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/\ City Stale - Example Dubai

        had been prepared lo abdicate in 1929 if he would have served the
         interests of his country best by doing so. The very nature of re­
         sponsible autocratic rule, based on and supported by shari'ah law,
         as understood by Shaikh SaTd bin Maktum and other shaikhs on the
         coast, ran contrary to the new concept of a system where ordinary
         citizens might also carry responsibility for the State and no longer
         have only advisory roles. In the Ruler’s eyes, a good hakim should not
         want lo disclaim total responsibility for those people who regarded
         themselves as his subjects.
           The great number of earlier incidents of insurrection, and of
         opposition for the sake of opposing, completely ruined all possibility
         of genuine co-operation between Shaikh Sa'Td bin Maktum and most
         of his cousins and their followers. There was always the suspicion
         that their good ideas and innovations were intended ultimately to
         work for their own private benefit. Shaikh Sa’Td bin Maktum
         therefore tolerated the new order for only as long as it seemed
         necessary; he presided over the first few meetings of the Majlis and
         then ignored all appeals to attend the meetings. The Majlis made a
         point of keeping him informed of its decisions: for some time he chose
         to ignore them and refused lo co-operate in implementing them. But
         he was not patient for long; on 29 March 1939 he had the entire Majlis
         dissolved by ordering a contingent of beduin who were in town for
         his son’s wedding to attack and disperse the members.
         The consequences of the existence of the Majlis
         Although Shaikh Sa'Td bin Maktum chose not to accept any of the
         suggestions of the Majlis, the efforts of its members during their
         extremely short term of office were not all lost. In these six months,
         examples were set of the ways in which the City State could be
         governed; it was demonstrated that institutions such as a Municipal
         Council were both necessary and useful; a community spirit, a
         feeling of pride in and optimism for the well-being of the State was
         generated; and official, rather than religiously-motivated, concern for
         the poor became acceptable. The seeds had been sown both in the
         minds of the leading personalities among the population of Dubai
         and in the mind of the Ruler, who, consciously or subconsciously,
         adopted several of these ideas when he improved certain aspects of
         commerce and life in Dubai in the 1950s.
           But Shaikh Sa'Td bin Maktum never entirely regained his political
         self-confidence, and after 1939 delegated a lot of the responsibility

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