Tuesday, September 17, 2024 | Rabi' al-awwal 13, 1446 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

From tents to tallest building: UAE's 'remarkable' 50-year rise

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DUBAI: Ehab Fouad was a teenager when he marched in the parade marking the birth of the UAE, that has gone from desert outpost to a powerhouse in 50 years. The retired civil engineer, now 64, vividly recalls December 2, 1971, when he proudly held aloft the photo of the Gulf state's founding father, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, and saw its new flag for the first time.


Fouad, who strode directly behind the flag-bearer, tears up when he remembers the Abu Dhabi parade and reflects on the decades that followed.


"Fifty years later, I feel special," said the Egyptian father of one.


"It was a remarkable journey for me, and a remarkable journey for this country," said Fouad, who lives with his family in Dubai, one of the country's seven emirates. Foreigners make up 90 per cent of the UAE's population, which has grown to 10 million from around 300,000 when its emirates came together to form a federation, even if its laws make most of them ineligible for citizenship.


The former British protectorate has left behind its humble beginnings of tents and simple, mud-brick houses to become one of the biggest players in the Middle East.


Dubai, a former pearling town and now a trade and financial centre, boasts a forest of skyscrapers including the world's tallest building, the 830-metre Burj Khalifa. "Some people here used to build their houses from date tree branches, then mud bricks, and today it is all villas and towers," Fouad said.


The late Sheikh Zayed "worked to unite the seven emirates into a single federation", said Elham Fakhro, senior Gulf analyst at the International Crisis Group think tank. "It remains the only functional system of federalism in the Arab world."


Among the world's top producers of crude, the UAE's rapid growth since the 1970s is linked closely to its oil and gas wealth.


However, Dubai, with scant oil resources compared to the capital Abu Dhabi, has blossomed as a financial, transport, tourist and media hub.


"As a committed regional and international actor, we know we need to take on even more responsibility for the future direction of our region," presidential adviser Anwar Gargash said.


"We have had numerous vacuums over the last decade... We cannot stand by and watch these vacuums filled by malign actors."


The UAE has in recent years relaxed its laws to attract more investments, branding itself a "zero tax" haven.


It lifted a cap on non-local ownership, allowed full foreign control of business ventures, and offered long-term "golden" visas to investors and "exceptional talents" such as artists, doctors, engineers and scientists.


Known in the 19th century as the Trucial States, named after a maritime truce, the seven emirates had been a British protectorate since 1892.


But Sheikh Zayed, who ran Abu Dhabi, the biggest and wealthiest of the emirates, saw an opportunity to slowly build a powerful state by joining its neighbours under one flag.


On Thursday, golden jubilee celebrations will include an airshow, a floating theatrical performance on a mountain lake, parades, concerts and fireworks. - AFP


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