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SafaQat secures investment to scale digital procurement
SafaQat secures investment to scale digital procurement

Observer

time23-07-2025

  • Business
  • Observer

SafaQat secures investment to scale digital procurement

MUSCAT: The Omani digital procurement platform SafaQat — meaning 'Deals' — has successfully closed a funding round with Future Fund Oman and Idrak Group, signalling growing investor confidence in homegrown tech ventures that support the Sultanate of Oman's digital economy goals. Supervised by the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Authority (Riyada), SafaQat is a pioneering venture launched by four brothers — Majed, Sulaiman, Ibrahim and Al Moatasem al Saifi — from the Wilayat of Nizwa. The idea for the platform was born during the Covid-19 lockdowns, initially inspired by the simple act of exchanging quotations through messaging apps, which revealed market readiness for a streamlined digital solution. The brothers used their combined expertise, particularly in tendering, to develop a comprehensive and competitive digital platform. Each of them managed a core function based on their respective specialisations, contributing to the project's structured growth. According to co-founder Al Moatasem, SafaQat faced several early-stage hurdles, notably in building market trust and shifting user behaviour. However, the team tackled these through adaptive development, user feedback and by demonstrating the platform's flexibility and value to institutions. Al Moatasem described the investment from Future Fund Oman and Idrak Group as a strategic milestone, saying the support goes beyond financial backing. 'These partners believe in the vision of investing in Oman's future economy and in empowering Omani youth', he said. The new capital will be used to enhance SafaQat's technical infrastructure, improve the user experience, recruit local talent, expand services to the public sector and support regional and international expansion. To date, SafaQat has recorded 2,486 users, 1,260 tenders and procurement opportunities; and 2,784 registered suppliers and companies, reflecting its fast-growing presence in Oman's digital procurement landscape. The platform has earned multiple accolades, including second place in the Omani Startup Accelerator's live pitch, recognition as the Best Growing Company and top rankings among Omani e-commerce stores. It also won in the Jadarah 2024 initiative. SafaQat has represented Oman at major regional and global events such as Comex 2024, Biban 24 in Riyadh, the Web Summit in Doha; and LEAP 25 in Saudi Arabia, further reinforcing its position as a key national tech player. Built with smart tools such as real-time dashboards, bidding algorithms and automated alerts, the platform is currently working on AI-based bid analysis and price forecasting tools, aligning with Oman's digital transformation objectives. Beyond business, SafaQat has launched social initiatives to train jobseekers as sales representatives through online practical courses, helping create self-employment pathways. It also offers free registration, technical support and awareness programmes for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), contributing to a more inclusive digital economy. — ONA

Kuwait's Creepy Folklore - The Dark Legend Of Um Al Duwais
Kuwait's Creepy Folklore - The Dark Legend Of Um Al Duwais

Arab Times

time16-05-2025

  • Arab Times

Kuwait's Creepy Folklore - The Dark Legend Of Um Al Duwais

By day, Kuwait pulses with modern energy — glass towers reaching into the sky, wide highways humming with traffic, the aroma of coffee drifting from every corner. But when night falls, and the desert wind grows still, an older Kuwait stirs. One made not of skyscrapers, but of whispers. And in those whispers, the name Um Al Duwais lingers. She is not found in official records or textbooks. Her story is passed down from grandmother to grandson, murmured around campfires, hinted at on desert drives. To many, she's a ghost. To others, a jinniyah — a shape-shifting demon. But to those who believe, she is real. A beautiful killer who still walks the sands, waiting for the next man to be drawn in by her beauty... and punished by her wrath. The Face That Floats in the Dark 'She doesn't walk. She floats.' That's how Abu Salem, a 74-year-old retired pearl diver, describes her. He grew up in a coastal home in Sharq, where tales of Um Al Duwais were as common as tea at dusk. 'They say if you see her smile,' he adds, 'it's already too late.' In every version of the tale, Um Al Duwais appears first as a vision of perfection — a woman cloaked in a flowing black abaya, her eyes kohl-lined, her skin glowing like moonlight. The air around her smells of oud and jasmine, thick and hypnotic. She appears alone on quiet roads, often in the deep desert, and always at night. But it's a trap. Those who dare approach — usually men — discover too late the truth beneath the veil. Her legs become goat-like, her bangles turn to blades, her eyes burn red. And then they vanish. Nobody. No blood. Just sand disturbed, a car engine still running, or sometimes... nothing at all. Understanding the Cultural Role of Um Al Duwais Explorers, Travelers and folklorists interpret the tale of Um Al Duwais not merely as a ghost story, but as a cultural mechanism of social control. Her beauty is seen as a metaphorical weapon — a symbol of temptation used to deliver moral lessons. In tribal societies where values like honor, chastity, and restraint are deeply embedded, her legend functions as a warning against adultery, vanity, and wandering far from communal norms. Much like figures in other global mythologies, such as the Sirens of Greek lore or La Llorona in Latin America, Um Al Duwais is believed to personify both desire and danger — a haunting narrative that guides behavior through fear and symbolism. The Man Who Saw Her — And Survived Not everyone believes she's just a tale. Ask Majed, a 32-year-old delivery driver who says he came face to face with her on the road to Al-Jahra. 'It was maybe 2 a.m.,' he recalls. 'I saw a woman by the road, abaya, veil, standing still like a statue. I slowed down. She didn't move. But when my headlights hit her face…' He shudders. 'It was smooth. Like wax. No eyes. No mouth. Just blank.' The moment he looked away, she was gone. Majed doesn't like to tell the story. But online forums, Reddit threads, and late-night radio programs across the Gulf are filled with similar accounts. Most are anonymous. All are terrified. Not Just Kuwaiti — But Deeply Kuwaiti Though similar stories of spectral women haunt other Gulf nations — Um Al Khoush in Bahrain, Um Al Sasa in Oman — the Kuwaiti version is among the most vivid and enduring. Some trace her origins to pre-Islamic jinn mythology. Others say she embodies the spirits of wronged women — betrayed, buried, or silenced in the emptiness of the desert. According to the Mecca newspaper, in the past, women often went to great lengths to keep their husbands faithful, even if it meant inventing terrifying myths such as Aisha Qandisha, Umm Al-Duwais, or Umm Jalumbo. The primary goal was to keep the man under control. Some even suggest that the mysterious disappearance of certain men was due to them being abducted to the underworld—at least, that's what folklore claimed. Another theory, however, is more sinister: some women may have killed their husbands and blamed it on the mythical, blameless Umm Al-Duwais. Lamia Kashmiri, 38, says she wishes the myth of Umm Al-Duwais were real. She's fed up with her husband, whom she mockingly calls "Basbas." 'Following my grandmother's old traditions,' she says, 'I created a story about Umm Al-Duwais to scare him, hoping it would keep him from going out late at night. I told him she might kidnap and devour him.' She elaborated on the legend: 'They say she's stunningly beautiful, in her early twenties, and anyone who sees her becomes entranced. She cooks her victims' flesh—either boiled or grilled—in the deepest layers of the hidden world.' However, Lamia's plan didn't work. Her husband wasn't frightened as she had hoped. 'So,' she adds, 'I decided to turn to the legend of Raya and Sakina as a final attempt.' Several working women shared similar views, believing that myths like Umm Al-Duwais may have served as convenient cover stories for actual crimes, such as a wife murdering her husband and hiding the body. In those days, when forensic science was nonexistent, such legends provided an easy scapegoat for sudden disappearances: the helpless and falsely accused Umm Al-Duwais. William Gifford Palgrave, a 19th-century British explorer and writer, is best known for his work Narrative of a Year's Journey through Central and Eastern Arabia (1862–63). In this travelogue, Palgrave provides detailed observations of the cultures, societies, and landscapes of the Arabian Peninsula during his travels. While his primary focus wasn't on supernatural entities, he does touch upon local beliefs and folklore, including mentions of spirits and jinn, as part of his broader ethnographic observations. Um Al Duwais shares traits with the Si'lat (shape-shifting demons), the Ghoula, and even the European Succubus or Siren — beautiful destroyers used to keep society in check. Her name, Um Al Duwais, may stem from duwais — a reference to her ornate gold bangles, which in some stories become sharpened tools of vengeance. It's both a cultural identifier and a symbol of her trap. A Living Memory 'She's not just a myth,' Abu Salem insists, voice low as if the desert might overhear. 'She's a memory. A warning. And maybe... if the night is quiet enough, she's still listening.' In a region charging toward modernity, Um Al Duwais remains a tether to the old world — a shadow in the rearview mirror of progress. And while you may never see her, you'll feel her story in the chill of the wind when you drive alone at night… or in the silence just after you hear a sound that wasn't supposed to be there. Because in Kuwait, some stories never die. They just wait....

Yemen: Father Kills Two Young Men Over PUBG Game Dispute, Just Before Iftar
Yemen: Father Kills Two Young Men Over PUBG Game Dispute, Just Before Iftar

Gulf Insider

time26-03-2025

  • Gulf Insider

Yemen: Father Kills Two Young Men Over PUBG Game Dispute, Just Before Iftar

A petty dispute over an online video game turned deadly in Yemen's Hadramaut governorate, where an elderly man shot and killed two young men after they allegedly refused to play the popular game PUBG with his son. The shocking incident occurred just before iftar in Wadi Amd district, southeastern Yemen. According to local media reports and a statement by the Yemeni Ministry of Interior, the conflict began at a café near the suspect's home, where a disagreement escalated between the two victims and the suspect's son. The victims, identified as 20-year-old Ali Mohammed Basaleeb and his 18-year-old brother, Majed, reportedly declined to join the suspect's son in playing PUBG — a popular online multiplayer battle game. The refusal led to an argument that quickly turned physical. Authorities say the son informed his father about the altercation. The 55-year-old man, identified by initials A.M.A.B., intervened in the dispute armed with a firearm and, without hesitation, opened fire on the two brothers, killing them instantly. He later surrendered to local police. In a statement, the Interior Ministry's media department confirmed that the suspect was taken into custody and that the victims died at the scene despite attempts to provide emergency assistance. 'The district's security services have launched a full investigation to uncover the circumstances of the crime and initiate the necessary legal proceedings,' the ministry said. Source Gulf News

Two shot dead in Yemen after refusing to play PUBG with suspect's son
Two shot dead in Yemen after refusing to play PUBG with suspect's son

Express Tribune

time25-03-2025

  • Express Tribune

Two shot dead in Yemen after refusing to play PUBG with suspect's son

Listen to article A petty disagreement over an online video game has turned deadly in Yemen's Hadramaut governorate, where an elderly man shot and killed two young men who had reportedly refused to play PUBG with his son. According the Gulf News, the incident took place shortly before iftar in Wadi Amd district, southeastern Yemen, according to local media and a statement by the country's Interior Ministry. The victims, identified as 20-year-old Ali Mohammed Basaleeb and his 18-year-old brother, Majed, were allegedly approached at a local café by the son of the suspect, who asked them to play the multiplayer game PUBG. When they declined, a verbal altercation ensued, which quickly escalated. Authorities said the suspect's son informed his 55-year-old father, identified by the initials A.M.A.B., about the dispute. The man then arrived at the scene armed with a firearm and shot both brothers, killing them instantly. 'The district's security services have launched a full investigation to uncover the circumstances of the crime and initiate the necessary legal proceedings,' the Interior Ministry said in a statement. The suspect later surrendered to local police. Emergency aid was attempted, but both victims were declared dead at the scene.

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