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Khalifa City A: They’re rooting for this outback

Khalifa City A: They’re rooting for this outback Silvia Radan / 21 August 2013 Situated north-east of Musaffah industrial area, a bridge away from Abu Dhabi main island, Yas island, and a short ride to the international airport, between the two highways to Dubai and Al Ain, Khalifa City A has become the Capital’s hottest residential area. It covers 22.9 square kilometres of sea level land, having about 2,000 villas and counting. At a first glance, there isn’t much to it — residential houses for as far as the eye can see, endless construction sites for even more residential homes, a labyrinth of small streets that would require any visitor a GPS to navigate, a complete lack of green spaces and dust, dust, dust everywhere! Yet, anyone who left the big towers of Abu Dhabi behind and moved out here is hooked on to it. “I would not want to go back and live in the city for so many reasons. For starters, there is never a parking issue here. The rent is much lower and we get much nicer living conditions. In Abu Dhabi, we lived in one of the tower blocks. It was a new one, very clean, with very good services, but windows wouldn’t open, there was no outdoor space, nowhere for children to play and we never heard a bird singing. Here, we live in a villa apartment, with a private garden and swimming pool. It’s bigger space and cheaper,” said British national Diana Oliver, who moved to Khalifa City A six months ago, with her family. Like many housewives here, Diana spends the morning with a leisurely coffee after taking her daughter to one of the local schools. It is her quiet time of the day, when she gets to write in her diary, which she hopes to turn into a book one day about her experience of living in an Arab country. Lunch is often with friends in the Garden Plaza, a complex part of Al Raha Gardens with a few shops, a small supermarket and a couple of cafes. “We did initially consider moving into Al Raha Gardens, but we found the villas have a lot of space inside and not too much outside. They are consider the creme de la creme out here, but to be honest, I believe if you take the time to look around, you find much nicer villas in Khalifa City itself,” said Diana. The commercial area of Khalifa City A. — KT photos by Shoaib Anwer Flanking the north of Khalifa City, stretching along the E10 highway leading to Masdar City, Al Raha Gardens are a series of residential compounds developed by Aldar Properties. Each compound is a cluster of tall two- to three-floor-high villas, dotted with trees, narrow alleys and a community playground for children. It is the only area in Khalifa City to have gas supply. The villas are available for rent only and they are intended for families, as most of them are three to four bedrooms. Yves Tarabout, a French expatriate, moved into a three-bedroom villa in Al Raha Gardens on March 1 and his life took a happier turn. “I’m very happy here! The location is good, with easy accessibility to Yas island and Abu Dhabi. The villa is well structured with good finish. There are lots of wooden features and top-to-bottom windows that can be fully opened. There are trees, space, light and the compound is nice, with security gates,” he described. Tarabout’s two dogs have become healthier and more playful since relocating, as they get to spend a lot more time outdoors. Several close-by vet centres make life easier for any pet owner — and there are quite a few in Khalifa City. “There is also access to decent recreational facilities in Al Raha Gardens itself, including a gym for Al Raha residents only. It’s quite small, but it’s good to have. There is no swimming pool yet, but we are promised one soon,” added Tarabout. Apart from tight and not that many parking spaces in the compound, Tarabout’s only complaint is the “quite restrictive communication channels” with Al Raha administration, which is not as quick and prompt in sorting out issues as it should be, especially since the Gardens are considered a top-of-the-market location. “We were lucky to only pay Dh155,000 rent per year, but a friend of mine who plans to move here found a similar three-bedroom villa for Dh190,000 now,” mentioned Tarabout. The price rise reflects a serious increase as Dubai residents are moving in, as a result of Abu Dhabi’s government ruling that all its employees must reside in Abu Dhabi. By the end of this year, thousands of families are expected to move from Dubai to the Capital, and many of them are looking at Khalifa City A. Apart from the Garden Plaza, the suburban town also has the Etihad Plaza, a lane of cafes, shops, an Etisalat branch and Khalifa City’s most expensive supermarket, Abella. Further inland is the largest supermarket, Spar, next to a post office branch. The “market area” is another landmark, a raw of grocery shops and small, mostly takeaway cafes, most popular with the Arab and South Asian populations of Khalifa City. A myriad of schools, nurseries and ladies salons dot the main streets. “None of these existed when we moved in,” pointed out Emirati Lee Al Romaithi, one of the first residents of Khalifa City. He and his family moved in 13 years ago, in April 2000. The house belongs to his father, who built it after getting a plot of land here in 1989. “When we moved here, there was only one other house in Khalifa City, about one kilometre away. We were able to see the airport from our home,” he remembered. It took six months to get telephone lines and one year and 10 months for the Internet connection. “We didn’t even have running water back then. We only got water for one hour a day, and I used to store about 20 tonnes of water daily for our consumption, the garden and for emergencies, in four massive tanks. We didn’t use it all, though.” The first grocery shop only opened three years later and access in and out of the city was limited, only through the small side road past the Abu Dhabi Golf Club. “I remember that road being closed for a while and we had to drive all the way down to the airport and come back through that side,” said Pamela Al Romaithi, Lee’s wife. “Yet, I loved Khalifa City back then. It was quiet and nice. It still is, especially if you keep away from the main 15th street,” she added. To this day, sea shells are still found in the earth around here, a reminder of the early days of Khalifa City, when it was a patch of land under the sea levels, taking the government a couple of years to raise it by a few metres with sea sand before infrastructure construction began in the early 1990s. Further away, Khalifa City B in the southwest is yet to catch up. Residents here, mostly Emirati homes, suffer from a complete lack of facilities — not even a grocery shop in sight. This keeps the rent low, but tenants are few and far between. Earlier this year, the Abu Dhabi Municipality announced plans to open a 25,000-square-metre community centre in Khalifa B that will include shops and cafes. The centre is meant to be ready by December 2014. In between the two “cities” is a large empty plot of land, where a third Khalifa City is planned — the Capital District, which will become the seat of power and government for the whole of the UAE as per Abu Dhabi 2030 plan. The largest Zayed University campus is the only building here and next to it is planned the Abu Dhabi railway station. silvia@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading

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Egypt arrests Muslim Brotherhood chief

Egypt arrests Muslim Brotherhood chief (AFP) / 20 August 2013 Egypt’s government Tuesday pressed its fierce campaign against the Muslim Brotherhood of ousted president Mohammed Mursi, effectively decapitating the group by arresting its supreme guide. The detention of supreme guide Mohamed Badie could throw the Brotherhood into further disarray as it struggles to withstand an onslaught by the army-installed authorities. It also raises fears of new violence in the country, where nearly 900 people have died in days of clashes between security forces and the supporters of Mursi. In the latest bloodshed, militants killed 25 policemen just hours after 37 Muslim Brotherhood prisoners died in police custody. Judicial sources meanwhile said fresh accusations had been levelled against Mursi, who has been detained at a secret location since his July 3 ouster by the army. And former president Hosni Mubarak won conditional release in the third of four cases against him, but remained in detention on the last case. The interior ministry said police picked up Brotherhood chief Badie near Rabaa Al Adawiya square, where more than 280 Mursi supporters were killed on Wednesday as police cleared their protest camp. A senior Brotherhood official, Ahmed Aref, said on its website Monday that Badie’s arrest would change nothing. “The leader of the Muslim Brotherhood is just one individual… among the millions who oppose the coup,” he said. Dozens of senior Brotherhood members have been arrested or are at large, after being accused of crimes including inciting the deaths of protesters before Mursi’s ouster. Violence continued to rock the country and draw international opprobrium. On Monday morning, militants killed 25 riot police in two buses in the Sinai peninsula, in the deadliest such attack in decades. The interior ministry blamed the attack on “armed terrorist groups” and Egypt closed its border with the Palestinian Gaza strip, near where the attack occurred. Security sources said another policeman was killed in north Sinai, bringing the number of security force members killed in Sinai since Mursi’s ouster to 75. United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon said he was “deeply disturbed” by the deaths and called for a “full investigation to ascertain the facts surrounding this incident.” Egypt’s foreign minister Nabil Fahmy said Monday in Sudan that his country was on the “right path.” But the international community has fiercely condemned the violence, with rights group Amnesty International decrying it as “utter carnage”. The group’s secretary general Salil Shetty warned the country’s government had “stained its human rights record”. And Human Rights Watch called on Egypt’s rulers to “urgently reverse” instructions for police to use live ammunition against protesters. In response to the violence, EU ambassadors held an urgent meeting in Brussels and foreign ministers were due to review the bloc’s ties with Egypt on Wednesday. The European Union has said nearly five billion euros ($6.7 billion) in aid to Egypt is under review since Mursi’s ouster. The United States has cancelled joint military exercises with Egypt but stopped short of suspending $1.3 billion in annual aid. US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel urged Egypt’s interim government to take an “inclusive approach to reconciliation” but admitted Washington’s influence was limited.   Continue reading

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Pakistan ex-head Musharraf charged in Bhutto death

Pakistan ex-head Musharraf charged in Bhutto death (AP) / 20 August 2013 A Pakistani court Tuesday indicted former president and army chief Pervez Musharraf on murder charges in connection with the 2007 assassination of iconic Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, deepening the fall of a once-powerful figure who returned to the country this year in an effort to take part in elections. The decision by a court in Rawalpindi marks the first time Musharraf, or any former army chief in Pakistan, has been charged with a crime. Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup and stepped down from office in disgrace nearly a decade later, now faces a litany of legal problems that have in many ways broken taboos on the inviolability of the once-sacrosanct military in Pakistani society. He has been charged with murder, conspiracy to commit murder and facilitation for murder, said prosecutor Chaudry Muhammed Azhar. The former army commando appeared in person during the brief morning hearing, and pleaded not guilty, said Afsha Adil, a member of Musharraf’s legal team. Bhutto was killed in 2007 during a gun and bomb attack at a rally in the city of Rawalpindi, the sister city to the capital of Islamabad. Prosecutors have said Musharraf, who was president at the time, failed to properly protect her. The judge set August 27 as the next court date to present evidence. Musharraf returned to Pakistan in March after nearly four years outside the country and vowed to take part in the country’s May elections. But he has little popular support in Pakistan and ever since his return has faced a litany of legal problems related to his rule. He has been confined to his house on the outskirts Islamabad as part of his legal problems, and was brought to court Tuesday amid tight security. In addition to the Bhutto case, Musharraf is involved in a case related to the 2007 detention of judges and the death of a Baluch nationalist leader. He’s also faced threats from the Pakistani Taliban who tried to assassinate him twice while he was in office and vowed to try again if he returned. Continue reading

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