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EDITORIAL

Dubai Sets the Stage for Global Free Zone Evolution at the World FZO World Congress

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The World Free Zones Organization (World FZO) marked a pivotal moment in its history as it celebrated its 10th anniversary at the World Congress in Dubai. The event, held under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, drew attention to Dubai’s expanding role as a global economic powerhouse. His Highness Sheikh Ahmed bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Second Deputy Ruler of Dubai and Chairman of the Dubai Media Council, inaugurated the event, underscoring the city’s commitment to shaping the future of global trade and economic development.

This year’s congress, held under the theme “Zones and the Shifting Global Economic Structures – Unlocking New Investment Avenues,” saw the launch of the World FZO’s new corporate identity, ushering in a fresh phase defined by three core pillars: Impact, Influence, and Trust. The organization’s rebranding signals its commitment to driving global economic progress, fostering sustainability, and creating inclusive growth opportunities through empowered free zones.

Dubai’s position as a leader in the free zone model is no accident. With cutting-edge infrastructure and a forward-looking approach, the emirate has transformed its free zones into dynamic hubs for trade, investment, and innovation. Sheikh Ahmed emphasized that Dubai is on course to become one of the world’s top three urban economies in the next decade, a goal aligned with the Dubai Economic Agenda (D33). This trajectory is driven by its status as a global hub for industries ranging from technology to healthcare and finance, all supported by the emirate’s advanced infrastructure and competitive environment.

The congress highlighted the role free zones play in not only national economies but also the global economic landscape. Free zones have become catalysts for growth, creating job opportunities, attracting investments, and fostering technological advancement. The UAE’s 44 specialized free zones, as noted by UAE’s Minister of Economy, Abdullah bin Touq Al Marri, serve as vital platforms connecting Asia, Europe, and Africa, while contributing to the competitiveness of the national economy.

Sheikh Ahmed’s presence at the event reinforced the centrality of free zones in the UAE’s broader economic vision, particularly as the country seeks to double its foreign trade to AED25 trillion by 2033. In the context of global economic uncertainty, the free zone model has proven resilient, responsible for facilitating $3.5 trillion in global exports annually, accounting for roughly 20% of global trade in goods.

The World FZO’s vision for the future is clear: empower free zones to be at the forefront of socio-economic development, innovation, and sustainability. By leveraging new technologies and embracing sectors like artificial intelligence, digital trade, and the Fourth Industrial Revolution, free zones are positioned to play a central role in shaping the future global economy. The launch of its new corporate identity represents a strategic shift, reflecting both the successes of the past decade and the opportunities for the future.

As the World FZO steps into its second decade, Dubai continues to play a critical role in shaping the narrative around global trade and free zones. With its visionary leadership, strategic location, and commitment to innovation, Dubai remains a beacon for investors, businesses, and governments worldwide looking to capitalize on the vast potential that free zones offer.

With over 1,600 members from 141 countries, the organization has facilitated the development of free zones, enabling countries to diversify their economies, create jobs, and attract foreign direct investment (FDI).

Africa is increasingly becoming a focal point for free zone development, offering untapped potential for industrialization and economic growth. As the continent pushes towards diversification, free zones provide an essential platform for African nations to engage in global trade, attract investment, and drive innovation. The African continent, home to rich natural resources and a youthful population, can benefit significantly from the expertise and frameworks developed by the World FZO.

Countries like China have exemplified how free zones can serve as engines of industrialization. China’s special economic zones (SEZs) have played a pivotal role in transforming its economy into the world’s manufacturing powerhouse. The success of the Shenzhen SEZ, which went from a fishing village to a sprawling industrial hub, demonstrates the transformative potential of free zones. China’s SEZs attracted billions in FDI, creating millions of jobs and propelling the country into global prominence.

In Africa, countries such as Morocco and Rwanda have started replicating this success. The Tanger-Med Free Zone in Morocco has become a significant gateway for African trade with Europe, serving as a model of how free zones can foster regional integration and industrialization. Similarly, Rwanda’s Kigali Free Trade Zone is laying the groundwork for the country’s transformation into an ICT and logistics hub.

The Islamic economy is another area where free zones can drive substantial growth. The global Halal economy is projected to reach $7 trillion by 2030, encompassing sectors like Halal food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, fashion, and Islamic finance. Dubai’s model of integrating Islamic economic principles within its free zones offers a blueprint for other nations. The Dubai Airport Free Zone Authority (DAFZA), for instance, supports Halal businesses with specialized zones designed to meet global Halal standards, thereby promoting Islamic economy sectors across the globe.

The World FZO, by fostering international cooperation and knowledge sharing, can help African and other Islamic economies develop their free zones to attract investments from key industries in technology, manufacturing, and finance. The success of Dubai’s Halal economy provides a powerful case for expanding this model across the Muslim world, particularly in Africa, where Islamic finance and the Halal economy hold immense potential for growth.

The Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) and the African Development Bank (AfDB) are critical institutions that can catalyze the development of free zones across Africa and Islamic economies. The IsDB has been at the forefront of providing financing and technical assistance to support infrastructure projects in member nations, including those in Africa. Its focus on infrastructure, capacity-building, and sustainable development is directly aligned with the goals of free zone development.

Through its various financial instruments, the IsDB can partner with African nations to establish and upgrade free zones, ensuring they meet international standards while promoting Islamic economic values. Moreover, the bank can fund Halal industry projects within free zones, stimulating trade and investment in sectors like agriculture, manufacturing, and logistics, which are crucial for the Islamic economy.

Similarly, the African Development Bank plays a pivotal role in driving Africa’s economic transformation. The AfDB’s focus on industrialization, infrastructure, and regional integration provides a strong foundation for supporting free zone initiatives across the continent. By financing large-scale infrastructure projects such as ports, airports, and industrial parks, the AfDB can help create the necessary conditions for African nations to establish competitive free zones that attract global investment.

As the World FZO steps into its second decade, it is time for African nations and Islamic economies to harness the power of free zones as catalysts for economic transformation. The successes of China, the UAE, and other global players provide clear evidence of the potential impact of free zones on industrialization, job creation, and economic growth. Africa, with its vast resources and growing population, must accelerate the development of its free zones to tap into global markets, attract FDI, and build sustainable economies.

We call on the Islamic Development Bank and the African Development Bank to prioritize the financing of free zone projects in Africa, aligning their efforts with the goals of economic diversification, industrialization, and Halal economy development. Additionally, governments across Africa must adopt policies that streamline free zone operations, ensuring a business-friendly environment that attracts global investors.

The Africa Islamic Economic Forum (AFRIEF) must continue its advocacy and support for the development of Islamic economies in Africa, using platforms like the World FZO to showcase the continent’s potential. By promoting the integration of Islamic finance, Halal industries, and free zones, AFRIEF can help position Africa as a leading player in the global Islamic economy.

This is Africa’s moment to step forward and seize the opportunities offered by free zones. Africa must embrace the vision of the World FZO and leverage the expertise of global partners to unlock new investment avenues, create jobs, and build a prosperous future for its people.

The time for action is now. Africa’s free zones must become the engines of its economic renaissance, driving industrialization, innovation, and global trade integration.


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EDITORIAL

When America Turns Away, Who Will Stand with the World’s Poor?

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The silent dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) by the Trump administration has already begun to cast a long and catastrophic shadow across some of the most vulnerable regions of our planet. While the world watched in disbelief, Washington took a scalpel—and at times a sledgehammer—to decades of humanitarian partnerships, transforming America’s image from a flawed but willing global responder to an indifferent bystander.

Under the guise of the “America First” doctrine, the White House is not only slashing funds—it is uprooting entire systems of international solidarity. USAID, long a cornerstone of the U.S. foreign policy arsenal, is being dissolved into the bureaucratic core of the State Department, its staff decimated, its mission neutered. This is not just policy redirection. It is strategic retreat.

And the consequences are already devastating.

In Myanmar, a country teetering between civil war and natural catastrophe, a deadly 7.7 magnitude earthquake has laid bare the moral vacuum left by the U.S. pullback. More than 3,300 people are dead. Entire neighborhoods are reduced to rubble. While Washington has offered a paltry $9 million in aid, the true toll lies not in numbers but in absence—no boots on the ground, no structured response, no meaningful engagement. By contrast, in the 2023 Turkey-Syria quake, the U.S. pledged $185 million and dispatched hundreds of relief workers. Myanmar, it seems, is now relegated to the back pages of the U.S. conscience.

In Afghanistan, the picture is equally dire. The abrupt halt of funding for World Food Programme (WFP) operations, and the shuttering of hundreds of WHO-supported clinics, has pushed a starving, war-weary population further into the abyss. Twenty-three million Afghans need humanitarian aid. Two million rely on WFP food rations that will now no longer come. The rationale? That funds might trickle to the Taliban. But blanket punishment of a population—especially women, children, and the elderly—is neither just nor strategic.

In Sudan, now entering its third year of a brutal civil war, the picture is almost apocalyptic. More than 30 million people are in need of aid. Nearly half a million have already died of hunger and disease in 2024 alone. With the U.S. pulling out, 80% of community kitchens have shut down. Refugees in Chad, already living on the brink, are now left without food, water, or hope. Once again, the U.S. has ceded moral ground.

Even in South Africa, where the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has for two decades been the world’s most successful anti-HIV initiative, the damage is palpable. Experts now warn that without sustained funding, South Africa could face an additional 565,000 HIV infections and over 600,000 deaths by 2034. Thousands of support services have been halted, and a generation of progress stands at risk.

These aren’t just numbers. They are the real, lived experiences of millions of human beings—trapped in crises not of their making, caught in the crosshairs of global geopolitics, abandoned in their hour of greatest need.

And yet, amid the wreckage, a critical question arises: Who will fill the void?

If the United States is retreating from its role as the world’s emergency responder, the onus must shift to others with the capacity and resources to help. Here, we must issue a moral and strategic challenge to the wealthier nations of the Gulf—Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, Oman, and Kuwait.

These countries have benefited from decades of immense oil wealth, and many have built modern economies, world-class cities, and sophisticated diplomatic networks. But with wealth comes responsibility. It is time for the Gulf to rise to the mantle of global humanitarian leadership—not just through quiet diplomacy or symbolic donations, but through bold, coordinated, and sustained intervention in global crises.

Gulf nations, particularly those that claim leadership in the Islamic world, must now walk their talk. Islam’s teachings on compassion, zakat, and the duty to protect the vulnerable are clear and uncompromising. What greater test of faith and moral purpose than to respond to famines in Sudan, earthquakes in Myanmar, or epidemics in sub-Saharan Africa?

In 2022, Qatar showed remarkable leadership by mediating in Afghanistan and offering humanitarian aid during natural disasters. The UAE has increasingly stepped into the humanitarian space in East Africa and Yemen. Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre has made strides in emergency response. But these efforts must now be scaled, systematized, and globalized. The Gulf must move beyond regional charity into international humanitarianism.

Moreover, such leadership is not only ethical—it is strategic. By filling the humanitarian gap left by the United States, Gulf countries can enhance their soft power, build alliances with Global South nations, and demonstrate that a multipolar world need not be a fractured one. If the West is faltering, the Global East and South must not fail.

Let the response to this moment of crisis become a defining chapter in Gulf leadership. Let the world say that when America turned away, others stood up. That amid despair, compassion found new champions.

For in the end, history will judge not the power we held, but the lives we saved with it.


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EDITORIAL

Trump’s Tariff Tsunami: Charting a Strategic Response from the Islamic World

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The world today stands on the precipice of a profound geopolitical and economic recalibration. With his latest sweeping tariff declaration—a 10% blanket levy on nearly all imported goods, alongside severe country-specific tariffs—Donald J. Trump has launched what may prove to be one of the most consequential acts of economic nationalism in modern history. Framed as a patriotic revival of American industry, it is, in fact, a seismic disruption of global trade norms with reverberations that will be especially destructive to the Global South and, by extension, the Islamic world.

This moment calls for clarity—not only of analysis but of strategy. For Muslim-majority countries already navigating fragile developmental paths, Trump’s tariff agenda may well become a catalyst for systemic realignment. It demands not despair, but a redoubling of efforts toward economic self-determination, intra-OIC trade expansion, and a bold embrace of Islamic economic principles.

A Revival of Mercantilism in a Globalized Age

At the heart of Trump’s new economic policy lies a nostalgia-fueled resurrection of mercantilist thought. In seeking to reverse the effects of decades-long globalization, his administration is deploying 20th-century tools against a 21st-century reality. The United States, no longer the singular industrial hegemon it was after World War II, now competes in a multipolar economic world. Yet Trump’s tariff regime assumes that insulating domestic markets from international competition will singlehandedly reindustrialize the American economy.

History, however, warns against such assumptions. The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930—often cited by economists as a contributing factor to the Great Depression—demonstrated how aggressive protectionism can lead to retaliatory spirals, global contraction, and social unrest. What we are witnessing today bears alarming similarities, albeit on a digitally interconnected and supply-chain-dependent global stage.

An Asymmetric Earthquake: The Vulnerability of Emerging Islamic Economies

The Islamic world—comprising over 50 nations, many of which are dependent on exports to Western markets—is uniquely exposed to this unfolding economic earthquake. While countries like China and the European Union may possess the leverage and infrastructure to respond with countermeasures, Muslim-majority economies—especially in South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Southeast Asia—face a more existential challenge.

Consider the case of Pakistan, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and Egypt. These nations are not only reliant on textile and agricultural exports to the United States but are also structurally embedded within global value chains that feed Western consumer markets. A sudden imposition of high tariffs on these exports—some reportedly as high as 50%—is not just punitive; it is potentially ruinous.

More alarmingly, these policies threaten to undermine decades of incremental gains achieved through preferential trade agreements, foreign direct investment, and participation in multilateral trading systems. For many of these nations, Trump’s tariffs are not just economic measures—they are external shocks with deeply internal consequences: rising unemployment, inflationary pressures, balance-of-payments crises, and heightened political instability.

An Opportunity to Reclaim Strategic Economic Sovereignty

Yet within this crisis lies a generational opportunity. Trump’s unilateralism and the broader Western trend toward economic insularity may, paradoxically, offer the Islamic world a historic opening to reimagine its position in the global economy—not as passive peripheries, but as an interconnected bloc of strategic importance.

There is a growing case for the acceleration of intra-OIC trade, currently hovering around a modest 20% of total trade among member states. Through strengthened regional economic cooperation, harmonized halal certification, integrated digital payment systems, and Islamic finance-backed industrial projects, Muslim-majority nations can foster alternative markets less susceptible to Western volatility.

Institutions such as the Islamic Development Bank, OIC Trade Negotiating Committee, and D-8 Organization for Economic Cooperation must now take center stage in coordinating a South-South trade renaissance. Additionally, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) nations, with their sovereign wealth and capital surpluses, have a critical role to play in underwriting industrialization efforts across lower-income OIC partners, creating mutually reinforcing economic corridors.

Furthermore, this is an opportune moment to reinvigorate the Islamic economic paradigm itself. Rooted in risk-sharing, ethical finance, and real-sector investment, Islamic economics offers a framework better attuned to sustainable development than the speculative excesses of neoliberal globalization. The decoupling of global trade may, therefore, provide the Islamic world with the impetus to invest in economic models that reflect its values and aspirations.

The Imperative of Strategic Unity

A fragmented response to this crisis will only deepen vulnerabilities. But a coordinated, principle-driven, and future-focused strategy could transform this tariff tsunami into a platform for economic reawakening across the Islamic world. The choice before us is stark: either remain at the mercy of shifting Western political winds or rise collectively to forge new alliances, institutions, and economic instruments.

Let us be clear: Trump’s tariffs are not simply a U.S. domestic policy—they are a challenge to the very fabric of globalization and an implicit message that the rules-based international economic order may no longer serve emerging economies. If so, then the Islamic world must not only ask what it stands to lose—but what it can gain by standing together.

Conclusion: Beyond Reaction, Toward Reinvention

In Surah Ar-Ra’d (13:11), the Qur’an reminds us: “Indeed, Allah will not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.” This is not merely spiritual counsel—it is strategic guidance.

The Islamic world now faces a defining test. Will it continue to look outward for validation and markets, or will it summon the internal resolve to build resilient, just, and independent economies? Trump’s tariff tsunami may well be a global economic earthquake—but it could also be the spark of a long-overdue economic renaissance for the Ummah.


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EDITORIAL

Trump’s Tariff Gambit and the Specter of Global Economic Chaos

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From the heart of Washington, D.C., the world is once again being dragged into an economic tailspin orchestrated by one man’s populist instincts and obsession with “winning.” Donald Trump’s latest tariff moves are not merely policy missteps—they are manifestations of a worldview that sees international economic cooperation not as a shared platform for mutual benefit, but as a zero-sum game of dominance and coercion.

For Islamic economists and policymakers concerned with equity, stability, and the moral dimensions of trade, the Trump Tariff Show is more than just theatrics—it’s a warning signal of how deeply distorted the global economic order has become.

Tariffs as Weapons, Not Tools

Unlike the Islamic economic tradition which views trade as a mutual covenant governed by justice (adl) and cooperation (ta’awun), Trump’s tariffs are being wielded as economic weapons. The idea of “reciprocal tariffs”—the notion that trade must always be balanced in numerical terms—is rooted in transactional nationalism, not in economic sense. In fact, scholars from Brookings to Peterson Institute for International Economics have repeatedly warned that such a view misinterprets the nature of global value chains and ignores the very logic of comparative advantage.

Islamic teachings on trade, as found in both the Qur’an and Hadith, emphasize ethical conduct, fairness, and avoiding harm (darar). The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) himself was a merchant whose success came not from closing markets to others, but from being known as “Al-Amin” – the trustworthy. Trump’s approach undermines trust and creates fear, a far cry from the Prophetic model.

A Strategy Without Strategy

Trump’s tariff saga lacks coherence. As reported, there is no clear doctrine—only the impulsive judgments of a leader playing to his domestic base. One day tariffs are imposed, the next day they’re paused. Global markets reel and recover like an abused partner in an unpredictable relationship. As The Economist notes, America has moved from predictable superpower to mercurial bully, unsettling even its closest allies.

Compare this with the Islamic economic emphasis on istiqrar (stability) and maslahah (public interest). Policies must be predictable, transparent, and rooted in long-term welfare—not short-term political spectacle. The Qur’an explicitly condemns deceit and sudden, destabilizing action in commercial dealings. In the Islamic vision of a just economic order, the state should be a shepherd (ra’i), not a predator.

The Myth of Reshoring and Manufacturing Mirages

Trump’s fantasy of “bringing jobs back” through punitive tariffs ignores basic economic realities. U.S. manufacturers are not leaving because tariffs are too low—they’re moving operations because of automation, wage differentials, and global efficiency gains. Punishing trading partners won’t change this. On the contrary, it risks triggering retaliation, increasing consumer costs, and destabilizing emerging economies—including those in the Muslim world.

China has already responded with its own tariffs, and others may follow. The world is being forced into trade blocs and protectionist corners. Islamic economies, particularly those dependent on export markets—like Malaysia, Indonesia, and even parts of the Middle East—stand to lose significantly. The result? Greater inequality, disrupted supply chains, and rising food and energy insecurity.

The Islamic Economic Alternative: Justice and Interdependence

The Islamic economic system envisions a world of interdependence based on moral values. Trade is a bridge, not a battleground. Protectionism must be measured, not malicious. Policies must promote the maqasid al-shari’ah—preservation of wealth, life, and dignity—not endanger them.

Instead of Trump’s chaos, we need international trade governed by mudarabah (risk-sharing), sukuk for infrastructure development, and transparent mechanisms that elevate developing economies rather than suffocate them.

Muslim-majority countries, especially those in the OIC, must use this moment to reevaluate their dependency on unpredictable partners and instead pursue regional trade, South-South cooperation, and Islamic economic integration. The Islamic Development Bank and institutions like D-8 must step up with frameworks that promote intra-OIC trade based on principles of equity, not economic blackmail.

Conclusion: Chaos as a Symptom of Deeper Decay

Trump’s tariff theatrics are not an isolated event—they are symptomatic of a deeper corrosion of global economic ethics. For Islamic economists, the lesson is clear: the time has come to build parallel economic institutions rooted in moral clarity, strategic foresight, and inclusive prosperity.

The Qur’an reminds us: “Woe to those who give less [than due], who when they take a measure from people take in full. But if they give by measure or by weight to them, they cause loss.” (Surah al-Mutaffifin 83:1-3). That, precisely, is the spirit of Trump’s tariff regime—mutaffifin economics. It is neither sustainable nor just.

Let us not merely watch this TV show from the sidelines. Let us offer a better script.


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