<span>Mohammed </span><span>Al Tamimi had two choices when he wanted to vote in the UAE national elections in 2015 – he could take a 45-minute flight to Abu Dhabi, or board a ferry to Jebel Dhanna and </span><span>drive to the nearest polling station.</span> <span>The first option involved paying for a costly airline ticket while the alternative was a </span><span>10-hour round trip. Neither seemed that appealing.</span> <span>This year, however, voting in the Federal National Council elections will take Mr </span><span>Al Tamimi </span><span>only minutes</span><span>. </span> <span>For the first time, he will be able to vote in his home town on Dalma Island, about 60 kilometres off the coast of Abu Dhabi.</span> <span>Officials are hoping </span><span>new polling stations in more remote communities around the Emirates will increase voter turnout in the Federal National Council elections on October 5.</span> <span>“It’s the first time,” said Mr Al Tamimi, 45. “Before, we went to Abu Dhabi or Madinat Zayed and sometimes it was difficult due to bad weather, waves or high winds.”</span> <span>About one in three eligible voters cast their ballots in the FNC elections four years ago.</span> <span>This year, three new polling stations have been added to the list, making </span><span>39 centres in cities including Hatta in Dubai, Mleiha and Al Dhaid in Sharjah, Falaj Al Mualla in Umm Al Quwain and Masfoot, a town in the interior of Ajman.</span> <span>“We’re trying to reach every geographical area in the UAE as much as we can,” said Tariq Lootah, Undersecretary at the Ministry of State for Federal National Council Affairs.</span> <span>“We try to reach all voters and provide every service to make it easy for them to vote.”</span> <span>In the 2011 elections, entire villages were found not to have </span><span>voted.</span> <span>“I didn’t vote last time,” said Noura Al Qaidi, a resident of Munai, a town 110km south of Ras Al Khaimah city.</span> <span>"Munai was very far from Ras Al Khaimah.</span><span>"</span> <span>Rural communities </span><span>often stand to gain the most from </span><span>council representation and are central to debates on crucial topics such as fishing rights, agricultural policies and air pollution from quarrying.</span> <span>Residents outside capital cities are proportionally more reliant on government health care, public schooling and other </span><span>crucial services.</span> <span>On election day in 2011, extended families from Ras Al Khaimah's north coast villages travelled to the </span><span>polling station in the city centre together and picnicked outside. </span> <span>They shared coffee and their political views with anyone who would listen.</span> <span>But southern voters in the emirate in that year, as well as in 2015, </span><span>did not cast a ballot. </span> <span>Many lived at least two hours from the polling centre.</span> <span>Even today, remote voters still miss a critical aspect of Emirati voter engagement: the majlis circuit.</span> <span>Campaigning in the UAE usually takes place at majlis </span><span>in people's homes rather than public venues. Rare is the candidate who ventures to </span><span>far-flung corners of the country.</span> <span>"Nobody came," said Ms Al Qaidi, referring to </span><span>the </span><span>three previous elections. "Nobody from outside Munai ever came to our town."</span> <span>Today, however, </span><span>access to polling centres is far easier.</span> <span>In Abu Dhabi, a new coastal motorway has cut the drive to the capital from Al Dhafra cities by hours.</span> <span>In 2011, </span><span>it took residents from the </span><span>border town of Sila two to three hours to drive to their nearest polling station. </span> <span>That year, Madinat Zayed was the sole polling station in Al Dhafra, </span><span>an area three and a half times the size of Lebanon. </span><span>Voter turnout was </span><span>21 per cent in the emirate of Abu Dhabi. In 2015, officials organised a polling station at Sila's community wedding hall. Turnout improved.</span> <span>And over recent years, the government has steadily taken steps to increase the number of citizens eligible to vote</span><span>.</span> <span>This year, just under a quarter of the Emirati population is able to vote, a 50 per cent increase from the 224,000 voters eligible in 2015.</span> <span>This translates into prospective candidates having a much stronger interest in voters living in </span><span>remote communities.</span> <span>“I think if one person runs on Dalma Island, every single person will vote for him,” said Mr Al Tamimi, one of the island’s 10,000 residents.</span> <span>“But, you know, the total number of people on Dalma Island is not so big.”</span>