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The
government of the UAE has provided housing for its people
that is on a par with the most developed areas of the
developed world. In the past, many people lived in tents or
small houses made of palm fronds while in the mountains,
there were small stone dwellings sheltering people from the
weather. Even in the towns, housing was very basic -- huts
of palm fronds or coral from the sea. And needless to say,
the lack of power supplies meant that such conveniences as
air-conditioning were unheard of.
All
that has now changed, and however nostalgic people are for
the simpler life of the past, no one ever laments the
absence of the housing of those days. The government has
built in rural areas over 50,000 houses which have been
given free of charge to citizens. New villages and
settlements have been established so that people can have
comfortable housing as well as access to schools and medical
clinics.
The
country's larger towns have become cities. In Abu Dhabi
alone, the government has built more than 35,000 apartments
which have been given to citizens through long-term soft
loans. The idea is that the citizens can lease the
apartments in order to produce income. Housing at low- and
controlled-rent has also been built all over the country for
both citizens and expatriates.
At
the upper end of the market, the country is a veritable
exhibition of the latest in modern architecture, much of it
with an Islamic influence. Luxury apartments, sumptuous
villas, the latest supermarkets and office blocks create an
architectural display which is equalled nowhere in the
world.
The
advances in education, health care and housing all require
support in the form of dependable supplies of water and
electricity, roads, communications and other facilities. And
the Emirates has produced a state well-equipped with all of
these.
Electric
power stations and desalination plants, often fuelled by gas
from the country's oil fields, ensure a constant supply of
water and electricity for residential, industrial or
agricultural consumption.
Several
thousand kilometres of the most modern tarmac roads now link
every part of the country with every other part. Journeys
which once took days or weeks can now be performed in a few
hours at the most. These roads have been invaluable in
moulding the country into a single nation as well as in
facilitating the ancient UAE tradition of sea-borne trade
and commerce.
Because
of its modern roads and ports, the country has once again
become a centre of maritime trade for the whole of the
Arabian peninsula and the Indian Ocean region.
The
three principal ports of the UAE -- Port Rashid in Dubai,
the Port of Fujairah and the Port of Jebel Ali -- handle a
total of over 1.5 million container units a year. Business
through the country's smaller ports brings the total to well
over 2.5 million units annually. There are now more than a
dozen ports in the country with more than 200 berths used
not only for imports and exports but also for transshipment
throughout the region. (As a measure of progress, in 1971
there were two ports and 18 berths in the country.)
The
country's airports at Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ras al
Khaimah, Fujairah and Al Ain handle several million
passengers annually either as visitors or in transit. These
passengers are transported by most of the world's major
carriers and have made the UAE one of the busiest aviation
hubs. The country also has two international carriers of its
own -- Emirates and the regional airline, Gulf Air, jointly
owned by three neighbouring states.
As
a further complement to the country's rapid movement into
the modern age, there is an enviable telecommunications
network. Over half a million telephone lines are now
operating in the country. There are also 6000 international
circuits, sufficient to handle the traffic for even the
UAE's thriving business community. Four satellite earth
stations also transmit information and pictures about the
UAE all over the world. |