Dear Comrades,
On the eve of World Post Day we celebrate the UAE’s 104-year-old mail service
Dubai: Before there were post boxes and same-day delivery, UAE’s post moved across the desert on camel-back. 
Wednesday marks World Post Day, and it is the year the country’s postal system — Emirates Post — turns 104 years old.
Fahad Al Hosani, acting 
president of Emirates Post Group, said: “Emirates Post has emerged as 
the leading postal corporation in the region, offering diversified 
services by using innovation and technology. We have been constantly 
expanding our portfolio of non-postal services, while at the same time 
upgrading our postal offerings. As a result, our network of over 120 
post offices located across the UAE, provide the most varied services. 
“On the occasion of World 
Post Day, we are delighted to reiterate our commitment to delivering 
quality service to individual and corporate customers.”
    	    
        
        
                 
        
    	
	
        				
		
        
            			
				 
The letters that now zip to their destination in a matter of hours, can trace a long, rich history in the UAE. 
All mail went through UAE’s 
first post office, which opened in Dubai in 1909. At the time, since the
 UAE was still 62 years from formation, the post office in Dubai was 
managed by the Indian Post Office Services. 
Abdullah 
Mohammad Al Ashram, chief executive officer (CEO) of Emirates Post, 
said: “The posts came under the dominion of different... country... 
controlling the area. During the transitional period [when India gained 
its independence in 1947 and Pakistan separated from it], Indian stamps,
 printed over with the word ‘Pakistani’, were used on letters and 
parcels sent through the Dubai office.”
In 1948, the British Postal 
Administration took over management of the Dubai post office and the 
services were extended to the rest of the emirates. 
Post offices in the various 
emirates were linked to Dubai’s office, in order to receive and dispatch
 private mail through Dubai Airport.
When Abu Dhabi’s government took over operations in 1967, the use of British stamps ceased. 
Al Ashram said: “With the 
establishment of the UAE federation on December 2, 1971, it turned out 
to be a turning point in the development of post in the region.”
Today, there are more than 
400,000 PO boxes in the UAE and thanks to advanced technology, the post 
office has sophisticated sorting machines that ensure mail is delivered 
within one day. 
A focus on innovation has 
also helped UAE’s post offices to become the nerve centre for a host of 
non-postal services, such as registration of tenancy contracts, money 
transfers, payments for utility bills and so on.
Al Ashram said: “Post office 
counter staff can offer multiple postal and non-postal services. In most
 cases, the computer system has a real-time link with partners, so that 
transactions are recorded instantly.” 
With each added facility, the
 postal service of the UAE sets a new benchmark for the region. Locally,
 too, new initiatives are underway.
“A door-to-door mail delivery
 system has been introduced recently on a selective basis in certain 
villa communities in Dubai,” Al Ashram said. “The plan is to extend this
 service to other communities across the country.”
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