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A complete 13-digit code has 5-digit number representing region, sector, city, and zone; 4-digit X between 2000 and 5999; 4-digit Y between 6000 and 9999. [24] Digits of 5-digit code may represent postal region, sector, branch, section, and block respectively.
There is no area code in Kuwait. As of 17 October 2008, telephone numbers in Kuwait consist of eight digits (with the exception of '800'-style numbers, which are made up of seven digits). From 17 October 2008 a single digit prefix was added to all fixed and mobile numbers as per the Ministry of Communication's new numbering plan:
Home of multiple hospitals, including Mubarak Al-Kabeer Hospital, Hadi Hospital, and Royale Hayat Hospital, as well as many embassies, the Blood Bank of Kuwait and Health Sciences Campus of Kuwait University. Rumaithiya: الرميثية 1964 12: 41,787: Has the largest number of Husainiya in Kuwait. Salam: سلام 22,314: Salwa: سلوى 12: ...
Kuwait City / k ʊ ˈ w eɪ t / ⓘ (Arabic: مدينة الكويت, romanized: Madinat al-Kuwayt) is the capital and largest city of Kuwait.Located at the heart of the country on the south shore of Kuwait Bay on the Arabian Gulf, it is the political, cultural and economic center of the emirate, containing Kuwait's Seif Palace, government offices, and the headquarters of most Kuwaiti ...
Shuwaikh Industrial Area (Arabic: الشويخ المنطقة الصناعية) is an area of Kuwait City in Kuwait. It comprises three separate districts: Shuwaikh Industrial-1, Shuwaikh Industrial-2, and Shuwaikh Industrial-3.
Al-Riggae (Arabic: الرقعي) is an area of the Farwaniya Governorate, Kuwait, located in the southwest of the centre of Kuwait City.The Al-Riggae area is distinguished by its location between the Fourth and Fifth Ring Road (its four borders between Andalus, Al-Rai, Ardiya and Shuwaikh).
A Monument dedicated to the martyrs of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990–1991 at Rumaithiya Co-Op in Block 7.. The general area of Rumaithiya was already known by the time Syrian traveller Faisal Al-Adhama visited Kuwait in 1942 and wrote about it in his 1945 book In The Pearl Country (Arabic: في بلاد اللؤلؤ), where he describes it as a "beautiful place neighboring Dimna."
It is considered one of the most important residential areas within the capital city, Kuwait City, after a complete plan was worked on to transform it into a residential area by specialists in the Kuwaiti municipality. Rawda occupies an area of 3 million square meters (3,000,000 m²), throughout which a large amount of groundwater wells are spread.