The electricity crisis in Yemen is a constant annoyance, especially for students studying for exams and for their teachers madly marking papers before the sunset.
Along with the poor electricity service, is the very lacking garbage collection service. This problem when linked to the electricity problem means oranger skies over Sana'a in particular. People are firing up the generators and burning up the garbage.
These two phenomena also affect sleep. The generators an obvious noise polution along with the air polution, but the acrid smell of plastics burning in the rubbish pile burn your nose and create a headache.
It is being said it will all be fixed up after the elections on 21 February. I doubt it - services weren't so good BEFORE the revolution.
There isn't much going on for muhajireen. Arabic courses are still running in some institutes, but either ridiculously expensive or cheap with a non-existant curriculum (do not try to study Arabic at Sana'a University - its a scam!).
The Islamic centres are mostly open, even Eman University reopened. Dammaj is under fire from the Houthis and is currently a Jihad destination.
Other than that there is not a long going on an visas are still a difficult commodity to obtain, especially for Western and Euro Musoims. Suggest you try Egypt or Libya as a hijra destination.
Along with the poor electricity service, is the very lacking garbage collection service. This problem when linked to the electricity problem means oranger skies over Sana'a in particular. People are firing up the generators and burning up the garbage.
These two phenomena also affect sleep. The generators an obvious noise polution along with the air polution, but the acrid smell of plastics burning in the rubbish pile burn your nose and create a headache.
It is being said it will all be fixed up after the elections on 21 February. I doubt it - services weren't so good BEFORE the revolution.
There isn't much going on for muhajireen. Arabic courses are still running in some institutes, but either ridiculously expensive or cheap with a non-existant curriculum (do not try to study Arabic at Sana'a University - its a scam!).
The Islamic centres are mostly open, even Eman University reopened. Dammaj is under fire from the Houthis and is currently a Jihad destination.
Other than that there is not a long going on an visas are still a difficult commodity to obtain, especially for Western and Euro Musoims. Suggest you try Egypt or Libya as a hijra destination.