Page 282 - Records of Bahrain (3) (i)_Neat
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272                        Records oj Bahrain


                                     The income and expenditure arc made closely to correspond.
                                     In bad years, retrenchments can undoubtedly be mado by the cutting down
                                 of allowances and presents, and the fact that tho Sheikh has received some two
                                 lakhs of Rupees in advances from the Customs-farmers bears no more heavily
                                 on him while his power to periodically sell the farm is uncontrolled than docs the
                                 British National Debt on ourselves.
                                     The total of the Chief's private debts is insignificant—some Rs. *5,000.
                                 The state of affairs here, therefore, differs very greatly from that of Maskat.'
                                     12.  With regard to the origin of the Customs reformation proposal, I only
                                 write from memory, as the records of this office commence from 1900, but if I
                                 am not mistaken, the proposal was made on the Chief's affirming, in his charact­
                                 eristic insincere manner, that he could not afford some trifling expenditure—it
                                 was probably the enhancement of Sheikh Ali bin Ahmed's allowance. The
                                 Maskat Customs question at that time was occupying much of Colonel Meade's
                                 attention, and the real position at Bahrein not being properly known, it wag
                                 natural for him to suggest that the same reform should be introduced into
                                 Bahrein as into Maskat.
                                     13.  I am most anxious that Government should not t hi lk that I havo
                                 failed to realize the advantages that will accrue to the Chief of Bahrein by the
                                 introduction of the new system, and you aro aware, I think that I have conti­
                                 nuously done my best to make Sheikh Isa see the matter in the same light,
                                 At the same time with my increasing knowledge of affairs here l have lately
                                 been coming round to the opinion that there arc two other reforms of immeasu*
                                 rcably greater importance, which should be fust introduced, and that while the
                                 Customs question is by no means to be forgotten it may conveniently for a little
                                 time be allowed to subside into the back ground.
                                     14.  The two abuses, which I wish to sec reformed, arc (1) the cruelties
                                 inflicted upon the Sheikh's own subjects by the al-Khalifa family, the Magisterial
                                 and Revenue Officials and the Kazis, and (iY) the objectionable welcome which Is
                                 extended every summer to hordes of Bedouin who, coming from Hasa as well as
                                 from Katar, arc fed at the Sheikh's expense and in addition are permitted to
                                 cpmmit a variety of crimes and to harass the townspeople of Manama without
                                 the slightest check.
                                     15.  The protection from foreign States which the Chief receives from us is
                                 neither rqorp nor less, it seems to me, than that which the Government qf India
                                 extend tp the, Native States in" India. In the latter .all persons have the
                                 privilege of appealing to the local Political Officer against acts of oppression,
                                 and 1 submit that the same right should exist here. My predecessor, regulated
                                 his conduct more on the pattern of a consular officer in Persia than of an Indian
                                 Political Officer, and I have consequently hitherto refused to entertain the com­
                                 plaints of Bahrein subjects, though such arc constantly being presented to me.
                                    16.  The most common forms of oppression arc the selling, over and over
                                 again, the same plots of ground by different servants of the Chief in the latter’s
                                 name, tfie arbitrary resumption of dale-gardens on the deaths of the original
                                 cultivators, the flagrant and almost continual acts of injustice committed by the
                                 Kazis in succession eases, and the exercise of " Sukhra " which the Chief has
                                 himself formally repudiated in a letter to me.
                                     1 7. Whilst these acts of tyranny arc constantly recurring it seems incongruous
                                 that we should be endeavouring to add a lakh and a half annually to the Sheikh's
                                 income without any conditions .as to the expenditure of. the money, and I feel
                                 that a little unfettered supervision and an occasional investigation intp alleged
                                 irregularities will have .such an effect on .-the Chief's revenue tha(, taken into
                                 consideration with the present reduction of his income for the next 2J years of
                                 a lakh per annum—the advance monpy which the Customs Farmers arc'no longer
                                 paying for renewals of the farm—ho will soon find himself against his will
                                 compelled to turn to Government for pecuniary assistance -a step which he has
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