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The Dubai Dilemma
The Dubai Dilemma Marie Nammour (mary@khaleejtimes.com) / 8 October 2013 Dubai, a cosmopolitan city where people from around 180 to 200 different nationalities converge, reflects an interesting image of a modern city that lives up to the expectation of any western tourist. At the same time the country has succeeded in keeping its conservative and traditional beliefs very much alive and takes pride in them. However, in the past few years Dubai has been the scene of several criminal cases related to sex and alcohol abuse, involving European, American and other foreign expatriates who have found themselves caught in the web of legal trouble. This is mainly due to the lack of knowledge about the laws and the fine line between a luxurious lifestyle and the violation of laws due to abuse of personal liberties. And, these foreigners would most probably continue to face the same trouble unless certain misconceptions are corrected. Counsel Hani Hammouda believes the culture of every society takes decades and even centuries to become firmly rooted. It is like a huge tree that needs space of its own to grow and flourish so that it can provide a shadow that covers everyone who lives in it. For Hammouda, who works for Kefah Al Zaabi Firm for Advocacy and Legal Consultancy, the solution would start by distributing leaflets at airports and by airline companies to newcomers to Dubai, introducing them to the basic facts and principles about life and code of conduct in Dubai. That would help tourists and visitors seeking jobs keep out of legal trouble. “Embassies and consulates can play a key role in guiding their community here and foreigners could make use of the advisory information and abide by them fully realising that the laws could be different from their own country. For example, the use of drugs is strictly prohibited in the UAE while it could be allowed in some European countries. The installation of information boards in malls and public places could also prove beneficial. Holding seminars and lectures are also necessary to raise the foreigners’ awareness about the traditions and norms. “While it is said that ‘when in Rome do as the Romans do’, learning about the host country’s laws and rules upon arrival is a basic need as the ignorance about laws is no excuse to spare law violators the legal accountability,” Hammouda stressed. Misconceptions about cultures This intriguing mosaic of the 180 to 200 nationalities certainly needs a clear set of rules which should be made available to foreigners. The culture of any society takes hundreds of years to be rooted and instilled in generations. However, even if this culture as a whole cannot reach all outsiders, at least the basic minimum components of that culture should be respected, stressed Hammouda. “A simple example of this is that some European countries banned the veil and subjected every woman, who was spotted wearing a veil in public, to fines simply because it did not go well with the cultures of those countries. However, here we still see expats walking along the streets in shorts and in other outfits which could quite hurt the feelings of the conservative local Arab and Muslim families,” said Hammouda. Scantily dressed women and men are often seen walking in malls he said and wondered why every mall does not have information boards with the dress code placed at the entrance itself. “The mall’s owner must be strolling around very often so why doesn’t he pay attention to the excesses of taste and value? At the end of the day, a certain culture would shape up from this combination of cultures. How would we expect it to be? “There is no room here for a reverse thinking that the society here is open to all cultures and that it would be wrong to interfere in other’s liberties. Even in European and American states, one would be punished for an indecent and obscene public act.” According to Adel Awad Jr, a lawyer with over 18 years of experience in law and practising in New York, the image about Dubai abroad is deceiving. “The media projects Dubai as a modern city, which is a fact. But according to that image, there is an unlimited exercise of freedom with no restrictions. So to begin with, westerners head to Dubai with a different picture,” he pointed out. Referring to Dalelv’s case (Norwegian Marte Deborah Dalelv, who was accused of illicit consensual sex after reporting rape), Awad Jr. said: “It is her fault. Even in Europe, a woman should be careful not to stay in the same room with a stranger at night. The alcohol was also a circumstantial element. She lost her sobriety and will.” Proving that a woman was raped is complicated. “Injury marks resulting from struggle with the rapist should be there. If there are no such marks then she would be thought of as a consenting party. If it is proven that she was drunk at the incident time then she will be thought of as an unwilling party and that the sex was forced upon her.” Awad Jr suggested that an introductory code of conduct be enclosed to the employment contract when sent to an expatriate. That way, he (she) would be advised on what would await him in the country he would become a resident of. “Tourists could as well make use of the same information so it would be recommendable that airline and travel agencies enclose it to the travel package they offer to their customers. This code of conduct will give a list of the Dos and the Don’ts in the host country. This code of conduct will help reduce the crimes as it will clear everything out all along.” In July this year, Norwegian Marte Deborah Dalelv who was jailed for having illicit sex and giving false reports to the authorities about being raped, was granted pardon. The 42-year-old Dalelv, who works as an interior design executive, was at first sentenced by the Court of Misdemeanours to 16 months in jail, followed by deportation, for falsely reporting a rape, having sex-out-of-wedlock and consuming alcohol. She claimed to the police and prosecutors that her Sudanese boss raped her in his hotel room in Bur Dubai in March, taking advantage of the fact that she was under the influence of alcohol. The man was sentenced to 13 months in jail and deportation. She was on a business trip with him when the incident happened. Marte’s case created media frenzy in the west after she told her story to the press recounting her ordeal and shock over being held in custody for reporting a rape. She claimed that during the interrogation, she changed her testimony and falsely confessed she had consensual sex in a desperate bid to get a reduced sentence. In February, the Court of Appeals reduced the jail terms of an expatriate couple (an Irish man and a British woman, who had sex mary@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
Dubai canal project to draw around 30m visitors
Dubai canal project to draw around 30m visitors Lily B. Libo-on (lily@khaleejtimes.com) / 8 October 2013 The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) will be developing over 14 million square feet of retail, dining, hospitality and residential areas along an esplanade that borders the Dubai canal, which connects Jumeirah Beach to the Business Bay. To be known as the Dubai Water Canal Project, the development was signaled by the recent signing of an agreement on the RTA premises with two real estate developers, Meydan and Meraas, and is expected to attract 30 to 36 million visitors to Dubai yearly. The agreement was signed by Mattar Al Tayer, Chairman of the Board and Executive Director of the RTA; Saeed bin Humaid Al Tayer, Chairman of the Board and CEO of Meydan Group; and Abdullah Ahmed Al Habbai, Group Chairman of Meraas Holding. The two companies will construct hotels, shopping mall as well as several retail and dining outlets, and residential units on the two banks of the Dubai Water Canal stretching from the Business Bay district and crossing the Shaikh Zayed Road up to Jumeirah Park with an extension to the existing park. The canal will pass across Al Safa Park, Al Wasl Road, Jumeirah 2 district, and Jumeirah Road before ending at the Arabian Gulf near Jumeirah Beach Park. Al Tayer said the RTA will do the drilling works of the canal, as well as the construction of crossings, roads and pedestrian paths. “The project works have been divided into three contracts. The first and second contract relate to the construction of crossings over the canal linking with the key roads intersecting the canal course, which are the Shaikh Zayed Road comprising eight lanes in each direction, in addition to Al Wasl Road and Jumeirah Road comprising three lanes in each directions apiece. Bridges rise 8.5 metres above the water level to allow free navigation 24/7.” He said the third contract is for the drilling and landscaping works in addition to the construction of pedestrian crossings, and four marine transport stations to ease the movement of the public and promote the mass transport and tourist business. “More than six million passengers are expected to use the marine transit transport every year.” Once completed, the Dubai Water Canal Project will add 6km to the Dubai waterfront, of which the Canal will have a depth of up to six meters on high tides. The entire length of the Business Bay Canal water will be automatically renewed without using water pumps. It will also renew the Dubai Creek water by 250 million cubic meters annually upon the linking of the Canal with the Business Bay District. The water movement during the tide process through the canal is also estimated to be 800 million cubic meters per annum. “The crossings rise more than eight meters to ensure the smooth and safe passage of large boats measuring 200 meters in length,” Al Tayer said. Several improvements will be made on main roads intersecting the canal as well as works in the surrounding areas of Jumeirah and Al Safa. A free and safe movement will be provided for pedestrians by constructing four pedestrian crossings over the canal, one of which will have retail and dining outlets. Lanes will also be provided for joggers and cyclists along both sides of the Canal. Landscaping works will also be undertaken on both sides of the canal offering greens, sitting areas and various types of relaxation and tourist facilities. Included in the development is the Canal Gate Tower at the intersection of Shaikh Zayed Road and the canal, connecting the canal and the shopping mall, comprising retail, F and B and entertainment venues. The Tower will have more than 3.5 million square feet of area that includes 468 apartments, 470 service apartments and 617 hotel rooms, as well as over 400,000 square feet of retail and 735,000 square feet of commercial office spaces. Other aspects of the Dubai Water Canal Development Project are the 1.5km of urban public beach front and space for public leisure and sports activity at Safa Park, an exclusive enclave of 19 water villas and 44 townhouses above retail outlets at Jumeirah High Street area, and an extended public beach front at Jumeirah Beach Park. Continue reading
India tops global remittances list
India tops global remittances list Issac John / 4 October 2013 With the developing world on track to receive $414 billion in migrant remittances in 2013 — an increase of 6.3 per cent over the previous year — India again topped the global chart with $71 billion in remittances, according to a revised World Bank forecast. Other top recipients of officially recorded remittances for 2013 are China ($60 billion), the Philippines ($26 billion), Mexico ($22 billion), Nigeria ($21 billion), and Egypt ($20 billion), the report said. The World Bank said migrant remittances to developing world is projected to jump to $540 billion by 2016. The GCC is already the largest send market for South Asian and Mena countries, contributing close to 50 per cent of the market. It also accounted for more than 40 per cent of the total inward remittances received by the market, said Sudhesh Giriyan, vice-president & business head, Xpress Money. “GCC will continue to grow in its stature as a major remittance source bloc with countries like the UAE and Qatar lining up major development projects, particularly in infrastructure, which will, in turn, lead to more influx of expatriate labour force,” said Giriyan. India’s projected remittance receipt is just short of three times the FDI (foreign direct in-vestment) it received in 2012, when the country’s recorded $69 billion in total remittances. India and China alone will represent nearly a third of total remittances to the developing world this year, said Dilip Ratha, economist and the manager of the Migration and Remittances Unit at the World Bank. Other large recipients include Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Ukraine. Remittance in-flows to the Middle East and North Africa region are expected to grow by 3.6 per cent in 2013 to about $49 billion. With about $20 billion in remittances anticipated in 2013, Egypt is the sixth largest beneficiary in the developing world, and receives about 40 per cent of remittances sent to the Mena region. Migration within the Mena region is growing, accounting for a growing share of migrants. The largest corridor is from Egypt to the GCC, where there are 2.4 million Egyptian migrants, including 1.3 million in Saudi Arabia alone, the World Bank said. Remittances to Lebanon and Morocco, two other large recipients in the Mena region, are expected to recover in 2013, after flat or negative growth in 2012. In 2012, the total remittances made by migrant workers in the Arab Gulf states amounted to $80 billion (representing a fifth of the global remittances), out of which 24 per cent were remitted by the migrant workers in the UAE for the same year, according to Ambassador Ahmed Al Jarman, Permanent Representative of the UAE to the United Nations at a UN roundtable. Globally, the world’s 232 million international migrants are expected to remit earnings worth $550 billion this year, and over $700 billion by 2016, says the latest issue of the World Bank’s Migration and Development Brief. As a percentage of GDP, the top recipients of remittances in 2012 were Tajikistan (48 per cent), Kyrgyz Republic (31 per cent), Lesotho and Nepal (25 per cent each), and Moldova (24 per cent). Growth of remittances has been robust in all regions of the world, except for Latin America and the Caribbean, where growth decelerated due to economic weakness in the United States. In South Asia, remittances are noticeably supporting the balance of payments. In Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, remittances are larger than the national foreign exchange reserves. All these countries (most notably, Pakistan) have instituted various incentives for attracting remittances. In India, remittances are larger than the earnings from IT exports. With the weakening of the Indian rupee, a surge in remittances is expected as non-resident Indians take advantage of the cheaper goods, services and assets back home. “Fall in the rupee exchange rate and attractive interest rates on external deposits have helped drive remittances to India, thereby supporting the balance of payments situation and contributing 3.7 per cent to India’s GDP,” said Promoth Manghat, vice-president — global operations, UAE Exchange. The Indian rupee depreciated by over 20 per cent during the first three quarters of 2013, among other things due to concerns over continuing current account deficits in India and the impact of an expected tightening of monetary policy in the US, which has induced a general retrenching of international capital and reduced flows to India. While actual data have not yet been compiled for the third quarter of 2013, money transfer operators are reporting a surge in remittances, as Indian migrants benefit from a higher value of their remittances in India. Remittances to India in the first half of 2013 were $35.6 billion. issacjohn@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading




