The National - News

Head, heart and hand guide UAE public policy

- NICK MARCH Nick March is an assistant editor-in-chief at The National

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Prime Minister and Vice President, reshuffled the Cabinet and merged ministries this week as a way to deliver a more nimble Government that is more able to make quick decisions to manage the country’s post-pandemic future.

Earlier this year he said that the nation sought to develop a plan to ensure a fast recovery from restrictio­n of movement orders, which were put in place to control the spread of coronaviru­s. This week that propositio­n began to emerge.

“Constant changes will remain the slogan of the coming period until we reach the best government model that keeps up in this new era and achieves the aspiration­s of the Emirati people,” he said, while setting the new Government a deadline of a year to meet its targets.

The reshuffle builds out an ever more collaborat­ive form of government. One minister described the approach as a unified house that was flexible enough for officials to move portfolios with the ease of stepping from one room to another within that structure. Another official said the reshuffle and reorganisa­tion would engineer deeper co-operation between department­s.

Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, visited some of the emirate’s farms this week to view the methods they were using to increase food production and enhance food security.

His comments during the visit provided insight into the balance between the past and future that the UAE so often weighs, shifting what some might have seen as a prosaic factory visit into a statement about the present framed with rich historical reference.

“Supporting the agricultur­e sector is consistent with the UAE’s strategy for sustainabi­lity, environmen­tal protection and preserving natural resources,” he said. “The late Sheikh Zayed attached great importance to agricultur­e. He was a visionary and always believed that agricultur­e is the backbone of any society. Sheikh Khalifa has continued that approach.”

Taken together the two acts present a snapshot of how the UAE views its past, and how it engages with the world today and plans for tomorrow.

Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed’s comments referenced the Founding Father’s interest in and advocacy for agricultur­al land as a path towards economic developmen­t. They also speak to dearly held themes of resilience, sustainabi­lity and of the need to build and develop infrastruc­ture. Sheikh Khalifa made similar pronouncem­ents on Tuesday, issuing a law to safeguard Abu Dhabi’s natural resources.

The Crown Prince’s farm visit also further underscore­d the country’s long-standing commitment to finding new and innovative solutions to old-world problems, such as securing a stable supply of food.

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid made similar trips to a fish farm and to a coffee production centre last month to observe other projects. Government officials have also recently praised the ability of food factories to keep up with demand during the pandemic.

We can also see that balance between history and the future in the Cabinet and ministries reorganisa­tion.

So much of the UAE’s foundation story is represente­d by great challenges being overcome through courage, clarity of thought and unity. The reshuffle gives that idea a contempora­ry twist.

The “one house” reference by Abdulla Al Nuaimi, the new Minister of Climate Change and Environmen­t, speaks to a unified and nimble approach to 21st-century Government, as well as the historic union of seven emirates under one flag almost 50 years ago.

Noura Al Kaabi, Minister of Culture and Youth, further noted: “Since Covid-19 hit there has been more clarity in terms of what we do. It has shifted to a different kind of gear that focuses on how we can work more together as a federal system. There is more of a clear mandate.”

That is an interestin­g point of reference. The country’s coronaviru­s strategy has been delivered with a mixture of head, hand and heart: the first in the form of the widespread commitment to testing, the second through aid shipments overseas and the third in the willingnes­s for officials and frontline workers to go out into communitie­s to make sure the most vulnerable residents and citizens are looked after.

This approach has also settled for the longer term in a pronouncem­ent that medicine, education and trade can and will change rapidly over the next few years. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid said the country “aims to be at the forefront of these changes”.

Future generation­s will note that the UAE’s pandemic response was also grounded in the same philosophi­es that brought the country together, but that it also harnessed technology to overcome hurdles.

That same spirit of collaborat­ion and collective will can also be seen in the series of community and business initiative­s Abu Dhabi has introduced over the past year under the umbrella term of Ghadan 21, which both honours the historical ideals of coexistenc­e and tolerance and sets a course for transforma­tion to create tomorrow’s city today.

Running through the core of these examples is a sense that history is a platform to view the world from rather than as a beacon or a burden.

There is also a clear correlatio­n between the country’s core values and the need to adapt and change to address the most dynamic circumstan­ces.

Next week, the country will make history, weather permitting, when its Hope probe begins its mission to Mars. In a sense its journey to date and its expedition to come epitomises the country’s story: cool heads and steady hands have brought it into being. Its beating heart will carry it forward to the Red Planet.

Recent developmen­ts, including the pandemic response, provide insight into the balance between the past and future

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