Monday, October 31, 2011

Trip to the Emirates Palace




Sunday 23rd October, Emirates Palace Hotel, Abu Dhabi
My colleagues and I in the elite program got the opportunity to visit the GCC Economic & Financial Integration Forum on the morning of Sunday 23rd October. They  registered and listed  our names to the opening and welcoming speeches. We travelled by bus and the driver took the longest way to reach there but it was fun and it was my first time to enter the Emirates Palace and I was surprised by the decoration and the reception.  

The first session, from 9.30 to 11.00 a.m. concerned economic and financial integration and international experiences, a talk by Dr Jassim Al Mannai, Director General of the Arab Monetary Fund.

We had a break for 15 minutes; they prepared a very good breakfast and all types of drinks; it was the first time I saw all this arrangement and dedication to detail.

The first speaker was Dr Abdul Aziz Aluwaisheg, Director General International Economic Relations GCC Secretariat. He talked mainly about the historical developments and agreements made in recent years by GCC countries in their pursuit of freeing up trade and reducing tariffs in the GCC zone but the only thing that upset me was that he spoke in English and most of the public were Arab  and they had a headset to translate Arabic to English.

The second speaker was Lukas Stemitsiotis, Head of Unit in the European Commission, EU, and he addressed the problems and challenges facing the Eurozone. These problems at the moment, centring on Greece and the possibility of a Greek default on its debt, are particularly acute and the Eurozone countries are still struggling to find a solution and mainly he was nervous and mainly talking to himself.

The third speaker was Dr Aladdin Rillo, Director and Chief Economist ASEAN Integration Monitoring Office. He spoke of the experiences of the Association of South East Asian Nations. He mentioned ASEAN’s Mutual Recognition Arrangements, already implemented for engineers and architects. He pointed out that ASEAN was different to the EU and the GCC in that 50% of ASEAN GDP is provided by the service sector. He said that the goal in his region was integration of capital markets, rather than a single currency. He pointed out that it was difficult for developed countries like Brunei and Singapore to share a currency with undeveloped countries like Laos and Cambodia. Perhaps this remark applies equally to the Eurozone. He said that in ASEAN the emphasis is on a single market and integration with the global economy. He stressed the importance of connectivity and equable economic development. He suggested that ASEAN was concentrating on integration of trade, while the GCC was leaning towards integration of finances. He was the briefest of the speakers and perhaps the one who dealt most with practicality rather than ideas and ideals.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Sheikh Zayed


In my humble opinion Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan was one of the critical thinkers. He ruled the UAE for 33 years. He had skills to generate ideas. His first idea was to unite the Emirates under one ruler and he started by visiting all the Emirates and he asked them to meet all of the Sheiks to explain the benefits of the union. After they all agreed he started to look after the people and how he could change the country from nothing to something and our country was almost desert; he started to think how he could make it green. He consulted with agricultural experts to find a solution for the problem but unfortunately the experts said that there was no solution but our Sheikh did not accept the answer so he continued trying to grow the plants; at the end we can see now green almost everywhere. Also he believed that everyone must have a good education and good living so in the future the people will take the responsibility to develop the country. His theory was to support all the national people so they will remember all the good work he did; also we cannot deny that he built homes and schools for free for his people so they do not need to suffer about the life and the hard living and cost so as we are living in this country every day and we are trying to find a way to develop our country.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Synonym and Antonym



Word
Synonym
Antonym
happy
Glad,joyful,pleased
Sad,unhappy,depressed,down,
heartbroken,miserable,blue
shout
Scream,yell,shriek
whisper
clever
Smart,intelligent,bright,brilliant
Dull,stupid,idiotic,Clim,dim,thick,
Cloddish, silly
Exciting
Interesting ,thrilling
Boring,dull,uninteresting
furious
Angry,mad,irate,enraged
Calm,mild,pleased

Monday, October 3, 2011

Hedley's trip to the Niah Caves



Thirty years ago, Hedley, accompanied by his wife and elder daughter Kate, travelled from Brunei to the Niah Caves in Sarawak, Malaysia.
He went with his lovely wife and elder daughter Kate. They decided to travel by all types of transportation so first they travelled by car than ferry to go to the other side of the river after that by boat and at the end on foot. They travelled early in the morning and he arrived there at sunset and they stayed in the government rest house. They went inside the caves and they saw birds, bamboo poles, men climbing to scrape birds’ nests off the roof in order to sell them to Chinese and they did stuff that nobody can imagine. They came back the next day; it was exciting, different and an adventure to them and they were lucky to see the men climbing the poles.