Page 192 - The Persian Gulf Historical Summaries (1907-1953) Vol II
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        of 1939 met most of his requirements. He was given liberty of action in respect
        of taxes and tariffs provided British subjects and goods were given most-favoured­
        nation treatment, and it was agreed that the British Consular authorities would
        at his request apply to British subjects his laws and regulations imposing taxation
        and duties, and police and municipal regulations, but apart from this the extra­
        territorial jurisdiction conferred by the 1891 Treaty was only very slightly curtailed.
        The Sultan’s desire that all privileges granted to Great Britain by the 1 reaty
        should be reciprocal was met so far as was practicable. This Treaty was to
        remain in force for twelve years after which it was automatically to remain in
        force unless notice of termination was given by one of the parties. The Sultan
        gave such notice as soon as he was in a position to do so in February 1950, but
        as negotiations for a new Treaty were prolonged the old one was with the consent
        of the parties extended up to December 31, 1951. The new Treaty was signed
        on December 20, 1951, and came into force on January 1, 1952, and is to remain
        in force for fifteen years after which it will automatically continue in force unless
        notice of termination is given by one of the parties.(J0) In asking for the
        termination of the previous Treaty the Sultan was probably actuated by a desire
        to exclude India, in view of the changed conditions there, and to abolish the
        extra-territorial jurisdiction of the British Consular authorities which he regarded
        as an infringement of his sovereignty. India and Pakistan are not parties to the
        Treaty. They were consulted on the subject and preferred to make their own
        arrangements. The Sultan was persuaded to agree to the retention of a limited
        amount of extra-territorial jurisdiction but this is covered by an exchange of letters
         and no mention of it is made in the Treaty. In other respects the new Treaty differs
         little from its predecessor.
             18.  Sa’id while he has met with little success in extending his influence over
         the tribes of the interior has made considerable progress in the consolidation of his
         control over the coastal areas. In 1931 before his accession he visited Sohar on
         the Batinah coast in a State gunboat and deposed the Wali, his uncle Saiyid Hamad,
         who was showing too much independence. In 1928 Shaikh Ali of the Bani Bu Ali
         at Sur was asserting his independence of Muscat and styling himself Amir of
         Jaalan.f31) It is interesting to note that in September of that year Ali hoisted
         Ibn Saud’s flag and in 1929 he visited that monarch and subsequently handed to
         the Resident at Aden a letter addressed to the Political Resident in which he
         virtually demanded independent recognition. In October 1928 a Muscat gunboat
         escorted by one of His Majesty’s ships ineffectually bombarded a block-house at
         Sur and later in the year one of His Majesty's ships bombarded the same block­
         house without achieving any result. In 1932 a combined operation by the Royal
         Navy and the Royal Air Force compelled Ali to yield and a customs port was
         established under the Muscat flag in his part of the town. He continued, however,
        to adopt a defiant attitude, and it was not until 1938 that he visited Muscat and made
         his formal submission to the Sultan. In 1930 the Shaikh of Khassab in the
         Musandam peninsula refused to admit some naval survey parties and defied the
         Sultan’s authority. The place was bombarded by two of His Majesty’s ships in
         company with the State gunboat and the Shaikh surrendered. Since 1932 British
         forces have never been called upon to support the Sultan’s authority in any of the
         territory which he administers. The position in 1953 was as follows. The Shihuh
         in the Musandam peninsula were giving little trouble though it is doubtful whether
         the Sultan’s Wali at Khassab exercised full control over them. The whole of the
         coast of the Gulf of Oman from the Muscat-Sharjah boundary in the north to Rus
         al Hadd in the south is under the Sultan's effective control. The southern coast
         of Arabia from Ras al Hadd to the western boundary of Dhofar is very sparsely
         inhabited by the Janabah, and although the Sultan had no organised administration
         there he appeared to have acquired sufficient influence over the tribe to contemplate
         constructing a road through their territory to Dhofar. Over the latter province
         he had completely established his authority at any rate up to the northern base of
         the hills and according to his own account up to and including the Mughsin oasis,
         where he had established a post.
             19.  At the outbreak of war in 1939 the Sultan promised His Majesty’s
         Government all assistance in his power. Shortly afterwards he prohibited all
         trading with Germany, and he and his subjects contributed generously to war funds.
            (**) No. 11 V.T.C.
            (”) Para. 42 at p. 51. P.G. 13.
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