Mindoro Island Philippines

Mindoro Island Philippines

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

gulfnews : New regulation to ensure strict standards for tyres this year

gulfnews : New regulation to ensure strict standards for tyres this year

New regulation to ensure strict standards for tyres this year

Process to track product from its origin until destruction expected by September

  • By Binsal Abdul Kader, Staff Reporter, Gulf News
  • Published: 00:00 June 21, 2011
  • Gulf News

  • Image Credit: Supplied
  • Nobody can sell a tyre in the country without a certificate of origin; ESMA will conduct inspections at tyre shops and warehouses with the help of police.

Abu Dhabi: A new system will soon help police detect whether faulty tyres are responsible for a road accident.

It is part of a new regulation stipulating stringent standards for tyres which is expected to come into force by the end of September this year.

Aiming to achieve zero accidents due to faulty tyres, it will put in place a system to track all tyres being sold in the country.

Technical specifications have recently been developed for several products and tyres are the most important product as faulty ones can result in fatal accidents, a senior official told Gulf News Monday.

The seller should have a certificate of origin for tyres which will be identified by a bar code, Mohammad Saleh Badri, Acting Director General of Emirates Authority for Standardisation and Metrology (ESMA), said.

Each and every tyre will be registered with the ESMA system which can be accessed by other authorities such as police, traffic departments, civil defence departments, etc, he said. "We will also share the database with other GCC nations," the official said. The reported malpractice of using somebody else's tyres to pass a vehicle fitness test will be stopped as the authority can easily track the tyre with the bar code, Badri said.

"The system will track a tyre from its origin until its destruction so we call the certificate of origin a birth certificate ," he explained.

Nobody can sell a tyre in the country without a certificate of origin; ESMA will conduct inspections at tyre shops and warehouses with the help of police, Badri said.

Detection

In the event of an accident, police can easily track the life cycle of the tyres of the vehicles involved in the crash by using the ESMA system [to detect whether they were faulty or worn out], the official said.

The existing regulations are not applicable to motorbikes and heavy machines, but the new regulation will cover the tyres of all motor vehicles in the country, he said.

"Although we don't have the statistics, the police say that faulty tyres cause many accidents," Badri said.

Gulf News reported on June 15 an accident in which about 19 people were injured in an incident involving a school bus and a minibus. The incident was caused when the minibus' tyre burst on Shaikh Zayed Road. About 35 schoolchildren had a providential escape in the mishap.

ESMA is making the specifications in cooperation with other authorities concerned such as the Ministry of Interior, police departments, and the private sector, Badri said.

The authority has also formed a technical working group of the leading importers and manufacturers of tyres in the UAE. The technical regulation will also cover conditions for manufacturing, handling, storage, re-treating, maintenance and disposal of tyres as per GCC standards. The regulation will come into force after the approval of the board of directors of ESMA and the UAE cabinet.

Eliminating fakes

The system will also help eliminate fake tyres from the market, Mohammad Saleh Badri said. Customers can check the authenticity of the tyres by using the bar code number on the Emirates Authority for Standardisation and Metrology website. An iPhone can be used to scan the bar code and put it on the website to check the tyre.


Motorists should check the date of manufacture, temperature, tyre load, exact size and speed symbol before purchasing a new tyre.

How to read a tyre for safety and suitability

Saturday, June 11, 2011

DFA Consular Office Issues Advisory on Passport Applications

DFA Consular Office Issues Advisory on Passport Applications

04 May 2011 - The Department of Foreign Affairs-Office of Consular Affairs (DFA-OCA) wishes to inform the public that measures have been put in place to address the delay in the processing and releasing of passports which are caused by the recent unprecedented increase in passport applications and other technical concerns.

The DFA will extend up to one year the validity of the current expiring passports of applicants who have urgent travel. The extension will be free of charge while the applicants are waiting for the release of their new electronic passports (ePassports).

Overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and applicants who need their passports on emergency circumstances (e.g., medical concerns, death in the immediate family) are advised to go to the Passport Director's Office, for assistance. The Passport Director's Office is located at the ground floor of the DFA-OCA at the Aseana Business Park along Macapagal Avenue.

Also, the DFA-OCA has extended its work hours, and opened its services on Saturdays. Passport processing services is now available until 8:00 p.m. on weekdays and from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 pm on Saturdays.

The DFA advises the public to file for their passport applications at least 12 weeks before their intended date of travel.

The DFA is exerting all efforts and is committed to resolve the delays at the soonest possible time, and requests the public's patience and understanding, particularly those who applied at its Regional Consular Offices (RCOs).

For additional information, the public may call the DFA-OCA at telephone nos. (02) 737-1000 and (02) 556-0000, send an email to oca@dfa.gov.ph or visit the Department's website at www.dfa.gov.ph. END

Friday, June 10, 2011

gulfnews : Ministry of Health to close three nursing schools

gulfnews : Ministry of Health to close three nursing schools

Ministry of Health to close three nursing schools

Private institutions the alternative as standards at the schools inadequate

  • By Aghaddir Ali, Staff Reporter
  • Published: 00:00 June 10, 2011
  • Gulf News

Students training at the Institute of Nursing in Sharjah
  • Image Credit: Gulf News archive
  • Students training at the Institute of Nursing in Sharjah. The Ministry of Health has decided to close its nursing institute in the emirate as well as those in Fujairah and Ras Al Khaimah.

Dubai: People wishing to take up nursing as a career will now have to apply to private institutes and universities after the Ministry of Health decided to close down the nursing education programme at its three schools in Sharjah, Fujairah and Ras Al Khaimah.

A source from the ministry told Gulf News Thursday the three nursing schools were closed apparently after it was found that they offered a "low level" of education in nursing.

"The responsibility of training and educating nurses shall be taken up by accredited universities and institutes in the country or abroad.

"Those who are interested in becoming nurses are required now to join colleges and universities accredited by the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research," said the source who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Colleges, universities

"Recently, a number of colleges and universities set up nursing schools in the UAE. The ministry believes there is no reason to keep its nursing schools open any more," the source added.

He said nurses in the UAE used to be employed after obtaining their licences without proper testing methods.

Standard 'not adequate'

Applying a comprehensive method of assessment, the ministry realised the standard of its nursing schools was not adequate and was lagging behind those in advanced countries. The decision of closing down the schools of nursing run by the ministry will help in improving the standards of the staff, added the source.

"The 105 nurses graduating this year will be the last from ministry of health's institutes," he said.

The source added that there will be 28 Emirati nurses among the 105 graduates from the three schools this year.

The total number of students in the past three years at the three nursing schools has reached 214. The number of Emaratis among them was 47.

The Ministry of Health also decided this year to stop accepting new requests from those wishing to join its nursery staff.

The nursing school graduates previously used to work in any of the facilities of the Ministry of Health for a period equal to the duration of their study, said the source.

The first nursing school was established in 1972. Their number expanded later with other branches, added the source.

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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

gulfnews : Abu Dhabi 2011

gulfnews : Abu Dhabi 2011:

Abu Dhabi 2011

Abu Dhabi based filmmaker Beno Saradzic showcases the magnificent growth that the UAE’s capital has seen in only a few decades in this magnificent time-lapse film. Twenty-one thousand images were captured over a period of eight weeks to make Abu Dhabi 2011

  • Supplied
  • Published: 14:01 May 29, 2011