Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04ABUDHABI2524
2004-07-28 13:08:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Abu Dhabi
Cable title:  

MUSLIM WORLD OUTREACH--ABU DHABI RESPONSE

Tags:  KPAO OIIP EAID KDEM OPRC PREL PHUM PTER KISL 
pdf how-to read a cable
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Diana T Fritz 02/06/2007 04:40:28 PM From DB/Inbox: Search Results

Cable 
Text: 
 
 
CONFIDENTIAL

SIPDIS
TELEGRAM July 28, 2004


To: No Action Addressee 

Action: Unknown 

From: AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI (ABU DHABI 2524 - UNKNOWN) 

TAGS: OIIP, EAID, OPRC, PREL, PHUM, PTER, KPAO, KDEM 

Captions: None 

Subject: MUSLIM WORLD OUTREACH--ABU DHABI RESPONSE 

Ref: None 
_________________________________________________________________
C O N F I D E N T I A L ABU DHABI 02524

SIPDIS
CXABU:
 ACTION: PAO 
 INFO: ECON POL DCM 
Laser1:
 ACTION: PAO 

DISSEMINATION: PAO
CHARGE: ICAS

APPROVED: CDA: RALBRIGHT
DRAFTED: PAO: HMENDELSOHN, PO
CLEARED: ECON: OJOHN, POL: SRADDANT

VZCZCADI875
OO RUEHC RUEHZM
DE RUEHAD #2524/01 2101308
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 281308Z JUL 04
FM AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5301
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 ABU DHABI 002524 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEAPD - MQUINN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/27/2014
TAGS: KPAO OIIP EAID KDEM OPRC PREL PHUM PTER KISL
SUBJECT: MUSLIM WORLD OUTREACH--ABU DHABI RESPONSE


Classified by Charge d'Affaires, Richard A. Albright,
reason 1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 ABU DHABI 002524

SIPDIS

STATE FOR NEAPD - MQUINN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/27/2014
TAGS: KPAO OIIP EAID KDEM OPRC PREL PHUM PTER KISL
SUBJECT: MUSLIM WORLD OUTREACH--ABU DHABI RESPONSE


Classified by Charge d'Affaires, Richard A. Albright,
reason 1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (C) SUMMARY: There is little sign of an active
political Islamic movement in the UAE. The UAEG promotes
the moderate practice of Islam and the vast majority of
religious group in the UAE follow a moderate practice of
Islam in line with UAEG policy. The Mission is actively
engaging Emirati society on several fronts: educational
reforms, media training, empowerment of women, and
information dissemination. Programs are conducted under
the auspices of the Middle East Partnership Initiative
(MEPI) and also with local resources as part of normal post
cultural and press work. Special attention is being paid
to programming in the economically disadvantaged and
conservative Northern Emirates (origin of two of the 9/11
hijackers) and to Emirati women students and faculty and
women's NGOs. We should continue a low-profile approach
that reinforces the moderation espoused by the UAEG.
Additional Washington support would be welcomed and put to
good use to strengthen and build upon what we have begun.

--------------
Local Context
--------------


2. (C) Although the UAE is a conservative society, the
government promotes a moderate/tolerant practice of Islam.
There is little sign of an active political Islamic
movement in the UAE, primarily because the UAE is a wealthy
country with a high per capita income. The leadership is
responsive to its citizens' needs, encouraging them to use
traditional mechanisms, such as the majlis, to air their
grievances. In addition, there are no elected
institutions, political parties, or a political opposition.


3. (C) Nearly all of the country's citizens (less than 20
percent of the total population) are Muslims, with
approximately 85 percent followers of Sunni Islam and the
remaining 15 percent followers of Shi'a Islam. The UAEG

promotes the moderate practice of Islam in a number of
different ways. The Ministry of Justice, Islamic Affairs,
and Awqaf operates as the central federal regulatory
authority for Muslim imams and mosques and distributes
weekly guidance on religious sermons to mosques and imams.
The Government ensures that clergy do not deviate
frequently or significantly from approved topics in
content. The UAEG also conducts ongoing training for
Imams, covering a variety of religious and social topics.


4. (C) After 9/11, the UAE senior leadership launched a
comprehensive top-down security review to assess the impact
of extremist thought and elements on UAE society. The UAEG
closely scrutinized the activities of the UAE's mosques,
schools, charities and NGOs. The UAEG also rounded up
about 160 people suspected of ties to extremist groups for
questioning. As part of this review, the UAEG passed
comprehensive anti-money laundering legislation, initiated
tighter controls on funds transferred into and out of the
country, assessed the country's charities and NGOs, and
took steps to eliminate cash fundraising at mosques and
channel all charitable giving through government-regulated
relief organizations.


5. (C) The UAE hosts a number of groups with a religious
agenda, the vast majority of which follow a moderate
practice of Islam in line with UAEG policy. These NGOs,
which also have social, educational, cultural and
charitable components, are funded in whole or part by the
UAEG and do not generally receive funding from foreign
sources. These groups rarely express anti-American
sentiment, and when they do, it is almost always on grounds
of U.S. foreign policy rather than religious grounds. Most
groups with religious components sponsor Quranic
instruction courses and religious workshops and lectures on
Islam and encourage their members to maintain and uphold
moderate Islamic traditions and values.

--------------
Engagement efforts
--------------


6. (C) The Mission is actively engaging Emirati society on
several fronts: academic, educational reforms, media
training, and information dissemination. Programs are
conducted under the auspices of the Middle East Partnership
Initiative and also with local resources as part of normal
post cultural and press work. Special attention is being
paid to programming in the economically disadvantaged and
conservative Northern Emirates and to Emirati women
students, faculty and women's non-governmental
organizations.

--------------
Higher Education
--------------


7. (C) The Public Affairs section is working closely with
institutions of higher education to send Emiratis to the
U.S., to assist Emiratis to continue graduate study within
their own country, and to enrich educational exchanges.
For example, MEPI funds will send eight women students from
the Higher Colleges of Technology Dubai campus to the U.S.
to learn leadership skills in a program that will take them
to the White House, Congress, and other key governmental
institutions. MEPI small grants will assist Zayed
University, the leading women's university, to conduct
training for women teachers of English in the Ras al
Khaimah educational zone. The Abu Dhabi Chamber of
Commerce will receive a grant to strengthen a "Work
Passports Program" to help high school and college
graduates--mostly women but also some men--learn
communication, computing and business skills to be able to
compete successfully in the job market. Another grant was
awarded to the University of Sharjah to help them bring
five American experts to participate in a faculty
development workshop next October. Zayed University is
utilizing a grant to award partial scholarships to four
women students--two from Abu Dhabi, two from Dubai--to
attend a new master's degree program in educational
leadership to be offered in September 2004.


8. (C) One of the biggest challenges remaining is to
increase the number of Emirati students attending higher
education institutions in the U.S. The number decreased
significantly post 9/11 from 2,500 to 800, according to the
UAE Embassy in the U.S. At present, there are 220 UAE
students in the U.S. under the auspices of the scholarship
department of the Ministry of Higher Education and
Scientific Research, including 60 post-graduate students.
Before 2001, there were about 400 scholarship students in
the U.S. Although the visa approval process for Emirati
men now takes only a couple of days, perceptions remain
strong that the U.S. does not want Muslim students and that
Muslims face open discrimination in the U.S. The Mission
has worked very hard over the past two years to counter
this perception by sending educational advisors and
counselor officers to campuses to talk about study in the
U.S. and explain the new visa regulations. The UAEG
remains strongly committed to sending its students to the
U.S. and the Minister of Higher Education has informally
decreed that all Emiratis who qualify for scholarships to
study in the U.S. will receive them.

--------------
American Corners
--------------


9. (C) The Minister of Higher Education attended the
opening of an American Corner that was established at the
UAE's primary university for Emiratis, the UAE University
in Al Ain. A second American Corner will be established in
the northern Emirate of Fujairah. American Corners are
small libraries that contain books on English language
teaching, how to study in the U.S., U.S. business
information and American fiction. They are often used a
venues to program U.S. speakers.

--------------
English Language Micro-scholarships
--------------


10. (C) PA has received $100,000 to develop micro
scholarships to allow 100 economically disadvantaged
students in to study English in local institutes. PA works
closely with the Manama based Regional English Language
Officer to assist Emirati educational zones to strengthen
English language teaching and is also working with the
Ministry of Education and Youth to develop educational
reform policies.

--------------
NGOs
--------------


11. (C) PAS is strengthening its relationships with NGOs,
especially women's NGOs. PAS has partnered with the General
Women's Union, the coordinating body for other women's
NGOs, to develop skill-training and leadership programs.
PAS' Information Resource Center Director taught a course
on developing web pages to market small businesses and PAS
is bringing a U.S. expert to teach a workshop on marketing
handicraft products.

--------------
Information Dissemination
--------------


12. (C) PAS has initiated a proactive information
dissemination program by developing electronic outreach
mechanisms. The Department's new embassy web page design
and content management system was implemented and promoted
and PAS is spearheading a mission wide effort to post short
stories about public programs, to tell the embassy's story
to the UAE. In addition, the Information Resource Center
is distributing U.S. policy documents to Emiratis by
listserv in order to get accurate and authoritative
information into the hands of policy makers and opinion
leaders.

-------------- --------------
Media Engagement--Countering Anti-American Sentiment
-------------- --------------


13. (C) Another critical dimension to countering anti
Americanism is to engage the press. According to a recent
Zogby International report, "Impressions of America 2004,"
overall favorable ratings throughout most of the region
toward the U.S. have declined in the past two years. Most
Arabs have only indirect or received knowledge about
America and the principle source of that knowledge comes
from the Arab media. Dubai is a regional hub for Arab
media and the UAE has moved to support freedom of the press
and expression by establishing Media City. PAS is
developing a strong program to develop media skills
training. Post has brought U.S. experts to the UAE to
teach workshops and PAS IRC Director, a former Fulbrighter
and U.S. graduate in information technology, is developing
a strong outreach program both in the UAE and regionally.
He is working closely with the Abu Dhabi based regional
Information Resources Officer to develop IT programs for
media to teach how to use the Internet for research and
verification, to access accurate and authoritative USG
information, to publish on the Internet and to better
understand intellectual and property law and copyright
issues.


14. (C) So far, programs have been conducted at al-Bayan
newspaper (attended by journalists from throughout the
region),the Emirates News Media, al-Arabiya TV station and
other media outlets. These programs are increasing in
popularity indicated by an increasing number of requests
for more such programs. Skill training programs,
especially those done by local staff who speak Arabic,
builds trust and strengthens partnerships with local
journalists and media institutions and presents them with
authoritative sources on U.S. society and values.
Furthermore, they now know to turn to the IRC Director for
accurate and authoritative information on the U.S. The IRC
Director and the IRO have traveled to other GCC countries
to conduct similar programs, most notably at the offices of
al-Jazeera's web site al-Jazeera.net.


15. Hosting over 550 media outlets and 170 free lance
journalists, Dubai's Media City has become the most
important center for broadcasting in the Middle East. MBC
(parent company of al-Arabiya) moved its headquarters and
production center from London to Dubai in 2003. Its
affiliate al-Arabiya is based in Dubai. The Media City has
enormous plans for growth as a center for media, IT,
education and entertainment. Al-Arabiya's senior managers
have repeatedly made the point that if we want to shape the
news Arabs hear, we need to engage with the Arab media in
Arabic. Given the growing concentration of media outlets
in Dubai, they have urged us to appoint an Arabic speaking
press attach€who can engage with the media on regional
issues in Arabic and in real time.
--------------
COMMENT
--------------


16. (C) Post is utilizing MEPI funds and limited post
resources to engage Emirati society to strengthen moderate
Muslim voices and counter anti-American sentiment. We
should continue a low-profile approach that reinforces the
moderation espoused by the UAEG. MEPI, which has as its
mission to support voices of change in the Middle East, is
one of the vehicles for accomplishing this. Our programs
have a strong multiplier effect, because the UAE is a
cultural crossroads for the Middle East and South Asia, a
regional center for business, finance, media, and higher
education, and is strongly promoting educational and
employment opportunities for women and is closely watched
by other GCC countries. Post has few financial resources
to draw upon with the exception of MEPI funds. More money
for International Visitors, U.S. Speakers, media training,
and American Corners would strengthen existing programs.
Additional Washington support would be welcomed and put to
good use to strengthen and build upon what we have begun.

Albright