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Chapter Five

                 Pearling by foreigners
                 As has been mentioned earlier, the pearl banks near the southern
                 shores of the Gulf were considered by all I he Arabs  as common
                 properly; they did not belong to individual sheikhdoms. This
                 situation was respected by the pearling communities from the
                 Persian Coast, some of whom, by virtue of their also being of Arab
                 tribal origin, might have come to fish on the Arab pearling banks but
                 for the great distance from home.
                   When the demand and the price for pearls increased, complete
                 outsiders were not slow to come in with the intention of securing for
                 themselves a share of this obviously quite profitable industry. Many
                 individuals and companies who tried to get a foothold in the pearling
                 industry in the Gulf reckoned that by using modern diving equip­
                 ment they would make the process of collecting the oysters from the
                 sea-bed faster and therefore more profitable. The first such attempt
                 was made in 18,57 by two British people resident in Bombay; when an
                 enquiry about the possibility of their participating in the pearl diving
                 reached the British Political Resident in Bushire, his reaction was to
                 advise strongly against such an attempt because the Arab pearl-
                 diving community could not be expected to suffer such interference
                 with their prime source of income.*10 Throughout the latter half of the
                 19lh century several more such enquiries reached the Government of
                 India, whose policy remained unchanged, and in cases where boats
                 of Indian or foreign origin arrived on the pearl banks without first
                 contacting the Government’s representatives such intruders were
                 removed from the scene by a naval escort.
                   The question became more complicated when other foreign
                 powers were involved. In 1899/1900 the Turkish Government was
                 considering selling a concession for part of the pearl fisheries in the
                 Gulf, a step which, besides harming the economy of the littoral Arab
                 communities, would have seriously undermined the British position
                 in the Gulf and once again have set in motion the discussion over
                 the issue of declaring the Gulf a mare clausum for the purpose of
                 pearl diving. But ever since this formula had been first considered in
                 1862, the Government of India time and again decided against
                 such a formal announcement, because such a declaration would only
                 have drawn unnecessary attention from America and European
                 powers.
                   After various firms had made numerous attempts to enter into this

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