From tents to tallest building: UAE’s ‘remarkable’ 50-year rise
- The United Arab Emirates, which turns 50 on December 2, is a wealthy Gulf oil state and economic hub
- The former British protectorate is one of the biggest players in the Middle East, both economically and politically

Ehab Fouad was a teenager when he marched in the parade marking the birth of the United Arab Emirates, that has gone from desert outpost to regional powerhouse in 50 years.
The retired civil engineer, now 64, vividly recalls December 2, 1971, when he proudly held aloft the photo of the oil-rich Gulf state’s founding father, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan, and saw its new flag for the first time.
Fouad, who strode directly behind the flag-bearer, tears up when he remembers the Abu Dhabi parade and reflects on the decades that followed.
“Fifty years later, I feel special,” said the Egyptian father of one.
“It was a remarkable journey for me, and a remarkable journey for this country,” said Fouad, who lives with his family in Dubai, one of the country’s seven emirates.
Foreigners make up 90 per cent of the UAE’s population, which has grown to 10 million from around 300,000 when its emirates came together to form a federation, even if its tough laws make most of them ineligible for citizenship.