Page 133 - The Persian Gulf Historical Summaries (1907-1953) Vol II
P. 133

118

                     to the general public. In 1934 the Kuwait Government engaged the services of   a
                     Syrian doctor and after the war they started to build a State hospital which was
                     completed and opened in 1949. In that year the Ruler appointed a British Chief
                     Medical Officer, and since then a number of British doctors together with a British
                     matron and nurses have been engaged. A highly efficient medical service now exists
                     and all treatment is free. In view of the development by the State of its own
                     medical service the Agency Dispensary was closed in 1949 and in 1951 the
                     appointment of Agency surgeon was abolished. The Agency staff arc now provided
                     with medical treatment free of charge by the Kuwait Government, but His Majesty’s
                     Government make an annual donation of Rs. 1,000 to the Kuwait Hospital poor
                     box.T”)
                         213. Until 1951 the functions of Quarantine Medical Officer at Kuwait were
                     performed by the Agency Surgeon under the supervision of the Chief Quarantine
                     Medical Officer at the Political Residency. In 1949 the Ruler agreed to meet the
                     cost of the quarantine administration and at the end of 1950 he agreed to take it
                     over. He accepted the principles which His Majesty’s Government had laid down
                     with regard to free service, compliance with International Sanitary Regulations
                     and supervisory control by His Majesty’s Government.^74) The transfer was
                     effected in March 1951 and in June of the same year the Chief Quarantine Medical
                     Officer reported that the Kuwait Government were maintaining an adequate and
                     satisfactory quarantine service and that they had taken material steps to improve
                     the organisation.(473)
                                            (j) Nationality and Passports
                         214.  In 1933 the Iraqi Government asked to be informed of the date on which
                     the Kuwaiti and Bahraini nationalities were constituted.(,7°) A reply was eventually
                     given to them, so far as Kuwait was concerned, in 1938, when the Iraqi Foreign
                     Minister had argued that Kuwait stood in relation to Iraq in the same position as
                     it had previously stood in relation to the Ottoman Empire, as follows: —
                             “ The Shaikhdom of Kuwait was for a considerable period in an anomalous
                         state of semi-dependence on the Ottoman Empire; His Majesty’s Government
                         have nevertheless been in treaty relations with the Shaikhs since 1841(477) and
                         Kuwait finally became completely independent of Turkey and Kuwaiti
                         nationality finally came into existence on the same date as Iraq and Iraqi
                         nationality.’^47*)
                     This date appears to have been purposely left vague but cannot have been later
                     than that of the ratification of the Treaty of Lausanne, viz., August 6, 1924. Legal
                     opinion was that the moment when Iraq began to have an independent existence
                     could not be placed earlier than 1922.C*®)
                         215.  In 1948 the Ruler issued a Nationality Law. His Majesty’s Government
                     suggested one amendment^4*0) which was accepted and incorporated in the law in
                     1952 (Appendix R).
                         216.  The Ruler has issued his own passports since 1936.C"') A request from
                     the Kuwait Government for the printing of passports in London in 1951 led to the
                     preparation by the Richmond Herald of a design for a Coat of Arms for the
                     Ruler(4”) which involved the standardisation of the Kuwait flag. The design was
                     approved by the Ruler but work on the Coat of Arms had not been completed by the
                     end of 1953 nor had the flag been finally standardised. There is no Kuwait passport
                     law but all passport and immigration matters arc dealt with by the Public Security
                     Department. In 1949 the Head of the Department issued a notification obliging
                     foreigners visiting or residing in Kuwait to register (Appendix S). Nationals of
                     the other Gulf Shaikhdoms, but not of Muscat, and of Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the
                        f47a) FO. to P.R. XS 10/91 K2/151 of February 12. 1951.
                        >4X4 P o to F.O. 14/26/50 of October 19. 1950 (XS 10/91 K2/250 of 1950).
                        f471) P R to F.O. Despatch 80 of June 12. 1951 (EA 1795/1 of 1951).
                        r474 Bagdad to F.O. Despatch 736 of November 23. 1933 (E 7589/7589/91 of 1933).


                        f47,l (E 2499/13/91 of 1938).
                        }4«o\ pn mPR EA 1601/1 of December 22, 1951.
                         J fo\0 F O PZ 6672/36 of September 25. 1936 (T 14551/3127/378 of 1936).
                        (<■■} Kuwait to F.O. 218/18/52 of May 27, 1952 (EA 1622/11 of 1952).

    li
   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138