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(Створена сторінка: Do you think you know everything about Dubai? Just think again. While the city is famous for its glamorous, luxurious lifestyle and numerous record-breaking fea...)
 
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Do you think you know everything about Dubai? Just think again. While the city is famous for its glamorous, luxurious lifestyle and numerous record-breaking feats, Dubai also boasts a fascinating history and culture, as well as its fair share of surprises.<br><br><br>Here are some real facts you never knew about the emirate:<br>• Before tourism and hospitality, Dubai made its money oil - that’s common knowledge. But before oil, Dubai was built on pearl diving, with more than 300 diving dhows and 7,000 hard-working sailors. To delve into this lesser-known past, head to Dubai’s Pearl Museum, home to one of the largest and finest collections of pearls in the world, donated by pearl merchant, Sultan Al Owais. On display are a whopping AED 500 million ($136,077,545 USD) worth of fine salt-water pearls.<br><br><br>• In the mid-1800s, the Indian rupee was the main currency in Dubai and the wider UAE, with the subsequent Gulf rupee introduced in 1957, eventually phasing out in 1966. Despite this currency evolution, the ties to India remain strong - reflected in India being the number one source market for visitors to Dubai, as well as the plethora of amazing Indian restaurants dotted throughout the city. More recent connections between Dubai and India include the opening of the world’s first Bollywood theme park on the outskirts of the city.<br><br><br>• Dubai boasts a record-breaking public transport system. According to Guinness World Records, the city’s metro is the longest driverless metroline in the world. And it’s getting longer everyday with new stops being added all the way out to the site of the upcoming Expo 2020 in Dubai.<br><br><br>• Less than 50 years ago in 1968, there were only 13 registered cars in Dubai. Now there are more than 1.5 million, mirroring the emirate’s meteoric growth from humble fishing and pearling settlement to what is now the fourth most visited city in the world.<br><br><br>• Contrary to popular belief, Dubai isn’t just a coastal city; it’s also home to a rugged mountainous exclave named Hatta, where visitors can hike and mountain bike through untouched nature in the Hajar Mountains, kayak through clear turquoise water at Hatta Dam, and explore picturesque date and bee farms.<br><br><br>• Emirati custom dictates that hosts offer their guests tea and dates, with the traditional way being to pour half a cup. The reason for this lies in the cups not having handles and the tea being piping hot - you wouldn’t want your guest to burn their fingers. If, however, the host pours a full cup of tea, it’s a subtle way of telling the guest that they have overstayed their welcome. To learn more and discover other intriguing customs, head to Dubai’s Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding.<br><br><br>• The UAE has a Minister of State for Tolerance and a Minister of State for Happiness. The country has endorsed a number of initiatives and projects in line with its National Happiness and Positivity Programme, which includes the set-up of happy and positivity offices, among other initiatives.
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The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has appealed to the Federal Government to settle all outstanding debts to oil marketers.<br><br><br>The union argued that such payment would engender growth of not only the downstream sector, but all sectors of the oil and gas industry and develop the nation’s economy.<br><br><br>It made the call following threats by the marketers to embark on massive retrenchment of their employees if the government failed to settle the over N720 billion subsidy arrears.<br><br><br>The debt, according to the marketers, was the outstanding subsidy owed on the importation of petroleum products, accrued interest on loans from banks and exchange rate differentials, which made them to stop the importation of refined petroleum products leaving only the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to do so.<br><br><br>PENGASSAN said if the government was genuinely interested in the growth of the downstream sector and desires to attract more investments in the sector, which has become almost moribund, then it should pay the debts owed the marketers.<br><br><br>A statement by its National Public Relations Officer, Fortune Obi, said the government should try to verify the authenticity of the oil marketers’ claims and ensure quick settlement of the genuine debts.<br><br><br>"The government should try to separate the genuine claims from spurious ones and pay them because we will not like to be engulfed in the mistakes of the past where briefcase marketers milked the nation through dubious subsidy claims.<br><br><br>"A situation where the workers in the industry suffer from government’s failure to honour its obligations as part of the importation deal, will be unfair and unacceptable to our association. This is against President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration’s job creation policy.

Поточна версія на 21:42, 16 листопада 2017

The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has appealed to the Federal Government to settle all outstanding debts to oil marketers.


The union argued that such payment would engender growth of not only the downstream sector, but all sectors of the oil and gas industry and develop the nation’s economy.


It made the call following threats by the marketers to embark on massive retrenchment of their employees if the government failed to settle the over N720 billion subsidy arrears.


The debt, according to the marketers, was the outstanding subsidy owed on the importation of petroleum products, accrued interest on loans from banks and exchange rate differentials, which made them to stop the importation of refined petroleum products leaving only the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to do so.


PENGASSAN said if the government was genuinely interested in the growth of the downstream sector and desires to attract more investments in the sector, which has become almost moribund, then it should pay the debts owed the marketers.


A statement by its National Public Relations Officer, Fortune Obi, said the government should try to verify the authenticity of the oil marketers’ claims and ensure quick settlement of the genuine debts.


"The government should try to separate the genuine claims from spurious ones and pay them because we will not like to be engulfed in the mistakes of the past where briefcase marketers milked the nation through dubious subsidy claims.


"A situation where the workers in the industry suffer from government’s failure to honour its obligations as part of the importation deal, will be unfair and unacceptable to our association. This is against President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration’s job creation policy.