Page 114 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
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I
                        72              BRITISH POLICY IN THE PERSIAN GULF,

                        demand redress at the hands of the third
                        maintenance of the conditions of the truce inviolate; &and these cond^
                        tions are, with the perfect knowledge of all, only held to apply to
                        aggressions oil the sea by one boat upon another, and not to those cases
                        where boats, drawing up on shore in the creeks and backwaters ^
                                                                                             are
                        attacked and robbed by the Bedouins. The interference of the Resid   cnl
                        towards redress in such cannot be claimed. Circumstances" mav
                        possibly arise, calling for the temporary suspension of the operation
                        of the restrictive line, and this contingency forms the only objection to
                        imposing any restraint of this nature on the Arabs with whom we have
                        treaties, arising out of the impossibility of exerting a similar control
                        over other States not so bound, the settlement of whose disputes with the
                        former would be involved in intricacy and difficulty.
 i
                          In cases where lawless and unprovoked aggressions have been made
                        at sea by such a power, not authorised by open war, and the      remon-
                        strances and mediatory interposition of the British authority have failed
                        to procure redress for the injured and aggravated chief, justice and good
                        policy would demand that the latter should be permitted to have
                        recourse to his own means to exact it; and further, that the British
                        authorities, having exerted their influence without effect to bring his
                        opponent to a proper sense of his injustice, should restrain any of the
                        other chiefs, subscribers to the truce, from interfering in any way, but
                        certainly from affording his assistance to that opponent.
                          Such a precedent has not up to the present date occurred, and
                        permission* has, on the other hand, ever been denied to any chief,

                          * Two examples may here be cited. In the middle of the year 1835, when the Shaikh of
                        Amylgavine expressed his wish to assist the people of Charak, it was assumed as a point with him,
                        that whatever claims of superiority he might formerly have possessed over the Charak people,
                        now they had located themselves in Persia they had become Persian- subjects, aud  conse-
                        quently he could not, situated as he was, have any right to interfere actively in their quarrels.
                        And again, in October 1843, when three of the Shaikhs of the Coast of Oman (Sultan bin Sug-
                        gur, Suggur bin Sultan, and Muktoom bin Butye) applied for permission to afford aid to the
                        ex-Chief Abdoolla bin Ahmed of Bahrein, in regaining his lost authority over that island, it was
                        well known at the time that overtures had been made by the latter’s opponents, Mahomed
                       bin Khaleefa and his colleagues, to the Shaikhs of Aboothabee (Khaleefa bin Shakboot) and
                       Amulgavine (Abdoolia bin Rashid), and that these chiefs were prepared to join them. A posi­
                       tive refusal was therefore imperatively called for, and was made in the following terras to the
                       ex-chief through w'hom the application had been made :—“ It is not hidden from )ou that
                       Mahomed bin Khaleefa, Esai bin Tarif, and their colleagues, being heads of tribes inhabiting
                       Bahrein, the British Government could not interfere in their quarrel with you ; but Sultan
                       bin Suggur and the other chiefs mentioned have no connection or interest in the war, an you
                       are aware  that if they become your active allies, Mahomed bin Khaleefa and Esai in ari
                       would undoubtedly immediately crave the assistance   of Khaleefa bin Shakboot and other
                                                                                           all the
                       chiefs. The result would be confusion throughout the Gulf, and enmity between
                       tribes ; moreover, no benefit would accrue to yourself.         to the inter-
                         “ For these reasons, it is not possible that I should grant my concuncncc







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