Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The paper's compound in Sanaa had been the subject of an attack by a dozen gunmen in February 2008. [3] Based in Aden, [1] it was the most widely read newspaper in southern Yemen, [citation needed] when it was one of seven newspapers closed in May 2009, [1] with the government accusing the paper of supporting separatism. [4]
Yemen TV channel: The 1st official channel started broadcasting in 1975 in North Yemen as local media, joined other Arab channels via Intelsat-59 in 1995 and later Nilesat. Yamania television channel: This channel was founded in 1980 in the South of Yemen as "Aden channel" and was renamed after the unity of Yemen .
Al-Ayyam (Yemen) Al-'Amal (Aden) O. Official Gazette (South Yemen) This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 12:15 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Aden's location in Yemen. Aden is located on the coast of the Gulf of Aden, and is about 363 kilometers away from the capital, Sana’a. It is located between latitudes 47 and 12 north of the equator, and at an altitude of 6 meters above sea level.
Sana'a al-Haneen, performed by Hussain Moheb. Sanaa has a rich musical tradition and is particularly renowned for the musical style called al-Ghina al-San'ani (Arabic: الغناء الصنعاني al-ġināʾ aṣ-Ṣanʿānī), or "the song of Sanaa", which dates back to the 14th century and was designated as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural ...
Al-Hasabah was formerly a separate village as described by medieval writers al-Hamdani and al-Razi, but by the 1980s it had become a suburb of Sanaa. [ 31 ] The southwestern area on both sides of Haddah Road is a generally affluent area with relatively more reliable access to utilities like water and sanitation.
Yemen television channel: The first official channel started broadcasting in 1975 in North Yemen as local media, joined other Arab channels via Intelsat-59 in 1995 and later Nilesat. Yamania television channel: This channel was founded in 1980 in the South of Yemen as "Aden channel" and was renamed after the unity of Yemen .
City of Aden: 1699: Named for Abu Bakr al-Aydarus, a Sufi mystic. [1] Al-Asha'ir Mosque: Zabid, Al-Hudaydah: 628: One of the early mosques of Islam. Part of UNESCO's World Heritage Site of Zabid. [2] Al-Muhdhar Mosque: Tarim, Hadhramaut: 1914: With a height of approximately 53 m (174 ft), the minaret is the tallest mudbrick structure in the ...