Page 452 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
P. 452

II I
                           408                          UTTOOBEES.

                           Shaikh Mahomed bin Khalccfa, still continued, and every possibl
                           plan was being resorted to by the refugee chief to induce^th*5
                           Persian Government to espouse his cause. They, on their °
                           had apparently entertained in a favourable light the proposals that were
                           made to them, and showed, by the pomp and
                                                                           ceremony with which
                           they received their visitor, on the occasion of his coming to Bushire
                           in the early part of the year 1844, that there was at least
                                                                                       a desire, if
                           not an intention, to lend him assistance. The
                                                                               Proceedings of the
                           Persian authorities were studiously watched by the Resident, and their
                           every movement and expression represented by him to higher authority.
                           It was thought advisable to check, in the outset, this uncalled for offi­
                           ciousness on the part of Persia: instructions were  accordingly issued
                           by Her Majesty’s Government to Colonel Shell, begging him to acquaint
                           the Persian Ministers that unless the right of the Shah to take part
                          in the quarrels of rival claimants to the possession of Bahrein  were
                          beyond dispute, the interference of His Majesty would be viewed
                          with much jealousy by the British Government in India, and might
                          possibly lead to serious discussions with England. Such an announce­
                          ment as this, coming as it did from Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for
                          Foreign Affairs, tended, no doubt, to damp the ardour of the brotherly
                          feeling shown by Persia to Abdoolla bin Ahmed, and must likewise
                          have blasted, for the present at least, all hopes that existed in the mind
                          of the latter of obtaining assistance from that quarter.
                             From this period the ex-chief commenced a roving style of life,—
                          first repairing with his Buteels to the neighbourhood of Bahrein, then
                          suddenly quitting the island in search of plunder, and, after perpetrating
                          all manner of mischief, returning to his place of asylum on the Persian
                          Coast. By the Resident, these proceedings were beheld with much
                          dissatisfaction, and eventually led to the issue of a positive order,
                          prohibiting him from a continuance of hostilities against the trade and
                          possessions of Bahrein, so long as he chose to reside on the shores of
                          Persia. Fully, however, to comprehend the policy of the British Govern­
                          ment with regard to the continued quarrels of the rival chiefs, it is
                          necessary that we should watch the movements and doings of either
                          party, and also observe the line of conduct pursued by the British to
                          wards them. Let us therefore proceed to consider a brief outline o
                          all that occurred during the protracted struggle for the sovereignty of the

                          Bahrein island.
                            Shaikh Abdoolla had not been long at Nabend  ere     he set out on a
                          cruise with his Buteels in the direction of his lost possessions, an Pr
                          ceeded into the immediate vicinity of Bahrein. His unexpecte
                          in that quarter threw the pearl divers and others into a. state o ex r ^
                          alarm and confusion, and it was not until the ex-chief assure




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