Page 31 - PERSIAN 9 1931_1940
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                                   CHAPTER III.
              Summary of Events and Conditions in Fars during the year 1931.
            This period passed unusually quietly. The tribes, even if not all perhaps
        subdued in spirit, lacked leaders and also ammunition and the means of buying or
        otherwise obtaining it. There were no serious disturbances and the central govern­
        ment continued to increase its hold on the province. However, though the number
        of troops was decreased and though the post of Governor General was once again
        given to a civilian, the main administrative power outside the principal towns re­
        mained with the army, which had not been relegated to its more normal function
        of merely supporting civil authority.
          2. In February the Amir Lashkar, Habibullah Shaibani, left for Tehran, being
        relieved as Governor General by Muzaffar A’lam who also continued his previous
        work as Governor of Bushire and the Gulf Ports. Muzaffar A’lam held the two
        positions for five months and earned respect by his hard work. Regarding the
        reasons given for his departure there were a number of rumours, of which the most
        likely would seem to have been concerning certain disputes with the military.
            Farajullah Khan Bahrami, who had been Governor General at Isfahan for a
        year, was transferred to Fars in the same capacity in August. He is also a man of
        industry but the very great part of his work is connected with strictly local matters
        such as municipal administration while the control of outlying districts and of the
        tribes, has, as has been already stated, remained largely with the military. After
         two years of an entirely military regime, the resumption of civil power cannot in
         this country be other than gradual. Farajullah Khan however holds what is
        still an important position and he is understood to have the ear of the Shah, having
         previously worked for some time in close touch with His Majesty.
            3.  Amir Lashkar Habibullah Khan during the previous year had directed con­
        siderable operations in difficult country against the Mamassani and the Boir Ahmedi
         tribes ; he had not been altogether successful and he ma'dc mistakes, but he had
         increased the security of the province and the prestige of his command. Ten
         months after leaving Shiraz he was, presumably owing to blunders made and jea­
         lousies aroused here, deprived of all military rank and imprisoned.
            The command of the mixed Fars brigade passed to Sarhang Ibrahim Khali
        ^andieh, a young officer appointed from Tehran. The brigade was much reduced
        in numbers during the year for, as no serious operations were undertaken here, two
        regiments were moved elsewhere before the summer.
            A small force was sent from Shiraz in the autumn to Dashti, now outside the
        province of Fars, to assist in the disarming of that neighbourhood,
            4.  From the tribes many of the leaders were called to Tehran where they will
        probably have to stay for long, against their wills and often in actual want, under
         the eye of their royal master. Registration, a necessary preliminary to conscription,
         was not started nor were further steps taken about enforcing dress regulations out­
        side the towns. Disarming was carried out by a number of commissions without
        great trouble but with questionable success. Military officers were placed in charge
        of all the leading groups. Threats to stop all migration were not carried out.
            The connection with the Qashqais of the family of Ismail Khan, Soulat-ud-
        Doulah, was very much weakened. He himslf was on friendly terms with Amir
        Lashkar Shaibani and early in the year assisted in the collection of arms from his
         tribe but in April he was ordered to Tehran and later on practically all his family
         and also many of the kalantars of the Qashqais had to follow him there. His son
        was relieved of the post of Il-Khani and a military officer, Sarhang Shakir Khan
        Tabatabai, was appointed in his place but only joined the tribes at the end of the
        year.
            The Boir Ahmedi and Mamassani districts were occupied by military posts and
        these tribes were increasingly divided up into small sections. Sartip Khan went
        to Tehran, and Mir Ghulam, the last of the important insurgent chiefs of the Boir
        Ahmedi was killed in the early summer during a private quanel. Others of the
        rebels of the previous year were caught and executed at Shiraz and Behbehan.
        These tribes are particularly intractable and can no doubt produce other leaders and
         still possess arms but Sarhang Jehanbani, who was mainly responsible for their area,
        Jiad no serious risings to quell.
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