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Chapter Two

                    The ascendancy of al 'Ain and the other Abu Dhabi villages in
                  Buraimi had a lasting effect on the way in which the sheikhdom
                  functioned. Not only was the emigration of several sections of the
                  Bani Yas from the Liwa into the Buraimi oasis, usually by way of Abu
                  Dhabi town, the expression of a social regrouping on the strength of
                  relative prosperity (from pearling or work in an oil company abroad),
                  but it went hand in hand with a considerable decline in the interest of
                  the ruling family in matters concerning the Dhafrah and the Liwa.
                  Already the sons of Zayid bin Khalifah, with the exception of
                  Hamdan, hardly ever visited the Liwa, and even Shaikh Shakhbut
                  and his brother Shaikh Zayid, who regained the influence which
                   their grandfather had had over so many tribes outside the limits of
                   what came to be the territory of the Stale of Abu Dhabi, turned their
                   full attention to this ancestral homeland of the Bani Yas only when it
                   was seriously threatened by the Saudi claims. Shaikh Shakhbut
                   made a tour of the Dhafrah, Liwa and neighbouring districts in 1951
                   and Shaikh Zayid accompanied the Assistant Political Agent
                   through that area in 1952; on both occasions the inhabitants of the
                   Liwa villages voiced their discontent with the apparent neglect they
                   experienced from the Al Bu Falah Rulers. This, however, did not
                  influence the basic opinion of the Bani Yas that they were and always
                   had been subjects of whoever was the Ruler of Abu Dhabi.
                     But the closely-allied Manaslr took exception to some of the Al Bu
                   Falah Rulers in Abu Dhabi. This was demonstrated by the hostile
                   reaction of the Manaslr towards those sons of Zayid bin Khalifah
                   who did not recognise the longstanding privileges of the Manaslr and
                  their entitlement to subsidies. The Na'Im of Buraimi were also much
                  less firmly under the influence of the Al Bu Falah Rulers after Zayid’s
                  death. They eventually gained virtual independence from everyone,
                  including the Sultan in Muscat, and claimed in 1949 vis-a-vis the oil
                  company, which had concluded agreements for all the territory of
                  both Abu Dhabi and Oman, that they should sign their own
                  agreements as independent Rulers.
                    Following the concessionary agreements concluded in the late
                  1930s, the use of a particular area by a certain tribe was translated
                  into territorial possession. Tribal allegiance to one Ruler or
                  another—at all times the most important issue in tribal politics—
                  became the subject of a great deal of probing and research. In
                  particular, the so called "Buraimi Dispute",88 although it was the
                  cause of a regrettable period of bad relations between the two camps,

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