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Dubai Metro Image Credit: Gulf News archive

Dubai: His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, said the UAE pursues its own vision to be at the top.

He told CNN in an interview that the UAE has been grabbing the right opportunities to stay on a developmental course, in line with its strategies. He underscored that the worst has passed and "now we are looking for the next growth and we have to be ready for it and take the opportunity and get in before the rest of the world".

Shaikh Mohammad: You have to create space for yourself. What you have to do, people have vision and some will be running only in his small vision and small safety zone. We have a vision to be number one so airlines or horses or whatever it is. If you do it well and you have your vision and that you can establish.

John Defterios: I was looking back, two months after 9/11 you put a plane order in for $15 billion (Dh55 billion) and six months after the restructuring started during this banking crisis, you put a giant $11 billion order in for planes. You obviously are trying to mark your territory in the airline space and be bold about it.

I think it is opportunities; you have to grab the opportunity and not lose that opportunity for another opportunity. Therefore I think Emirates Airlines, giving order after September 11 because that was an opportunity. And now of course because of the growth, the airport growth and the passenger growth and the tourist growth I think that's why they order these more. I think they will have to order some more in the airshow in Farnborough

So another large order in July is what your saying?

I think they will have to, because of the growth, where I see the growth in Dubai Airport and the UAE is very big.

Listening to you, you don't seem to share any of the concerns for example that the International Monetary Fund has about a persisting recession in Dubai and throughout the region.

Well, I think there are recessions all over the world. And I don't call it a recession, I call it a challenge. Every day was a challenge to us a challenge to find the water, a challenge to find a meal, a challenge, everyday a challenge. Life will be boring if there is no challenge. Or we call it recession or we call it whatever you call it. No Dubai and UAE, Abu Dhabi and the rest of the Emirates are fine, you know, we know it is recession, we know it is challenge and we dealing with it.

How did the global recession and the crisis that faced Dubai, redefine the relationship within the UAE and specifically the relationship with Abu Dhabi?

The relationship between Dubai and Abu Dhabi both ruling family is from the same tribe. So we are one family and the UAE is not only Abu Dhabi and Dubai, there are other five other Emirates and we all look after each other. We are one nation and we are one country and one president.

After what we've seen in the last six months will additional external support be necessary in this restructuring that's taking place?

Restructure, the companies are restructuring because it's a new world. I'm not worried about the company, the company have got the wealth. So they have something, and they will come back very, very quickly but the relationship this is very good between the Emirates. And we have a challenge now to bring the other Emirates in line with the Abu Dhabi and Dubai. It's not only me, as a Chairman, as a ruler or as a Prime Minister, no there is a team behind us. The worst is passed by and now we are looking for the next growth and we have to be ready for it and take the opportunity and get in before the rest of the world. Everything we started, we are going to finish. Maybe some projects that we are thinking of or in the books that might delay for six months, eight months, one year. But the rest is going forward.

You don't seem overly concerned about the restructurings that need to take place in the future. We've reached the bottom, you think we can move forward with no real hurdles to cross in the future.

We're already moving forward. The structure is ready, bridges, roads, tunnels, everything. We don't have to build, so we are ready now to move forward with the country.

So you have an advantage with infrastructure? How do you protect these sectors from the competing states around you, like Qatar or Saudi Arabia or even Abu Dhabi?

Abu Dhabi is my country and Qatar is my neighbour and Saudi Arabia. I wish them good luck and I will help, if I can. Even if they ask me, I will help with their growth. Because we need, the whole area needs to grow really, not only United Arab Emirates.

You've created a fourth trading hub. Most people thought of Asia, Europe and the United States in the past. But you personally helped define what the Middle East stands for but should there be greater unification?

We understand that the power is shifting so therefore we have to be ready.

If I'm looking at the market of a Middle East at a market of 300 million people and then you have the Gulf states trying to create a single currency. Are you a supporter of the single currency in that process?

The Euro is in trouble and we thought of the Gulf currency and we said, well the UAE said "not yet" and I think they are right, until we are sure. So therefore now we will not change anything for the time being until we see something solid really and profitable.