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Everything about Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan totally explained

Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan (Arabic: زايد بن سلطان آل نهيان)‎, (19182 November 2004), the principal architect of United Arab Emirates (UAE), was the ruler of Abu Dhabi and president of the UAE for over 30 years (1971-2004).
   Sheikh Zayed was the youngest son of Sheikh Sultan bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the traditional ruler of Abu Dhabi from 1922 to 1926. He was named after his famous grandfather, Zayed bin Khalifa Al Nahyan, who ruled the emirate from 1855 to 1909. On August 6, 1966 he succeeded his brother, Sheikh Shakhbut Bin-Sultan Al Nahyan, as emir of Abu Dhabi after the latter was deposed in a bloodless palace coup. Zayed was first appointed (by the other six Sheikhs on the Supreme Council) to the presidency of the UAE in 1971 and was reappointed on four further occasions: 1976, 1981, 1986, and 1991. He was considered a relatively liberal ruler, and permitted private media. However, they were expected to practice self-censorship and avoid criticism of Zayed or the ruling families.

Attitudes

His religious tolerance of Christians and the freedom given Western workers sojourning in the UAE was in marked contrast to most neighbors in the region and exposed him to criticism. Zayed was respected around the world for his unifying influence and his drive to make the Emirates one nation. His calls for cooperation extended across Persian Gulf to Iran. Zayed advocated dialogue as the means to settle the row with Tehran over three strategic Persian Gulf islands which Iran seized from the (future) UAE Emirate of Sharjah in 1971, though the islands remain in Iranian hands, despite over three decades of UAE diplomatic initiatives.
   Zayed didn't shy away from controversy when it came to expressing his opinion on current events in the Arab world. Troubled by the suffering of Iraqi civilians, he took the lead in calling for lifting sanctions on Iraq imposed by the United Nations in the aftermath of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, despite Kuwaiti displeasure and opposition.
   Sheikh Zayed was considered one of the wealthiest men in the world. A Forbes magazine estimate put his fortune at around USD $24 billion. The source of this wealth could be almost exclusively attributed to the immense oil wealth of Abu Dhabi and the Emirates, which sit on a pool of a tenth of the world's proven oil reserves. Nevertheless he chose to live a relatively modest and traditional lifestyle, riding and hunting with falcons, though he gave up hunting with firearms, a sport at which he excelled, to set an example for wildlife conservation in his fragile desert homeland. He was personally popular, and was regarded to be considerably pious in his religious observances.

Policies and charity

At the time the British withdrew from the Persian Gulf, Zayed oversaw the establishment of the Abu Dhabi Fund for Arab Economic Development; through its oil riches were channeled to some forty less fortunate Islamic nations in Asia and Africa during the decades that followed. He is also remembered as "the man who turned the desert green," because he invested oil revenues into projects to improve the harsh desert environment.
   Using the country's enormous oil revenues, Sheikh Zayed built up institutions such as hospitals, schools and universities and made it possible for UAE citizens to enjoy free access to them. He also decreed that the State would undertake the cost of foreign health care for those families unable to afford it. Other charitable acts included adopting hundreds of orphans and building several hospitals abroad in Europe, Asia, and Africa.
   Land was also often distributed gratis. However, whilst this policy benefited many landless families, enormously wealthy clans and individuals were given free land grants in proportion to their status and influence with the royal family. His majlis (a traditional Arab consultation council) was open to the public, and as well as discussing national and personal issues, he enjoyed hearing people's opinions on poetry, as well as recitals by new and young poets. His tolerance towards other people and their faiths was evident, and he allowed the building of religious buildings such as churches and temples. This action in particular helped his image with the vast multitudes of expatriate workers who make up approximately three quarters of the population of the UAE. Zayed was also an advocate the education and participation of women in the work force, within traditional parameters. His views regarding women's rights were considerably more liberal than his contemporaries in the GCC nations.

BCCI Scandal

In 1972, Agha Hasan Abedi, a Pakistani banker who had set up a new bank called Bank of Credit and Commerce International, approached Sheikh Zayed for investment capital. Abedi had previously set up the United Bank of Pakistan in 1959, which later became a leading nationalized bank in 1971. With this new project at hand, Sheikh Zayed became responsible for fronting the majority of the investment, also partnering with Bank of America (25%) and, allegedly, the CIA. It is claimed that the CIA were seeking a funding route for the mujahideen in Afghanistan, similar to the Investors Overseas Service and the Nugen Hand Bank in the 1960s.
   By 1977, the bank was almost certainly insolvent, using cash from deposits to fund operating expenses, rather than making investments, taking on the attributes of a Ponzi scheme. Within another eight years, the bank reported assets of over $4 billion with over 150 branches in 46 countries. Bank of America reduced its share in the bank, with Abu Dhabi's holdings companies taking on a controlling block.
   In 1990, a Price Waterhouse audit of BCCI revealed an unaccountable loss of hundreds of millions of dollars. The bank approached Sheikh Zayed, who made good the loss in exchange for an increased shareholding of 78% of the bank.
   In December 1991, further investigation found layers of criminal activity taking place through the bank. Around this point in time, U.S. law enforcement was able to legally establish BCCI as an organized crime syndicate. Though Sheikh Zayed's name wasn't directly mentioned during interrogations, numerous family members were implicated in criminal activity tied to the bank. The investigation found evidence of bribery, money laundering, arms trafficking, prostitution, and support of terrorism. (http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1992_rpt/bcci/04crime.htm)

Zayed Center

The Zayed Center for Coordination and Follow-up, a think tank established in Abu Dhabi in 1999 for "the fulfillment of the vision of Sheikh Zayed," quickly became an anti-Jewish institution. The Zayed Center published a report that Zionists had caused the Holocaust. The center also hosted a lecture by a professor who claimed Jews celebrate Purim by murdering innocent victims and eating their blood. The director of the Zayed Center has publicly declared the Jewish People "enemies of all nations."
   Controversy over the opinions of the Zayed Center caused the Harvard Divinity School to consider returning Zayed's $2.5 million gift to the institution in 2000 as "tainted money." Harvard's equivocation and the engendering negative publicity led the UAE to shut down the Zayed Center.

Final years

In 1999, while he was in a hospital for some tests, the people of the UAE wrote him a personal thank-you letter with 1.5 million signatures. He underwent a kidney transplant in 2000 at the Cleveland Clinic in the U.S.
   On 2 November 2004, Sheikh Zayed died, as announced by Abu Dhabi TV. He was believed to be 86 years old. No official cause of death was given; however he'd recently been in London undergoing hospital treatment. He is buried in the under-construction Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque.
   His eldest son, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, born in 1948, took an increasing role in the government from the 1990s; he was ratified as president of the United Arab Emirates by his fellow rulers on the Supreme Council directly after his father's death. Shaikh Zayed International Airport located at Rahimyar Khan, Punjab, Pakistan is named in his honor.

Criticisms

Sheikh Zayed's critics point to the vast sums of the state's wealth that he accumulated for himself and his family, significantly dwarfing the amounts channeled to charitable contributions. Furthermore, that this wasn't his own wealth that he was distributing, but the nation's. Zayed's supporters maintain that much of his charitable work went unadvertised, and was merely known through popular word-of-mouth, though state-friendly media enthusiastically publicized his philanthropy.

Legacy

Zayed was extremely popular in his home country. He was admired as a relatively simple man who guarded his people's culture and traditions and presented a civilized image of the UAE to the rest of the world; he was the undisputed father of his nation. He was especially respected in the US and Europe due to his pro-western stance, and his reputation as a moderate and gentle ruler.

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