UNITED ARAB EMIRATES

map_uae.gif (25845 bytes)

 

Area

83,000 sq km includes approx. 200 islands

Religion

Islam

Currency

Dirhams and fils

100fils = 1 Dh

1 US$ = 3.67 Dh

Time

Four hour ahead of GMT

Emirates

Made up of seven emirates

Abu Dhabi

Dubai

Sharjah

Ajman

Umm Al Quwain

Al Khaimah

Fujairah

GEOGRAPHY OF UAE 

UAE lies between 22°50' and
26° north latitude and between 51° and 56°25' east
longitude. It shares a nineteen kilometer border with Qatar on the northwest, a 530-kilometer border with Saudi Arabia on the west, south, and southeast, and a 450-kilometer border with Oman on the southeast and northeast. The largest emirate, Abu Dhabi, accounts for 87 percent of the UAE's total area (67,340 square kilometers). The smallest emirate, Ajman, encompasses only 259 square kilometers 

The UAE stretches for more than 650 kilometers along the southern shore of the Persian Gulf. Most of the coast consists of salt pans that extend far inland. The largest natural harbor is at Dubai, although other ports have been dredged at Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, and elsewhere. Numerous islands are found in the gulf. The smaller islands, as well as many coral reefs and shifting sandbars, are a menace to navigation. Strong tides and occasional windstorms further complicate ship movements near the shore. 
The UAE also extends for about ninety kilometers along the Gulf of Oman, an area known as the Al Batinah coast. The Al Hajar al Gharbi (Western Al Hajar) Mountains, rising in places to 2,500 meters, separate the Al Batinah coast from the rest of the UAE. Beginning at the UAE-Oman border on the Persian Gulf coast of the Musandam Peninsula (Ras Musandam), the Al Hajar al Gharbi Mountains extend southeastward for about 150 kilometers to the southernmost UAE-Oman frontier on the Gulf of Oman. The range continues as the Al Hajar ash Sharqi (Eastern Al Hajar) Mountains for more than 500 kilometers into Oman. The mountain slopes tend to run right to the shore. Nevertheless, there are small harbors at Diba al Hisn, Kalba, and Khor Fakkan on the Gulf of Oman. In the vicinity of Fujeirah, where the mountains do not approach the coast, there are sandy beaches.

 

HISTORY OF UAE

The gestation period of this country was not altogether a straightforward one. It took nurturing and plenty of nourishment before the birth of a healthy new state could be contemplated - let alone guaranteed. The idea of the various sheikhdoms in the Gulf co-operating for their mutual security was first seriously and realistically talked of in 1967. Their great wealth, small size and strategic location made them especially vulnerable to threats. But the idea, reportedly initiated by His Highness Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nayhan, to provide greater self-protection gained momentum only when the British announced their intention to withdraw from the Gulf. The Trucial States are unique in history in that they expressed a reluctance at the prospect of Britain leaving the region. Britain had provided protection and with the discovery of oil this was even more of an everyday need. Indeed, the decision of the British to withdraw was the result not of a clamour for independence along the Trucial Coast but of domestic policy concerns at home. The Labour government responded to the growing calls among its rank and file members for a reduction in defence spending by announcing that it would pull out of almost all its military bases east of Suez. On 16th January 1968, the British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, told the House of Commons that Britain's presence in this part of the world would end by the closing days of 1971.
Britain was determined to make its withdrawal and the hand over of the administration in the Gulf as smooth as possible; so much so that some have described its role in the birth of this country as that of a midwife.
The British announcement provided an even greater spur for thoughts of a Union among the sheikhdoms. Of course the Trucial States Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Qaiwain, Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah - had plenty in common with one another, over and above their treaty relationship with Britain. The social structure, geography, mutual regard, political characteristics, maritime past and former dependence on pearl fishing all reinforced the relationship between them.
As well as these ties between the Trucial States, similar links extended to two other Gulf neighbours; Qatar and Bahrain. His Highness Sheikh Rashid Bin Said Al Maktoum had close ties with Qatar, which was ruled by his son-in-law who had been generous towards development projects in Dubai. Teachers and civil servants had come to work in Abu Dhabi from Bahrain and the sheikhdom used the Bahrani dinar as its currency between 1966 and 1972.

From the end of the 1960's, right up until the formation of the United Arab Emirates, there was the possibility (indeed at times very much a probability) that the two would become a part of the union.
One of the first crucial steps towards forming that union came from the statesmanlike decision of the rulers of Dubai, Sheikh Rashid, and of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Zayed. In February 1968, they met on the border between their two territories and formally agreed to merge their two sheikhdoms. By doing that, it meant that from that time on they were to conduct their foreign affairs, defence, security and social services jointly, as well as adopting a common immigration policy.

By the end of the month, they had also invited the other Trucial states and Qatar and Bahrain to become part of a larger federation.
The rulers of all nine states came to Dubai for a constitutional conference at Abu Dhabi and Dubai's invitation. The agreement that resulted from that first meeting was less a constitution and more an expression of intent.
Sheikh Zayed had always been a highly generous supporter of the federal idea, stressing as early as the late 1960's the idea that Abu Dhabi's oil and all its resources were at the service of the Emirates as a whole. This type of sentiment undoubtedly had great benefits on the attitude and establishment of the fledgling union.
The nine were to meet several times more over the next few years, still with the idea that they would become one united country. Many decisions, such as the location of the capital and the appointment of individuals to take on the roles of state, were taken when the nine were discussing the union.
The idea of Oman joining was also mooted when Sultan Qaboos became ruler in 1970. As history would have it, as the situation unfolded, Oman remained a Sultanate and both Qatar and Bahrain become independent states, in their own right.

In the spring of 1971, the British Foreign Minister, Sir Alec Douglas Home, announced the idea of a Friendship Treaty between Britain and the 'Arab Emirates of the Gulf', which was to replace the existing treaties between the states. Things moved quickly, with a communiqué announcing the planned formation of the United Arab Emirates in July 1971, and meetings with legal advisors were held and discussions between the rulers took place.

Ras Al Khaimah did not join the union until just over two months after its birth, the hesitation stemming from its representation and the complication of a potential oil find off its coast around that time. 

When the proclamation of a new state was made on 2nd December 1971, the great hope was expressed "that this federation will form the nucleus of a complete federation which will include the remaining members of the brotherly family of emirates". Ras Al Khaimah officially joined the UAE on 1st February 1972.

The membership of Al Imarat Al Arabiyya Al Muttahida (UAE) was complete.

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