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Khaleej Times
3 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
UAE: Kim Kardashian's Skims to open Middle East's first physical store in Dubai
Skims, a popular shapewear and clothing brand, will soon be opening its first physical store in the UAE, as it forays into the Middle East. On August 6, Khaleej Times spotted a banner showcasing the location of the new store in Dubai. Until now, residents have been purchasing Skims clothing online through Ounass, but they will soon be able to touch and try on the clothing before buying it. The store may soon come up close to the cinemas in Mall of the Emirates, Dubai. No launch date has yet been announced by Skims or Kim Kardashian, who is the face and part-owner of the brand. Take a look at where the store is set to open below: Dubai resident Janisha Kaur has said that she is enthralled for the brand to come to the UAE. "A physical store makes all the difference," the 22-year-old said. I usually ask my cousin in the US to bring me my fix, because she can see the clothes in the store," she said. Meanwhile, 25-year-old Indian expat Ananya Chawla, who works in Canada but has family in Dubai, is happy to hear that she wouldn't have to worry about online shopping for her mum anymore. "She often has to exchange the clothes I order for her because I get her size wrong. She can just go try them on now!" Skims has been a popular brand across the globe since it launched in 2019, with several of its products going viral for their size-inclusive design. The brand's bodycon dress was recently all the rage as young women purchased the garment in droves, appreciating the snug fit of the cloth. However, of late, the brand has found itself in some hot water with many expressing their disappointment with the newest 'face wrap'. Many have taken to social media to say that the product is not a necessity and preys on women's insecurities.


Al Etihad
5 hours ago
- Al Etihad
German city Dresden cleared for WWII bomb defusal
6 Aug 2025 21:53 BERLIN (AFP)Large parts of Dresden's old town were briefly evacuated on Wednesday as experts sought to defuse an unexploded World War II bomb found during clearance work for a collapsed 17,000 people were asked to leave their homes in the eastern German city, authorities affected area included the famous Frauenkirche, a church which was rebuilt brick-for-brick after being destroyed in the war, as well as several bomb was found on Tuesday during clearance work at the site of the Carola Bridge, one of Dresden's main crossings over the Elbe river, which partly collapsed in the middle of the night in September entire structure is due to be demolished by bomb was successfully defused early in the afternoon and the evacuation order was subsequently lifted by 80 years after the war, Germany remains littered with unexploded ordnance, often uncovered during construction than 20,000 people were evacuated from central Cologne in June after three unexploded World War II bombs were found, the biggest such operation in the city since the end of the heart of the city was left deserted, with a hospital, two old people's homes, nine schools and a TV studio evacuated. The bomb found in Dresden was British-made and weighed 250 kilograms, according to city authorities.


Al Etihad
5 hours ago
- Al Etihad
New discoveries at Italy's Pompeii show signs of life post historic volcano eruption
6 Aug 2025 21:37 ROME (AFP)Archaeologists have discovered new evidence pointing to the reoccupation of Pompeii following the 79 AD eruption of Mount Vesuvius that left the city in ruins, the directors of the famous site said the massive destruction suffered by Pompeii, an ancient Roman city home to more than 20,000 people before the eruption, some survivors who could not afford to start a new life elsewhere are believed to have returned to live in the devastated believe they were joined by others looking for a place to settle and hoping to find valuable items left by Pompeii's earlier residents in the rubble."Judging by the archaeological data, it must have been an informal settlement where people lived in precarious conditions, without the infrastructure and services typical of a Roman city," before the area was completely abandoned in the fifth century, they said in a some life returned to the upper floors of the old houses, the former ground floors were converted into cellars with ovens and mills."Thanks to the new excavations, the picture is now clearer: post-79 Pompeii reemerges, more than a city, a precarious and grey agglomeration, a kind of camp, a favela among the still recognisable ruins of the Pompeii that once was," said Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the that the site was reoccupied had been detected in the past, but in the rush to access Pompeii's colourful frescoes and still-intact homes, "the faint traces of the site's reoccupation were literally removed and often swept away without any documentation"."The momentous episode of the city's destruction in 79 AD has monopolised the memory," said estimate that 15 to 20 percent of Pompeii's population died in the eruption, mostly from thermal shock as a giant cloud of gases and ash covered the ash then buried the Roman city, perfectly preserving the homes, public buildings, objects and even the people until its discovery in the late 16th century.A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Pompeii is Italy's second most-visited tourist spot after the Colosseum in Rome, with some 4.17 million visitors last year. It covers a total area of approximately 22 hectares (54.4 acres), a third of which is still buried under ash.