Centara Grand Island Resort & Spa Maldives offers stunning accommodation such as the Family Overwater Villa, Premium Deluxe Sunset Overwater Villa, and a collection of beachfront villas that include private pools and access to the powder-soft sand. Facilities include a spa, fitness centre, kids club, and a variety of restaurants, bars and lounges.
Families can bond over activities like tennis, volleyball, water sports, snorkelling and scuba diving, or explore the beauty of the Maldives with excursions including snorkelling adventures, semi submarine rides, as well as whale shark, turtle or manta sighting cruises.

Lovebirds can head to Centara Ras Fushi Resort & Spa Maldives, an exquisite adults-only island retreat in the North Malé Atoll, less than 20 minutes away by speedboat from Velana International Airport.
Housing a collection of beachfront and overwater accommodation, such as the Deluxe Spa Overwater Villa that comes with an outdoor spa bathtub and direct steps down to the reef – perfect for swimming or snorkelling around the lagoon; and the Premium Deluxe Sunset Overwater Villa with an ocean-facing deck, outdoor spa bathtub and access to the sparkling lagoon.
There are seven restaurants and bars, spa, and water sports facilities available at Centara Ras Fushi Resort & Spa Maldives.
For more information, visit Centara Hotels & Resorts.




Prior to his new appointment, Ali was a key member of the pre-opening team of Dream Doha, as director of sales, for Dream Hotel Group’s flagship luxury hotel in Qatar.




















The World Health Organization (WHO) said on May 23 that mass vaccinations are not needed against the monkeypox outbreak that has spread beyond Africa.
Latest reports this week state that there are about 200 confirmed and suspected cases across at least a dozen countries, most of them being in Europe.
The US and the UK are making some vaccines available while Germany is mulling options for vaccinations, isolation and quarantine. On May 23, Belgium ordered mandatory monkeypox quarantine; it is the first country to do so.
A senior official at WHO said measures like good hygiene, safe sexual behaviour, contact tracing and isolation will help control its spread, and noted that the virus does not spread very easily.
In a statement issued May 21, WHO said epidemiological investigations are ongoing, and reported cases have no established travel links to endemic areas. As the situation is evolving and surveillance is expanded in non-endemic countries, WHO expects more cases of monkeypox will be identified.