ɫɫ

Skip to main content
You have permission to edit this article.
Edit

Promise and peril drive the fascination with rain in the parched deserts of the United Arab Emirates

MASAFI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Outside of a mountain village in the northern outskirts of the United Arab Emirates, clouds on a recent weekend suddenly crowded out the white-hot sun that bakes this desert nation in the summer months. Fierce winds blew over planters and pushed a dumpster down the street. And then came the most infrequent visitor of all: rain.

Updated
3 min read
Promise and peril drive the fascination with rain in the parched deserts of the United Arab Emirates

People stand in the rain as they chase rain showers at Fujairah, United Arab Emirates, Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Fatima Shbair)


MASAFI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Outside of a mountain village in the northern outskirts of the United Arab Emirates, clouds on a recent weekend suddenly crowded out the white-hot sun that bakes this desert nation in the summer months. Fierce winds blew over planters and pushed a dumpster down the street. And then came the most infrequent visitor of all: rain.

Rainfall long has fascinated the people of the Emirates. That includes both its white-thobed locals crowding into the deserts for any downpour and its vast population of foreign workers, many coming from homes in the Indian subcontinent who grew up with monsoon deluges.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW

More from The Star & partners