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Chapter Two
                   Their tamJmah, Sultan bin Muhammad al Hamuda, of the A1 Bu
                   Kharaiban section, was the Sultan’s wali. But being irrevocably split
                   into two sections, the Al Bu Kharaiban and the Al Bu Shamis,02 the
                   NaTm were weakened by constant internal strife. The lonilmah
                   needed support in asserting his authority over the other elements of
                   the NaTm in Dhahirah, at the western end of the Wadi Jizi, in the
                   Wadi Hatta and in the region adjoining al Jau in the direction of
                   Sharjah and 'Ajman; the latter was being wrested from their hands
                   by the Bani Ka'nb and the Bani Qitab. Occasional support came from
                   the Ruler of 'Ajman and the headman of Hamriyah on I he coast, both
                   of whom were members of a NaTm subsection; Sultan bin Muham­
                   mad al Hamuda became, however, very much dependent on the
                   assistance and friendship of Shaikh Zayid bin Khalifah, who had
                   married one of his daughters.
                     The NaTm of Buraimi were certainly not in a position to make
                   independent policy decisions within the oasis or outside it during
                   Zayid bin Khallfah’s rule. On every move they consulted him either
                   personally or through his Dhawahir representative Ahmad bin
                   Hilal.83 In 1895, for instance, the 'Awamir declared war against the
                   NaTm, and Sultan bin Muhammad al Hamuda wrote to Ahmad bin
                   Hilal: “We could not do anything against them because our interests
                   and yours are one. . . . Whatever you decide please let us know
                   because they [the 'Awamir] are with you.” When in 1905 the Bani
                   Qitab built a fort in the traditionally Na'imi-controlled Wadi Hatta
                   and attacked caravans moving through this important pass between
                   Dubai and the Balinah, and took the village of Masfut, the tamlmah of
                   the NaTm appealed from his fort in Buraimi village to Zayid for help,
                   through Ahmad bin Hilal: “We are relying on God and on him in all
                   matters ... for as you know we are [in Zayid’s hand! like an article in
                   the hand of its maker." At a meeting of the Trucial Shaikhs in Dubai
                   in April 1905 to settle this dispute, Zayid stood up for the NaTm, and
                   Masfut was returned to them.84
                     The meeting in Dubai is an illustration of Zayid’s successful
                   pursuit of the two closely related aims. First, seven villages in the
                   Buraimi Oasis paid tax and had become entirely loyal to the Al Bu
                  Falah. As Captain P.Z. Cox, who travelled to Buraimi in 1902 and
                  1905. put it: “The real power in the neighbourhood is the Shaikh of
                  Abu Dhabi, whose material possessions and consequent influence in
                  the oasis are yearly increasing,  "85  Secondly, he had been able to
                  increase his influence over both settled and beduin tribes outside the
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