Page 212 - UAE Truncal States
P. 212

The Traditional Economics

        industry, it became necessary that a clear line of policy should be laid
        down. The Law Officers of the Crown were consulted and in a finding
        dated 'll February 1905 their opinion was that within the three mile
        limit and in "any other water which might justly be considered
        territorial, the tribes of the Arabian Coast were entitled to the
        exclusive use of the pearl fisheries. As regards pearl banks outside
        territorial waters it was held that, as a matter of international law,
        such banks were capable of being the properly of the tribes to the
        exclusion of all nations."41 The Law Officers pointed out that the
        question of ownership of the banks could be raised at the Hague
        Tribunal, but because there was no guarantee that its decision would
        be in favour of exclusive Arab ownership of all the banks on the
        southern part of the Gulf, it would probably be belter to avoid raising
        the question internationally, and that as far as possible indirect
        measures of diplomacy should be used by the Government to protect
        the Arab tribes from intruders into the pearling industry.
          On the strength of this recommendation it became easier for the
        authorities in Bombay and Bushire to foil subsequent attempts of
        companies to enter into this industry. At limes this firm policy of the
        British authorities was endangered by the underhand attempts of
        people seeking concessions, in that they went straight to the Arab
        shaikhs. In one instance in 1900 a British Indian merchant settled in
        Muscat managed to obtain a concession from the Ruler of Abu Dhabi
        and made arrangements with some Bani Yas regarding boats. The
        British Political Resident in Bushire immediately enquired from the
        other shaikhs of Trucial Oman and Bahrain whether they consented
        to this arrangement. The general opinion was, however, that the
        banks were the "common property of the coast Arabs, that no Shaikh
        had the right to grant permission for diving to foreigners, and that the
        appearance of divers equipped with European diving dresses would
        probably not be regarded with equanimity by the local operatives."42
        So ingrained was this conviction that the pearl banks belonged to the
        people of the Arab coast and islands that even in the post-oil era
        Rulers do not find it worth their while to antagonise the tribal
        population over this matter of principle by granting concessions to
        anyone, local or foreign, for the exploitation of the pearl banks with
        modern diving equipment. The few attempts to bring together local
        Arab and foreign interests in such ventures in the Gulf have all come
        to nothing.
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