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On
6 August 1999, His Highness Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan completed
33 years as Ruler of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, one of the seven
emirates that together comprise the Federation of the United Arab
Emirates (UAE), of which he has also been President since its creation
in December 1971. Having first served in government in 1946 as Ruler's
Representative in Abu Dhabi's Eastern Region based in the inland
oasis of Al Ain, Sheikh Zayed has now provided leadership to the
country for well over half a century.
Born around
1918 (the date is uncertain), Sheikh Zayed is the youngest of the
four sons of Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed, Ruler of Abu Dhabi from 1922
to 1926. He was named after his grandfather, Sheikh Zayed bin Khalifa,
who ruled the emirate from 1855 to 1909, the longest reign in the
three centuries since the Al Nahyan family emerged as leaders of
the Emirate of Abu Dhabi.
Abu Dhabi, like
the other emirates of the southern Arabian Gulf known as the Trucial
States, was then in treaty relations with Britain. At the time Sheikh
Zayed was born the emirate was poor and undeveloped, with an economy
based primarily on fishing and pearl diving along the coast and
offshore and on simple agriculture in scattered oases inland.
Life, even for
a young member of the ruling family, was simple. Education was primarily
confined to the provision of instruction in the principles of Islam
from the local preacher, while modern facilities such as roads,
communications and health care were conspicuous only by their absence.
Transport was by camel or by boat, and the harshness of the arid
climate meant that survival itself was often a major concern.
In early 1928,
following the death of Sheikh Sultan's successor, a family conclave
selected as Ruler Sheikh Shakhbut, Sultan's eldest son, a post he
was to hold until August 1966 when he stepped down in favour of
his brother Zayed.
During the late
1920s and 1930s, as Sheikh Zayed grew to manhood he displayed an
early thirst for knowledge that took him out into the desert with
the bedu tribesmen to learn all he could about the way of life of
the people and the environment in which they lived. He recalls with
pleasure his experience of desert life and his initiation into the
sport of falconry, which has been a lifelong passion.
In his book, Falconry: Our Arab Heritage, published in 1977, Sheikh
Zayed noted that the companionship of a hunting party:
...permits each
and every member of the expedition to speak freely and express his
ideas and viewpoints without inhibition and restraint, and allows
the one responsible to acquaint himself with the wishes of his people,
to know their problems and perceive their views accurately, and
thus to be in a position to help and improve their situation.
From his desert
journeys, Sheikh Zayed learned to understand the relationship between
man and his environment and in particular, the need to ensure that
sustainable use was made of natural resources. Once an avid shot,
he abandoned the gun for falconry at the age of 25, aware that hunting
with a gun could lead rapidly to extinction of the native wildlife.
His travels
in the remoter areas of Abu Dhabi provided Sheikh Zayed with a deep
understanding both of the country and of its people. In the early
1930s, when the first oil company teams arrived to carry out preliminary
surface geological surveys, he was assigned by his brother the task
of guiding them around the desert. At the same time he obtained
his first exposure to the industry that was later to have such a
great effect upon the country.
In 1946, Sheikh
Zayed was chosen to fill a vacancy as the Ruler's Representative
in the Eastern Region of Abu Dhabi, centred on the oasis of Al Ain,
approximately 160 kilometres east of the island of Abu Dhabi itself.
Inhabited continuously for at least 5,000 years, the oasis had nine
villages, six of which belonged to Abu Dhabi, and three, including
Buraimi, by which name the oasis was also known, belonged to the
Sultanate of Oman. The job included the task of not only administering
the six villages, but the whole of the adjacent desert region, providing
Sheikh Zayed with an opportunity to learn the techniques of government.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s when Saudi Arabia put forward
territorial claims to Buraimi he also gained experience of politics
on a broader scale.
Sheikh Zayed
brought to his new task a firm belief in the values of consultation
and consensus, in contrast to confrontation. Foreign visitors, such
as the British explorer Sir Wilfred Thesiger, who first met him
at this time, noted with approbation that his judgements 'were distinguished
by their astute insights, wisdom and fairness'.
Sheikh Zayed
swiftly established himself not only as someone who had a clear
vision of what he wished to achieve for the people of Al Ain, but
also as someone who led by example.
A key task in
the early years in Al Ain was that of stimulating the local economy,
which was largely based on agriculture. To do this, he ensured that
the subterranean water channels, or falajes (aflaj), were dredged
and personally financed the construction of a new one, taking part
in the strenuous labour that was involved.
He also ordered
a revision of local water ownership rights to ensure a more equitable
distribution, surrendering the rights of his own family as an example
to others. The consequent expansion of the area under cultivation
in turn generated more income for the residents of Al Ain, helping
to re-establish the oasis as a predominant economic centre throughout
a wide area.
With development
gradually beginning to get under way, Sheikh Zayed commenced the
laying out of a visionary city plan, and, in a foretaste of the
massive afforestation programme of today, he also ordered the planting
of ornamental trees that now, grown to maturity, have made Al Ain
one of the greenest cities in Arabia.
In 1953 Sheikh
Zayed made his first visit abroad, accompanying his brother Shakhbut
to Britain and France. He recalled later how impressed he had been
by the schools and hospitals he visited, becoming determined that
his own people should have the benefit of similar facilities:
There were a
lot of dreams I was dreaming about our land catching up with the
modern world, but I was not able to do anything because I did not
have the wherewithal in my hands to achieve these dreams. I was
sure, however, that one day they would become true.
Despite constraints
through lack of government revenues, Sheikh Zayed succeeded in bringing
progress to Al Ain, establishing the rudiments of an administrative
machinery, personally funding the first modern school in the emirate
and coaxing relatives and friends to contribute towards small-scale
development programmes.
However, the
export of Abu Dhabis first cargo of crude oil to the world
market in 1962 was to provide Sheikh Zayed with the means to fund
his dreams. Although prices for crude oil were then far lower than
they are today, the rapidly growing volume of exports revolutionised
the economy of Abu Dhabi and its people began to look forward eagerly
to some of the benefits that were already being enjoyed by their
near-neighbours in Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. The
pearling industry had finally come to an end shortly after the Second
World War, and little had emerged to take its place. Indeed, during
the late 1950s and early 1960s, many of the people of Abu Dhabi
left for other oil-producing Gulf states where there were opportunities
for employment.
The economic
hardships faced by Abu Dhabi since the 1930s had accustomed the
Ruler, Sheikh Shakhbut, to a cautious frugality. Despite the growing
aspirations of his people for progress, he was reluctant to invest
the new oil revenues in development. Attempts by members of his
family, including Sheikh Zayed, and by the leaders of the other
tribes in the emirate to persuade him to move with the times were
unsuccessful, and eventually the Al Nahyan family decided that the
time had come for him to step down. The record of Sheikh Zayed over
the previous 20 years in Al Ain and his popularity among the people
made him the obvious choice as successor.
On 6 August
1966 Sheikh Zayed became Ruler, with a mandate from his family to
press ahead as fast as possible with the development of Abu Dhabi.
He was a man
in a hurry. His years in Al Ain had not only given him experience
in government, but had also provided him with the time to develop
a vision of how the emirate could progress. With revenues growing
year by year as oil production increased, he was determined to use
them in the service of the people and a massive programme of construction
of schools, housing, hospitals and roads got rapidly under way.
Of his first
few weeks as Ruler, Sheikh Zayed has said:
All the picture
was prepared. It was not a matter of fresh thinking, but of simply
putting into effect the thoughts of years and years. First I knew
we had to concentrate on Abu Dhabi and public welfare. In short,
we had to obey the circumstances: the needs of the people as a whole.
Second, I wanted to approach other emirates to work with us. In
harmony, in some sort of federation, we could follow the example
of other developing countries.
As Abu Dhabi
embarked on development, Sheikh Zayed also turned his attention
rapidly to the building of closer relations with the other emirates:
'Federation
is the way to power, the way to strength, the way to well-being,'
he felt. 'Lesser entities have no standing in the world today, and
so has it ever been in history.'
One early step
was to increase contributions to the Trucial States Development
Fund established a few years earlier by the British; Abu Dhabi soon
became its largest donor. At the beginning of 1968, when the British
announced their intention of withdrawing from the Arabian Gulf by
the end of 1971, Sheikh Zayed acted swiftly to initiate moves towards
a closer relationship with the other emirates.
Together with
the late Ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, who
was to become Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE, Sheikh
Zayed took the lead in calling for a federation that would include
not only the seven emirates that together made up the Trucial States,
but also Qatar and Bahrain. When early hopes of a federation of
nine states eventually foundered, with Qatar and Bahrain opting
to preserve their separate status, Sheikh Zayed led his fellow Rulers
in agreement on the establishment of the UAE, which formally emerged
on to the international stage on 2 December 1971.
While his enthusiasm
for federation - clearly displayed by his willingness to spend the
oil revenues of Abu Dhabi on the development of the other emirates
- was a key factor in the formation of the UAE, Sheikh Zayed also
won support for the way in which he sought consensus and agreement
among his brother Rulers:
I am not imposing
unity on anyone. That is tyranny. All of us have our opinions, and
these opinions can change. Sometimes we put all opinions together,
and then extract from them a single point of view. This is our democracy.
Sheikh Zayed
was elected by his fellow Rulers as the first President of the UAE,
a post to which he has been successively re-elected at five-yearly
intervals.
The new state
came into being at a time of political turmoil in the region. A
couple of days earlier, on the night of 30 November and early morning
of 1 December, Iran had forcibly and unlawfully seized the islands
of Abu Musa, part of Sharjah, and Greater and Lesser Tunb.
On land, demarcation
of the borders between the individual emirates and its neighbours
had not been completed, although a preliminary agreement had already
been reached between Abu Dhabi and Oman.
Foreign observers,
lacking an understanding of the importance of a common history and
heritage in bringing together the people of the UAE, predicted that
the new state would survive only with difficulty, pointing to disputes
with its neighbours and to the wide disparity in the size, population
and level of development of the seven emirates.
Better informed
about the nature of the country, Sheikh Zayed was naturally more
optimistic. Looking back a quarter of a century later, he noted:
Our experiment
in federation, in the first instance, arose from a desire to increase
the ties that bind us, as well as from the conviction of all that
they were part of one family, and that they must gather together
under one leadership.
We had never
(previously) had an experiment in federation, but our proximity
to each other and the ties of blood relationships between us are
factors which led us to believe that we must establish a federation
that should compensate for the disunity and fragmentation that earlier
prevailed.
That which has
been accomplished has exceeded all our expectations, and that, with
the help of Allah and a sincere will, confirms that there is nothing
that cannot be achieved in the service of the people if determination
is firm and intentions are sincere.
The predictions
of the pessimists at the time of the formation of the UAE have indeed
been clearly proven to be unfounded. Over the course of the past
28 years, the UAE has not only survived, but has developed at a
rate that is almost without parallel. The country has been utterly
transformed. Its population has risen from around 250,000 to a 1999
estimate of 2.94 million. Progress, in terms of the provision of
social services, health and education, as well as in sectors such
as communications and the oil and non-oil economy, has brought a
high standard of living that has spread throughout the seven emirates,
from the ultra-modern cities to the remotest areas of the desert
and mountains. The change has, moreover, taken place against a backdrop
of enviable political and social stability, despite the insecurity
and conflict that has dogged much of the rest of the Gulf region.
At the same
time, the country has also established itself firmly on the international
scene, both within the Gulf and Arab region and in the broader community
of nations. Its pursuit of dialogue and consensus and its firm adherence
to the tenets of the Charter of the United Nations, in particular
those dealing with the principle of non-interference in the affairs
of other states, have been coupled with a quiet but extensive involvement
in the provision of development assistance and humanitarian aid
that, in per capita terms, has few parallels.
There is no
doubt that the experiment in federation has been a success and the
undoubted key to the achievements of the UAE has been the central
role played by Sheikh Zayed.
During his years
in Al Ain, he was able to develop a vision of how the country should
progress, and, since becoming first Ruler of Abu Dhabi, and then
President of the UAE, he has devoted more than three decades into
making that vision a reality.
One foundation
of his philosophy as a leader and statesman is that the resources
of the country should be fully utilised to the benefit of the people.
The UAE is fortunate to have been blessed with massive reserves
of oil and gas and it is through careful utilisation of these, including
the decision in 1973 that the Government should take a controlling
share of the oil reserves and assume total ownership of associated
and non-associated gas, that the financial resources necessary to
underpin the development programme have always been available. Indeed,
there has been sufficient to permit the Government to set aside
large amounts for investment on behalf of future generations and,
through the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority created by Sheikh Zayed,
the country now has reserves unofficially estimated at around US
$200 billion.
The financial
resources, however, have always been regarded by Sheikh Zayed not
as a means unto themselves, but as a tool to facilitate the development
of what he believes to be the real wealth of the country - its people,
and in particular the younger generation:
Wealth is not
money. Wealth lies in men. That is where true power lies, the power
that we value. They are the shield behind which we seek protection.
This is what has convinced us to direct all our resources to building
the individual, and to using the wealth with which God has provided
us in the service of the nation, so that it may grow and prosper.
Unless wealth is used in conjunction with knowledge to plan for
its use, and unless there are enlightened intellects to direct it,
its fate is to diminish and to disappear. The greatest use that
can be made of wealth is to invest it in creating generations of
educated and trained people.
Addressing the
graduation ceremony of the first class of students from the Emirates
University in 1982, Sheikh Zayed said:
The building
of mankind is difficult and hard. It represents, however, the real
wealth [of the country]. This is not found in material wealth. It
is made up of men, of children and of future generations. It is
this which constitutes the real treasure. Within this framework,
Sheikh Zayed believes that all of the country's citizens have a
role to play in its development.
Indeed he defines
it not simply as a right, but a duty. Addressing his colleagues
in the Federal Supreme Council, he noted:
The most important
of our duties as Rulers is to raise the standard of living of our
people. To carry out one's duty is a responsibility given by Allah,
and to follow up on work is the responsibility of everyone, both
the old and the young.
Both men and
women, he believes, should play their part. Recognising that in
the past a lack of education and development had prevented women
taking a full role in much of the activity of society, he has taken
action to ensure that this situation does not continue.
Although women's
advocates might argue that there is still much to be done, the achievements
have been remarkable and the country's women are now increasingly
playing their part in political and economic life by taking up senior
positions in the public and private sectors. In so doing, they have
enjoyed full support from the President:
Women have the
right to work everywhere. Islam affords to women their rightful
status, and encourages them to work in all sectors, as long as they
are afforded the appropriate respect. The basic role of women is
the upbringing of children, but, over and above that, we must offer
opportunities to a woman who chooses to perform other functions.
What women have achieved in the Emirates in only a short space of
time makes me both happy and content. We sowed our seeds yesterday,
and today the fruit has already begun to appear. We praise Allah
for the role that women play in our society. It is clear that this
role is beneficial for both present and future generations.
Sheikh Zayed
has made it clear that he believes that the younger generation,
those who have enjoyed the fruits of the UAE's development programme,
must now take up the burden once carried by their parents. Within
his immediate family, Sheikh Zayed has ensured that his sons have
taken up posts in government at which they are expected to work
and not simply enjoy as sinecures. Young UAE men who have complained
about the perceived lack of employment opportunities at an unrealistic
salary level have been offered positions on farms as agricultural
labourers, so that they may learn the dignity of work:
Work is of great
importance, and of great value in building both individuals and
societies.The size of a salary is not a measure of the worth of
an individual. What is important is an individual's sense of dignity
and self-respect. It is my duty as the leader of the young people
of this country to encourage them to work and to exert themselves
in order to raise their own standards and to be of service to the
country. The individual who is healthy and of a sound mind and body
but who does not work commits a crime against himself and against
society.
We look forward
to seeing in the future our sons and daughters playing a more active
role, broadening their participation in the process of development
and shouldering their share of the responsibilities, especially
in the private sector, so as to lay the foundations for the success
of this participation and effectiveness. At the same time, we are
greatly concerned to raise the standing and dignity of the work
ethic in our society, and to increase the percentage of citizens
in the labour force. This can be achieved by following a realistic
and well-planned approach that will improve performance and productivity,
moving towards the long-term goal of secure and comprehensive development.
In this sphere,
as in other areas, Sheikh Zayed has long been concerned about the
possible adverse impact upon the younger generation of the easy
life they enjoy, so far removed from the resilient, resourceful
lifestyle of their parents. One key feature of Sheikh Zayed's strategy
of government, therefore, has been the encouragement of initiatives
designed to conserve and cherish aspects of the traditional culture
of the people, in order to familiarise the younger generation with
the ways of their ancestors. In his view, it is of crucial importance
that the lessons and heritage of the past are not forgotten. They
provide, he believes, an essential foundation upon which real progress
can be achieved:
History is a
continuous chain of events. The present is only an extension of
the past. He who does not know his past cannot make the best of
his present and future, for it is from the past that we learn. We
gain experience and we take advantage of the lessons and results
[of the past]. Then we adopt the best and that which suits our present
needs, while avoiding the mistakes made by our fathers and our grandfathers.
The new generation should have a proper appreciation of the role
played by their forefathers. They should adopt their model, and
the supreme ideal of patience, fortitude, hard work and dedication
to doing their duty.
Once believed
to have been little more than an insignificant backwater in the
history of mankind in the Middle East, the UAE has emerged in recent
years as a country which has played a crucial role in the development
of civilisation in the region for thousands of years.
The first archaeological
excavations in the UAE took place 40 years ago, in 1959, with the
archaeologists benefiting extensively from the interest shown in
their work by Sheikh Zayed. Indeed he himself invited them to visit
the Al Ain area to examine remains in and around the oasis that
proved to be some of the most important ever found in southeastern
Arabia. In the decades that have followed, Sheikh Zayed has continued
to support archaeological studies throughout the country, eager
to ensure that knowledge of the achievements of the past becomes
available to educate and inspire the people of today.
Appropriately,
one of the most important archaeological sites has been discovered
on Abu Dhabi's western island of Sir Bani Yas, which for more than
20 years has been a private wildlife reserve created by Sheikh Zayed
to ensure the survival of some of Arabia's most endangered species.
If the heritage
of the people of the UAE is important to Sheikh Zayed, so too is
the conservation of its natural environment and wildlife. After
all, he believes the strength of character of the Emirati people
derives, in part, from the struggle that they were obliged to wage
in order to survive in the harsh and arid local environment.
His belief in
conservation of the environment owes nothing to modern fashion.
Acknowledged by the presentation of the prestigious Gold Panda Award
from the Worldwide Fund for Nature, it derives, instead, from his
own upbringing, living in harmony with nature. This has led him
to ensure that conservation of wildlife and the environment is a
key part of government policy, while at the same time he has stimulated
and personally supervised a massive programme of afforestation that
has now seen over 150 million trees planted.
In a speech
on the occasion of the UAE's first Environment Day in February 1998
Sheikh Zayed spelt out his beliefs:
We cherish our
environment because it is an integral part of our country, our history
and our heritage. On land and in the sea, our forefathers lived
and survived in this environment. They were able to do so only because
they recognised the need to conserve it, to take from it only what
they needed to live, and to preserve it for succeeding generations.
With Allah's will, we shall continue to work to protect our environment
and our wildlife, as did our forefathers before us. It is a duty:
and, if we fail, our children, rightly, will reproach us for squandering
an essential part of their inheritance, and of our heritage.
Like most conservationists
Sheikh Zayed is concerned wherever possible to remedy the damage
done by man to wildlife. His programme on the island of Sir Bani
Yas for the captive breeding of endangered native animals such as
the Arabian oryx and the Arabian gazelle has achieved impressive
success, so much so that not only is the survival of both species
now assured, but animals are also carefully being reintroduced to
the wild.
As in other
areas of national life, Sheikh Zayed has made it clear that conservation
is not simply the task of government. Despite the existence of official
institutions like the Federal Environmental Agency and Abu Dhabi's
Environmental Research and Wildlife Development Agency, (empowered
by a growing catalogue of legislation), the UAE's President has
stressed that there is also a role both for the individual and for
non-governmental organisations, both of citizens and expatriates.
He believes
that society can only flourish and develop if all of its members
acknowledge their responsibilities. This does not only to concerns
such as environmental conservation, but also to other areas of national
life.
Members of the
Al Nahyan family, of which Sheikh Zayed is the current head, have
been Rulers of Abu Dhabi since at least the beginning of the eighteenth
century, longer than any other ruling dynasty in the Arabian peninsula.
In Arabian bedu society, however, the legitimacy of a Ruler, and
of a ruling family, derives essentially from consensus and from
consent. Just as Sheikh Zayed himself was chosen by members of his
family to become Ruler of Abu Dhabi in 1966, when his elder brother
was no longer able to retain their confidence, so does the legitimacy
of the political system today derive from the support it draws from
the people of the UAE. The principle of consultation (shura) is
an essential part of that system.
At an informal
level, that principle has long been put into practice through the
institution of the majlis (council) where a leading member of society
holds an 'open-house' discussion forum, at which any individual
may put forward views for discussion and consideration. While the
majlis system - the UAE's form of direct democracy - still continues,
it is naturally, best suited to a relatively small community.
In 1970, recognising
that Abu Dhabi was embarking upon a process of rapid change and
development, Sheikh Zayed created the Emirate's National Consultative
Council, bringing together the leaders of each of the main tribes
and families which comprised the population. A similar body was
created for the UAE as a whole, the Federal National Council, the
state's parliament,
Both institutions
represent the formalisation of the traditional process of consultation
and discussion and their members are frequently urged by Sheikh
Zayed to express their views openly, without fear or favour.
At present,
members of both the National Consultative Council and the Federal
National Council continue to be selected by Sheikh Zayed and the
other Rulers, in consultation with leading members of the community
in each emirate. However, in the future, Sheikh Zayed has said,
a formula for direct elections will be devised. He notes, however,
that in this, as in many other fields, it is necessary to move ahead
with care to ensure that only such institutions as are appropriate
for Emirati society are adopted.
Questioned by
the New York Times on the topic of the possible introduction of
an elected parliamentary democracy, Sheikh Zayed replied:
Why should we
abandon a system that satisfies our people in order to introduce
a system that seems to engender dissent and confrontation? Our system
of government is based upon our religion, and is what our people
want. Should they seek alternatives, we are ready to listen to them.
We have always said that our people should voice their demands openly.
We are all in the same boat, and they are both captain and crew.
Our doors here
are open for any opinion to be expressed, and this is well known
by all our citizens. It is our deep conviction that Allah the Creator
has created people free, and has prescribed that each individual
must enjoy freedom of choice. No-one should act as if he owns others.
Those in a position of leadership should deal with their subjects
with compassion and understanding, because this is the duty enjoined
upon them by God Almighty, who enjoins us to treat all living creatures
with dignity. How can there be anything less for man, created as
Allah's vice-gerent on earth? Our system of government does not
derive its authority from man, but is enshrined in our religion,
and is based on God's book, the Holy Quran. What need have we of
what others have conjured up? Its teachings are eternal and complete,
while the systems conjured up by man are transitory and incomplete.
Sheikh Zayed
imbibed the principles of Islam in his childhood and it remains
the foundation of his beliefs and philosophy today. Indeed, the
ability with which he and the people of the UAE have been able to
absorb and adjust to the remarkable changes of the past few decades
can be ascribed largely to the fact that Islam has provided an unchanging
and immutable core of their lives. Today, it provides the inspiration
for the UAE judicial system and its place as the ultimate source
of legislation is enshrined in the country's constitution.
Islam, like
other divinely revealed religions, has those among its claimed adherents
who purport to interpret its message as justifying harsh dogmas
and intolerance. In Sheikh Zayed's view, however, such an approach
is not merely a perversion of the message but is directly contrary
to it. Extremism, he believes, has no place in Islam. In contrast,
he stresses that:
Islam is a civilising
religion that gives mankind dignity. A Muslim is he who does not
inflict evil upon others. Islam is the religion of tolerance and
forgiveness, and not of war, of dialogue and understanding. It is
Islamic social justice which has asked every Muslim to respect the
other. To treat every person, no matter what his creed or race,
as a special soul is a mark of Islam. It is just that point, embodied
in the humanitarian tenets of Islam, that makes us so proud of it.
Within that
context, Sheikh Zayed has set his face firmly against those who
preach intolerance and hatred:
In these times
we see around us violent men who claim to talk on behalf of Islam.
Islam is far removed from their talk. If such people really wish
for recognition from Muslims and the world, they should themselves
first heed the words of God and His Prophet. Regrettably, however,
these people have nothing whatsoever that connects them to Islam.
They are apostates and criminals. We see them slaughtering children
and the innocent. They kill people, spill their blood and destroy
their property, and then claim to be Muslims.
Sheikh Zayed
is an eager advocate of tolerance, discussion and a better understanding
between those of different faiths, recognising that this is essential
if mankind is to ever move forward in harmony. His faith is well
summed up by a statement explaining the essential basis of his own
beliefs:
'My religion
is based neither on hope, nor on fear, I worship my Allah because
I love him.'
That faith,
with its belief in the brotherhood of man and in the duty incumbent
upon the strong to provide assistance to those less fortunate than
themselves, is fundamental to Sheikh Zayed's vision of how his country
and people should develop. It is, too, a key to the foreign policy
of the UAE, which he has devised and guided since the establishment
of the state.
The UAE itself
has been able to progress only because of the way in which its component
parts have successfully been able to come together in a relationship
of harmony, working together for common goals.
Within the Arabian
Gulf region, and in the broader Arab world, the UAE has sought to
enhance cooperation and to resolve disagreement through a calm pursuit
of dialogue and consensus. Thus one of the central features of the
country's foreign policy has been the development of closer ties
with its neighbours in the Arabian peninsula. The Arab Gulf Cooperation
Council, (AGCC) grouping the UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain,
Qatar and Oman, was founded at a summit conference held in Abu Dhabi
in 1981, and has since become, with strong UAE support, an effective
and widely-respected grouping.
Intended to
facilitate the development of closer ties between its members and
to enable them to work together to ensure their security, the AGCC
has faced two major external challenges during its short lifetime:
first, the long and costly conflict in the 1980s between Iraq and
Iran, which itself prompted the Council's formation and second,
the August 1990 invasion by Iraq of one of its members, Kuwait.
Following the
invasion of Kuwait, President Zayed was one of the first Arab leaders
to offer support to its people and units from the UAE armed forces
played a significant role in the alliance that liberated the Gulf
state in early 1991.
While fully
supporting the international condemnation of the policies of the
Iraqi regime and the sanctions imposed on Iraq by the United Nations
(UN) during and after the conflict, the UAE has, however, expressed
its serious concern about the impact that the sanctions have had
upon the country's people. In his interview with the New York Times
in mid-1998, Sheikh Zayed noted:
Moderate states
in the Arab world recognise that Saddam [Hussein] did injustice,
and received the appropriate response. He paid the price, and sanctions
have now been imposed on Iraq for seven years.
Now, Iraq is
sick, tired, hungry and naked. How can you continue to impose sanctions
on it for ever in a situation like this? It [Iraq] should not continue
to receive punishment, and should no longer have sanctions imposed
upon it. We believe that the time has come to say that enough is
enough.
Continuing to
argue forcefully for a lifting of sanctions, the UAE has, at the
same, time, provided an extensive amount of humanitarian assistance
to the Iraqi people, ensuring, as far as possible, that the aid
reaches those for whom it is intended.
Another key
focus of the UAE's foreign policy in an Arab context has been the
provision of support to the Palestinian people in their efforts
to regain their legitimate rights to self-determination and to the
establishment of their own state. As early as 1968, before the formation
of the UAE, Sheikh Zayed extended generous assistance to Palestinian
organisations, and has done so throughout the last three decades,
although he has always believed that it is for the Palestinians
themselves to determine their own policies.
Following the
establishment of the Palestinian Authority in Gaza and on parts
of the occupied West Bank, the UAE has provided substantial help
for the building of a national infrastructure, including not only
houses, roads, schools and hospitals, but also for the refurbishment
of Muslim and Christian sites in the city of Jerusalem. While much
of the aid has been bilateral, the UAE has also taken part in development
programmes funded by multilateral agencies and groupings and has
long been a major contributor to the United Nations Relief Works
Agency (UNRWA).
Substantial
amounts of aid have also been given to a number of other countries
in the Arab world, such as Lebanon, to help it recover from the
devastation caused by over a decade of civil war, and to less-developed
countries such as Yemen.
Sheikh Zayed
has a deeply held belief in the cherished objective of greater political
and economic unity within the Arab world. At the same time, however,
he has long adopted a realistic approach on the issue, recognising
that to be effective any unity must grow slowly and with the support
of the people. Arab unity, he believes, is not something that can
simply be created through decrees of governments that may be temporary,
political phenomena.
That approach
has been tried and tested both at the level of the UAE itself, which
is the longest-lived experiment in recent times in Arab unity, and
at the level of the Arabian Gulf Cooperation Council.
On a broader
plane, Sheikh Zayed has sought consistently to promote greater understanding
and consensus between Arab countries and to reinvigorate the League
of Arab States. Relations between the Arab leaders, he believes,
should be based on openness and frankness:
They must make
it clear to each other that each one of them needs the other, and
they should understand that only through mutual support can they
survive in times of need.
A brother should
tell his brother: you support me, and I will support you, when you
are in the right. But not when you are in the wrong. If I am in
the right, you should support and help me, and help to remove the
results of any injustice that has been imposed on me. Wise and mature
leaders should listen to sound advice, and should take the necessary
action to correct their mistakes. As for those leaders who are unwise
or immature, they can be brought to the right path through advice
from their sincere friends.
Within that
context, and since the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait which split the
Arab world asunder, Sheikh Zayed has consistently argued for the
holding of a new Arab summit conference at which leaders can honestly
and frankly address the disputes between them. Only thus, he believes,
can the Arab world as a whole move forward to tackle the challenges
that face it, both internally and on the broader international plane:
I believe that
an all-inclusive Arab summit must be held, but before attending
it, the Arabs must open their hearts to each other and be frank
with each other about the rifts between them and their wounds. They
should then come to the summit, to make the necessary corrections
to their policies, to address the issues, to heal their wounds and
to affirm that the destiny of the Arabs is one, both for the weak
and the strong. At the same time, they should not concede their
rights, or ask for what is not rightfully theirs.
The UAE President
acknowledges, however, that unanimity, although desirable, cannot
always be achieved. He has, therefore, been the only Arab leader
to openly advocate a revision of the Charter of the League of Arab
States to permit decisions to be taken on the basis of the will
of the majority. Such has been the experience of the society from
which he comes, and such has been one of the foundations of the
success of the federal experiment in the UAE. It is time, he believes,
that a similar approach was adopted within the broader Arab world.
This should
not, however, mean that essential rights and principles should be
set aside; these include, of course, the principle of the inviolability
of the integrity of Arab territories.
This principle
has been a matter of major concern to the UAE since its formation,
due to the Iranian occupation in 1971 of the UAE islands of Abu
Musa and Greater and Lesser Tunb. That occupation was undertaken
in contravention of all norms of international law and of the Charter
of the United Nations.
Successive governments
in Iran have continually consolidated their military hold over the
islands and have failed to respond to efforts by the UAE to resolve
the issue. The UAE in turn, has never abandoned its attempts to
regain its rights over the islands. Iran, however, has rejected
the UAE suggestion that the matter be referred to the International
Court of Justice and it has also stated that while it is willing
to hold bilateral negotiations, these would only deal with what
it describes as 'misunderstandings', failing to acknowledge that
a question of sovereignty exists.
While Sheikh
Zayed wishes to see an improvement in relations with Iran, not only
a near-neighbour of the Emirates but also a fellow Muslim state,
he has made it clear that a concrete and positive initiative is
now required from the Iranian side. 'It is said that [Iranian] President
Khatami wants to pursue a policy of openness towards his neighbours
and the world, but we are still waiting [for action].'
Here, as on
other foreign policy issues, Sheikh Zayed has consistently adopted
a firm but calmly worded approach, eschewing rhetoric that could
make the search for a solution to problems more difficult.
In recent years,
the conflicts ensuing from the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia
have been the cause of considerable concern. Prior to the imposition
of a peace in Bosnia by the western industrialised powers, Sheikh
Zayed's frustration with the continued slaughter of Bosnian Muslims
was scarcely concealed.
Commenting to
the Emirates News Agency, WAM, at the height of the Serbian campaign
of 'ethnic cleansing' against the Muslims, he said that the UN seemed
'enfeebled like a dead machine' in the face of Serbian atrocities:
It is as if
the United Nations has been turned into stone, with no feeling or
compassion for the agony of the Bosnian people.
We call on all
people with a conscience, those who believe in justice and who deplore
aggression and unjust wars to stand up against the horrors being
perpetrated against the innocent people of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The world has
to move forcefully to put an end to the horrifying tragedy. Governments
must move now to enable the people of that besieged country to defend
themselves. The right of self-defence is the most basic human and
elementary right.
Once the international
community had forced the Serbs to cease their campaign of slaughter
in Bosnia, Sheikh Zayed promptly moved to ensure that substantial
assistance was sent by the UAE to enable the Bosnian Muslims to
begin the task of rebuilding their society.
The lessons
of the Bosnian tragedy were not, however, lost on Sheikh Zayed.
The time had come, he recognised, for the UAE itself to play a more
proactive role in international peacekeeping operations.
The UAEs
armed forces had already begun to establish a record in such peacekeeping
activities, first as part of the joint Arab Deterrent Force that
sought for a few years to bring to an end the civil strife in Lebanon,
and then through participation in UNISOM TWO, the UN peacekeeping
and reconstruction force in Somalia.
In early 1999,
as a new campaign of Serbian atrocities began to get under way against
the Albanian population of Kosovo, Sheikh Zayed was among the first
world leaders to express support for the decision by the North Atlantic
Treaty Organisation (NATO) to launch its aerial campaign to force
Serbia to halt its genocidal activities.
Recognising
early on in the campaign that there would be a need for an international
peacekeeping force once the NATO campaign ended, Sheikh Zayed ordered
that the UAEs armed forces should be a part of any such force
operating under the aegis of the UN. In late 1999, with the UN's
KFOR force in place in Kosovo, the contingent from the UAE was the
largest taking part from any of the non-NATO states.
While ensuring
that the UAE should now increasingly come to shoulder such international
responsibilities, however, Sheikh Zayed has also made it clear that
the UAE's role is one that is focused on relief and rehabilitation.
In the Balkans
and in other countries, the policy adopted by the UAE clearly reflects
the desire of Sheikh Zayed to utilise the good fortune of his country
to provide assistance to those less fortunate. Through bodies like
the Zayed Foundation and the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development, established
by Sheikh Zayed before the foundation of the UAE, as well as through
institutions like the Red Crescent Society, chaired by his son,
Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the country now plays a major
role in the provision of relief and development assistance worldwide.
In essence,
the philosophy of Sheikh Zayed, derived from his deeply held Muslim
faith, is that it is the duty of man to seek to improve the lot
of his fellow man. His record in over half a century in government,
first within the UAE and then concurrently on a broader international
plane, is an indication of the dedication and seriousness with which
he has sought to carry out that belief.
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