Arab Cities List - United Arab Emirates
Indooroodilly Ras al Khaimah Mina Zayed/Abu Dhabi Jumayrah Al Hamriyah Minhad Jebel Ali Das Island Dibba Mina Khalid Zirku Island Ruwais = Ar Ruways Arzanah Island Ar Ruways Mubarras Island Jebel Dhanna Abu Dhabi Masfut Port Rashid Mubarek Terminal Ras Zubbaya (Ras Dubayyah( Kalba Umm al Qaiwain Umm Al Nar Khalidia Mina Saqr Al Dhafra Musafa Khor al Fakkan Ajman Abu al Bukhoosh Dubai Al Fujayrah Sharjah Abu Musa Al Ain Suez
Dubai Bank
Dubai (Arabic: دبÙÙ Dubeii; IPA: [du'beii]; English pronunciation: /duËËbaɪ/ doo-by( is a city and emirate in the United Arab Emirates (UAE(. The emirate is located south of the Persian Gulf on the Arabian Peninsula and has the largest population with the second-largest land territory by area of all the emirates, after Abu Dhabi.[4] Dubai and Abu Dhabi are the only two emirates to have veto power over critical matters of national importance in the country's legislature.[5] Dubai City is located on the emirate's northern coastline.
The earliest recorded mention of Dubai is in 1095, and the earliest settlement known as Dubai town dates from 1799. Dubai was formally established in 1833 by Sheikh Maktoum bin Buti al Maktoum when he persuaded 800 members of the Bani Yas tribe, living in what is now part of Saudi Arabia, to follow him to the Dubai Creek by the Al Abu Falasa clan of Bani Yas, and it remained under clan control when the United Kingdom assumed the protection of Dubai in 1892.[6] Its geographical location made it an important trading hub and by the beginning of the 20th century, it was an important port. In 1966, the year oil was discovered, Dubai and the emirate of Qatar set up a new monetary unit to replace the Gulf Rupee. The oil economy led to a massive influx of foreign workers, quickly expanding the city by 300% and bringing in international oil interests. The modern emirate of Dubai was created after the UK left the area in 1971. At this time Dubai, together with Abu Dhabi and four other emirates, formed the United Arab Emirates. The following year Ras al Khaimah joined the federation while Qatar and Bahrain chose to remain independent nations. In 1973, the monetary union with Qatar was dissolved and the UAE Dirham introduced throughout the UAE. A free trade zone was built around the Jebel Ali port in 1979, allowing foreign companies unrestricted import of labor and export capital. The Gulf War of 1990 had a negative financial effect on the city, as depositors withdrew their money and traders withdrew their trade, but subsequently the city recovered in a changing political climate and thrived.
Today, Dubai City has emerged as a global city and a business hub.[7] Although Dubai's economy was built on the oil industry, the emirate's model of business drives its economy, with the effect that its main revenues are now from tourism, real estate, and financial services, similar to that of Western countries.[8][9][10] Dubai has recently attracted world attention through many innovative large construction projects and sports events. This increased attention has highlighted labour rights and human rights issues concerning its largely South Asian workforce.[11] Dubai's property market experienced a major deterioration in 2008 and 2009 as a result of the worldwide economic downturn following the Financial crisis of 20072010
The earliest recorded mention of Dubai is in 1095, and the earliest settlement known as Dubai town dates from 1799. Dubai was formally established in 1833 by Sheikh Maktoum bin Buti al Maktoum when he persuaded 800 members of the Bani Yas tribe, living in what is now part of Saudi Arabia, to follow him to the Dubai Creek by the Al Abu Falasa clan of Bani Yas, and it remained under clan control when the United Kingdom assumed the protection of Dubai in 1892.[6] Its geographical location made it an important trading hub and by the beginning of the 20th century, it was an important port. In 1966, the year oil was discovered, Dubai and the emirate of Qatar set up a new monetary unit to replace the Gulf Rupee. The oil economy led to a massive influx of foreign workers, quickly expanding the city by 300% and bringing in international oil interests. The modern emirate of Dubai was created after the UK left the area in 1971. At this time Dubai, together with Abu Dhabi and four other emirates, formed the United Arab Emirates. The following year Ras al Khaimah joined the federation while Qatar and Bahrain chose to remain independent nations. In 1973, the monetary union with Qatar was dissolved and the UAE Dirham introduced throughout the UAE. A free trade zone was built around the Jebel Ali port in 1979, allowing foreign companies unrestricted import of labor and export capital. The Gulf War of 1990 had a negative financial effect on the city, as depositors withdrew their money and traders withdrew their trade, but subsequently the city recovered in a changing political climate and thrived.
Today, Dubai City has emerged as a global city and a business hub.[7] Although Dubai's economy was built on the oil industry, the emirate's model of business drives its economy, with the effect that its main revenues are now from tourism, real estate, and financial services, similar to that of Western countries.[8][9][10] Dubai has recently attracted world attention through many innovative large construction projects and sports events. This increased attention has highlighted labour rights and human rights issues concerning its largely South Asian workforce.[11] Dubai's property market experienced a major deterioration in 2008 and 2009 as a result of the worldwide economic downturn following the Financial crisis of 20072010
2012-05-15T05:10:09Z
In a sign of a maturing market, banks have now started assisting their mortgage clients offload multiple properties in the emirate even as experts maintain that property prices may have already bottomed out in select areas of the emirate. One such example ...
2012-05-08T14:15:20Z
Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) has mandated five banks for an Islamic bond, or sukuk, due to be issued at the end of May, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday. The lender has picked HSBC, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, Emirates ...
2012-05-17T09:32:38Z
Dubai’s benchmark DFM General Index (DFMGI ... Stock symbols are in parentheses. Ithmaar Bank BSC (ITHMR) plunged 14 percent, the biggest intraday loss in more than a year, to 19 cents after the Bahrain investment bank was removed from ...
2012-05-15T11:43:52Z
May 15 - Fitch Ratings has assigned Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC's (DIB) USD2.5bn trust certificate issuance programme a 'A(exp)'expected rating. The issuing entity under the programme is DIB Sukuk Limited (DIBSL). The final ratings are contingent on ...
2012-05-16T12:32:47Z
The DFSA is the sole regulator of the Dubai International Financial Center established in 2004. As of today, the DFSA regulates a total of 344 entities. Eighteen of the 25 largest banks in the world have set up branches in Dubai's financial free zone.
2012-04-30T09:17:00Z
DUBAI (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Scotland expects Gulf borrowers to have no significant problems overcoming a refinancing hump this year that the bank estimates at $60 billion (36.8 billion pounds), though its own lending in the region will ...
2012-05-15T16:37:21Z
CAIRO May 15 (Reuters) - Dubai-based regional investment bank Ridge Capital has bought 100 percent of Egyptian asset management firm El Rashad Holding, which is expanding its Islamic financing business, its financial adviser said on Tuesday.
2012-04-22T10:02:17Z
DUBAI (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Canada expects to double the number of wealth management employees in its Dubai office in the near future, and is open to opportunities for acquisitions, a senior executive said on Sunday. Toronto-based RBC has ...
2012-05-17T02:51:46Z
ATHENS: Greece's president spoke of "fear that could develop into panic" at the country's banks in the weeks before June 17 elections that could precipitate Athens exit from the euro zone. Greeks are withdrawing euros afraid of the prospect of rapid ...
2012-05-09T12:12:27Z
Bankers say the deal is a sign that activity in the sukuk market will grow Dubai Islamic Bank (DIB) is planning to issue a sukuk (Islamic bond) towards the end of May, according to bankers close to the deal. DIB has appointed the UK’s HSBC, Germany’s ...