DUBAI - The United Arab Emirates began 40 days of mourning on Wednesday following the death of the state founding president,
who helped transform seven backwater Gulf states into the world’s ninth largest oil producer and a high-tech commercial crossroads of gleaming skyscrapers.
Shaikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, one of the richest rulers in the world according to Forbes magazine, died on Tuesday at the age of 86. He was credited with forging close ties with the United States and the West during his rule of the country, which stretched back to its 1971 founding after winning independence from Britain.
Shaikh Zayed is expected to be succeeded by his eldest son, Shaikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, as Emirates president. Shaikh Khalifa, who has been crown prince of Abu Dhabi, the wealthiest of the seven emirates, since 1969, automatically becomes ruler of Abu Dhabi following his father’s death.
The leaders of the seven emirates that make up the Emirates will appoint the new president within 30 days. In the meantime, the prime minister - Shaikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum, a close relative of Shaikh Zayed - will serve as acting president. During the president’s illness, Shaikh Maktoum has been the public face of the Emirates.
Condolences have been flooding in from around the world following the death of Shaikh Zayed, who had been ailing for several years and largely out of public eye. He had a kidney transplant in August 2000.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell said he was “saddened” by Shaikh Zayed’s death, describing the late leader as a “friend” and “symbol of benevolent and wise leadership characterized by generosity, tolerance, and avid pursuit of development and modernization.”
Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat were among numerous Arab leaders who expressed remorse for the loss of Shaikh Zayed, whose rule led the unification of the seven tiny emirates on the eastern edge of the Arabian Peninsula - once a backwater relegated to fishing from traditional dhow boats and diving for pearls in the Gulf waters.
“His death is a big loss for the Arab and Islamic nations and to humanity,” Oman’s Foreign Minister Youssef bin Alawi told Dubai-based Al-Arabiya TV.
Kuwait’s information minister, Mohammed Abul-Hassan, credited Shaikh Zayed with helping Kuwaitis who fled to the Emirates after Iraqi President Saddam Hussein ordered his forces to invade Kuwait in 1990, a move that led to the US-led 1991 Gulf War.
Alluding to the Emirates’ incredible economic growth, Abul-Hassan said Shaikh Zayed was an “example to be followed in his ability to turn the impossible into a truth.”
40 days of mourning
The Emirates’ top decision-making body, the Supreme Council, declared that starting Wednesday, a 40-day official period of mourning would begin. It also announced that all government offices would close for eight days and businesses shut for three.
Based on Islamic tradition, Shaikh Zayed will be buried as soon as possible, most likely on Wednesday, but no official announcement has yet been made regarding funeral arrangements. It was unlikely that the burial would be delayed to wait for heads of state to arrive.
Shaikh Zayed became the ruler of Abu Dhabi, the largest emirate, in 1966, four years after the emirate first began exporting the oil it had just discovered off its shores. At the time, Abu Dhabi city was a collection of huts clustered around the ruler’s fort.
Today, the country - with a population of around 850,000 Emiratis and 2.6 million foreign expatriates and workers - is a leading member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the world’s ninth leading producer and fifth largest exporter.
Billions of oil dollars were invested to make Abu Dhabi an oasis of high-rises, parks, fountains, manicured flower beds, restaurants and a wildlife island. The country has also sought to diversity the economy, becoming a center for banking and finance. Dubai, the second largest emirate, now gets most of its revenues from trade.
“Our experiment in federation ... arose from a desire to increase the ties that bind us, as well as from the conviction of all that we were part of one family, and that we must gather together under one leadership,” a lengthy profile carried by WAM, the official Emirates news agency, quoted Shaikh Zayed as saying after becoming president.
Shortly before the US-led invasion of Iraq in March, 2003, Shaikh Zayed took the bold step to urge Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to step down and avoid war.