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Administering a Tribal Society

        was an employee of the Ruler, and therefore although it was a pre­
        stigious position it was different from that of a wali in Shamaillyah or
        of a headman or semi-independent shaikh in Hamrlyah. The Rulers
        representative on Dalma was paid a salary; he was not entitled to a
        share of the taxes he collected, as was the case in some of the
        Qawasim ports where a wcili was so frequently a local tribal shaikh
        or a political figure in his own right.
          During the later years of the rule of Zayid bin Khalifah, amirs on
        Dalma were Hamad bin Dismal, Ahmad bin Qumbar, and eventually
         the Rulers fourth son Sultan.06 In Hamdan bin Zayid’s time
        (1912-22) and that of his successors a permanent resident on the
        island, ’Abdul Rahman bin Hamad al Najdi, was amir on Dalma. He
         died in the summer of 1932 and the Ruler’s brother Shaikh Hazza' bin
         Sultan took over for the remainder of that season, assisted by a
         secretary of Iranian descent, 'Abbas bin 'Abdullah. Between 1933
         and 1937 'Abbas bin 'Abdullah shared the responsibility with 'Ali
         bin Shaiban al Khamlri. After that the latter went alone to the island
         for the following seasons until 1942 when Rashid bin Jabir al
         Suwaidi took over for two seasons. Then 'Ali bin Shaiban returned to
         Dalma again for the season of 1945 to 1949. 'Abbas bin 'Abdullah
         succeeded 'Ali and remained the amir for Dalma until his death in
         1951.
           An amir on Dalma usually had an assistant tax collector, muzakki,
         and throughout the year a customs official collected the 2§ per cent
         customs dues on behalf of the Ruler. The diving court67 for Abu
         Dhabi’s pearling community has in this century always consisted of
         just one man, appointed by the Ruler; he was concerned with all
         pearling-related disputes arising in Abu Dhabi waters, and com­
         muted between Abu Dhabi and Dalma. During the off-season the few
         permanent inhabitants on Dalma settled small disputes themselves.
         Important matters could be referred to a relative of the ruling family
         residing on the island for communication to the Ruler in Abu Dhabi.  68
           The increase in oil company activities eventually diverted most of
         the manpower away from the pearling industry, which was already
         at a low ebb in the 1950s. With this the importance of Dalma also
         declined. In the later 1970s the small community of tribal fishermen
         was given new incentives to stay there by the establishment of
         government-financed houses, schools, new mosques, a market
         complex, and a small hospital: free transport to and from the island
         by helicopter was organised by the army; several construction
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