Emaar founder Alabbar not inclined to take on Gaza rebuild work

Emaar Founder and Chairman Mohamed Alabbar appears on-screen as he speaks at the Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit in Abu Dhabi. (Reuters)
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Updated 22 October 2025
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Emaar founder Alabbar not inclined to take on Gaza rebuild work

  • Mohammed Alabbar says rebuilding should be done by those responsible for the destruction

ABU DHABI: Dubai real estate developer Emaar has not been approached for any post-war Gaza reconstruction work and would not be inclined to do any, said its founder and chairman Mohammed Alabbar.
While US President Donald Trump has envisaged the creation of a new Riviera in Gaza, Alabbar said on Wednesday rebuilding should be done by those responsible for the destruction. “It’s my philosophy ... that everybody should clean up his garbage,” he told the Reuters NEXT Gulf Summit in Abu Dhabi.
“I’m very focused on making money for my shareholders,” he added.
Emaar, a building block of Dubai’s expansion into a global economic player in recent decades and developer of the world’s tallest building, is involved in projects worldwide.
Its Marassi Red Sea tourism development in Egypt alongside Saudi and local investors will involve investment of $17 billion, Alabbar said.
Emaar is also looking at possible new projects in India and China. “Their evolution of economic development in India is quite good. China is also, you know, still suffering with their housing problem but you know they’ll come up with it,” he said.
Meanwhile, the US housing shortage is “a disaster” that should be a focus for Trump, he said, urging states and major companies to work together on the problem.
“You can talk about autonomous cars, investment in, you know, data centers. Thank you so much. We want to have a house,” Alabbar added.


Iraq hit by total blackout: ministry

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Iraq hit by total blackout: ministry

  • “The power grid has completely shut down across all Iraqi provinces,” the ministry said
  • Work was underway to gradually restore power

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s electricity ministry said on Wednesday that the entire country had been affected by a blackout, later attributing it to a sudden drop in gas supplies to a key power plant.
“The power grid has completely shut down across all Iraqi provinces,” the ministry said, according to the Iraqi News Agency (INA).
It later announced that a “sudden drop in gas supplies to the Rumaila power plant” in the southern province of Basra led to a rapid loss of 1,900 megawatts, which triggered the outage.
It added that work was underway to gradually restore power.
Iraq has been impacted by the ongoing Middle East war and parts of the country have come under repeated attacks.