United Arab Emirates says it will offer citizenship to some

The United Arab Emirates on Saturday announced plans to grant some foreigners citizenship to this oil-rich nation home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai, part of efforts to stimulate its economy amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The UAE previously gave
citizenship to Palestinians and others who helped form the country’s government
after its formation in 1971. Others have received it over time as well.
Saturday’s announcement by Sheikh
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the ruler of Dubai who also serves as the
autocratic nation’s prime minister and vice president, said the offer could
apply to artists, authors, doctors, engineers and scientists, as well as their
families.
Sheikh Mohammed wrote on Twitter
that hereditary rulers in the country’s seven emirates and at the federal level
would nominate those for citizenship. Those granted citizenship also would be
able to keep their initial citizenship.
It wasn’t immediately clear if the
citizenship also would grant rights to the UAE’s cradle-to-grave social
programs for its nationals.
The UAE is home to over 9 million
people, only a tenth of them citizens. In November, the UAE announced plans to
overhaul of the country’s Islamic personal laws, allowing unmarried couples to
cohabitate, loosening alcohol restrictions and criminalizing so-called “honor
killings.”