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In
August 1996, H.H. Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan completed thirty
years as
Ruler of Abu Dhabi and on 2 December 1996 celebrated his silver
jubilee as President of the UAE, coinciding
with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the establishment of the United
Arab Emirates, of which he was a key architect. These events were
marked by a host of special activities in the UAE on the occasion of
its twenty-fifth National Day and during the course of the year.
Sheikh
Zayed is the grandson of Sheikh Zayed bin Khalifa Al Nahyan, Ruler
of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi from 1855-1909, the longest reign in the
emirate's history. His father, Sheikh Sultan, was Ruler between 1922
and 1926, and then, after a brief reign by an uncle, Sheikh Shakhbut
(Sheikh Zayed's brother) came to the throne at the beginning of
1928. At the time, Britain , which first established its presence in
the region as early as 1820, had signed a series of agreements on
maritime truce with local rulers of the seven Trucial States on the
Southern coast of the Arabian Gulf that make up the United Arab
Emirates today, including Abu Dhabi. bus games
Abu
Dhabi was poor and undeveloped, with an economy based upon fishing
and pearl-diving along the coast, and on simple agriculture in
scattered oases inland, like Liwa and Al Ain. When the world market
for Gulf pearls collapsed in the 1930s, the already poor emirate
suffered a catastrophic blow. Sheikh Zayed's family, like their
people, fell upon hard times. When the young Zayed was growing up,
there was not a single school anywhere in the Trucial States. Like
his fellows, he received only a basic instruction in the principles
of Islam from the local preacher, although a thirst for knowledge
took him out into the desert with Bedouin tribesmen, to absorb all
he could about their way of life. He recalls with pleasure what his
expeditions taught him about desert life and created companionship
among the people. The falconry, which he learned from Bedouins, has
remained a lifelong passion. 4d cinema cost, 5d cinema addresses
The
early days of Abu Dhabi Latest Abu Dhabi
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These
early years taught Sheikh Zayed much about his country and his
people. In the early 1930s when the first oil company teams arrived
to carry out a preliminary surface geological survey, it was Sheikh
Zayed who was given the task of guiding them around the desert,
giving him his first exposure to the industry that was later to have
such a great effect upon his country. He performed well, and in
1946, he was the obvious choice to fill a vacancy as Ruler's
Representative in the oasis of Al Ain, then a cluster of small
villages, though today a thriving city with a population of around
200,000.
When,
a little over thirty years ago, revenues from oil exports offered
the opportunity to develop the emirate as a whole, Sheikh Zayed was
the obvious choice of the Al Nahyan family, rulers of Abu Dhabi for
250 years, to tackle the challenges ahead. He was a man in a hurry.
With revenues growing, he was determined to use them in the service
of the people, and a massive construction program got under way, of
roads and schools, housing and hospitals.
 H. H.
Sheikh Zayed taken a trip around the cities of the Trucial
States after he became a ruler of Abu Dhabi in 1966.
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Upon
acceding to power in 1966, he called openly for the seven emirates
comprising the Trucial States to come closer together.
"Federation is the way to power, the way to strength, the way
to well-being, a high reputation . . . Lesser entities have no
standing in the world today, and so it has ever been in
history". As always, Sheikh Zayed followed up his words with
concrete action, donating substantial funds to the Trucial States
Development Council, which had been established a decade or so
before to promote development projects. By 1968, Abu Dhabi was the
Fund's largest donor.
When
in 1968 Britain announced its intention of leaving the Gulf by the
end of 1971, he was ready to act. Together
At the
formation of the United Arab Emirates, 2nd of December
1971
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with
the late Ruler of the Emirate of Dubai, Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al
Maktoum, later UAE Vice President and Prime Minister, he took the
lead in calling for a federation among the emirates and in July
1971, it was agreed to form the United Arab Emirates. Initially, the
seven Trucial States were joined by Qatar and Bahrain, who
eventually chose to seek their own separate paths. Holding out the
hand of cooperation to Ras al-Khaimah, which initially declined to
join, but did so in early 1972, and to Qatar and Bahrain, Sheikh
Zayed commented: "I am not imposing unity on anyone. That is
tyranny. All of us have our opinions and these opinions can change.
Sometimes we put all opinions together and then extract from them a
single common point of view. This is our democracy".
Sheikh
Zayed was elected the first President of the Federation, a post to
which he has been successively reelected at five year intervals,
while Sheikh Rashid Al Maktoum of Dubai was elected Vice President,
and remained so until his death in 1990. The UAE was formally born
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