Page 205 - Historical Summaries (Persian Gulf - Vol II) 1907-1953
P. 205

of a signal station on the island. In 1951 when i       lan                                       (,0 When the origin;)} agreement was signed tt^was decKied      ^ni ^
                                                           wished to erect a radio beacon on the island the  Political r??!1
                                                           that the Quoin Islands should be regarded as Muscat territory0111                            company to onl.r Into.                                   any obligations which
                                                           approval obtained.^6) This recommendation was accepted anHVnd l,le Sultan?                    by an exchange of letters to <         Drafts of the documents were prepared
                                                           accordingly.                                          1 and aPProval obtai S                  might devolve upon him as a li ^ ml His reactions are reported to have
                                                                                                                                       ned
                                                                                                                                                        and presented to the Sultan in      t Qn account 0f what he regarded as
                                                               57. The Kuria Muria Islands, which are known locally as                                  been “startingly postil           The wj10ic matter was discussed with him in
                                                           Ghalfan, off the southern coast of Arabia were ceded to Oucen v.w • ^air Bin
                                                           Sultan Sa’id I.(8“) They are nominally part of the Aden Colonv hu?*1* ln 1854 by
                                                           administratively by the Political Resident.(h7) There are about fifty are dealt with
                                                           on Hallaniyah and the other islands are uninhabited. Hallaniyah• ers?ns living                                                                               *p:s
                                                           time to time by one of Her Majesty’s ships with or without a Politic 7sAled fr  om                                    ss1aisss
                                                           board. On such occasions a few provisions are usually presented to th& • i ■  cer on                                                     to notification3being ZZ him
                                                           who are extremely poor but otherwise nothing is done for their welf f 111 ^ itants
                                                           they described themselves as Sultanate subjects and they probably T ' ° 1950                 as^ronosed but said he would merely file'It and not acknowledge it. It is interesting
                                                                                                                                                        to note that later in the year one of the companies competing for the Gwadur 01
                                                           Murbat on the mainland from which place they obtain their supplies^ Th^ /rom
                                                                                                                                                        concession gave a written statement to him to the effect that any agreement between
                                                           are now of no commercial or strategic value and in 1949 the Political R                      them and him would be contingent upon the approval of His Majesty s Government
                                                           suggested that they might be offered to the Sultan as an inducement to oart* •«!             and that he suggested that the other company which was competing should be
                                                           Gwadur. The suggestion was not accepted as it was thought that there 1 'h                    instructed to do the same.f3) An associate of Petroleum Concessions Limited                   v.
                                                           be an advantage in retaining them for use as a quid pro quo on «nmp TIu 11
                                                           occasion^88)                                                  7       0me other              called Petroleum Development (Oman and Dhofar) Limited was formed to operate
                                                                                                                                                        both the concession for Muscat and Oman and that for Dhofar which was obtained
                                                                                                                                                        at the same time and in September 1938 His Majesty’s Government entered into
                                                                                                                                                        two Political Agreements!94) with this company, one a General Agreement, of
                                                                                              VIII.—Oil
                                                                                                                                                        which the Sultan had agreed to take cognisance in an exchange of letters, and the
                                                                                                                                                        other a Pre-emption Agreement which was not to be shown to the Sultan. The
                                                                                        (a) Muscat and Oman
                                                                                                                                                        exchange of letters with the Sultan took place in November 1938 and he accepted
                                                               58. The oil concession granted to the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in 19250                 the General Political Agreement and its implications so far as he was concerned
                                                           appears to have been abandoned owing to the disappointing results of geological              subject to one small amendment being made in its terms.!95) The agreement was
                                                           surveys.                                                                                     amended accordingly and the Political Resident was instructed to inform the
                                                                                                                                                        Sultan that His Majesty’s Government had no objection to the concession granted
                                                               59. At the end of 1935 the Sultan asked the Political Agent to find a British            by him.(9B)
                                                           company to prospect for oil in his territories. In the following year he was told
                                                           that a company had been found and would send a representative to visit him.                      61. In March 1951 after the abandonment of the Dhofar concession
                                                           Nothing came of this for the time being and in January 1937 he apparently on his             (paragraph 64 below) the company operating the Muscat and Oman concession
                                                           own initiative sent some samples of oil seepages in Muscat to the Standard Oil               changed its name to Petroleum Development (Oman) Ltd. In 1953 it appointed a
                                                                                                                                                        local representative to reside in Muscat.
                                                           Company of California. Some correspondence between him and the company
                                                           followed and at the beginning of June the Political Resident was instructed to press             62. Early surveys showed that there was little hope of finding oil in territory
                                                           the Sultan to submit any communication he wished to make to the c°mPaJjf!                    under the Sultan’s full control, but from aerial surveys there appeared to be a good
                                                           through official channels and to remind him of his obligations not to grant a                prospect of finding it in the foothills to the west and south-west of the main Ha jar
                                                           concession without consulting and without the approval of His Majl T;                        range. The company’s efforts to obtain access to this area from the north have
                                                           Government.(,J0) No action was taken on this as by the time the ms. .                        already been described (paragraph 41 above). When these failed they began to
                                                           reached the Political Agent a representative of Petroleum Concessions un                     devhedefnrei po?-slblllty ?f approaching it from the south. In 1949 a scheme was
                                                                                                                                                        devised for landing on the southern coast of Arabia opposite Masirah Island with
                                                           arrived in Muscat and started negotiations with the Sultan. These we ver$ aj)                been^t °f 2°° aJ\d Prenetrating the interior via the Huqf Wadi. This has since
                                                           completed and an agreement was signed on June 24.f1) The agreemen an(j                                         ^uqf S^herme though its scope was eventually limited to
                                                           the territory within the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman, excep rts 0f the                     area un                                                                      an
                                                           Gwadur, but under Article 12 the company recognises that certain P his good
                                                           territory are not safe for its operations and the Sultan undertakes      t0 enter           sSisisSiSraS
                                                           offices with a view to making it possible for representatives of the c agreement
                                                           such parts to inform the company as soon as they became sate.           c0nipany
                                                           is for 75 years but it included an option of five years within w    ^ sultan
                                                           were at liberty to terminate it. The company undertook              period. 011
                                                           Rs. 100.000 on signature and Rs. 5,000 a month during the P a furthers11^
                                                           declaring their intention of taking up the concession they were P g^ QQO a ye                                                                                                             :
                                                           of Rs. 100,000 plus Rs. 84,000 a year for the first five years and K ^ of rs.3^
                                                           for subsequent years unless the royalty payable to the Sultan t ^ eXten
                                                           per ton of oil exceeded these amounts. In 1942 the option P_iaration in wr                                                                                                               , ;-
                                                           for two years and on May 8, 1944, the company made a
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      1
                                                           taking up the concession.
                                                               (“) P.R. toF.O. 1401/22 of April 18. 1951 (EA 1402/11 of 1951).                                                               ® 8Mif, 9W,
                                                                                                                                                          I lull! *s s
                                                               ("7j C.o/to F.O. 78865/50 of August 29. 1950 (EAf 1019/9 of 195°).
                                                              M F.O. to P.R. Despatch 43 (E 6677/1053/91 of June 3. 194;;.                                                                                 of 1939).
                                                              («•) Para. 74 at p. 58. P.G. 13.   , 1937 (E 3343/12/91 of 1937).
                                                              (»0) I.O. toF.O. P.Z. 3918/37 of June 21                                                       46639
                                                              (•*) No. 1 V.O.A.C.
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