Page 115 - UAE Truncal States
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Chapter Three

                   al bay by impressing them. The young Ahmad bin Rashid therefore
                   began his tenure in 1926 by assuming the role of mediator between
                   the Shaikh of Kalba and I he Naqbiyfn, some of whom resided in
                   Dibah although most of them were subjects of Kalba.24 For a lime
                   Rashid seems to have been able to establish a reasonable relationship
                   with his counterpart, the headman of the Shihuh al Bai'ah, Salih bin
                   Muhammad;25 they concluded a treaty in 1926. After Salih’s death in
                   1932 the new headman in Bai'ah, Zayid bin Sinan of the Kumzar,20
                   could not restrain the beduin Shihuh, and allegations of Shihuh
                   raiding and interference when they visited the suq of Dibah  were
                   frequent.
                     The most that Rashid bin Ahmad could do was to request direct
                   action against the Shihuh by the Sultan in Muscat. Therefore he went
                   personally to Muscat on the occasion of the accession to rule of
                   Sultan SaTd bin Taimur in October 1932, staled his problems, asked
                   for the Sultan’s help (or formal protection) and later went as far as
                   hoisting the Sultan’s flag on his fort in the hope of gelling help from
                   that direction. As an unexpected side-aspect of his request for
                   protection from incursions by the Shihuh. Rashid bin Ahmad
                   received a letter from the Sultan on the occasion of the introduction
                   of a new Omani wali at Khasab27 in 1934, saying: “my object is that
                   you should be obedient to him” (meaning the wali of Khasab, who
                   was responsible for the whole of Muscat’s possessions on the
                   Musandam Peninsula) “and submissive to his orders . . .”28 The
                   Ruler of Sharjah clearly saw that he was about to lose Dibah to
                   Muscat altogether, and communicated these matters to the Political
                   Resident in Bushire. Later, the British Government obliged the Ruler
                   of Sharjah by corresponding with the Sultan of Muscat, slating that
                   Dibah was part of Sharjah territory.29
                     Since the recognition of the Sharqiyln territory of Fujairah as an
                   independent State in 1952, the Sharjah dependency of Dibah looks
                   on the map like a tiny button in between large tracts of Omani and
                   Fujairah territory, the latter starting a mere mile or two south and
                   west of the fort of Dibah. The two other Sharjah dependencies on the
                   east coast, Khaur Fakkan and Kalba. are 32 kilometres and 68
                   kilometres respectively south of Dibah. But until passes were blasted
                   through several rocky headlands, Dibah was in any case connected
                   to these southern coastal tracts only by sea; the other communication
                  route to Dibah was down the steep Wadi Taybah from Masafi,
                  which was opened for Landrovers at about the same time as the
                  coastal route in 1968.
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