UK writer Peter Hellyer who chronicled UAE’s rise and development dies at 75
Peter Hellyer, a UK-born writer who spent nearly five decades chronicling the history, natural beauty and modern transformation of the United Arab Emirates, has died peacefully at the age of 75, local media reported Monday. Hellyer, who was granted UAE citizenship and awarded the country’s highest civilian honor, helped found the state-run WAM news agency and established its English service. He also helped establish an archaeological group that uncovered several historical sites. For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app. Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the president of the UAE, said on Twitter that Hellyer’s dedicated service to UAE over the course of decades had left “notable” marks in the fields of antiquities, the environment and the media. “With his passing, we lost a model of commitment and giving,” Sheikh Mohammed wrote. Hellyer came to the UAE in 1975 to make a documentary film about Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, Sheikh Mohammed’s father and the founder and first president of the federation of seven sheikhdoms. He stayed on to chronicle its dramatic rise from a sparsely populated desert nation to an ultra-modern hub of tourism and commerce, home to the futuristic cities of Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and the world’s tallest skyscraper. Hellyer wrote several articles and books on the country’s rise, including the official history of its vital oil industry, as well as a broader, maritime history of the Gulf nation. He co-founded WAM with the late Palestinian journalist Ibrahim al-Abed and later served as director of external information and research at the National Media Council, a government regulatory body. He co-founded and led the Abu Dhabi Islands Archaeology Survey from 1991 to 2006 and was involved in several discoveries shedding light on the history of the Persian Gulf, including a 1,400-year-old Christian monastery unearthed on Sir Bani Yas Island near the border with Saudi Arabia. He wrote widely on the UAE’s desert ecology. He chaired the Emirates Natural History Group in the early 1990s and launched its journal, Tribulus, at which he was a longtime editor. He also founded a local birdwatching society. He was awarded the Abu Dhabi Medal in 2013 — the country’s highest civilian honor. Organizers hailed him as “a self-taught jack-of-all-trades” whose “devotion to this land and its people is expressed through his commitment to protecting the country’s fragile ecosystems and history in a time of rapid development.” He continued writing about the UAE in regular columns for The National, an English-language newspaper founded in 2008 that he had advised in its early years. Read more: UAE Year of Sustainability: Residents called upon to act toward a sustainable future Fire engulfs high-rise in UAE, no reports of injuries From Singapore to Dubai: The world’s most expensive cities for luxury living