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A question driving the government’s decision-making is continuing Dubai’s “transformative” prewar trajectory, Badri said, adding that the city has a “track record of coming out of challenges.”
He noted that domestic spending has largely recovered from an initial shock after the first missiles and drones were launched by Iran at the UAE on Feb. 28, and is now “only a few percentage points shy” of pre-conflict levels.
Half a million Iranians live in Dubai. “They’re still here. They’re still participating in the economy. They’re still safe,” Badri said, when asked if they are still welcome in the UAE.
This week, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed visited China, where he met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The UAE’s relationship to China represents a long-held foreign policy philosophy to not choose sides, Badri said.
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