Page 130 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 130

Administering a Tribal Society

         Eventually most families of Dhafrah were allocated a house in Bida'
         Zayid constructed for them by the government; women and children
         of school age and the elderly took up residence there during most of
         the year while some of the men were either supervising the camels on
         the winter grazing or looking after the gardens in the LTwa.
         Eventually the majority of the men established transport businesses
         either in Abu Dhabi or in Bida’ Zayid, or they found employment with
         the military, police or one of the many companies operating in the
         area.
           Since the early 1970s Saif bin Musa has ceased to report directly to
         the Ruler in Abu Dhabi, but has referred to the representative in the
         western region, Shaikh Muhammad bin Buti al Hamad. This was the
         effect of a far-reaching change in the nature and function of wali
         administration in the shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi after the establish­
         ment of new population centres associated with the activities of the
         oil company.

         Tarlf
         Since the 1950s the activities of the oil companies have required the
         concentration of a work-force of local inhabitants in new settlements
         in places previously insignificant in the local economy. The men
         obtained regular employment, wages were paid, and they were
         subject to the authority of the foreign company. The relationship
         between the company, the Ruler and his people in these various
         locations had to be arranged to suit the new requirements. Thus a
         total transformation was brought about in the method of administer­
         ing the shaikhdom.
           When preparations for drilling the first well on the Trucial Coast
         were being made late in 1949 by PD(TC) at Ra’s al Sadr, men from all
         areas of Abu Dhabi Slate found employment with the company. The
         Ruler, Shaikh Shakhbul, kept in touch with every development
         regarding the recruitment of labour, the payment of wages, and the
         conditions of employment; but he also appointed his nephew Shaikh
         Hamdan bin Muhammad as his representative at the drilling site, to
         be present as and when required. Routine liaison between the tribal
         work-force and the company was entrusted first to Ahmad bin Fadil
         al Mazru’i, then to the wall in the Liwa, who was at times assisted by
         Ahmad bin Juma'h.
           Under the terms of the agreement of 1939 between the Ruler and
         the company, the former was obliged to provide guards for all

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