Science & Technology |
UAE's 'Hope' Probe Sends First Image of Mars |
2021-02-15 |
[AnNahar] The UAE's "Hope" probe sent back its first image of Mars, the national space agency said Sunday, days after the spacecraft successfully entered the Red Planet's orbit. The picture "captured the largest volcano in the solar system, Olympus Mons, emerging into the early morning sunlight," it said in a statement. The image was taken from an altitude of 24,700 kilometers (15,300 miles) above the Martian surface on Wednesday, a day after the probe entered Mars' orbit, it said in a statement. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, UAE prime minister and Dubai's ruler, shared the colored image on Twitter. "The first picture of Mars captured by the first-ever Arab probe in history," he wrote. The mission is designed to reveal the secrets of Martian weather, but the UAE also wants it to serve as an inspiration for the region's youth. Hope became the first of three spacecraft to arrive at the Red Planet this month after China and the U.S. also launched missions in July, taking advantage of a period when the Earth and Mars are nearest. The UAE's venture is also timed to mark the 50th anniversary of the unification of the nation's seven emirates. "Hope" will orbit the Red Planet for at least one Martian year, or 687 days, using three scientific instruments to monitor the Martian atmosphere. It is expected to begin transmitting more information back to Earth in September 2021, with the data available for scientists around the world to study. |
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Science & Technology |
UAE says its first astronaut going into space in September |
2019-02-26 |
[DAWN] The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has announced the date the first astronaut from the Gulf Arab nation will go into space. The UAE said on Monday it will send either Hazza al-Mansoori or Sultan al-Neyadi to the International Space Station on September 25 aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket. Organisers had earlier said they would announce the astronaut who was going but instead gave just the launch date. Dubai's ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum had already announced the astronauts' names last September. The UAE has a fledgling space program with big ambitions. It launched its first locally made satellite KhalifaSat from Japan in October. It wants to launch a probe to Mars in 2020. The UAE also says it wants to colonise Mars by 2117, with a fully functioning city of 600,000. |
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Arabia | |
UAE renames Abu Dhabi mosque after Mary, mother of Jesus | |
2017-06-19 | |
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] A mosque in the capital of the United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi was renamed on Wednesay to "Mariam Umm Eisa" ‐ meaning mother of Jesus in Arabic. The move was aimed at promoting social connections between followers of different religions and strengthen the common characteristics between them, local media reported.
UAE's Minister of State for Tolerance Sheikha Lubna al-Qasimi said the move reflected the Crown Prince’s "pure humanity and portrays a bright image of the real tolerance and coexistence in the UAE." Qasimi explained that the mosque is located in a place that reflects values of tolerance and coexistence, as the area includes "many civilized places of worship." February last year, the UAE opened the Ministry of Tolerance to "promote tolerance as a fundamental value in UAE society," the ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum said. Senior chaplain Reverend Canon Thompson at nearby Anglican church St. Andrews said he was pleased with the renaming. "We are delighted that we are celebrating something that we have in common between both our faiths," he told Gulf News. | |
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Arabia |
Bahraini King's Son Injured in Operation by Yemeni Military |
2015-10-02 |
[ALMANAR.LB] Prince Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the son of Bahrain's king, was injured in a missile attack by the Yemeni army and the Popular Committees on a military base of the Saudi-backed forces in Ma'rib, Yemen, sources in Manama confirmed on Wednesday. On September 14, several sources revealed on their twitter accounts that Khalid had been either killed or injured in Ma'rib. According to al-Safir newspaper, Khalid has not appeared in front of the public ever since then and was even absent in the funeral ceremony of Dubai ruler's son and the media have just been informed by his office that he is running affairs and fulfilling his daily duties. But sources close to Khalid told the daily on Wednesday that he had been injured in Ma'rib, without disclosing further details. The report came after informed sources announced on September 21 that son of the Prime Minister and Vice President of the United Arab Emirates Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, was also killed in the Yemeni revolutionary forces' attack in Ma'rib province, rejecting claims that Sheikh Rashid has died of heart attack. "Sheikh Rashid and a number of other UAE forces were killed in a Yemeni forces' Katyusha attack in Ma'rib province and reports on his death as a result of a heart attack are only aimed at deceiving the Emirati people who are demanding withdrawal of the UAE troops from Yemen," the Yemeni Press quoted informed sources as saying. The UAE news websites had claimed that Sheikh Rashid had died of a heart attack. A Saudi-led coalition force has been striking Yemen ...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of. Except for a tiny handfull of Jews everthing there is very Islamic... for 190 days now to restore power to runaway President Abed-Rabbu Mansour Hadi. The Saudi-led aggression has so far killed at least 6,433 Yemenis, including hundreds of women and kiddies. Despite Riyadh's claims that it is bombing the positions of the Ansarullah fighters, Saudi warplanes are flattening residential areas and civilian infrastructures. |
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Arabia |
Dubai Ruler's Son Killed in Yemeni Forces Attack in Ma'rib |
2015-09-22 |
[ALMANAR.LB] Son of the Prime Minister and Vice President of the United Arab Emirates Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, has been killed in the Yemeni revolutionary forces' attack in Ma'rib province, Fars news agency reported citing well-informed sources. "Sheikh Rashid and a number of other UAE forces were killed in a Yemeni forces' Katyusha attack in Ma'rib province, and the reports about his death as a result of a heart attack are only aimed at deceiving the Emirati people who are demanding withdrawal of the UAE troops from Yemen," the Yemeni Press quoted informed sources as saying on Sunday. The UAE news websites had claimed that Sheikh Rashid had died of a heart attack. The Arab-language al-Ain news website, meantime, quoted people close to Ansarullah powerful group as confirming that Sheikh Rashid has been killed in Ma'rib. Sheikh Rashid was the eldest son of Sheikh Mohammad. Rashid's brother Sheikh Hamdan is the Crown Prince of Dubai. |
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Arabia |
Dubai Pardons Norwegian In Rape Case |
2013-07-23 |
[AnNahar] A Norwegian woman sentenced to prison in Dubai after reporting she was raped was set free with a full pardon on Monday after her case sparked an outcry. Marte Dalelv, 24, expressed relief at the end of a four-month ordeal which had seen her prosecuted and convicted for extramarital sex, perjury and consuming alcohol without a licence, after she lodged the complaint against her boss. The convictions could have seen her serving a 16-month jail term in the United Arab Emirates but Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum pardoned her on all counts. The boss, against whom she lodged the complaint and who had been sentenced to 13 months for alcohol consumption and sex outside marriage, was also pardoned, her lawyer Mahmoud Azab told Agence La Belle France Presse. "I was told that I've been pardoned," a smiling Dalelv told news hounds outside a Scandinavian social center, adding her passport had been returned and she would leave the Gulf state "as soon as possible". "I'm very, very happy. This is the perfect ending (and) it feels really, really good," she said. In Oslo, Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide expressed relief the pardon had been granted but criticized the original court verdict. "I'm... thankful to the emir, who has it within his power to give such a pardon," Eide told AFP. "The verdict was contrary to several conventions of human rights When they're defined by the state or an NGO they don't mean much... that the Emirates have signed and promised to upkeep, especially the U.N. Convention of Women." Eide had criticized Dalelv's prosecution from the outset saying it was "very strange that a person who reports rape is sentenced for acts which in our part of the world are not even a crime." Dalelv reported the rape to police back in March and was immediately locked away Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please! , being released four days later with the assistance of Norwegian diplomats. She has since been staying at the Norwegian Seamen's Center in Dubai. Norwegian authorities had agreed to pay for legal fees after she spent 55,000 Norwegian kronor (7,000 euros) on legal assistance, she said. Dalelv, who had come to Dubai on a business trip from Doha when the incident took place, told AFP that she has not yet decided if she will go back to Qatar. Dalelv's boss, a Sudanese identified only as Hawari in his 30s, was also freed and handed back his passport, her lawyer Azab said. Norwegian ambassador Ase Elin Bjerke, who was accompanying Dalelv, told AFP: "We are very grateful for the outcome of this case ... It has been very challenging." She said there was no immediate word on the grounds for the pardon but "the very fruitful dialogue that we have had at a senior level has given result." "She has not only been pardoned but she can stay until she decides herself to leave and she is allowed to return to the UAE anytime," said Bjerke. Dalelv had said she was hopeful that she would succeed in her appeal against the conviction by a Dubai court last week. Her hearing was to have taken place on September 5, before she was called to appear at the public prosecutor's office and informed of the pardon on Monday. "Marte was a victim of her boss's moral corruption," her lawyer Azab told news hounds. The Norwegian government had faced opposition criticism for not taking more robust action in support of Dalelv. But the foreign minister's political adviser, Kathrine Raadim, had insisted it was out of the question for Norway to recall its ambassador while the case remained unresolved. A petition on campaign group Avaaz for her release had obtained over 72,000 signatures while several Facebook groups were set up to demand her freedom. |
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Arabia | ||
UAE leader: Israel would destroy Iran if attacked | ||
2011-12-06 | ||
The prime minister of the United Arab Emirates has rejected the threat of a nuclear Iran, saying that if Tehran were to attack Israel, it would be destroyed the next day. In an interview with CNN, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the absolute monarch of Dubai, said that he does not think Iran would develop a nuclear weapon since it would be of little use to it. "What can Iran do with a nuclear weapon?" al-Maktoum asked CNN. "For example, will they hit Israel? How many Palestinians will die? And if you think Iran hits Israel, their cities will be safe? They will be gone the next day."
According to the Telegraph report, the commander of the Revolutionary Guard Mohammed Ali Jaafari issued a command to raise operational readiness, fearing what the report called "potential external strikes and covert attacks." | ||
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Arabia | |
UAE economy solid despite debts: president | |
2009-12-02 | |
[Al Arabiya Latest] The United Arab Emirates economy is in a good condition and will not slip due to the global financial crisis, the Gulf country's president said on Tuesday as Dubai's ruler said the global reaction showed a lack of understanding.
Sheikh Khalifa said that the national economy was showing signs of gradual growth in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile Gulf markets dropped for a second day running, taking little comfort from Dubai World's plan to restructure about $26 billion of debt and despite a statement by Sheikh Mohammed, who is also UAE vice president, prime minister and defense minister, insisting his city was "strong and persistent." Sheikh Mohammed also told reporters the global reaction had shown "a lack of understanding." Dubai stocks fell a further 3.6 percent and the Abu Dhabi bourse lost 5.6 percent on their second trading day since Dubai last week asked creditors of Dubai World and its property arm Nakheel for a six-month delay on debt repayments. The neighboring Gulf state of Qatar's bourse was also more than 8 percent lower. State-controlled Dubai World, which led the emirate's transformation into a regional hub for finance, investment and tourism, unveiled details late on Monday of its plan covering $26 billion of debt owed by its main property firms, Nakheel and Limitless. Global markets took a pounding when the Dubai news broke last week, though on Tuesday Asian and European stocks were up, following the lead from Wall Street overnight. The Dubai World group, whose total liabilities are estimated at nearly $60 billion, said the restructuring would exclude "financially stable" units such as Infinity World Holding, Istithmar World and Ports & Free Zone World, which includes DP World, Economic Zones World, P & Ferries and Jebel Ali Free Zone. | |
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Arabia |
Dubai's finance head removed from all posts |
2009-06-25 |
![]() Shaikh resigned earlier this week from several government-linked positions, including Dubai Islamic Bank and its affiliate Deyaar just a month after he was replaced as head of the emirate's finances. At the time, he was moved to the position of assistant to the director of the Ruler's Court for Foreign Affairs. WAM cited a statement from the media office of Dubai's ruler and Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum. The report did not reveal why Shaikh had been removed. "I don' wanna talk about it!" Shaikh's surprise dismissal from the finance department, a day after outlining the emirate's handling of the financial crisis and its recovery plan at the World Economic Forum, has triggered questions and fuelled rumors among some investors as Dubai and its constellation of government-controlled companies attempt to restructure and meet looming debt needs. During his brief tenure, Shaikh earned a measure of respect from investors as head of the department for his efforts to navigate the difficulties created in the former boom-town following a liquidity crunch and collapse in real estate markets. It was not immediately clear how the decision would affect his chairmanship of Islamic mortgage lender Amlak. |
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Home Front Economy |
Sheikdom shakedown: Dubai moves on Nasdaq |
2007-09-21 |
Gee. How the fuc& does this kind of thing happen? Mind if we buy some serious interest in Saudi oilfields? Why are these guys so interested in getting their hands on a US economic nexus like ports or stock exchanges? In a complex set of transactions, Dubai is moving to acquire 19.9 percent of the Nasdaq in New York, placing the Arab government in an ownership position of the key U.S. stock exchange and raising concerns in Congress. As a result of the transaction, Dubai also will acquire 28 percent of the London Stock Exchange, one of the oldest and largest in the world. The transaction is being made through Borse Dubai, a holding company 100-percent owned by the government of the Emirate of Dubai and controlled by Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the head of the Dubai ruling family. According to its website, Borse Dubai was created Aug. 6 as the holding company for Dubai Financial Market and Dubai International Financial Exchange in a move to consolidate the Dubai government's two stock exchanges "as well as current investments in other exchanges, expanding Dubai's position as a global capital market hub." The announcement set off a firestorm of criticism in Washington, prompting President Bush to comment today in a news conference, "We're going to take a good look at it, as to whether or not it has any national security implications involved in the transaction. I'm comfortable with the process to go forward." On July 26, Bush signed into law the Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007, a law passed after last year's controversy over the effort by Dubai Ports World to acquire London-based Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation, an international ports operating firm that would have given Dubai control of operations in up to 22 U.S. ports. The Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007 was passed to strengthen the examination requirements of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS, a highly secretive bureaucratic panel constituted by the Treasury Department to pass verdict on the national security implications of foreign investments in the U.S. In a letter today, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., urged Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson to conduct the Borse Dubai CFIUS review under the standards imposed by the Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007, even though most of the requirements of the new law do not take effect until later this fall. Schumer chairs the Joint Economic Committee, composed of 10 members each from the Senate and House of Representatives. "Nasdaq is not just any exchange, but one of the world's largest," Schumer wrote Paulson. "With approximately 3,200 companies, it lists more companies and, on average, trades more shares per day than any other U.S. market." Schumer's letter posed five specific questions for Paulson: What national security concerns are raised by allowing a foreign government to own U.S. financial exchanges? The Department of the Treasury could not be reached for immediate comment. |
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Arabia |
Child slavery in Dubai |
2006-09-15 |
The issue of children--as young as 2--being kidnapped, sexually abused, and forced to serve as camel jockeys in Dubai has been brewing for years. Even after a ban was heralded by human rights groups last year, the sheiks looked the other way at the practice throughout the UAE. Now, families of kidnapped children have filed a lawsuit to stop the slavery. And Dubai's "progressive" ruling family is named as a top conspirator: Dubai's ruling family has been served with a class-action lawsuit in the United States accusing them of masterminding an international child slave trade to provide jockeys and attendants for the popular desert sport of camel-racing. The suit names both Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the crown prince of Dubai, and his brother, Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid al-Maktoum, as being "the most active participants" in the slave trade, which was described and denounced in a US State Department report on human trafficking last year. According to the suit, as many as 30,000 boys from South Asia and Africa could have been victimised in what it calls "one of the greatest humanitarian crimes of the last 50 years". "Because camel racing is extremely dangerous and arduous, especially for children," the suit says, "the Arab sheikhs would not make their own children jockeys and trainers. The sheikhs instead bought boys who had been abducted and trafficked across international boundaries and enslaved as young as two years old... "The defendants robbed parents of their children and boys of their childhoods, their futures and sometimes their lives, for the craven purposes of entertainment and financial gain." The suit identifies six families as plaintiffs in the suit, although it does not name them. The case is being brought under the Alien Tort Statute, which dates back 200 years but has become a popular means to redress wrongs taking place far outside the borders of the United States. The suit was filed in federal court in Miami, because the Maktoums have vast horse farm holdings in Florida - part of a multi-billion dollar investment they have in the US, ranging from sporting pursuits to hotels, residential buildings, health care facilities and Dubai Ports World, the company that tried unsuccessfully to take over six leading US ports last year. More on child slaves in Dubai's camel racing empire here and here. |
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Arabia |
UAE reaction to the ports deal |
2006-03-10 |
The decision by the United Arab Emirates on Thursday to order state-controlled Dubai Ports World to end its control over US port facilities marks the lowest point yet in the relationship between President George W. Bush and the Republican-controlled Congress. Mr Bush had warned repeatedly that blocking the deal would send a dangerously discriminatory message to the world. He threatened repeatedly to veto any congressional legislation. But with his public approval ratings at record lows and his Republican party abandoning him, one of the USs closest allies in the Arab world concluded that he was no longer in control in Washington. The decision by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai, is likely to avert the political backlash that hit Washington last month and may prevent any further damage to diplomatic and security relations between the countries. But it underscored that Mr Bush, who still has nearly three years to go in his second term, has become perilously weak. Dennis Hastert, the Republican speaker of the House and one of Mr Bushs most loyal backers in Congress, emerged from a White House meeting on Thursday morning and signalled that he could not hold back the opposition to the deal. We want to protect the American people and we will continue to do that, he said. Theres a Republican initiative right now that says, Get us the hell out of here, said Frank Lautenberg, a Republican senator from the port state of New Jersey. Um, he isn't a Republican and that isn't exactly a trivial point ... The acquisition of five US port terminals by an Arab company became an unlikely target for an outpouring of American anger and fear. While administration officials and port security experts insisted there were no security concerns raised by the transfer of port facilities from a British company to a Dubai company, members of Congress said they were flooded with calls and letters from ordinary Americans angered by the deal. The White House promise to reopen a national security investigation into the deal, together with a concerted public relations effort by DP World, seemed only to deepen the anger. More than four years after the September 11 attacks, it brought together a toxic combination of anxieties over Americas place in the world. Traditional protectionists, worried by foreign acquisitions of US assets and the outsourcing of jobs to distant and little-understood countries, lined up alongside security hawks who warned that even a close Arab ally such as the UAE was vulnerable to terrorist infiltration. |
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