Page 540 - PERSIAN 9 1941_1947
P. 540

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                          VI.— TRIBAL SITUATION

                     Throughout the year, the tribes of this area.
              were remarkably quiet. This fortunate  state of affairs
              may be attributed to the presence of the Allied
              occupation troops, and to the employment 'they afforded
              the local inhabitants. It is difficult to predict to
              what degree security will be affected when these
              restraining and palliative influences are removed.

                     The year was only barely uneventful however, for
              on January 10th this year, Shaikh Abdullah, the fourth
              and slightly demented son of the late Shaikh Khazal Khan
              (formerly Shaikh of Mohommerah) ilegally entered Khorram-
              shahr from Iraq with a following of armed retainers, and
              established himself in one of his father's old palaces
              at Failiyeh, after evicting the four gendarmes who were
              stationed there. However, on receiving no rally from the
              local tribes, and finding the Persian force, which the
              General Officer Commanding, Khuzistan Army Division, had
              sent against him with commendable promptitude, to be too
              strong for him, Abdullah withdrew the same night. His
              precipitate retreat was probably also caused by receipt
              of the news that Iraqi troops were taking up positions
              along the frontier to effect his arrest should he try to
              re-enter Iraq. Abdullah therefore sought sanctuary in
              Kuwait.
                     The attack was not altogether a surprise, for
              reports were received in December that Abdullah was
              agitating among the Iraq tribes on the border for action
              which would effect the restoration of the Khazal Family's
              fortunes in Khuzistan. It was considered however that
              Abdullah had no real following, and that his was only a
             hare-brained scheme which would, at most, prove only of
             nuisance value if it was carried out. Nevertheless, all
             precautions were taken against such an eventuality.






                                            His Majesty's Consul,
                                                Khorramshahr.
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