Page 409 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 409

Chapter Nino

               Dubai decided in early 1979 lo allow the ministry to take over these
               services, and Ra s al Khaimah followed suit in 1980, but integration
               lakes time.
                 The measure of actual permeation of the federal administration
               through all aspects of public life and throughout the entire country is
               varied and cannot be described in statistics alone. Probably the most
               effective federal achievement, which in itself helped the nationwide
               provision of various services and a more uniform economic develop­
               ment, was the construction of the road network. When the federation
               was founded, Abu Dhabi and Dubai were not yet connected by a
               surfaced road, and the journeys from the east coast to Sharjah or
               from the Llwa lo Abu Dhabi were best undertaken in four-wheel-
               drive cars. In the 1980s only the smallest and most remote villages are
               still not reached by a paved road, but even they usually have a graded
               track for better access. The road connecting the UAE for overland
               traffic via Saudi Arabia to Europe is also completed. The dramatic
               expansion of air travel to foreign countries since 1972 encouraged
               the construction of no less than four international airports (a fifth
               near Abu Dhabi is nearing completion) by the governments of four
               Emirates, thereby potentially increasing rivalry. Internal communi­
               cation has also benefited immensely by the establishment of an STD
               telephone system which instantly connects almost all subscribers in
               the UAE with Europe and the USA.
                 This dramatic improvement in communications facilitates the task
               of civil servants in the ministries’ headquarters of keeping in close
               contact with the developments in the regional departments and of
               monitoring the impact of their services on the recipient population in
               even the remotest parts of the country. An important reason for the
               slow implementation of plans to improve services to the population
               in more remote areas was that the majority of the administrators
               were  not very familiar with conditions outside the main towns, and
               were  somewhat reluctant to travel in heal and discomfort.
                 One of the most important aspects of the improvements in people’s
               daily life in the UAE was the transformation of the place where
               they actually live: the family house. Even before 1971 most of the
               windtower houses had been replaced by modern houses and multi­
               storey office buildings; suburban villas  were  being built where
               previously the people had lived in the traditional palm-frond houses.
               The crooked alleys and open spaces between these quarters had
               already been obliterated by straight dual carriageway roads slicing

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