Page 148 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
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Administering a Tribal Society
        mad al Kindi of the Qumzan section of the Bani Yas. During the rule
        of Shaikh Shakhbut, Muhammad’s son Shaikh Mijarin bin Muham­
        mad al Kindi and afterwards 'Abdul Rahim al Gharlb were qudah in
        Abu Dhabi town. The qadi in al 'Ain was the father of Shaikh
        Shakhbul’s secretary, Sayyid 'Abdullah, who was an Arab from the
        Persian coast. In the Buraimi area there was a mulawwa' in most of
        the villages, each of whom was partly maintained by the Ruler and
        partly lived from the fees he obtained in kind from such functions as
        officiating al marriages and certifying divorces. The brother of the
        qadi in al 'Ain was mulawwa' in Mu'tirid. The authority of one of the
        nui(ci wwa'. Thani bin Ahmad, who co-operated most frequently with
        the Ruler’s wali in the area, extended as far as Khatam. The most
        respected mulawwa' in Dhafrah was called Allahir bin 'Ali al
        Murri. He was succeeded in about 1966 by his nephew Musaba.
          Some lime during the 1940s Shaikh Shakhbut appointed Yusuf al
        Badr from Bahrain as qadi for all of Abu Dhabi. He usually resided in
        Abu Dhabi town, but was at times sent by the Ruler on a circuit to
        settle cases in the desert and on the islands. He married in Haflf in
        LTwa some time before 1955, and owned dale gardens in that village.
          In March 1951 Shaikh Shakhbut spent several weeks in Bainunah.
         north of Liwa, with a large retinue. During this time many people,
         mostly beduin because there were no permanent settlements in
         Bainunah, came to pay their respects, and also to refer their disputes
         to him for settlement. But he did not himself give a verdict. After his
         return to Abu Dhabi he sent the wali of Dhafrah, Ahmad bin Fadil,
         and his qadi, Yusuf al Badr, who spent more than three months in
         that area settling disputes: they listened carefully to each case,
         sometimes taking up to three weeks on one of them.96 Few of the
         cases were disputes between members of the same tribe, but mostly
         between a Manaslr, an 'Awamir or a Manahll on the one side and a
         Bani Yas on the other side. The Manaslr had their own qcidis or
         mulawwa' and preferred to settle their disputes among themselves;
         but some cases, in particular serious criminal cases and disputes
         with non-Manasir neighbours over camels or the ownership of dale
         gardens were referred to the Ruler of Abu Dhabi, his wali or his
         qadi.07
           While the fact that cases were brought by the Ruler’s subjects
         themselves to him or his qadi testifies to a certain amount of
         practical, administrative authority over them, the extent of his
         sovereignty may be assessed particularly well if, in a dispute
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