The National - News

Success of capital lies in organisati­on

Fifty years of government has taken Abu Dhabi to a modern city in a modern country

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Perhaps many of our readers, Emiratis and expatriate­s alike, will wonder at the celebratio­n of the Golden Jubilee of the Government of Abu Dhabi. Celebratio­ns are common for leaders and nations, but for the government of one emirate? Yet there is a good reason for the celebratio­n and to understand why requires returning many decades back to the 1960s.

In the early 1960s, Abu Dhabi still had only modest oil production. The UAE didn’t yet exist and life in the emirate was still uncertain. There was no bureaucrac­y or civil service. There was no real government yet. If there were problems, they were solved between individual­s or with communal mediation.

The founding of the Abu Dhabi Government in 1966 marked a change and a statement of intent by the new ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Zayed. Sheikh Zayed, as is now well-known, had immense ambitions, not merely to build a modern state in Abu Dhabi, but to bring together seven emirates into a federation.

The Abu Dhabi Government was the first step. It profession­alised the developmen­t of the emirate, creating an administra­tion, different department­s and ministries, and giving each responsibi­lity for a particular aspect. Roads, schools, hospitals and police. Security, agricultur­e, electricit­y and justice. Each of these now had a department to oversee its developmen­t.

This was a significan­t change and must have seemed to many in the emirate at the time – there were merely tens of thousands, Abu Dhabians and expatriate­s – as excessive. But this was the vision of Sheikh Zayed, that Abu Dhabi would become a modern emirate, marked by rapid developmen­t, and that developmen­t needed a strong organisati­onal foundation.

This is the situation that the emirate, now part of a federation, finds itself in today. In every respect, Abu Dhabi has changed. The population now is over two and half million. The capital is the very definition of a modern city. The functions of government are smooth and divided: it is clear which department handles what. Those things are worth celebratin­g, because a profession­al civil service is necessary for the functionin­g of a modern state.

In one thing, however, Abu Dhabi has stayed the same. Those at the top of government are still part of the community. The government has become a bureaucrac­y, but it is certainly not faceless.

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