Friday, November 22, 2024

Indian expat who moved to Dubai on Dh600 salary wins Dh12m in Abu Dhabi draw

The 39-year-old said:  “I have been purchasing a Big Ticket on my own since the start of December 2018. My family has been very supportive and always believed that one day I would strike big and become a millionaire.”

Mohammed Sameer Alan, an Indian expat working in Dubai has won Dh12 million in a Big Ticket draw held in Abu Dhabi, a report in the Khaleej Times says.

The 39-year-old said:  “I have been purchasing a Big Ticket on my own since the start of December 2018. My family has been very supportive and always believed that one day I would strike big and become a millionaire.”

He had purchased his Dh12 million winning ticket number 192202 of Series 237 on February 27.

“I always wait for my salary to be credited to buy a ticket. My payday is 26 or 27 of every month. Also, 2 is my lucky number. This ticket had lots of 2s in it.”

He plans to start a new business in Dubai and back in his home in Deoria,Uttar Pradesh.

“I will split my investment here and in UP. I will bring my family here. I will show them the place I have been living here in the past 18 years.”

Alan won’t be buying tickets now and wishes to give others an opportunity to win.

“I always wait for my salary to be credited to buy a ticket. My payday is 26 or 27 of every month. Also, 2 is my lucky number. This ticket had lots of 2s in it.”

He said “I have a large family. My father was a rickshaw driver. He raised us by earnings from driving a rickshaw. We were not financially well off. Seeking to transform our fortunes, I came to Dubai in February 2004. I started with a salary of Dh600. Over the years, I learnt and improved my skills. Currently I work as a technician for automatic sliding doors and earn Dh3,300,” said Alan, who hails from Deoria district of Uttar Pradesh.

 “I was watching the draw live, but work came up and I missed the show after the name of the fifth winner was announced. But my wife was watching it live back home in UP.”

“All are happy. We are all now waiting to get hold of the cheque”, he added

************************************************************************

Readers

These are extraordinary times. All of us have to rely on high-impact, trustworthy journalism. And this is especially true of the Indian Diaspora. Members of the Indian community overseas cannot be fed with inaccurate news.

Pravasi Samwad is a venture that has no shareholders. It is the result of an impassioned initiative of a handful of Indian journalists spread around the world.  We have taken the small step forward with the pledge to provide news with accuracy, free from political and commercial influence. Our aim is to keep you, our readers, informed about developments at ‘home’ and across the world that affect you.

Please help us to keep our journalism independent and free.

In these difficult times, to run a news website requires finances. While every contribution, big or small, will makes a difference, we request our readers to put us in touch with advertisers worldwide. It will be a great help.

For more information: pravasisamwad00@gmail.com

David Solomon
David Solomon
(For over four decades, David Solomon’s insightful stories about people, places, animals –in fact almost anything and everything in India and abroad – as a journalist and traveler, continue to engross, thrill, and delight people like sparkling wine. Photography is his passion.)

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

EDITOR'S CHOICE