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The best thing to do in Dubai when the sun goes down? Follow the crowds to the beach

Floodlit and with lifeguards sporting night-vision binoculars, Dubai beaches too hot to use by day have drawn over a million night visitors

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Roasted by daytime summer temperatures too hot for the beach, Dubai has turned to an innovative solution: opening beaches at night. Photo: AFP

Roasted by summer temperatures too hot for the beach, Dubai has turned to an innovative solution: opening them at night, complete with floodlights and lifeguards carrying night-vision binoculars.

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The idea, in one of the world’s hottest regions and where temperatures are climbing ever higher because of climate change, has proved popular – more than one million people have visited the night beaches since last year, an official said.

Even with much of the region preoccupied with the widening conflict that pits Israel against Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, the United Arab Emirates’ giant neighbour, the night beaches remain busy on weekend evenings.

“The temperature drops down in the evening after the sun sets. So, yeah, it’s amazing,” said Mohammed, 32, from Pakistan, who brought his children to enjoy the sea without having to worry about the burning Gulf sun.

At nearly midnight on a recent Friday, Umm Suqeim beach was packed with people. Photo: AFP
At nearly midnight on a recent Friday, Umm Suqeim beach was packed with people. Photo: AFP
For residents of Dubai, a coast-hugging, desert metropolis of about 3.7 million people, the hot season from June to October is an annual trial.
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