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At the Crossroads of Empire and Nation-State: Partition, gold smuggling, and port cities in the western Indian Ocean

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2019

NISHA MATHEW*
Affiliation:
Middle East Institute and Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore Email: meinmm@nus.edu.sg

Abstract

This article investigates gold smuggling in the twentieth-century western Indian Ocean. It illustrates how gold, condemned as a ‘barbarous relic’ by international monetary economists and central banks in the immediate post-war period, created an economy in the intermediate zone between a retreating empire and emerging nation-states in India and the Persian Gulf. Bombay and Dubai—connected by mercantile networks, trading dhows, migrants, and ‘smugglers’—were the principal constituencies and key drivers of this trans-regional economy. Partition and the concomitant flight of Indian mercantile capital into Dubai becomes the key to unlocking the many dimensions of smuggling, including its social organization and ethnic constitution. Looked at in such terms, gold smuggling reveals a transnational side to both partition and the post-colonial history of Bombay which has drawn little critical attention from historians. Consequently, it expands the analytic space necessary to explain how Dubai was able to capitalize on the arbitrage possibilities offered by import regulations in India, tap into the global networks of trade and finance, and chart its own course of development as a modern urban space throughout the latter half of the twentieth century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

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Footnotes

The archival research for this article was undertaken at the India Office Library, London (IOR); the National Archives of India, New Delhi (NAI); and the Maharashtra State Archives, Bombay (MSA) between 2011 and 2016, while ethnographic work was conducted in Dubai, Sharjah, Bombay, and parts of Kerala during the same period. The funds for the fieldwork were covered by the CISA Mellon Doctoral Fellowship at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. I am extremely grateful to the reviewers of this journal and to Engseng Ho, Janice Jeong, Ameem Lutfi, and Serkan Yolacan for their comments on earlier versions of the article. I also wish to thank Dilip Menon and Isabel Hofmeyr for their valuable input.

References

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20 The Thattai Bhatias had a presence in the Persian Gulf much earlier than the colonial period, and were one of the earliest communities to settle in Muscat and parts of present-day Iran. For details, see Markovits, The global world, pp. 10–12.

21 See Chapter VIII of the Administrative Report of the Persian Gulf for the Year 1929, File No. 192-S in Vol. 158-N (1930), Secret Department, NAI. Also see Al-Sayegh, Fatma, ‘Merchants’ role in a changing society: The case of Dubai, 1900–90’, Middle Eastern Studies 34, no. 1 (1998), p. 94CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Morsy, Abdullah, The United Arab Emirates: A modern history (London: Croon Helm, 1978), p. 104Google Scholar.

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27 Control of Exports from Trucial Coast and Oman, IOR/R/15/2/772.

28 These bars were in units of 10 tolas, weighing a little less than a quarter of a pound and costing as much as US$ 150 in Dubai. A tola is an Indian measure equivalent to roughly 0.375 troy ounce.

29 Magabha and a Dubai-based Arab, whose family he remains in contact with, helped him to test the purity of gold, which ranged anywhere between 21 to 24 carats. For more details, see his reflections on life as a merchant in Dubai: Pancholia, Magabha, Footprints: Memoirs of an Indian patriarch (Dubai: Motivate, 2009), pp. 5354Google Scholar.

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32 For details, see Currency in Arab Sheikhdoms, IOR/R/15/2/379; and Bahrain Intelligence Summary, IOR/R/15/2/320.

33 The discussion on how the prolonged life of the rupee reinforced gold smuggling circuits throughout the 1970s and 1980s solicits a different kind of enquiry and is beyond the scope of this article.

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36 For details, refer to the confidential report on smuggling prepared by Patrick Fyere, commercial officer at the Political Agency, Dubai: External relations’, in Annual records of the Gulf, UAE, 1962 (Slough: Archive Editions, 1993), pp. 514518Google Scholar.

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39 In what may be considered an upscaling of his activity around buying and selling gold in the early 1940s, Magabha recounted during the interview how he often flew to Bahrain and Kuwait to buy the gold needed in Dubai himself. He briefly narrates in his memoirs an episode of chartering an eight-seater flight for a trip to Dubai in the 1980s where he was to deliver a few consignments of gold that he had bought in Kuwait, some 30 years before the publication of the book. There was nothing unusual about the trip since the gold route between Bahrain and Dubai, with pilots flying weekly shipments between the two cities, was an established one. See Pancholia, Footprints, pp. 124–125.

40 Meanwhile, the source of London's gold was South Africa's mines, something that had been an established tradition since the late nineteenth century. For more details, see Ally, Russel, Gold and empire: The Bank of England and South Africa's gold producers 1886–1926 (Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1994)Google Scholar; Ally, R., ‘War and gold—the Bank of England, the London gold market and South Africa's gold, 1914–19’, Journal of Southern African Studies 17, no. 2 (1991), pp. 221238CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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42 For details, see H. R. Vohra ‘Gold flow traced to Dubai’, The Times of India, 27 February 1968; Tuohy, ‘Dubai's golden fleece’; and Eric Pace, ‘Smuggler's gold’, The Times of India, 28 July 1971.

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45 These banks were based in Dubai and included the British Bank of the Middle East, National Bank of Dubai, Dubai Bank, Bank of Oman, Arab Bank, Eastern Bank, and the First National City Bank of New York. See Green, The world of gold, p. 227.

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48 Many of my informants in Malabar first made their first voyage to ports in present-day United Arab Emirates on a dhow, or a launch as it was otherwise called, in what could be called episodes of human smuggling.

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56 See File No. 1129 of 1867, Revenue Department 20th March 1867 forwarded to the Commissioner of Customs, Salt and Opium in Vol 87. of 1867 Pol. Dept, MSA. Also see Jones, ‘British India steamers’, p. 25.

57 For an excellent study of dhows and their commercial activity in the form of servicing niche markets in the nineteenth-century western Indian Ocean, see Mathew, Johan, Margins of the market: Trafficking and capitalism across the Arabian Sea (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2016)Google Scholar. Also see the details on Mohammerah by Jones, ‘British India steamers’, p. 36.

58 Many traditional ports in western India like Mandvi and Malabar had, for a brief while, been reduced to coasting ports, a state of affairs that had much to do with the abolition of slavery and the Bombay government's efforts at putting an end to piracy. For details, see Tod, James, Travels in western India, embracing a visit to the sacred mounts of the Jains, and the most celebrated shrines of Hindu faith between Rajpootana and the Indus: with an account of the ancient city of Nehrwalla (London: W. H. Allen and Company, 1839), pp. 449453Google Scholar.

59 When trawling through the records I did not come across a single instance when a dhow was caught smuggling gold or silver, although many older migrants I interviewed in Dubai told me repeatedly how this was not at all unusual.

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64 This was a practice from the inception of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in Abadan in the early years of the twentieth century. For details, see File No. F 13-17/53 (Emi) of 1953, NAI. Also see Srinivasan, Kannan and Gongoli, Geetanjali, ‘India and Middle Eastern oil: 1900–1950’, Journal of the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library 4, no. 1 and 2 (2005), pp. 57103Google Scholar.

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66 ‘Airlines staff held for smuggling gold’, The Times of India, 13 February 1987.

67 I gathered much of this information during my fieldwork in the Malabar districts of Kerala among migrants who had taken this route to the Persian Gulf.

68 It was not entirely coincidental that Dubai and Bombay had the greatest number of dhows in the 1960s and the 1970s out of all the different ports in the western Indian Ocean. For details, see Martin, Esmond Bradley and Martin, Chrysee, Cargoes of the east: The ports, trade and culture of the Arabian Seas and western Indian Ocean (London: Elm Tree Books, 1978)Google Scholar.

69 Interview in Malayalam with Mr Ashraf (name changed to protect anonymity), January 2012, Dubai.

70 Haji Mastan was the iconic smuggler in the Indian popular imagination.

71 For a brief description of how dockworkers transferred goods in gunny bags and boxes in a workers’ chain, see Zaidi, S. Hussain, Dongri to Dubai: Six decades of the Mumbai mafia (New Delhi: Lotus Collection, 2012), pp. 317Google Scholar.

72 It is perhaps unnecessary to describe here what the political advantages accruing to smugglers were, since the lives and activities of men like Dawood Ibrahim, who operate out of different geographies, best exemplify them for us.

73 I have borrowed the idea of ‘accidental traders’ from Jeff Sahadeo's discussion of the Uzbeki and Azeri Kyrgyz migrating to Moscow and trading in its grey markets in the late twentieth century. For details, see Sahadeo, J., ‘The accidental traders: marginalisation and opportunity from the southern republics to late Soviet Moscow’, Central Asian Survey 30, no. 3–4 (2011), pp. 521540CrossRefGoogle Scholar.