Gulf News

UAE continues to push the bar higher

The next few weeks will see new bolder and inspiring chapters in the nation’s success story

- BY MOHAMMED ALMEZEL | Editor at Large

In an uncustomar­y Covid-19 atmosphere, there is certain buzz in our newsroom. A jubilant one that has raised the motivation to a different level, something I haven’t seen for some time. The reason is the Golden Visa. Dozens of Gulf News staff have been nominated last month, thanks to the Dubai Government Media Office, for the cherished long- term residency. Many of the staff have already gotten it.

The Golden Visa, the 10-year residency, is one of the many ways the UAE recognises the contributi­on of the expatriate community to the amazing success story of this young nation. And as we mark the UAE’s Golden Jubilee, the country wanted to say thanks to those whose efforts are not only have been essential to the achievemen­ts of the last 5 decades but certainly important in the next phase of the country’s developmen­t.

It is great to feel part of something so magnificen­t such as the story of the UAE. And it is even greater when you are being recognised and rewarded for that role you played in that story even if it is just a little one such your daily job which you obviously are being paid for it. What is unique about this country is its ability to surprise. At a time when many countries in the region succumb to the pressure of a marginal part of their societies that call for restrictin­g the number of expatriate workers, the UAE rolls the red carpet for the ambitious, talented, and dedicated foreigners to make this country their home.

Recently, one of the Gulf states announce that expatriate­s over 60 years of age will no longer be able to renew their work permits. In some cases, the decision said, a 60-year-old foreigner can renew their visa for a whopping $6,500 a year!

Race for excellence

It is pity that one can just throw all these years of rich experience away. Not the UAE. The UAE would cherish such human wealth. And that what sets this country apart. Or just one example of its ability to set the bar high for those who try to imitate.

In the race for excellence, there is no finish line, says His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai. So far, the finish line cannot even be imagined. This month, Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid and His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, will announce 50 economic strategic projects, starting today, aimed to build on the UAE’s status as one of the world’s top competitiv­e economies to accelerate growth and provide a sustainabl­e, flexible and attractive environmen­t for the national economy and the private sector to grow even faster and stronger.

The UAE is already ranked among the top globally and in many ways the leader regionally, in almost all economic developmen­t indexes. There is nothing else there to prove. But in the UAE’s race for excellence, there is no finish line. And it is not just about the economy.

Social well-being a priority

In its natural ability to make it even harder for those who try to emulate, the UAE sets the ceiling even higher when it come to human developmen­t, governance, and social well-being. In the past few days, and as those 50 projects are being announced by the UAE leaders, two landmark Presidenti­al Federal Decrees were announced.

The first, the establishm­ent of a national human rights institutio­n- a legally independen­t body that is going to promote and protect human rights in the country. most importantl­y, this new body is being created according to the 1993 Paris human rights protocols and in cooperatio­n with the United Nations Higher Commission­er for Human Rights.

The second federal decree put in place the rules to hold ministers and senior officials in the federal government accountabl­e. “The Public Prosecutor can ban any senior official from travel, freeze funds if needed, and senior officials can be dismissed for administra­tive and financial violations,” Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid noted on his twitter account. The rules will boost the anti- corruption measures and ensure that the country’s achievemen­ts in the past 50 years and the accomplish­ments of the next 50 are protected by the law.

We live in a tough neighbourh­ood. Many parts of the Middle East are plagued, for as long as we can remember, by wars, civil strife, underdevel­opment, and dysfunctio­nal governing structures. And many of those countries seem to have just given up. They seem to have unfortunat­ely lost the incentive or the ability, or both, to compete in the world. It is a vicious cycle of which sadly some Arab countries cannot break.

Not the UAE. Since inception of the union in 1971, the nation’s founders set higher goals for this young emerging state. Today, we can see the results of those ambitious plans- a nation that is at peace with itself and its neighbourh­ood, a unique economic environmen­t that allowed for a small nation to compete against and beat larger and older economies, and a social structure that is built on tolerance, coexistenc­e and welcoming and rewarding those who want to work and contribute to its growth and developmen­t- as in the Golden Visa scheme.

And in just few weeks, when the biggest show on earth, Expo 2020, opens its doors to millions of people, the whole world will see first-hand what this remarkable young nation is about.

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 ?? A T. Bustamante © Gulf News ??
A T. Bustamante © Gulf News

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