Page 393 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 393

Chapter Nino

                    Because of the absence of institutions lo which certain authorities
                 could be handed over, some  aspects of the abrogation of the treaty
                 relationship with Britain could not be dealt with promptly on the
                 final day. The command of the Trucial Oman Scouts passed, on 2
                 December, from the British Political Resident in the Gulf to the
                 President of the UAE after the appropriate military law had been
                 issued in Dubai; but the actual handover of day-to-day responsibility
                 was only possible on 22 December.115 Similarly, the retrocession of
                 jurisdiction over certain foreign subjects which, in theory, had to be
                 completed before the 2nd of December was a long and difficult
                 process because new federal courts had to be set up and a number of
                 federal laws had to be passed for which Britain continued to press.116
                 Even after the British Political Residency in Bahrain was closed on 26
                 March 1972, some unsettled appeal cases were still pending, and for
                 this purpose the British Ambassador in Abu Dhabi retained a brass
                 plate engraved “British Political Residency” which was put up when
                 he dealt with the few cases which dragged on beyond that date.
                   Thus, by necessity, Britain served as midwife at the birth of the
                 federation. Britain had all along had doubts about a federation which
                 included Bahrain and Qatar; it could now be satisfied that the infant
                 was of the very shape and size it had anticipated. Because of the
                 protracted handover procedures, the new legal requirements, and
                 the need to allocate the duties of the Trucial States Development
                 Office,117 Britain still helped to smooth the path for a few months
                 while the federation took its first steps. However it was not long
                 before the British Embassy took its place among the rapidly-
                 increasing number of embassies opened in Abu Dhabi.
                   Britain had not succeeded in tidying up all the loose ends quite as
                 neatly as had been hoped. In particular the border dispute between
                 Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi was unresolved. In December 1970
                 Saudi Arabia had repeated a territorial claim which would have cost
                 Abu Dhabi much of her territory and most of her onshore oil-fields.118
                 But Britain was by then confident that a solution could best be
                 worked out between the two governments, possibly with the
                 mediation of other Arab governments. This belief was justified and
                 an agreement was signed in August 1974.

                Ra's al Khaimah - last but not least
                 This State in the extreme north probably had three major reasons
                 why it did not sign the July 1971 agreement between the other Trucial

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