Tag Archives: business
Evolution of the UAE passport
Evolution of the UAE passport Mustafa Al Zarooni / 23 August 2013 While history could be “the biography of great men”, as Thomas Carlyle wrote, we encounter it through collections of yellow-tinged papers and photographs and artefacts. Museums, which display these archives, are the house of history. They tell the tales of nations, people, their rulers, customs, beliefs and turning points. Al Dana Museum at the General Directorate of Naturalisation and Foreigners Affairs in Dubai is one such house of history. It has a good collection of important documents which young Emiratis must see to understand their country’s past. The collection includes travel documents and passports of the once Trucial States with each emirate having its own separate passport before the UAE Federation came into being 42 years ago. Colonel Ali Ghanim Al Mirri, Advisor for Naturalisation Affairs to the Director of the General Department of Residency and Foreigners Affairs, said, “The department looks forward to collecting more documents from Emiratis to enrich the museum, and show the people the history of their homeland, and the events it had witnessed. Boosting awareness about their history will help instil a sense of patriotic identity deeply in the hearts and minds of the young.” The collection includes a free pass document issued in 1966; a passport issued in 1973; temporary passports; change of the family book (citizenship document) from just a paper to a booklet; and passports in which the holders’ photographs were not shown as at that time privacy was strongly followed by the society. The other items showcased include passports — in fact, the travel documents — of all seven emirates before the establishment of the Federation. Over the years “There were no passports before the establishment of the state, and most likely only a travel document was issued,” said Colonel Al Mirri. “People travelled to GCC countries, east Asia and some African coasts for trade.” The travel document was usually issued by the Customs Office at the Ruler’s Court of each emirate. “Since the inception of the UAE Federation on December 2, 1971, and with the country going a long way towards modernity, passports were issued, and the nationals submitted their previous travel documents. Committees with members from reliable families with good reputation and well-known persons in each and every nook and corner of the country were formed. The members of those panels who knew every person in their respective regions were authorised to approve or reject the applications for passports those days,” he recalled. “In the early 1980s, a family book used to be issued to each family. The document was just a piece of paper. Its character and look changed many times, and at all times it looked like a passport but of brown colour.” “Then, the ordinary passports were of black colour and was renewed once every two years. Later, the colour changed to blue and the passport had to be renewed every five years.” There were five types of passports then — ordinary, special, diplomatic and temporary. The rules and procedures have changed. All indigenous and well-known UAE citizens are issued passports now and the process of granting the passport at present is different, as there are investigation committees and other procedures required before issuing the document. Colonel Al Mirri urged Emiratis who have such old and important documents to submit them to the museum so that everyone will benefit from viewing them. Thus, the museum would also expand and the public would benefit a lot in terms of understanding the history and evolution of the country as well as the naturalisation department. The museum is open to the public throughout the year. The naturalisations departments across the county had shown good cooperation by providing the documents in their possession to the Dubai directorate to be showcased at the museum, he added. Colonel Ahmed Mohammed Al Mohairi, Director of the Naturalisation Department at the directorate, said the progress the UAE had seen over the last 40 years might not have been achieved without the intimate relationship between the leadership and the people, and without the sincerity of the leadership and its keenness on mobilising all resources for the convenience and welfare of the people. Echoing the words of Colonel Al Mirri, he said it was necessary to document the history of the country, especially the pre-era of the Union, the early beginnings and the rapid development the UAE had seen after in a record short time. New passports The present biometric passports bear the same information saved on the Emirates identity card making it easy to use anywhere and they are safer. The passports are printed in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. The printing of the UAE passport does not take more than a working day, and the document is delivered after a couple of hours if there is no overcrowding. “However, the passport renewal section sees pressure and overcrowding during the holiday and travel season,” he said. Manner of writing names Recently, a uniform way of writing the names of Emirati families has been adopted. The move was taken after some applicants faced some problems as their documents were being processed and issued in the old way. The department has addressed these issues. On the possibility of changing the family name or add a new name, certain rules and processes are being followed. Put a new family name or changing it is not allowed other than in some cases — that too only in the presence of the most senior and reliable member of the clan to which an applicant wants or claims to belong. That member has to acknowledge that he is a witness and that the applicant is one of his relatives and bears the same name of the clan. “Emirati woman does not follow the name of her husband or his clan, but she rather keeps the name of her clan or family,” he said. In the past, some people refrained from putting their photographs on the passports, and would, instead, write “refused”, especially veiled women. Some others allowed their photographs to be pasted on the passports but featuring only veiled faces or covering part of their faces. – malzarooni@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
UN chief calls for swift probe of attack in Syria
UN chief calls for swift probe of attack in Syria (AP) / 23 August 2013 Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday called on the Syrian government to allow a UN team now in Damascus to swiftly investigate an alleged chemical weapon attack outside the capital that killed at least 100 people. UN deputy spokesman Eduardo del Buey said Ban remains “deeply troubled” by the alleged attack on the eastern suburbs of Damascus on Wednesday and believe it needs to be investigated “without delay.” Syrian anti-government activists accused President Bashar Assad’s regime of carrying out an attack using toxic gas and have reported death tolls ranging from 136 to 1,300. Even the lowest figure would make it the deadliest alleged chemical attack in Syria’s 2 1/2-year civil war. The government has denied that it used chemical weapons, calling the allegations “absolutely baseless.” Del Buey said the secretary-general “takes positive note” of the UN Security Council meeting on Wednesday that backed his initial call for “a thorough, impartial and prompt investigation.” He said the secretary-general has been in touch with world leaders since Wednesday and is sending UN disarmament chief Angela Kane to Damascus to press for a UN investigation. Under the terms of an agreement with Syria negotiated by Kane and chief weapons inspector Ake Sellstrom in July, the UN team can investigate three previous incidents of alleged chemical weapons use. A new agreement would need to be negotiated for the 20-member team to be able to go to the Damascus suburb of Ghouta. The UN team is scheduled to investigate an alleged chemical weapons attack that happened March 19 on the village of Khan Al Assal outside the city of Aleppo, which was captured by the rebels last month. The government and rebels blame each other for the attack. The sites of the two other incidents to be investigated are being kept secret for security reasons. More than 35 countries signed a letter to the secretary-general Wednesday requesting the UN experts to launch “an urgent investigation … as expeditiously as possible” into Wednesday’s incident as well. Del Buey said the secretary-general is sending a formal request to the Syrian government to grant permission and access to the Ghouta area to the UN chemical weapons experts. “He expects to receive a positive response without delay,” del Buey said. UN Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson, who briefed the Security Council on Wednesday, expressed hope that the Syrian government will give the team access to the site as soon as possible, though he cautioned that because of fighting “the security situation right now does not allow such access.” “This represents, no matter what conclusions are, a serious escalation with grave humanitarian consequences and human consequences,” Eliasson stressed. The secretary-general reiterated his call for an immediate cessation of hostilities so that humanitarian assistance can be urgently delivered to the area of the latest incident, del Buey said. Continue reading
Indian expats cashing in on falling rupee
Indian expats cashing in on falling rupee Staff Reporter / 21 August 2013 Concerns mounted over the state of the Indian economy as the country’s currency plummeted to another record low against the dollar and shares continued their slide on Tuesday. The Indian rupee, Asia’s worst-performing currency this year slid to 64.13 rupees to the dollar in morning trading, past its previous low of 63.22 on Monday, and some Indian expats are cashing in on the record low the currency has hit by sending more money home. The Reserve Bank of India is believed to have intervened twice in the foreign exchange market to sell dollars for rupees. The move lifted the Indian unit slightly but it still ended the day at a new lifetime closing low of 63.25 rupees to the dollar. Troubles besetting the rupee, which has fallen nearly 17 per cent against the dollar this year, has spilt over to the stock and bond markets. Indian shares — which have lost seven per cent in the past three trading days — slid as much as 1.83 per cent in early trade to a low of 17,970.98 points before recovering to close down 0.34 per cent at 18,246.04. The yield on the 10-year benchmark bond hit 9.23 per cent intraday, the highest for over five years, reflecting eroding investor appetite for Indian debt as worries about the economy and potential default mounted, AFP reported. Finance Minister P. Chidambaram told parliament a number of government steps had been taken to stem the rupee’s decline including reducing imports of non-essential items such as gold. The falling rupee stokes inflation by raising the cost of everything India imports from crude oil to chemicals and pulses. There are also growing fears that India will find it tough to fund its gaping current account deficit, which hit a record high last year. India’s weak trading sentiment was mirrored across key Asian stock markets, with investors jittery before Wednesday’s publication of the minutes of July’s US Federal Open Market Committee meeting. These were expected to give indications about a possible rollback of the Fed’s massive stimulus programme. Most emerging market currencies have been hit by expectations the Fed will scale back its stimulus sooner than expected, causing funds to flow back to the United States as its economy recovers. “This is a crisis, the sentiment is extremely frail,” said Param Sarma, chief executive of NSP Forex, a forex consultancy, according to AFP news agency. In the UAE, many Indian expats view the record decline of their currency as an opportunity to invest and send more cash home. However, Vasudev, assistant manager of UAE Exchange, Bur Dubai branch, said it’s been business as usual. “Even though we opened at Rs17.3 to the dirham on Tuesday morning, fluctuations in the rupee don’t influence people. The people who have to remit do so on a monthly basis — end of the month and first week of the month, around the time salaries get credited.” At a branch of Al Fardan Exchange located in a mall, the manager (not authorised to speak to the media), said he had noticed a disturbing trend in the past few weeks of Indians taking personal loans from banks and sending the money home. The manager’s own belief is: “Send what you have, never take a liability, it’s best to take it slow and send monthly.” “Yesterday, a man sent five million in Indian currency home to three different accounts.” There is a huge risk, though, in taking loans and sending that money home. According to K. V. Shamsudheen, who runs a charitable trust and looks into the welfare of NRIs and also conducts classes in Dubai on financial awareness: “More than 36 per cent Indians are taking loans from credit card companies that say they are charging 2-3 per cent interest” when, in fact, that 2-3 per cent was not annual interest, but monthly. Shamsudheen advises expats on key matters: “Never take loans from individual money lenders. Never take loans from credit card companies. And if you are remitting money home, make sure the investment back home is not in real estate, not in buying houses, but in a liquid investment such as fixed deposit, mutual funds and stocks.” news@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading




