Page 374 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
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330                            JOASMEE5.

                    The defenceless state into which   many of the places in the neigh­
                  bourhood of Bushiro had been thrown, by the ravages of the plague,
                  tended to encourage a return to habits of plunder and piracy, and was
                  taken advantage of by some Joasmees, who, on their return from
                  Bussora, finding that the towns of Bunder Dillum and Bunder Reig
                  had been deserted, plundered them, as likewise a boat returning from
                  Congoon to Bushire.
                    When called upon to afford satisfaction for the outrages committed
                                         by the dependents of Shaikh Rashid bin Humeed
                       a. d. 1832.
                                         of Ejman, Shaikh Sultan bin Suggur distinctly
                  stated, (as he had before done by letter, which referred also to the
                 Shaikh of Amulgavine,) that he no longer possessed any authority   over
                 him, nor could either control or be answerable for his proceedings, any
                 participation in which he most positively disavowed. Upon this ex­
                 plicit avowal, therefore, of the virtual independence of Shaikh Rashid,
                 the British authority turned for redress to that chief himself, and a
                 formal demand, backed by the presence of two vessels of  war, was
                 accordingly made upon him, for the restoration of such vessels and
                 property, belonging to Muskat, as had been captured and plundered
                 by his subjects, and twenty-four hours were allowed him to consider the
                 same, or abide by the consequences.
                   The Shaikh at first attempted evasions upon various grounds :—his
                 counter claims upon the people of Bussora, Grane, Amulgavine,
                 Aboothabee, and Sohar; the discontinuance of late of the payment of the
                 annual allowance, and the non-fulfilment of the promise of a Buggalow
                 made to him by the Imautn ; his being now a subject of the Wahabee
                 Chief, and the necessity, therefore, for a reference to that personage ; the
                 people of Muskat having taken possession of an Ejman Buteel with
                 her cargo, worth 1,500 dollars, &c. ; but was informed, in reply, that
                 being in his own person a member of the General Treaty, he must be
                 held responsible for the acts of his subjects. His assertion, however,
                 regarding the seizure of his Buteel, having been confirmed (with the

                 assistance declined when he again offered it to His Highness, for the reduction of his revolted
                 dependent Ilumood bin Azan, and in consequence threw himself into the opposite scale.
                 Accordingly, when Rashid bin Humeed, who, subsidised by Ilis Highness, had joined his
                 enemies, declaring in their favour, returned to his territory, he learnt that Ejman had
                been plundered, and several of his people killed and carried away by a party of the Beniyas dur­
                ing his absence. Immediate retaliation and hostilities between these parties were the result,
                and because the Sohar people refused to admit the Ejman boats into their ports, while those of
                Aboothabee were permitted to trade and export provisions as formerly, Rashid bin Ilumeed
                commenced aggressions against them, and now, in opposition to all that had of late occurred,
                setting up the plea that they were subjects of Ilis Highness the Imaum, procce e wit out
                further notice to an attack upon the trade of Muskat.







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