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                    Chapter Three
                    their grievances and disputes, and to dispense justice in consultation
                    with a qadi and the niujawwcT. The diving court, salifah al ghaus,
                    was responsible for settling disputes arising out of the preparations
                    for the annual diving season and the many debts and claims which
                    usually followed it.
                      Throughout the decades when the wali of Ra’s al Khaimah was
                    sometimes do jure dependent, sometimes de facto dependent, and
                    sometimes independent of the Ruler of Sharjah, the contentious     i
                    issues usually concerned economics rather than status. Whoever
                    was governor of Ra’s al Khaimah levied the customary taxes, chiefly
                    on pearling, but also on dales (one twentieth of the crop in kind) and
                    on animals, and collected customs duties (1.5 to 2 per cent). Such
                    income was primarily used for the administration of Ra’s al
                    Khaimah, which included maintenance of the fort and lowers, salary
                    for some 70 armed guards, hospitality and subsidies to beduin tribes
                    of the area. The rest was given in allowance to the members of the
                    Qasimi family who lived in Ra’s al Khaimah and at the time of the
                    Gazetteer numbered eight males.13
                      More than once in the history of the Qasimi realm and of other
                    shaikhdoms, an ex-Ruler attempted to regain control of part or all of
                    a shaikhdom because he could not see any other way out of his
                    obligations to his debtors, his family and his supporters. Ra’s al
                    Khaimah was in this respect not as coveted as Sharjah, which had a
                    substantial income from pearling: according to the Gazetteer 23,400
                    Rupees were collected there as tax in 1906.14 The walis of Ra’s al
                    Khaimah were usually not required, and the independent Rulers not
                    inclined, to remit any of the revenue from Ra’s al Khaimah to Sharjah.
                    The income to be derived from the former therefore helped to solve
                    the economic problems of Salim bin Sultan, ex-Ruler of Sharjah, who
                    managed to install himself as Ruler in Ra’s al Khaimah in 1910.15
                      In 1917 Salim bin Sultan’s eldest son Muhammad took over most of
                    the affairs of Ra’s al Khaimah because his father had become
                    partially paralysed, but after Salim’s death in 1919 the younger son
                    Sultan gripped the reins of government and was recognised as Ruler
                    of Ras al Khaimah by the British Government in 1921.
                      During the meagre years of the Second World War and after,
                    Shaikh Sultan alienated his subjects by unduly neglecting their
                    welfare, and his brother by signing an oil concessions agreement
                    with PCL in secret. Thus it was possible for his nephew Shaikh Saqr
                    bin Muhammad to take over as Ruler of Ra’s al Khaimah in March

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