeptowska-Marusarz, whose family runs a guesthouse in Zakopane, recalled seeing a Kuwaiti in full Islamic attire as she stood in a meadow, arms spread out, soaked in torrential rain.
“I thought it was beautiful,” she said.


How plastic whistles are becoming an anti-ICE resistance tool in Chicago 

How plastic whistles are becoming an anti-ICE resistance tool in Chicago 
Updated 23 October 2025

How plastic whistles are becoming an anti-ICE resistance tool in Chicago 

How plastic whistles are becoming an anti-ICE resistance tool in Chicago 
  • The piercing blow of a whistle has become a Chicago-wide means of signaling that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement or US Customs and Border Protection agents are present.
  • It warns undocumented people to flee and invites US citizens to come to the scene to record arrests, give detainees legal information and discourage agents from lingering

CHICAGO: As the shrill sound of whistles echoed through a parking garage in Chicago’s North Side on Tuesday, two people flung their car doors open, ducked inside and shrank down into their seats. Outside, a convoy of federal immigration enforcement vehicles that had arrived in the area just minutes prior sped off.
“We just saw a bunch of guys with whistles that chased them out,” said Luke, a landscaper who was working nearby and declined to share his full name. The Trump administration in early September launched a targeting what it said were hardened criminals among immigrants in the US without legal status, though many noncriminals have been swept up in raids.
Since then, the piercing blow of a whistle has become a Chicago-wide means of signaling that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement or US Customs and Border Protection agents are present. It warns undocumented people to flee and invites US citizens to come to the scene to record arrests, give detainees legal information and discourage agents from lingering. The aggressive immigration enforcement effort — which has no end date — has sparked widespread protests and resentment among residents. Hundreds of federal agents have fanned across the third-largest city in the US and its suburbs, often carrying assault rifles and wearing military fatigues. Agents have teargassed crowds, rappeled from a Black Hawk helicopter to raid an apartment building, dragged immigrants from cars, held people at gunpoint and shot two people, including one fatally.
Against this heavily militarized force, whistles have become a modest but effective tool to fight back.
“It grew like wildfire,” said Baltazar Enriquez, president of Little Village Community Council, a community group in one of Chicago’s largest Latino enclaves. “If we have to patrol our neighborhood for the next three years, we’re willing to do that just to keep our community safe.”
The group began handing out the whistles to neighborhood residents over the summer. Since then, relentless promotion turned the whistles into a defining symbol of Chicago’s resistance against ICE. Volunteers from whistle-making parties and local activist groups have passed out the whistles at local festivals and parades and dropped them off at Little Free Libraries. Some residents have picked up whistles from community groups that advertised them on social media — others have simply bought them from dollar stores and Amazon.
“Our officers are highly trained,” said Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, and “they are not afraid of loud noises and whistles.”
Their ease of use and low cost have contributed to their soaring popularity on the streets and on social media. But the impact of a whistle against squads of armed, fast-moving immigration officers is limited.
On a quiet residential street in another North Side neighborhood, residents ran out of their apartments to confront ICE officers as they detained a group of landscapers. Their whistles and shouts managed to draw a crowd and elicit names of detainees to be passed on to immigration rights groups, but officers still drove away with two people.
“I’m sure I’ll cry again later,” said Joanne Willer, a resident of Albany Park who used her whistle to sound the alarm about the detention. “It’s just really upsetting.”
Afterward, other residents of Albany Park, a Chicago neighborhood known for its diversity that was teargassed by federal immigration agents earlier this month, carried different kinds of noisemakers as they patrolled the streets.
Jordan, who declined to share her last name out of fear of retribution, carried her son’s toy train whistle.
“I’m Jewish, and I feel very personally tied to what’s going on here because of our history as a Jewish people,” Jordan said. “I feel like if we’re not out here supporting our neighbors, nobody else is going to be doing it.”


This seat taken? Thieves busted for stealing over 1,000 restaurant chairs in Spain

This seat taken? Thieves busted for stealing over 1,000 restaurant chairs in Spain
Updated 22 October 2025

This seat taken? Thieves busted for stealing over 1,000 restaurant chairs in Spain

This seat taken? Thieves busted for stealing over 1,000 restaurant chairs in Spain
  • The estimated impact of the stolen property was around 60,000 euros ($69,000)

MADRID: Spanish police have busted a criminal group dedicated to stealing your seat. Literally.
Spain’s National Police said Wednesday that they had arrested seven people suspected of stealing more than 1,100 chairs from outdoor seating areas at restaurants and bars in Madrid and another nearby municipality in just two months.
The group of six men and a woman worked at night to pilfer the chairs from 18 different establishments in Madrid and Talavera de la Reina, a smaller city to the southwest of the capital, in August and September. The estimated impact of the stolen property was around 60,000 euros ($69,000), according to police.
The suspects, who face charges of theft and belonging to a criminal organization, resold the chairs in Spain but also in Morocco and Romania, police said.
In Spain, many restaurants and bars leave tables and chairs, which are usually made of metal or hard plastic, outdoors during the night. The chairs will normally be kept in stacks and chained down.


Border order: Geneva schools kick out Swiss kids living in France

Border order: Geneva schools kick out Swiss kids living in France
Updated 19 October 2025

Border order: Geneva schools kick out Swiss kids living in France

Border order: Geneva schools kick out Swiss kids living in France
  • Home to numerous international institutions, Geneva is one of the most expensive cities in the world to live in
  • Around 115,000 people work in Geneva but live across the border, where the cost of living is cheaper

GENEVA: Swiss families priced out of Geneva and forced to live just across the border in France are reeling from another blow: their children are now being elbowed out of Genevan schools.
The Geneva authorities’ decision to bar pupils who live in the Swiss city’s surrounding French suburbs and villages has left parents angry, children worried, and French municipalities fuming at having to absorb more than 2,000 extra kids into their classrooms.
“We’ve become second-class Swiss citizens,” lamented Joana, a 35-year-old mother of two, declining to give her surname for professional reasons.
Like many cross-border commuters, Joana, who works in health care, left Geneva due to the lack of affordable housing.
“We agreed to leave our sub-standard home in the city center to move to the countryside – but crossing the border was conditional on access to Swiss schools,” she said.
Home to numerous international institutions, Geneva is one of the most expensive cities in the world to live in.
Its position is geographically curious: the Swiss city is almost entirely surrounded by France. Nowhere in the Geneva canton is more than 5.5 kilometers from the French border.
Around 115,000 people work in Geneva but live across the border, where the cost of living is cheaper.
‘We’re not happy’
The French village of Bossey is home to cross-border workers, many of them Swiss nationals who cannot afford to live in Geneva.
Its mayor, Jean-Luc Pecorini, can see the border from his office, less than 100 meters away on the other side of the highway.
“We’re not happy,” he said, evoking a sentiment shared by other French mayors.
He called Geneva’s decision – taken in June and coming into force at the start of the next school year in September 2026 – “abrupt.”
Opening a new classroom would cost around €80,000 ($93,000), he explained.
A source with knowledge of the figures, who did not want to be identified, said around 2,500 pupils would initially be affected, followed by “a steady stream of students” who would otherwise have gone to Swiss schools later on.
While some are French, 80 percent of those affected are Swiss.
The financial consequences for France are estimated at around €60 million in schooling and infrastructure costs, plus another €15 million a year thereafter, the source said.
Geneva’s demographic growth
Geneva is refusing to budge, citing demographic pressure and a shortage of school places.
The change represents “a saving of just over 27 million Swiss francs ($34 million) over four years,” the Genevan authorities said.
Roberto Balsa, a 47-year-old cross-border IT worker, said the news was “very brutal” for his seven-year-old daughter.
Some parents have filed legal appeals in Geneva, while others have signed an online petition.
Emmanuel, a father of four affected by the decision, who did not want to give his surname, called Geneva’s attitude “discriminatory,” noting that so-called “frontalier” workers like himself pay their taxes in Switzerland, with only a third remitted to France.
France’s Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes regional prefecture said that French authorities “can no longer accept” Geneva shifting the impact of its problems onto neighboring France “without any real consideration of the financial impact.”
By kicking out pupils, most of whom are Swiss and intend to work in Switzerland, “Geneva is exporting the burden of schooling to France, while our schools are already under severe pressure in terms of capacity,” it said.


Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population
Updated 15 October 2025

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population

Jumbo drop in estimates of India elephant population
  • India is home to the majority of the world’s remaining wild Asian elephants
  • The species listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature
NEW DELHI: India’s wild elephant population estimates have dropped sharply by a quarter, a government survey incorporating a new DNA system has found, marking the most accurate but sobering count yet.
India is home to the majority of the world’s remaining wild Asian elephants, a species listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and increasingly threatened by shrinking habitat.
The Wildlife Institute of India’s new All-India Elephant Estimation report released this week puts the wild elephant population at 22,446 – down from nearly 29,964 estimated in 2017, a fall of 25 percent.
The survey drew on genetic analysis of more than 21,000 dung samples, alongside a vast network of camera traps and 667,000 kilometers (414,400 miles) of foot surveys.
But researchers said the methodological overhaul meant the results were “not comparable to past figures and may be treated as a new monitoring baseline.”
‘Gentle giants’
But the report also warned that the figures reflect deepening pressures on one of India’s most iconic animals.
“The present distribution of elephants in India represents a mere fraction of their historical range,” it said, estimating they now occupy only about 3.5 percent of the area they once roamed.
Habitat loss, fragmentation, and increasing human-elephant conflict are driving the decline.
“Electrocution and railway collisions cause a significant number of elephant fatalities, while mining and highway construction disrupt habitats, intensifying man-wildlife conflicts,” the report added.
The Western Ghats, lush southern highlands stretching through Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala, remain a key stronghold with nearly 12,00 elephants.
But even there, populations are increasingly cut off from one another by commercial plantations, farmland fencing, and human encroachment.
Another major population center lies in India’s northeast, including Assam and the Brahmaputra floodplains, which host more than 6,500 elephants.
“Strengthening corridors and connectivity, restoring habitat, improving protection, and mitigating the impact of development projects are the need of the hour to ensure the well-being of these gentle giants,” the report said.

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show
Updated 14 October 2025

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show

The world’s driest desert blooms into a rare, fleeting flower show
  • 2025 was one of Atacama’s wettest in recent years, with some high-elevation borderlands receiving up to 60 mm of rain in July and August
  • Seeds from more than 200 flower species sit in the red and rocky soil of the Atacama all year, awaiting the winter rains, says Chilean botanist

LLANOS DE CHALLE NATIONAL PARK, Chile: A rare bloom in Chile’s Atacama Desert has briefly transformed one of the world’s driest places into a dazzling carpet of fuchsia-colored wildflowers.
The arid region — considered the driest nonpolar desert on Earth, averaging around 2 millimeters (0.08 inches) of rainfall a year — was a riot of color this week after unusual downpours throughout the Southern Hemisphere’s winter months soaked the desert foothills and highlands.
Experts describe 2025 as among the Atacama’s wettest in recent years, with some high-elevation borderlands receiving up to 60 millimeters of rain (2.3 inches) in July and August.
Seeds from more than 200 flower species sit in the red and rocky soil of the Atacama Desert all year, awaiting the winter rains, said Víctor Ardiles, chief curator of botany at Chile’s National Museum of Natural History.
Moisture from the Amazon basin arrives to the desert’s eastern fringes as modest rainfall, and from the Pacific Ocean to its coastline as dense fog. Dormant seeds must store up at least 15 millimeters (0.6 inches) of water to germinate.
“When certain moisture thresholds are met, (the seeds) activate, grow and then bloom,” Ardiles said.
Yet even then there’s no guarantee that brightly colored bulbs will explode through the soil.
“There are four key factors that determine whether this process reaches the seed – water, temperature, daylight and humidity,” Ardiles added.
“Not all the seeds will germinate, some will remain waiting … a portion will make it to the next generation, while others will be left behind along life’s path.”
The main threads in the floral carpet are pink and purple. But yellow, red, blue and white strands emerge as well.
Tourists flocked to the northern desert in recent days to marvel at the short-lived flower show. Some even trek from Chile’s capital, Santiago, 800 kilometers (497 miles) south of the Copiapó region.
Most flowers will have vanished by November, as summer sets in. But more drought-resistant species can stick around until January.
“It’s one of those rare things you have to take advantage of,” said Maritza Barrera, 44, who hit the road with her two kids for almost six hours to catch the desert bloom in the Llanos de Challe National Park last week. “It’s more stunning than I could have imagined.”
Recognizing the ephemeral desert flowers as a conservation priority, Chilean President Gabriel Boric minted a new national park further inland in 2023, converting about 220 square miles (570 square kilometers) of flower fields along the Pan-American Highway into Desert Bloom National Park.
“Nowhere on Earth does this phenomenon occur like it does here in Chile,” Ardiles said.