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📄 Extracted Text (1,254 words)
From: Sultan Bin Sulayem < M >
To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Golden dubai
Date: Sat, 28 Apr 2012 02:43:41 +0000
http://www.economist.corn/node/15006764?story_id=15006764&source=hptextfeature
From the archive
Golden Dubai
1970: Dubai is in strange and welcome contrast to anywhere else on the Gulf
Jun 6th 1970
If the accident of oil had not brought such wealth to Abu Dhabi Sheikh Zayed, remarkable a man as he is, would
not have been the unchallenged leader among the Trucial states' rulers. His neighbour, Sheikh Rashed bin Said al
Maktum, a shrewd, cunning and hard-working merchant who has ruled Dubai since 1958, would have been as
likely a candidate. And Dubai, which in effect is a town straddling a 6-mile long creek (although there are 1,500
square miles of desert too) has for centuries been the main port and trading post serving the Trucial states and the
interior of Oman. Sheikh Rashed intends that it shall remain so.
With a thriving and well-established trading community of some 60,000 people, a frantically active waterway
running through its heart, with lighters and dhows being loaded and unloaded 24 hours a day at its centre, Dubai
is in strange and welcome contrast to anywhere else on the Gulf. The difference is not only physical. The tolerant
and broadminded attitude of Sheikh Rashed (what other Arab ruler would lay the foundation stone of a Protestant
church?) infects the life of his state. There are almost no restrictions on anyone opening businesses; the foreign
community (Iranians alone number 11,000) is treated as equal to the indigenous, and no eyebrows are raised if
young Arabs take to the dance-floor.
The tolerance extends to trade. It is no secret that a large proportion of the wealth accumulated by Dubai
merchants comes from smuggling gold bullion (mostly from Britain), Swiss watches and Japanese cloth into
Pakistan and India and tea into Iran. Between 15 and 20 tons of gold (at £600,000 a ton) arrive by air in Dubai
each month. It is taken to India, often in fast, modern launches, and by the time the agents are paid off, and the
rupees converted into hard currency the organising syndicate can expect a profit of between 18 and 22 per cent
on a consignment. This adequately covers the losses on consignments that are caught by Indian or Pakistani
customs patrols, or which have to be dumped into the Indian Ocean if arrest seems imminent. Import statistics
show that Dubai is the second largest importer of Swiss watches in the world—£7 million worth arrived in 1968.
The state's main source of income has been its 4.625 per cent custom duty on
imports, but in 1967 oil was discovered in commercial quantities off-shore and Related topics
shipments began last year. This year Sheikh Rashed's income could reach £10
million and next year £14 million. In anticipation Rashed has embarked on one of Abu Dhabi
the major development projects on the Trucial coast—a 15 berth deep-water Middle East
harbour, which is being constructed by Costain at a cost of £24 million. It is a brave
venture, for Qatar, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah are in the process of building their own, United Arab Emirates
more modest ports, and if Dubai's is to prove worth its cost, it will have to attract the Dubai
merchandise destined for the other states as well. This is not just the Sheikh's wild
dream, for by the time his harbour is finished, the whole Trucial coast from Doha to
Ras-el-Khaimah will be joined by asphalted roads. He is also confident that the experience and standing of the
Dubai merchants will justify his investment.
Rashed understands the economic advantages that will follow a federation of the states, but he does not hesitate
to tell his brother rulers and his visitors that no one is going to interfere in the running of his state. It is very
much a family affair. One son heads the municipal council of appointed merchants which runs the town; another,
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the Crown Prince, heads the Land Registration Committee; and a third is in charge of the police. But Rashed has
his own eyes and ears and little escapes his notice. He drives around the town, fishing his pipe tobacco out of an
old aspirin bottle, and if he notices anything amiss or new he stops to find out for himself what is afoot.
His next-door neighbour, Sheikh Khalid of Sharjah, whose state boundary is just a few miles down the road, is
another able, hard-working ruler with a business background. In the five years since he took over he has also
trasformed his small domain from a run-down fishing village into a small active trading town with water and
electricity supplies. He is indebted to Sheikh Zayed for the road to the agricultural centre of Dhaid and to the
Trucial States Development Fund for aid in developing the fishing industry in Sharjah's enclave on the Indian
Ocean coast. The long jetty built at great cost by his predecessor to give the state a deep-water harbour is
doomed to be a white elephant as the prevailing winds and tides deter captains from tying up alongside, but
Sheikh Kahlid has started work on dredging the silted-up creek and this, he hopes, will bring trade back to
Sharjah. He has recently granted oil exploration concessions to two groups on favourable terms and this income
will more than compensate him for the loss of revenue from the British base, when it disappears.
Oil concessions have also brightened the outlook for the next two small states along the Gulf coast, Ajman and
Umm al-Qaiwain, both little more than primitive villages. Ajman, however, sports a large cinema that could take
more than its whole population, and both now have water and electricity and are trying to develop their dried fish
industries. The youngest state, Fujairah, which was only recognised in 1952, lies on the Batinah coast of the
Indian Ocean. It, too, is poor and its working population ekes out a living by farming and fishing. Both industries
could be developed considerably were the money and the expertise available. Finally, there is Ras-al-Khaimah
and its wily old ruler, Sheikh Saqr. A simple, stubborn, fighting man, Sheikh Saqr rules his 10,000 subjects
without much outside aid. He keeps his fingers crossed that one of the two oil groups prospecting on and off
shore will strike oil in commercial quantities. If they do, he may well insist on building his own international
airport—a useless project—but he has plans as well for a cement factory and agriculture and fishery
developments, while a power station will be in action in 1971. Saqr has been insisting that the defence
headquarters of the proposed federal force should be in his capital—an impossible idea—but the motive behind
this and his plan for an airport is his fear of Zayed of Abu Dhabi. In the conferences up to date, he has aligned
himself with Ahmed of Qatar and Rashed of Dubai and it is noticeable that the Iranians have taken trouble to f'e'te
him on his visits there. He owns the two small Tumbs islets which the Shah wants for himself, and if Saqr plays
his cards right, he could get a handsome cash payment for them. But so unpredictable are the alliances and feuds
on the Trucial coast, that the recent news that Sheikh Saqr and his son have been visiting Sheikh Zayed comes as
no surprise.
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ℹ️ Document Details
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4d7611729c76a4493f117fb30a5a33732967245195f63e149ba041f758c94034
Bates Number
EFTA00660120
Dataset
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document
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2
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