Julian Fortay Walker was born in
London, United Kingdom on 7 May 1929 to British
urologist and philosopher
Kenneth Macfarlane Walker and Eileen Marjorie Wilson. He joined the
British armed forces in August 1947 and served till September 1949.
Career In September 1952, he was appointed as a member of the British
foreign service. A month later, he began attending an
Arabic course at the
School of Oriental and African Studies,
University of London and as per some sources, he also attended the
Middle East Centre for Arab Studies in
Shemlan,
Lebanon. He was transferred to
Dubai in December 1953, which was then part of the
Trucial States during the reign of
Sheikh Saeed bin Hasher al-Maktoum. He was later appointed as a third secretary at the British embassy in
Bahrain in November 1955, and later regarded as second secretary in April 1956. He was transferred to the
Foreign Office in June 1957. In July 1960, he was posted as the second secretary at the British Embassy in
Oslo,
Norway and was later regraded as first secretary in July 1961. In October 1963, he was transferred as the first secretary to the
Foreign Office.Walker's senior, Gordon started the arbitration work by touring the boundary between the two sheikhdoms of
Umm al-Quwain and
Ras al-Khaimah. He began his work in April 1954 and was so disillusioned by his first day's experience in the field, that he decided that it would not be possible for him to carry out the work necessary for boundary arbitration and abandoned it in preference for his normal office work. In his place, he delegated the boundary work to his assistant in the Political Agency, Julian Walker Walker travelled across the territories of the
emirates and
sheikhdoms in a government-owned
Land Rover vehicle where he used to engage with tribesmen and then consult with
Sheikh Zayed and
Sheikh Shakbut while drawing up the borders. His interest in cartography and
boundary disputes earned him the nickname
Boundary Walker by his colleagues.
Mapping and survey According to the report Walker submitted in March 1955 on Trucial States frontier settlement, the following principles to establish ownership of a territory were taken as the basis for internal boundary settlement, listed in approximate order of importance: • Control of several years' standing in an area, and tribal recognition of that control. • The collection of
zakat (on
crops). • The
allegiance of tribesmen settled in the area. • Historical evidence: divided into 5 subjects as follows: agreements, zakat, settlement of disputes, past occupation and development and use of territory • Ownership of property In his 1954 survey, Walker found out that the relationship between tribes and boundaries is crucial and political boundaries are defined by tribal loyalties to specific
sheikhs, the very reason internal boundaries shown on the
Trucial States map being based on tribal loyalties. Those loyalties are conditional and subject to change. Boundaries between the
Trucial States and its neighbors, and boundaries between individual
Trucial States, periodically shifted during the 19th and 20th centuries due to the boundaries being based on the
dirah of the tribes.
Dirah in
Eastern Arabia were flexibly defined areas, changing in size according to tribal strength. and had completed the mapping of the emirates of
Abu Dhabi,
Dubai,
Ajman and
Fujairah by the 1950s and 1960s before he was transferred back to
London and then to
Oslo,
Norway. This announcement came as a surprise for the Gulf rulers, especially of
Trucial States,
Bahrain and
Qatar. His policy was carried forward by his successor,
Edward Heath. In January 1971, Walker was reposted in the
Trucial States, this time as
London's last political agent to oversee the Britain's smooth withdrawal and to take part in an ongoing effort to bring the sheikhs and emirs to the negotiating table to discuss the future of the region once the Britain leaves. In an interview given to a researcher in
Durham,
England on 19 July 1991, After the declaration of the independence of the
United Arab Emirates on 2 December 1971, Walker was appointed as the first Consul-General of the
United Kingdom to the
United Arab Emirates in
Dubai, a position he held till 1972. Afterwards, he went to
West Berlin where he was posted as a political adviser for the British Military Government between 1973 and 1976. He then went to
Shemlan,
Lebanon where served as the last director of the
Middle East Centre for Arab Studies (MECAS) from 1977 to 1978, when the institution was closed down due to the ensuing
Lebanese civil war. He was then appointed as the British ambassador to
North Yemen in 1979 where he served till 1984, and then as the British envoy to Qatar from 1984 to 1987. Following the end of the
1991 Gulf war, he worked with a
United Nations-led committee on resolving the
Iraq-Kuwait border issues. == Retirement and later life ==