Page 105 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 105

Chapter Two

                Kumzar and other places on the coast of Ru’us al Jibal . . the
                impression which he derived from intercourse with the people  was
                that they had a predilection for the Government of the Saiyid of
                Masqat and were animated by an implacable hatred of the Qa-
                wasim.”133 It is therefore not surprising that the Shihuh headmen
                repeatedly and actively supported the secession of the Sharqiyin of
                Fujairah from Sharjah. However, when it came to negotiating directly
                with the British authorities over allowing a telegraph station to be
                built in their territory, the Shihuh shaikhs repeatedly denied that
                they owed allegiance to the Sultan, although he had a wali stationed
                in Khasab. In general the British Government has supported Omani
                authority over Ru'us al Jibal. The Sultan’s wali has for several
                decades now resided in Khasab; he also has representatives in Dibah
                and LImah.
                  The inability of the Qawasim Rulers to dominate the inhabitants of
                Ru’us al Jibal, while they were prepared to accept the sovereignty of
                the distant and rather ineffective authority of the Sultan, demon­
                strates the tenuous nature of government before modern communica­
                tions. In the absence of armies, there was little a Ruler could do to
                keep a tribe or an area under his domination if the people thought
                that they would be better off without him. Thus the Qasimi Empire
                never was a very coherent political entity and it disintegrated quite
                readily. In comparison the social interdependence which existed
                between the desert and the coast in the case of the Bani Yas and their
                associates provided a better base for a territorially extensive but
                nevertheless quite coherent political unit.






















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