DUBAI'S crown prince has bought a camel for a record $A2.9 million during a desert festival in the emirate of Abu Dhabi.
Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the son of Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed, and his heir apparent, bought 16 camels for $A4.8 million during a camel beauty pageant taking place during a desert carnival that aims to preserve the nomadic way of life in the oil-rich Gulf.
Sheik Hamdan paid $2.92 million for one camel, the Emirates' state news agency reported yesterday. It gave no details on the camel.
More than 17,000 camels from the oil-rich Gulf countries — the Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain — were registered for a camel beauty contest taking place over two weeks in the Emirates' western desert.
Camels are registered for the beauty contest in several categories, defined by age and skin colour. The owners of the top three camels in each category split a $2.16 million prize fund and each receives a car from a pool of more than 100 four-wheel-drive vehicles and utility trucks.
Five judges assess the camels' bodies as a whole and their necks, heads, lips, noses, humps, legs and feet separately.
The money and cars for the camel beauty contest were donated by members of Abu Dhabi's ruling family, which organised the festival in a bid to preserve the nomadic way of life in the desert that predates the discovery of oil in the region in the 1960s.
The ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan, who is also the Emirates' president, and his brother Sheik Mohammed Bin Zayed al-Nahyan both own an undisclosed number of camels.
Abu Dhabi is the capital of United Arab Emirates and, with the lion's share of the nation's oil resources, is the richest of the seven semi-autonomous emirates that make up the Gulf country.
Dubai, the largest emirate in population, has been undergoing an unprecedented boom as its leaders shape it into a major financial centre. AP
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