Dubai’s sheikhs have claimed it is “the eighth wonder of the world”, and seen from space the tree-shaped sand and rock formation of the Palm Jumeirah looks exactly that. But after the hype and the novelty of living four miles out to sea has faded, that claim is starting to look shaky. It seems there is a little trouble in paradise….

The Palm Jumeirah, in Dubai

Dubai’s sheikhs have claimed it is “the eighth wonder of the world”, and seen from space the tree-shaped sand and rock formation of the Palm Jumeirah looks exactly that.

But after the hype about David Beckham buying a mansion here and the novelty of living four miles out to sea has faded, that claim is starting to look shaky. It seems there is a little trouble in paradise.

Four thousand “Palm pioneers” have moved in and are getting to grips with life in the sweltering Arabian Gulf. This week, when the Guardian visited, the gripes were as common as the plaudits among the Brits who are in the vanguard of this new community.

Multimillion-pound villas have been squeezed together “like Coronation Street”, air-conditioning bills are hitting £800 a month and persistent snags have led some to joke it is more “eighth blunder” than “eighth wonder”.

The villas were developed by the government-owned Nakheel Properties, and many residents believe the company’s slogan, “Our vision inspires humanity”, which flutters on flags around the place, is beginning to look over-egged.

It is not all bad news. The blue seas which lap the man-made shores are teeming with rays, hermit crabs and baracudas. Away from the ongoing construction, which has four years to run, life in the middle of the ocean is incredibly peaceful.

But for Rachael Wilds, 42, an exhibition organiser from Surrey who moved in with her family to a palatial villa on one of the Palm’s “fronds” a year ago, it was not what she expected. She found her £3m property squashed against a neighbour’s and set in a barren, almost treeless, landscape. “It was absolutely nothing as it was depicted in the brochure,” she says. “There was a massive gap between the villas and it was full of lush tropical gardens. We were totally shocked at the closeness of the villas.”

Despite summer temperatures of 48C and high humidity, access to centralised air conditioning was not included in the purchase price of apartments, and residents are rebelling against plans to ask them to pay extra. More seriously, there is evidence the low-pay and hard conditions endured by the thousands of migrant workers who built the area are driving many into despair and debt.

It has made for an awkward start for a development that is far more than a whim of the Dubai royal family. Palm Jumeirah is the testing ground for the United Arab Emirates’ strategy for life after oil - big-scale tourism. Once complete, there will be homes and hotel rooms for 65,000 people.

Taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk



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