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  2. Al Habtoor Motors LLC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Habtoor_Motors_LLC

    Al Habtoor Motors is an automobile distributor in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and part of the Al Habtoor Group. [1] [2] The company was established in 1983. The company is the dealer for Mitsubishi, Pagani, McLaren and Bentley, Fuso, Chery and JAC Motors. [3] In 2011, the company launched the CarZone Megastore, the largest used car ...

  3. Transport in Dubai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Dubai

    The city has a car ownership rate of 541 cars per 1,000 population. This figure exceeds that of cities like New York City [444 cars per 1,000 population], London [345 cars per 1,000 population] and Singapore [111 cars per 1,000 population]. If this trend continues, then by 2020, there will be 5.3 million registered cars in Dubai. [3]

  4. OLX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLX

    In Kenya in 2016, farmers have reportedly used OLX to sell their produce and livestock, especially chicken and cattle. [25] [26] In late 2016 it launched Tradus as a heavy machinery classifieds site. [27] OLX ceased its operations in Venezuela on September 11, 2018, due to complex political issues and lack of free dealing. [28] [29] [30]

  5. W Motors Lykan HyperSport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W_Motors_Lykan_HyperSport

    At US$ 3.4 million, the Lykan HyperSport was the third most expensive production car at the time of its production. The HyperSport is the first car to have headlights with embedded jewels; they contain titanium LED blades with 440 platinum diamonds (15cts); [9] although buyers had a selection of rubies, diamonds, yellow diamonds, and sapphires to be integrated into the vehicle's headlights at ...

  6. United Arab Emirates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Arab_Emirates

    There are four Salik tolling points placed in strategic locations in Dubai: at Al Maktoum Bridge, Al Garhoud Bridge, and along Sheikh Zayed Road at Al Safa and Al Barsha. [261] A Dubai Metro train. Dubai Metro is the Arabian peninsula's first rapid transit system and was the world's longest driverless metro network until 2016.

  7. Economy of the United Arab Emirates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_the_United_Arab...

    Dubai suffered from a significant economic crisis in 2007–2010 and was bailed out by Abu Dhabi's oil wealth. Dubai's current prosperity has been attributed to Abu Dhabi's petrodollars. [39] In 2014, Dubai owed a total of $142 billion in debt. [40] The UAE government has worked towards reducing the economy's dependence on oil exports by 2030. [41]

  8. E 311 road (United Arab Emirates) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_311_road_(United_Arab...

    Within the city of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Road used to be known as the most dangerous road in the UAE, [4] with 19 fatalities recorded on it within the first six months of 2006. But with improved road designs and replacement of several roundabouts with interchanges, flyovers, speed cameras and increase in lanes, it has become much ...

  9. Al Buteen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Buteen

    Al Buteen (Arabic: البطين) is a locality in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE). Al Buteen is located in eastern Dubai, in Deira and is bounded to its west by Al Ras, its east by Al Sabkha and its north by Al Dhagaya. Dubai Creek forms the southern periphery of the locality. Al Buteen is located between Old Baladiya Street (110th Road) and ...