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Analysis: Qatar banks on education

By DALAL SAOUD

DOHA, Qatar, May 5 (UPI) -- There are growing fears in the Gulf state of Qatar that expatriates are exceeding the number of nationals, and officials see the trend continuing for many years to come.

Blame can largely be placed on projects and developments that are greater than the capacity of the country's society, Qatar Foundation Vice-President Seif Ali al-Hijri told United Press International.

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"The solution is to prepare 20 percent to 30 percent of our citizens to be leaders. Otherwise, we will face a big gap and we (Qataris) would disappear."

Despite such fears, change is still welcomed in Qatar, although the new appetite for change is focused on education. Qatar, a tiny Gulf state, though immensely rich in oil and gas, has been undergoing a rapid transformation, opting for world-class education and healthcare to position itself as a key player in the region.

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Despite its small population -- barely exceeding 200,000 -- Qatar has big ambitions. After gaining world-wide notoriety with the establishment of al-Jazeera television, a network which broke many taboos in the Arab world, Qatar is now aiming to become the region's prime center for education and medical care.

Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, the emir of Qatar who assumed power after overthrowing his father in 1995, has since initiated major changes in the country. But the emir soon became aware that oil and gas would not last forever.

"Sheikh Hamad realized that oil and gas wealth, enormous as it is, was going to be a temporary window of opportunity," said Robert Baxter, communications adviser for the Qatar Foundation. "In order to create something sustainable out of it, you need to invest in the capabilities of the people, which is the true asset in the end. Education was the way to bring it out and make it relevant."

Baxter, who spoke to UPI during a symposium on education hosted by the Qatar Foundation in Doha earlier this week, said Sheikh Hamad wanted Qatar "to be known for more than" its oil and gas wealth.

"Education represented the best way to create a kind of sustainable prosperity and at the same time to position Qatar as a regional leader," he said, noting that Qatari authorities had invested heavily in education.

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The Qatar Foundation has been the driving force behind the country's commitment to education since it was founded in 1995 by Sheikh Hamad and supervised by his wife, Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser Al-Missned.

The foundation's landmark project is Doha's Education City, eight-million square meters of learning and research facilities, a science and technology park, as well as a 350-bed specialty teaching hospital with an endowment of $8 billion to support its operating costs and fund research.

The Qatar Foundation went into partnership with five world-renowned American universities; Cornell, Texas A&M, Carnegie Mellon, Georgetown and Virginia Commonwealth, each setting up branch campuses offering degrees in medicine, arts, engineering, business and foreign affairs. The Qatar Foundation has also gone into partnership with the RAND Corporation, allowing RAND experts in the United States and Europe to study issues of concern to the Middle East.

Education City includes the Qatar Academy, offering programs in English to students between three and 18-years-old; and the Qatar Leadership Academy, which focuses on preparing Qatari citizens to assume leading positions in society.

"Our target is to represent a hub of high quality education," said Baxter, who explained that 450 students from various nationalities were currently enrolled in Education City; the target is to reach 7,000 to 10,000 students.

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In line with Foundation policy, 60 percent of students and employees should be Qataris while the remaining 40 percent is to be made up of other nationalities. Baxter agreed that maintaining such a ratio would be "a big challenge indeed" because of Qatar's small population.

Another challenge will be to attract enough students, meeting the target -- fees for Education City's various colleges and universities exceed $30,000 a year per student.

Loans and scholarships will be available, but there will be no compromise on quality, according to Michael Vertigans, director of public affairs in Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar.

"It is the Cornell degree that is being delivered. The curriculum, the standard, the staff... everything is same as (in the mother college) in New York," Vertigans told UPI.

He noted that 129 students from over 20 countries were currently enrolled in the Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar, the "first American-style medical campus in the Middle East."

This is the first time that a number of prominent universities have "moved to an Arab country, especially in the Gulf region," said Qatar Foundation Vice-President Seif Ali al-Hijri.

One of the main challenges facing the Qataris is the emir's vision of maintaining an open society despite the ever-growing number of foreigners flocking to the country, while at the same time preserving the country's identity, culture, heritage and customs.

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Qataris are keen to preserve their cultural independence. One fear is that Qatar, a staunch U.S. ally, is being "Americanized" and "falling under Washington's influence." But despite mounting pressure from Washington to silence al-Jazeera, the Doha-based TV network has successfully managed to rebuff Washington's efforts to censor it.

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