Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, on Friday attended the UAE Day celebrations at Expo 2025 Osaka.
The festivities began with a parade featuring traditional Emirati music and dancers that headed towards the main Expo Hall, while there were also cultural performances.
Sheikh Khaled was shown UAE Day cultural activities put together by 17 organisations, including the UAE Space Agency and the Abu Dhabi Music and Arts Foundation. There were traditional handicraft workshops, cultural and artistic performances, and discussions highlighting sustainable development and technological innovation in the UAE.
The UAE Day programme also featured events focused on diplomacy that aimed at strengthening co-operation between the UAE and Japan. Education, culture and sustainability were in the spotlight on those events.
Sheikh Khaled met young Emiratis who played a key role in the country’s participation at Expo 2025, praising their contributions and emphasising the importance of empowering young people to represent the nation abroad.
Sharing the UAE’s story
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, visited the UAE’s pavilion during a tour of Expo 2025 in April.
“I was impressed by the design of our national pavilion, inspired by the palm tree, which reimagines the traditional Arish – the old homes built from palm fronds and trunks,” Sheikh Mohammed said at the time. “However, the content of the UAE Arish showcases our space projects, future initiatives in the health sector and our progress in sustainability projects. Our pavilion embodies our commitment to our authentic past and our passion for the future.”
Expo 2025 opened in the Japanese city on April 13 and runs until October 13. It provides a global platform for more than 150 countries to show off their heritage, achievements and plans for the future.
The six-month event follows the successful Expo 2020 Dubai, the first world’s fair to be held in the Middle East and North Africa, which recorded more than 24 million visits in six months.
Expo 2025 Osaka attracted five million visits in its first six weeks, putting it on track to hit its 28 million target.
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4) 809 hand sanitiser dispensers placed throughout the venue
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It’ll be summer in the city as car show tries to move with the times
If 2008 was the year that rocked Detroit, 2019 will be when Motor City gives its annual car extravaganza a revamp that aims to move with the times.
A major change is that this week’s North American International Auto Show will be the last to be held in January, after which the event will switch to June.
The new date, organisers said, will allow exhibitors to move vehicles and activities outside the Cobo Center’s halls and into other city venues, unencumbered by cold January weather, exemplified this week by snow and ice.
In a market in which trends can easily be outpaced beyond one event, the need to do so was probably exacerbated by the decision of Germany’s big three carmakers – BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Audi – to skip the auto show this year.
The show has long allowed car enthusiasts to sit behind the wheel of the latest models at the start of the calendar year but a more fluid car market in an online world has made sales less seasonal.
Similarly, everyday technology seems to be catching up on those whose job it is to get behind microphones and try and tempt the visiting public into making a purchase.
Although sparkly announcers clasp iPads and outline the technical gadgetry hidden beneath bonnets, people’s obsession with their own smartphones often appeared to offer a more tempting distraction.
“It’s maddening,” said one such worker at Nissan’s stand.
The absence of some pizzazz, as well as top marques, was also noted by patrons.
“It looks like there are a few less cars this year,” one annual attendee said of this year’s exhibitors.
“I can’t help but think it’s easier to stay at home than to brave the snow and come here.”
AloJapan.com