Page 493 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
P. 493

449
                                         WAHABEES.
             under surveillance to Riaz. A movement by Khalid into the districts,
             attended by the Egyptian cavalry, for the purpose of confirming his
             authority, and receiving the allegiance of the various unsettled tribes,
             indicated an intention on the part of his allies to evacuate Nujd, and
             their desire, by putting him forward in a more  prominent position of
             outward authority than he had hitherto enjoyed, to check the growing
             disaffections previous to his being left at the head of affairs.
               Just as the blockade of Katecf, Sohat, and Ajeer, held by the Egyp­
             tian troops, began seriously to be contemplated by the British Govern­
             ment, intelligence was received (May 1840) that Lahsa had been
             evacuated, and that the main body of the Egyptian troops had actually
             left Nujd; which being corroborated by the declaration shortly before
             made by Mahomed Ali Pacha, the Egyptian ruler, to Her Majesty’s
             Consul General at Cairo, and subsequently in a measure confirmed by
             the despatch of a vessel to those ports, which were now found to be in
             the hands of Arabs, adherents of Ameer Khalid, although the Egyptian
             Agent still continued to exercise the actual authority and control, rendered
             the adoption of this measure unnecessary. The grossly oppressive and
             extortionate conduct of the Pacha and his Agent further afforded a
             plausible reason for the belief that the Egyptians no longer contem­
             plated the permanent occupation of Central Arabia.
               As a sacrifice to the memory of his deputy, Mahomed Effendi, who
             was shot while Governor of Lahsa, Korshid Pacha’s last act, previous
             to his departure, was to put to death Burgeish, the Chief of the Ali
             Humccd. Tt was evidently intended, that on Nujd being made over to
             the charge of Ameer Khalid, that chief should nevertheless continue to
             act under the authority of the Egyptian Agent whom it was intended
             to establish at Medina, a post whence he could exercise a general super­
             intendence over the country of the Hujeeb Arabs and Central Arabia ;
             but the moral influence of the usurper among the various tribes, which
             under the most favourable circumstances had ever been very trifling,
             was now entirely lost: despised, disliked, and deprived of the support
             of his patrons, he had very shortly his hands fully occupied with the
             intrigues which were set on foot to dispossess him of his illegal power.
               At the period of the evacuation of Lahsa and Ajeer, one Mooshrif
             arrived at Bahrein, despatched probably by the inhabitants of those
             places, to invite Shaikh Mahomed bin Khaleefa (the grandson of Soley-
             man, the brother of Abdoolla bin Ahmed) to come over and claim those
             districts, when they would throw off their allegiance to Ameer Khalid.
               The spirit of disaffection now developing itself in Central Arabia
                                                                               was
                                   in no slight degree promoted and encouraged by
                  A. D. 1841.
                                   the current report of Ameer Fysul having effect­
             ed his liberation from Cairo, and commenced his journey to Medina








 I
   488   489   490   491   492   493   494   495   496   497   498