From: "Sultan Bin Sulayem" To: "Sarah Lockie" Subject: Fw: Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 13:34:12 +0000 >, <[email protected]> From: To: Sultan Bin Sulayem Sent: Wed Oct 21 06:31:11 2009 Subject: I was just looking at all the other writing this fellow Andrew Critchlow puts out including his Twitter; it's incredible. He not only doesn't get it he seems to hate the Arab world! Maybe all of these guys just had unhappy childhoods... On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 7:11 PM, Sultan Bin Sulayem > wrote: Dubai Inc. Needs Change at the Top• By ANDREW CRITCHLOW Faced with a continuing financial crisis of savage proportions, Dubai risks retreating into its past rather than facing up to its new reality. The Gulf emirate needs to radically overhaul its state- controlled companies if it is to overcome its $80 billion mountain of debt. Yet rather than seize the opportunity to introduce international standards of governance and transparency, the people whose poor judgment led Dubai to the brink have kept their jobs. For western lenders with billions of dollars still at stake, that is troubling.Take Dubai World, the conglomerate that has just been radically restructured after running up almost $60 billion of liabilities on an ill-judged acquisition spree. Its deals included buying struggling Madison Avenue retailer Bameys for $800 million, investing in an $8.8 billion Las Vegas casino development and paying $100 million for the Queen Elizabeth II liner, which has since spent most of its time languishing in a Dubai dry dock.Dubai World has now cut its work force by 15% in an effort to save $800 million over the next three years. Surprisingly, its senior managers remain in place, including Sultan bin Sulayem, the chairman who masterminded the expansion. That has disappointed bankers who fear that, unless senior managers are held more accountable, the mistakes of the past will be repeated.But holding senior Emirati officials like Mr. Sulayem responsible for their decisions