Al Bhatti
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September 8, 2014
Expats weigh in on Scotland vote
Scottish voters carefully waiting the morning of September 19
In 10 days’ time, Dubai businessman Bill Lorimer will wake up either celebrating that Britain still remains a united kingdom, or commiserating that his beloved homeland has voted to end more than three centuries of union.
“No,” the Aberdeen-born and Perth-raised distributor of laser equipment in the UAE, tells Gulf News. “At the end of the day, the Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP) and its leader Alex Salmond do not have enough experience to govern an independent country.” And unlike the Labour or Conservatives, who each have a long history and extensive experience of governing, the SNP’s track record in government is very limited.
Then there’s the question of an independent Scotland not having a nuclear deterrent to ward off potential threats.
“How could Scotland protect itself?” Lorrimer asks.
And as a businessman working in the UAE for the past 15 years, he believes that only a united Britain can effectively market itself overseas.
“Even the whole question of North Sea oil is interesting,” he notes. “What would happen if, for example, the Shetland and Orkney islands — where most of the oil is located — simply decided to hold a vote to go their own way and declare independence?”
Back home in Scotland, two of his three sons will be voting no while a third is leaning that way, although he hasn’t fully made up his mind.
Creating ‘our own destiny’
In Doha, Ruth McIntyre has most definitely made up hers.
“Yes,” she tells Gulf News. “It’s an opportunity to create our own destiny and to decide our future.”
And in 10 days’ time she is looking forward to waking up to a Scotland that is independent.
“I think a lot of the arguments that are being thrown up by the no side are red herrings,” she says. “There is nothing to stop Scotland from using the pound as its currency, just as many other nations use the US dollar as their currency.”
Narrow majority
The latest opinion polls show a narrow majority of Scottish voters voting yes, the first time the independence movement has been ahead since the September 18 referendum was announced.
“All of a sudden the no sides seems to have woken up and realised that Scottish independence is about to happen,” the Glaswegian says. “The latest offer from the no side to offer more powers and greater taxation to Scotland shows they are in a panic. If they were really serious about it, why didn’t they offer that before tens of thousands of advance voters started to vote?”
Englishman Martin Hughes operates Carranmore, a management consultant agency in Dubai. For him, Scotland going its own way won’t spell doom and gloom.
“I fully understand the desire for Scots to create their own destiny,” he tells Gulf News. “If the government in London has failed to look after Scottish interests and failed to listen to Scots concerns for decades, then Scotland has every right to secede from the union and go its own way.”
Expats weigh in on Scotland vote | GulfNews.com
Expats weigh in on Scotland vote
Scottish voters carefully waiting the morning of September 19
In 10 days’ time, Dubai businessman Bill Lorimer will wake up either celebrating that Britain still remains a united kingdom, or commiserating that his beloved homeland has voted to end more than three centuries of union.
“No,” the Aberdeen-born and Perth-raised distributor of laser equipment in the UAE, tells Gulf News. “At the end of the day, the Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP) and its leader Alex Salmond do not have enough experience to govern an independent country.” And unlike the Labour or Conservatives, who each have a long history and extensive experience of governing, the SNP’s track record in government is very limited.
Then there’s the question of an independent Scotland not having a nuclear deterrent to ward off potential threats.
“How could Scotland protect itself?” Lorrimer asks.
And as a businessman working in the UAE for the past 15 years, he believes that only a united Britain can effectively market itself overseas.
“Even the whole question of North Sea oil is interesting,” he notes. “What would happen if, for example, the Shetland and Orkney islands — where most of the oil is located — simply decided to hold a vote to go their own way and declare independence?”
Back home in Scotland, two of his three sons will be voting no while a third is leaning that way, although he hasn’t fully made up his mind.
Creating ‘our own destiny’
In Doha, Ruth McIntyre has most definitely made up hers.
“Yes,” she tells Gulf News. “It’s an opportunity to create our own destiny and to decide our future.”
And in 10 days’ time she is looking forward to waking up to a Scotland that is independent.
“I think a lot of the arguments that are being thrown up by the no side are red herrings,” she says. “There is nothing to stop Scotland from using the pound as its currency, just as many other nations use the US dollar as their currency.”
Narrow majority
The latest opinion polls show a narrow majority of Scottish voters voting yes, the first time the independence movement has been ahead since the September 18 referendum was announced.
“All of a sudden the no sides seems to have woken up and realised that Scottish independence is about to happen,” the Glaswegian says. “The latest offer from the no side to offer more powers and greater taxation to Scotland shows they are in a panic. If they were really serious about it, why didn’t they offer that before tens of thousands of advance voters started to vote?”
Englishman Martin Hughes operates Carranmore, a management consultant agency in Dubai. For him, Scotland going its own way won’t spell doom and gloom.
“I fully understand the desire for Scots to create their own destiny,” he tells Gulf News. “If the government in London has failed to look after Scottish interests and failed to listen to Scots concerns for decades, then Scotland has every right to secede from the union and go its own way.”
Expats weigh in on Scotland vote | GulfNews.com