Top Dubai Resources


The residents of Dubai will tell you that there is so much more to see and do in Dubai than just what you see in the brochures.

Whether its a holiday, on business or for a flying visit, Dubai is increasing in popularity amongst us Brits - and rightly so!

Thats why its important to get your travel plans sorted out properly, and in our opinion, flight, holiday and hotel specialists Opodo offer the best service online - but you can find that out for yourself here...


There are an increasing number of "freehold" villas and flats which come with a guaranteed residence visa renewable every three years for a around US$1350 per person. The Jumeira Palm, an artificial island in the shape of a palm tree, is one of these. It is illegal to seek employment on this visa though, and a separate job visa must be obtained from an employer. It is common practice among Dubai employers to hold on to employees' passports for the duration of the employment contract. This is done to prevent expatriate employees from moving to higher paying jobs. On termination of an employment contract, expatriates and their families are usually banned from the country for six months.

There was a pearl-diving and fishing community at the mouth of Dubai Creek for many centuries, but modern Dubai dates its existence to the 1830s when the Baniyas tribe under the Al-Maktoum family settled there and renounced allegiance to Abu Dhabi. Successive sheikhs encouraged contacts with outsiders, especially the British, who made Dubai a regular port of call.

The annual Dubai Shopping Festival (DSF) draws shoppers from the Indian subcontinent and around the region. Other, smaller shopping festivals such as Dubai Summer Surprises are held throughout the year.

One of the most imporant personality figures in Dubai is Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoom. He ruled Dubai for over 30 years within which he created major large projects like the Jebel Ali free zone, world trade center and the airport.

Non-Muslims in the country are free to practice their religion but may not proselytize publicly or distribute religious literature. The Government follows a policy of tolerance towards non-Muslim religions and, in practice, interferes very little in the religious activities of non-Muslims.

Apart from donated land for the construction of churches and other religious facilities, including cemeteries, non-Muslim groups are not supported financially or subsidized by the Government. However, they are permitted to raise money from among their congregants and to receive financial support from abroad. Christian churches are permitted to openly advertise certain church functions, such as memorial services, in the press.

A post office of British India was opened August 19, 1909. It used the stamps of India on mail, with postmark "Dubai Persian Gulf", until India's independence in 1947, then stamps of Pakistan until March 31, 1948. Pakistan also becoming independent, the British government set up a postal administration for Eastern Arabia and used overprinted British stamps until January 7, 1961, when Dubai issued its own stamps inscribed "Trucial States". (Despite the name, these were only on sale in Dubai's post office.)

Dubai Index 1
Dubai Index 2
Dubai Index 3
Dubai Index 4
Dubai Index 5
Dubai Index 6
Dubai Index 7
Dubai Index 8
Dubai Index 9
Dubai Index 10
Dubai Index 11
Dubai Index 12
Dubai Index 13
Dubai Index 14
Dubai Index 15
Dubai Index 16
Dubai Index 17
Dubai Index 18
Dubai Index 19
Dubai Index 20
Dubai Index 21
Dubai Index 22
Dubai Index 23
Dubai Index 24
Dubai Index 25
Dubai Index 26
Dubai Index 27
Dubai Index 28
Dubai Index 29
Dubai Index 30
Dubai Index 31
Dubai Index 32
Dubai Index 33
Dubai Index 34
Dubai Index 35
Dubai Index 36
Dubai Index 37
Dubai Index 38
Dubai Index 39
Dubai Index 40



Sources of Dubai information from the web.

Dubai Resources | Dubai