The National - News

AN OASIS OF CALM IN EUROPE, LAKE GENEVA IS ALSO A HOME FROM HOME FOR THE LEADERS OF THE UAE

First visited by Sheikh Zayed, the spa town of Evian and nearby Geneva have proved a tonic for the country’s Rulers, writes James Langton

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Sheikh Zayed would have had other things on his mind when he saw the city of Geneva and its lake for the first time in September 1955.

The Founding Father, then the Ruler’s Representa­tive in the Eastern Region, was leading an Abu Dhabi delegation at an internatio­nal tribunal trying to resolve a border dispute at the Buraimi Oasis.

But the surroundin­gs must have caught his eye, the centuries-old stone buildings, the summer skies mirrored in the clear blue of the lake, and beyond, the Alpine meadows of the Chablais mountains with some peaks already dusted with the first snows of winter.

What is certain is that Sheikh Zayed returned again and again to one of the most spectacula­r regions of Europe, sharing its beauty with his family and eventually making a home there.

It is a family tradition that continues to this day. The President, Sheikh Khalifa, returned this week from his latest visit to the lake, the shores of which are shared between France and Switzerlan­d.

Sheikh Khalifa has a property on the French side, at Maxilly-sur-Leman on the outskirts of Evian les Bain, a spa town known worldwide for the purity of its water.

He may well have first travelled there with his father, who is also reported to have owned properties in the hills behind the lake, at Annemasse and near Le Petit Saleve, a 1,379-metre peak that rises above Geneva.

Switzerlan­d’s tough laws against foreign property owners may have been a factor as to why Sheikh Zayed chose the French side of the lake for his homes, but the President was a frequent visitor to the city of Geneva and other resorts on the Swiss side.

In 1979, his official photograph­er Noor Ali Rashid, captured Sheikh Zayed on an early morning stroll through Lausanne, where an Emirati-Swiss Friendship Forum was launched in 2010.

Other images show Sheikh Zayed enjoying excursions on the lake with his children and taking the oars of a small rowing boat.

Those visits did not mean an escape from the responsibi­lities of state. The official records show that Sheikh Zayed held several important discussion­s on internatio­nal affairs on his visits to region.

In 1982, during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, he held talks in Geneva with Al Shadhili bin Jadid, then secretary of the Arab League. In June 1993 there were meetings with the president of Romania.

Two weeks later, Sheikh Zayed and the then UN secretary general, Boutros Boutros Ghali held talks in Geneva amid the rising threat of Serbian militias carrying out genocide on the Muslim population in Bosnia.

The following year, Sheikh Zayed received Palestinia­n president Yasser Arafat. In 1995 there were talks in Geneva with Egypt’s president Hosni Mubarak and president Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen.

It was also in Geneva in 1996 that Sheikh Zayed uttered one his most memorable quotes.

Asked why he spent so much money on his people, the President replied: “If you have money, won’t you spend it on your children? All my people are my children.”

Sheikh Khalifa has continued to receive guests during visits to his home at Evian. This summer, he met the

Ruler of Ajman, Sheikh Humaid bin Rashid Al Nuaimi in July and received Eid greetings from Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces last month.

Geneva home to internatio­nal organisati­ons such as the UN, the World Health Organisati­on and the Red Cross, as well as being a financial centre with excellent health providers.

At the same time it has none of the frenetic bustle of cities such as London or New York. Geneva is twinned with Abu Dhabi and in 2002 gave the capital a flower clock, newly restored, for the Corniche.

The city and the towns and villages around the lake, known as Leman in France, have long attracted visitors from the Middle East.

Higher oil prices from the 1970s brought the first wave from the Arabian Gulf as newly prosperous citizens followed to see for themselves what attracted the ruling families.

When Sheikh Zayed arrived early to spent six weeks in the Chablais in 2000, Geneva tourist authoritie­s recorded a 57 per cent increase in visitors from the Middle East on the previous year, the equivalent of 10,000 extra overnight stays.

Gulf visitors are also popular for other reasons. In 2013, the Swiss tourist board calculated that they spent an average of Dh1,600 a day, compared to Dh900 by Indian visitors and just Dh528 by Germans.

Two years ago, estate agents reported that one in 10 sales, mostly of the more expensive properties, were to Middle East buyers. Members of the ruling families from other emirates are also understood to have summer homes near Evian.

The arrival of the UAE elite does little to disrupt the quiet pace of life along the lakeside, something that seems to suit locals and their visitors.

Their impact can be measured in other ways. The community of Maxilly-sur-Leman now benefits from a Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan Library, with the President reported to have quietly made other donations to help the community through the years.

The town of Excenevex, about 25 kilometres to the west of Evian, has a new children’s park and playground thanks to a donation from Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed Al Maktoum, who stays at a family home in the community each summer.

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 ?? Wam ?? President Sheikh Khalifa received Sheikh Humaid bin Rashid Al Nuaimi, Ruler of Ajman, at his Evian residence in July
Wam President Sheikh Khalifa received Sheikh Humaid bin Rashid Al Nuaimi, Ruler of Ajman, at his Evian residence in July
 ??  ?? Geneva in Switzerlan­d has long been a favourite spot for Emiratis after Sheikh Zayed visited it in 1955
Geneva in Switzerlan­d has long been a favourite spot for Emiratis after Sheikh Zayed visited it in 1955
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