SheikhMohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (
Arabic: محمد بن راشد آل مكتوم,
romanized: Muḥammad bin Rāšid Āl Maktūm; born 15 July 1949) is an Emirati politician and royal who is the current
ruler of Dubai, and serves as the
vice president and
prime minister.[1] Mohammed succeeded his brother
Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum as UAE vice president and ruler of Dubai following the latter's death in 2006.[2]
Mohammed is the
absolute ruler of Dubai and the prime minister of the UAE,[9] a position appointed by
the president.[10] The government is
autocratic, as there are no democratic institutions, and internal dissent is prohibited.[11][12][13][14] It is characterized by scholars as authoritarian.[15][16]
On 5 March 2020, a British court ruled that
on the balance of probabilities, Mohammed had abducted two of his daughters,
Shamsa and
Latifa, and had threatened his former wife, the Jordanian princess
Haya bint Hussein.[17] Allegedly, Shamsa and Latifa were forcibly medicated while held in Dubai under Mohammed's orders since 2000 and 2018, respectively.[18] On 16 February 2021,
BBC's Panorama broadcast a documentary featuring Latifa's video messages that she made secretly under enforced detention in Dubai on her father's orders.[19][20]
Mohammed is an
equestrian and is the founder of the
Maktoum family-owned
Godolphin stable and the owner of
Darley, a
thoroughbred breeding operation, operational in six countries. In 2012, he rode the horse Madji Du Pont 160 km to take the
FEI World Endurance Championship.[21]
From the age of four, Mohammed was privately tutored in
Arabic and
Islamic Studies. In 1955, he began formal education at Al Ahmedia School. At the age of 10, he moved to Al Shaab School, and two years later, attended Dubai Secondary School. In 1966, with his cousin
Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum, he attended the
Bell Educational Trust's English Language School in the United Kingdom.[25][26] He subsequently studied at the
Mons Officer Cadet School in
Aldershot, passing out with the sword of honour as the top
Commonwealth student.[27] He also travelled to Italy to train as a pilot.[28]
Political career
Dubai Police
On Mohammed's return from military training to Dubai, his father appointed him as the head of the
Dubai Police Force and the Dubai Defence Force (which later became a part of the
Union Defence Force) when he was only 20 years old.[24][29][30]
Minister of Defence
In January 1968, Mohammed was present when his father and Sheikh
Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan first met in the desert between Dubai and Abu Dhabi at Argoub El Sedira[31] to agree to the formation of a union of emirates following British notification of intent to withdraw from the
Trucial States. When the new country of the United Arab Emirates was founded on 2 December 1971, Mohammed became its first minister of defence at the age of 22.[30][32]
A period of uncertainty and instability followed the Union of the United Arab Emirates, including skirmishes between tribes over property, straddling new borders. On 24 January 1972, the exiled former ruler of the
Emirate of Sharjah, Sheikh
Saqr bin Sultan Al Qasimi, led an insurrectionist
coup against his successor,
Khalid bin Mohammed Al Qasimi.[33] Following a spirited firefight between the
Union Defence Force and Sheikh Saqr's forces – mostly
Egyptian mercenaries who had entered the UAE through
Ras Al Khaimah[31] – Mohammed accepted Saqr's surrender.[33] Sheikh Khalid had been killed in the action, leading to the accession of his brother
Sultan as ruler of Sharjah. Mohammed delivered Saqr to UAE president Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, who put Saqr under house arrest in
Al Ain.[34]
In 1973, Mohammed was involved in protracted negotiations with the hijackers of
JAL 404, led by
Japanese Red Army member Osamu Maruouka, which landed in Dubai after being hijacked as it departed
Schiphol Airport. Although unsuccessful in obtaining the release of the hostages (they were finally freed, and the 747 blown up, in Libya), he was more successful in a later negotiation with the three hijackers of
KLM 861, who released the balance of their hostages and handed over the plane in return for safe passage.[35] In 1977, Mohammed oversaw the integration of Dubai's military forces with those of the other
emirates.[30]
Crown Prince of Dubai
On 3 January 1995, Mohammed's brother Sheikh
Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum,
ruler of Dubai, signed two decrees. One decree appointed Mohammed as crown prince and the other appointed their brother
Hamdan as the deputy ruler of Dubai.[36]
Mohammed is the
absolute monarch of Dubai.[42] The government is described as
autocratic, as there are no democratic institutions, and internal dissent is prohibited.[11][12][13][14] Scholars characterize the UAE as authoritarian.[15][16] According to human rights organizations, there are systematic
human rights violations, including the torture and forced disappearance of government critics.[43] There is a blurred line between the assets of the state of Dubai and those of the
Al Maktoum ruling family.[4]
On 19 October 2020, Mohammed led the UAE Council of Ministers meeting that ratified a
peace agreement with Israel, normalizing diplomatic relationships between the countries.[48] The Council, again headed by Mohammed, approved the decision to found an
Emirati embassy in
Tel Aviv in January, and Mohammed swore in the first Emirati ambassador to Israel, Mahmoud Al Khajah, a month later.[49]
Space exploration
Mohammed founded the
Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre in 2015,[50] which announced it would be launching a spacecraft to
Mars to study the planet’s atmosphere;[51] He stated that the planet was chosen for its "epic challenge,"[52] saying it would benefit the
Emirati economy.[53] He announced that the mission would be called Hope after a public vote, as the name would "send a message of optimism to millions of young Arabs,"[54] since "Arab civilisation once played a great role in contributing to human knowledge, and [would] play that role again."[55]
Mohammed announced that the
Hope mission had succeeded at orbit insertion on 9 February 2021,[56] and shared the first picture the probe had captured days later. Hope became the first Arab mission to space, as well as the first of three missions in July 2020—the others from the United States and China–to arrive at Mars.[57][58][59]
In 2020, Mohammed announced a second mission, this one to the moon.[60][61] The
Emirates Lunar Mission used a
lunar rover named Rashid, reportedly built entirely in the UAE.[62] It was launched on 11 December 2022 on a
Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket.[63] In a historic [64] first, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum’s book titled "The Journey From the Desert to the Stars" was launched from the
International Space Station (ISS) through Emirati astronaut
Sultan Al Neyadi.
Business career
Mohammed has overseen the creation and growth of a number of businesses and economic assets of Dubai, with a number held by two companies under his ownership,
Dubai World and
Dubai Holding. According to the laws of Dubai, the ruling family owns all undeveloped land in Dubai, which has allowed the family to prosper from real estate development.[4] During Mohammed's rule, Dubai has seen enormous population growth, causing a real estate boom in Dubai.[65] The boom was in part facilitated by Sheikh Mohammed's 2002 decree that foreigners would be allowed to purchase property in Dubai.[65]
Mohammed established
Dubai World by decree,[66] leading to the company's launch on 2 July 2006, as a
holding company consolidating a number of assets including logistics company,
DP World, property developer
Nakheel Properties, and investment company
Istithmar World. With more than 50,000 employees in over 100 cities around the globe, the Group has real estate, logistics and other business investments in the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Africa. The company is owned by the
government of Dubai.[66]
Sheikh Mohammed's personal corporate portfolio is the
Dubai Holding Group, which is involved in a variety of investments.[66]Dubai Holding benefits from its association with the
ruling family of Dubai, and is given free land by the Dubai government.[4]
Through the 1970s, as well as his role as head of Dubai Defence Force and UAE Minister of Defence, Mohammed oversaw Dubai's energy resources and was in charge of the
Dubai Civil Aviation Authority. It was in this latter role, in March 1985, that he founded
Emirates Airline,[67] tasking then-head of
Dnata,
Maurice Flanagan, with launching a new airline to be called
Emirates after a dispute with Gulf Air over Dubai's '
Open Skies' policy. The launch budget of the airline was $10 million (the amount Flanagan said he needed to launch an airline) and its inaugural flight took place on 25 October 1985.[68][69] Sheikh Mohammed appointed his uncle Sheikh
Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum as chairman of the new company. A further $75 million in facilities and materials was provided, but
Emirates has always maintained that it has received no further subsidies throughout the company's meteoric growth to become one of the world's leading airlines.[68]
In 1989, Mohammed inaugurated the first
Dubai Airshow. In 2013, the exhibition had grown to over 1,000 exhibiting companies, and was the venue for
Emirates' placement of the largest aeroplane order in history, with $99 billion combined orders with
Airbus for its
A380 and
Boeing for its
777X.[70][better source needed]
Burj Al Arab and Jumeirah
The
Burj Al Arab was inaugurated in December 1999. The hotel, constructed from a design by
WS Atkins in response to a brief from Mohammed to create "a truly iconic" building, styles itself as "the world's most luxurious hotel". It was constructed on an island offshore from the
Jumeirah Beach Hotel, the first property managed by
Jumeirah,[71] the hotel management company launched by Mohammed in 1997 and headed by ex-Trust House Forte executive Gerald Lawless. While work began on both hotels at the same time, the island to house the
Burj Al Arab required three years to build before construction began above ground.
Jumeirah's international expansion, driven after it became part of
Dubai Holding in 2004,[72] encompasses 22 hotels in ten countries.[73]
Dubai Internet City and TECOM
On 29 October 1999, Mohammed announced
Dubai Internet City, a technology hub and free trade zone. Offering companies long leases, full ownership, and fast access to government services,
DIC grew from its first tenants in October 2000, to a current zone employing about 15,000 people.[74][better source needed] In November 2000, it was joined by
Dubai Media City, a content and media production-free zone, which is co-located with DIC. The launch of DIC came with assurances from Mohammed regarding media freedoms. In 2007, he issued a decree banning the imprisonment of journalists following an incident in which local journalists were accused of
libel and sentenced to jail terms.[75]
In June 2017, two new initiatives were added to the
Mohammed Bin Rashid Global Initiatives, within the "Empowering Communities" sector, namely the International Institute for Tolerance and the Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Award for Tolerance. In this respect, Sheikh Mohammed issued Law No. (9) of 2017 on the Establishment of the International Institute for Tolerance and Decree No. (23) of 2017 on the Formation of a Board of Trustees and Decree No. (28) of 2017 on the Appointment of a Managing Director for the International Institute for Tolerance. In this respect, Law No. (9) of 2017 includes the launch of the Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Award for Tolerance, administered in accordance with the provisions and statute of said Law. Hence, the establishment of the International Institute for Tolerance aims at instilling a spirit of tolerance across the community, building a cohesive society, strengthening the UAE's standing and position as a model of tolerance, as well as renouncing extremism and all forms of discrimination among people on the basis of religion, sex, race, color or language, in addition to honoring all entities and institutions contributing to the promotion of tolerance and open, interfaith dialogue.[81]
Sporting interests
Mohammed is a major figure in international
thoroughbredhorse racing and
breeding. He owns
Darley Stud, the biggest horse breeding operation in the world with farms in the United States, Ireland, England, and Australia. In 1985 he bought the Irish
thoroughbredPark Appeal for an undisclosed sum at the end of her second season. She went on to produce at least nine winners from twelve
foals and is the ancestor of many successful horses.[82]
Mohammed had raced horses as a child (he would share his breakfast with his horse on the way to school)[83] but he attended his first formal race at
Newmarket in 1967 with his brother Hamdan, watching
Royal Palace win the 2,000
guineas.[84][better source needed] Becoming an owner in his own right, ten years later he won his first race with Hatta at Brighton. And five years after that, Mohammed and Hamdan had three studs and 100 horses under training.[85]
By 1992, Mohammed had started 'wintering' his horses in Dubai, frequently against the advice of trainers and pundits in the UK. The results were a string of high-profile wins, and by 1994 he founded
Godolphin. In 1995, his hands-on approach to racing resulted in a major split with leading trainer
Henry Cecil after a disagreement over racing a horse Mohammed insisted was injured. Cecil took the argument public and Mohammed removed all his horses from Cecil's stable.[86]
In 1996, the
Dubai World Cup was inaugurated as the world's richest horserace, drawing the legendary American dirt track horse
Cigar to race in Dubai. Today, held at the
Meydan Racecourse, the race meeting carries a prize of $27 million.
At the age of 63, Mohammed won the 2012 World Endurance Championship over a 160 km course.[89] Both his
thoroughbreds and endurance horses have failed drug tests – although his trainers (including
Mahmood Al Zarooni) have accepted the blame. His endurance racing stable has also been involved in other scandals, including both fatal injuries, and ringers.[90] In 2015, the
FEI suspended the United Arab Emirates following a series of scandals.[91]
Sheikha Latifa and Sheikha Shamsa kidnap allegations
Mohammed has three daughters named Latifa. The other two daughters are not connected to this allegation.
An early 2000s British police investigation of allegations, made by a former riding instructor about the attempted escape of Mohammed's daughter
Latifa (born 1985) from her family estate in England and the subsequent kidnapping on a street in
Cambridge of Latifa's sister
Shamsa in 2001, was inconclusive.[98]
On 11 March 2018, a video was released of Sheikha Latifa[99][100][101] after her failed attempt to flee the UAE and subsequent disappearance,[102] in which she claimed she was fleeing from her family, made allegations of abuse, and said her father was responsible for a number of murders, including the murder of his deceased older brother's wife. The escape attempt was the focus of a documentary by Australian broadcaster
Nine News as well as
BBC Newsnight investigation.[103][104]
In December 2018, former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Mary Robinson, after meeting Latifa in the presence of other family members, said that Latifa was now in the care of her family. Her statement was criticised by human rights groups, who said that Robinson would not have been able to tell in the meeting whether Latifa truly had psychological issues.[105] A spokeswoman for "The Mary Robinson Foundation – Climate Justice" confirmed that Robinson was approached by Latifa's stepmother
Princess Haya bint Hussein, an old friend of Robinson's, and was requested to go to Dubai by Princess Haya and that Haya paid the fare, less than two weeks after the
BBC ran a documentary detailing Latifa's failed escape attempt in March.[106][107][108] Robinson admits she was "horribly tricked" when photographs of the private lunch were made public and that both she and Haya had been told of details of Latifa's
bipolar disorder, a condition which she does not have.[109] Latifa's cousin Marcus Essabri reported that Latifa's photos with Mary Robinson seem to show Latifa medicated while held in Dubai under her father's orders.[18] She has not been seen in public since.
In February 2021, video footage obtained by the BBC shows Latifa saying she has been "a hostage" for over a year "with no access to medical help" in "
solitary confinement" without access to medical or legal help in a "villa jail" with windows and doors barred shut, and guarded by police. The governments of Dubai and the UAE have not responded to requests for comment from the BBC.[110] Despite her family's insistence that she has been enjoying time with them at home the past two years, Latifa says in the series of videos released by her advocates that she is "a hostage" and fears for her life. "Every day, I'm worried about my safety in my life. I don't really know if I'm going to survive this situation." "The police threaten me that they would take me outside and shoot me if I didn't cooperate with them," she said. "They also threatened me that I would be in prison my whole life and I'll never see the sun again."[111][112]
In 2021, investigative reporting into the
Pegasus spyware found that Latifa's name was added to a list of names that were potential targets of the spyware just days before she was seized by commandos of an unknown country, off the coast of India, while she was aboard a yacht in an attempt to flee Dubai.[113]
Princess Haya escape
In June 2019, it was reported that Princess Haya had fled Dubai along with her two children, a son and a daughter, and was in Germany seeking
political asylum.[114] A subsequent poem composed by Mohammed (an occasional couplet-writer) and posted on
Instagram alluded to betrayal in love.[115][116] In 2020, a 34-page fact-finding ruling by the UK High Court Family Division found that Princess Haya had been having an affair with her bodyguard.[117] She paid around $9 million to hide the affair.[118]
In December 2019, a UK
family court ruled that,
on the balance of probabilities, Mohammed may have committed the crime of "taunting" Haya after her adulterous affair with a bodyguard became known, which verbal "taunting," the court held, amounted to subjecting Haya to "a campaign of intimidation,"[119] reportedly including guns placed on her pillow.[120] The findings were published in March 2021.[121][122][17] In October 2021, the
High Court ruled that Mohammed's agents used the Israeli
Pegasus spyware to hack the phones of Princess Haya, her solicitors, a personal assistant and two members of her security team in the summer of 2020. The court ruled that the agents acted "with the express or implied authority" of the sheikh; he denied knowledge of the hacking. The judgment referred to the hacking as "serial breaches of (UK) domestic criminal law", "in violation of fundamental common law and
ECHR rights", "interference with the process of this court and the mother's access to justice" and "abuse of power" by a
head of state.[123]
In December 2021, Haya was granted full custody of her children, and
alimony and support in the amount of US$720 million.[124] The
Washington Post reported that "In justifying the amounts,
(Justice) Moor cited the need to preserve the truly opulent and unprecedented standard of living enjoyed by these parties" and dismissed as "irrelevant" Haya's admitted adultery with her bodyguard while ensconced in this opulent luxury.[125] In 2022, the court ordered that there should be no direct contact between Mohammed and his children, and no input by him into decision-making about their lives.[20]
Child camel jockeys
In 2006, a
UNICEF-sponsored program with the UAE government resulted in the repatriation of hundreds of children formerly enslaved as camel jockeys, and provided them with social services and compensation upon return to their home countries of Pakistan, Sudan, Mauritania, and Bangladesh. The UAE government set aside US$2.7 million in initial funding in 2005 with an additional $9 million for the second phase, and to enforce compliance, adopted a law officially banning the practice with penalties of jail time and a $27,200 fine.[126]UNICEF endorsed the UAE's efforts and expressed the hopes that "the UAE's programme will serve as a model to other countries in the region, as a means of ending all forms of exploitation of children".[127]
In September 2006, Mohammed was accused of encouraging the abduction and enslavement of thousands of boys for use as jockeys in
camel races. A
class-action suit was filed against him in the US state of Florida.[128][129][130] In 2006, American lawyers representing the UAE raised a motion to dismiss the lawsuit on the grounds that none of the involved parties resided in the US, arguing that the UN program best served the interests of the children. In July 2007, Judge
Cecilia Altonaga accepted the motion and dismissed the suit.[131]
Horse racing drugs scandal
In April 2013, Mohammed's Godolphin stables trainer
Mahmood Al Zarooni was disqualified for eight years from
thoroughbred horse racing by the
British Horseracing Authority for administering
steroids to eleven racehorses. Mohammed stated that he was "appalled and angered" by the case and announced that the stable would be locked down while drug tests were carried out on all horses under Al Zarooni's care.[132] In May, Mohammed, as prime minister of the UAE, issued a decree outlawing and criminalizing the use of
anabolic steroids on horses in the UAE.[133]
In October 2013, Mohammed faced another scandal in the venue of
horseracing, with reports of potentially toxic and dangerous steroids,
anaesthetics, and
anti-inflammatory drugs being shipped into the UAE, mislabeled as "
horse tack". The Telegraph commented that a "PR campaign is already underway, with Sheikh Mohammed again cast as a victim of employee malpractice".[134]
Pandora Papers
In October 2021, an investigation by the
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) revealed that over 330 prominent politicians and public officials across the world had ties with offshore companies. Amongst them were 35 current and former world leaders. The leaked 11.9 million files revealed that Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum also used offshore companies to manage and expand his wealth. In order to carry out his dealings, he registered three companies in the
tax havens of the
British Virgin Islands (BVI) and the Bahamas. Registered by an Emirati firm, Axiom Limited, the three companies were Tandem Investco Limited and Tandem DirectorCo Limited in BVI and Allied International Investments Limited in the Bahamas. Partly owned by the
Dubai Holding, in which Mohammed owns major shares, Axiom Limited used the three companies to “expand its core business”.[135][136][137]
Personal life
Sheikh Mohammed has 26 children from several wives.[138][needs update]
Sheikh Mohammed's ex-wife was
Princess Haya bint Hussein, daughter of former King
Hussein of Jordan and half-sister of King
Abdullah II of Jordan.[139] In 2022, the High Court of England and Wales ruled and mandated that Sheikh Mohammed must not have direct contact with his children by Princess Haya, or input into decision-making about them, because of his coercive and abusive behaviour which "had emotionally and psychologically harmed their children".[20] On 19 September 2022, he attended the
state funeral of Queen Elizabeth II at
Westminster Abbey, London.[140]
In addition to
Arabic, he also speaks English.[141]
Sheikh Mohammed owns the yacht named Dubai, built by the German company
Blohm + Voss and designed by English designer
Andrew Winch, who owns Winch Design. The yacht is 162 metres (531 ft) long, and was the world's third largest yacht as of 2014, with the capacity for up to 115 people including crew.[142] Another of his yachts is the 40 metres (130 ft) Alloya, built by Sanlorenzo in 2013.[143][144]
Sheikh Mohammed owns real estate in the United Kingdom worth more than 100 million British pounds, as well as properties in
Rome through a company registered in Luxembourg.[3] According to a 2021 analysis by The Guardian and Transparency International, Sheikh Mohammed is one of the largest landowners in the UK, owning more than 100,000 acres.[145] The exact number of properties is not known, as most of the properties connected to him are owned through
offshore companies in the
tax havens of
Guernsey and
Jersey.[145] When asked about these holdings, Sheikh Mohammed's lawyer rejected that the properties were bought through offshore companies or that the holdings were intended to avoid UK taxes.[145]
In the 2021
Pandora Papers leaks, it was revealed that Sheikh Mohammed was a shareholder in three additional companies registered in jurisdictions allowing secrecy.[146]
Wives and children
Mohammad has been married to at least seven women. As of 2023, he is divorced from all his wives except his second wife, Sheikha
Hind bint Maktoum Al Maktoum.
Hind bint Maktoum bin Juma Al Maktoum
Mohammed and Hind married in 1979. The couple are first cousins. Together they have 12 children:
Sheikha Hessa bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 6 November 1980), she is married to Sheikh Saeed bin Dalmook Al Maktoum and they have three children:
Sheikha Hind bint Saeed Al Maktoum (born 25 November 2009).
Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum (born 20 May 2012).
Sheikha Salama bint Saeed Al Maktoum (born 17 July 2018).[147]
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (born 18 November 2003).
Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 14 November 1982), Crown Prince of Dubai (since 2008). He is married to Sheikha Shaikha bint Saeed bin Thani Al Maktoum.[150] He has three children:
Sheikh Rashid bin Hamdan Al Maktoum (born 20 May 2021).[151]
Sheikha Shaikha bint Hamdan Al Maktoum (born 20 May 2021).[151]
Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamdan Al Maktoum (born 25 February 2023).[152]
Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 24 November 1983), First Deputy Ruler of Dubai (since 2008), Deputy Prime Minister of the UAE (since 2021), UAE Minister of Finance (since 2021). He is married to Sheikha Maryam bint Butti bin Maktoum Al Maktoum,[153] and they have three daughters:
Sheikha Hind bint Maktoum Al Maktoum (born 24 November 2020).[154]
Sheikha Latifa bint Maktoum Al Maktoum (born 11 January 2022).[155]
Sheikha Shaikha bint Maktoum Al Maktoum (born 25 January 2023).[156]
Sheikh Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 7 February 1987), Second Deputy Ruler of Dubai (since 2023). He is married to Sheikha Madiyah bint Dalmook Al Maktoum.[153] They have one daughter:
Sheikha Hind bint Ahmed Al Maktoum (born 22 October 2022).
Sheikh Saeed bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 20 March 1988).
Sheikh Hamad bin Mohammed Al Sharqi (born 29 December 2009).
Sheikha Aisha bint Mohammed Al Sharqi (born 1 November 2011).
Sheikha Fatima bint Mohammed Al Sharqi (born 11 March 2014).
Sheikh Rashid bin Mohammed Al Sharqi (born 15 December 2015).[158]
Sheikha Hind bint Mohammed Al Sharqi (born 22 June 2020).
Sheikha Maryam bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (II) (born 11 January 1992). She is married to Sheikh Khaled bin Mohammed bin Hamdan Al Nahyan, and they have three sons:
Sheikh Mohammed bin Khaled Al Nahyan (born 25 September 2020).[159]
Sheikh Hamdan bin Khaled Al Nahyan (born 25 August 2021).[160]
Sheikh Khalifa bin Khaled Al Nahyan (born 10 October 2022).[161]
Sheikha Sheikha bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 20 December 1992). She is married to
Sheikh Nasser bin Hamad Al Khalifa, and they have five children:
Sheikha Sheema bint Nasser Al Khalifa (born 16 July 2010).
Sheikh Hamad bin Nasser Al Khalifa (born 6 June 2012).
Sheikh Mohammed bin Nasser Al Khalifa (born 6 June 2012).
Sheikh Hamdan bin Nasser Al Khalifa (born 28 October 2018).[162]
Sheikh Khalid bin Nasser Al Khalifa (born 15 February 2022).[163]
Sheikha Futtaim bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 22 July 1994).[164]
Sheikha Salamah bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 8 August 1999).
Sheikha Shamma bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 13 November 2001).
Haya bint Hussein
Sheikh Mohammed married
Princess Haya bint Hussein on 10 April 2004, and they divorced on 7 February 2019. They have two children:
Sheikha Al Jalila bint Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 2 December 2007).[165]
Sheikh Zayed bin Mohammed Al Maktoum (born 7 January 2012).[165]
Randa bint Mohammad Al-Banna
The sheikh married Randa bint Mohammed Al-Banna in 1972. Mohammed and Randa later divorced.[166] They have one daughter:
^
abMarozzi, Justin (2019).
Islamic Empires: Fifteen Cities that Define a Civilization. Penguin UK.
ISBN978-0-241-19905-3.
Archived from the original on 19 February 2023. Retrieved 30 October 2021. There is no free speech in Dubai... criticism of the ruling family, or any other political activity, is absolutely prohibited... Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, Ruler of Dubai
^Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (2012). Spirit of the Union: Lecture on the Occasion of the United Arab Emirates' Fortieth National Day. Dubai, UAE: Motivate. p. 34.
ISBN9781860633300.
OCLC957655419.
^Edmonson, Richard (26 March 1996).
"Sheikh Speaks Out On Cecil". The Independent.
Archived from the original on 5 November 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
^Pagones, Rachel (2007). Dubai Millennium: A Vision Realised, A Dream Lost. UK: Highdown. p. 118.
ISBN978-1-905156-32-0.
Maktoum, Mohammed (2012). My Vision: Challenges in the Race for Excellence. UAE: Motivate.
ISBN978-1-86063-344-7. Vision for governance.
Maktoum, Mohammed (2012). Spirit of the Union. UAE: Motivate.
ISBN978-1-86063-330-0. Talks about UAE independence & union.
Maktoum, Mohammed (2013). Flashes of Thought. UAE: Motivate.
ISBN978-1-86063-356-0. A number of insights into policy, attitude & approach to leadership.
Dubai The Maktoum Story by John M. Smith; in English; a book which criticizes the governance of Sheikh Mohammed