Page 80 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 80

The Tribal Structure of Society

        was a  blessing in disguise as far as Ihe historiography of the tribes in
        the disputed area is concerned. The last concerted effort at collecting
        material on the tribes had been some on-the-spot investigations
        during 1904-7 to update the archival material available to the
        Government of India for the compilation of the Gazetteer.”9 The
        dispute over large parts of Dhafrah and over the oasis of Buraimi,
        which came to a head in the early 1950s, made it essential for all the
        concerned parlies to collect as much evidence as possible on the
        wandering habits and the allegiances of the beduin tribes of the
        areas, and on the number, habitat, occupation, tax payments,
        seasonal movements and other questions regarding the settled or
         semi-nomadic population. Such research brought much of the
         information contained in the Gazetteer up to dale. The changes
         which look place during five decades in the life pattern of the tribes
         were recorded. Some of the initial reports of these meticulous
         investigations carried out by government officials as well as oil
         company employees on both sides in the dispute are still confidential.
         Material which stood up to repealed probing and historical corre­
         lation was eventually used in the memoranda submitted by each side
         to an arbitration tribunal which was convened for the first time in
         Nice on 23 January 1955. These memoranda became known as the
         “UK Memorial” and the "Saudi Memorial”.90 Both have been used
         and quoted extensively by scholars who adopted the history of this
         dispute as the subject of specialised research.
           Thus the shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi became a well-studied model
         which illustrated the different types of tribal claims to a particular
         area and the relationships between a Ruler and the various tribal
         groups, which could lake any form from unconditional submission to
         traditionally-established loyalty, to alliance or just temporary re­
         spect. The expansion of the influence of the A1 Bu Falah Rulers went
         hand in hand with the appropriation by the Bani Yas sub-tribes, first
         of all of Dhafrah and the Liwa, then of the coast and islands,
         especially of Abu Dhabi and later Dubai. In all these areas the Bani
         Yas did not have to compete with the established rights of previously
         settled people, but they shared these rights with the Manasir and
         some sections of migrating beduin tribes. Extending A1 Bu Falah
         influence into the area bordering Oman meant competing not only
         with the incumbent owners of the settlements, mainly Dhawahir and
         Na'Im, but also with the nomadic and settled tribes of the neighbour­
         hood, who had to be kept sufficiently well under control so that they

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