Page 273 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 273

Chaptnr Seven

                  containers were virtually unknown, and leftovers from meals and
                  food preparation were given to camels, goats, chickens and cats, all of
                  which had their own area in the yard, there was very little waste to
                  dispose of. The family used to gel one of the servants to deposit
                  refuse anywhere outside the house. In some quarters a person would
                  be paid by the community to collect this refuse from the alleys, and it
                  would then be deposited on an empty space outside that quarter for
                  general collection. Proper disposal of refuse was not organised until
                  some lime in the late 1950s, when Shaikh Rashid appointed someone
                  to undertake this for all quarters of the City State.
                    Throughout that period and even up to the middle of the 1960s the
                  entire population of Dubai lived in identifiable groups. The neigh­
                  bourhoods within the different quarters of the town had originally
                  grown through a process of immigrants moving in with, or settling
                  next to, their tribal relatives.15 Therefore each neighbourhood also
                  had a headman, elder or notable who was the spokesman for that
                  group of inhabitants when complaints had to be voiced, when a
                  disaster occurred, or when the Ruler wanted a certain decision to be
                  communicated to all the residents. There was no wali for any quarter
                  of the town.16 During his rule, Shaikh Sa'id bin Maktum used to send
                  his brother Hashar almost daily to Dairah to settle disputes among
                  merchants and to hear their complaints and suggestions. The Ruler
                  or his brother acted as arbiters in any dispute which people cared to
                  bring to them for settlement. But disputes regarding inheritance or
                  marriage and divorce were immediately referred to the qadi.17
                    With no State police, no government-run educational system, nor
                  organised supervision—for instance by a municipality—of land use,
                  buildings and market practices, very little contact with government
                  authority was forced upon the individual. The residents were
                  nevertheless well aware of the presence of the Ruler’s authority, of
                  his armed retainers, of his tax collectors and of his duty to act as
                  arbiter. The most effective coercive force in such a tightly-knit
                  community as Dubai was then, was public opinion within the groups
                  and communities.
                    One of the few services rendered by the shaikhly government to
                  the community was the co-ordination of improvements along both
                  sides of the creek, where wooden platforms were built as landing-
                  points for 'abrahs, and to facilitate offloading goods from the boats
                  and barges. Because customs dues had to be collected on all imported
                  goods, a system had to be organised whereby boats could not creep

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