Page 615 - PERSIAN 5 1905_1911
P. 615

POLITICAL RESIDENCY FOR 1011.               15
           restoration of order on the roads bv the use of our sowars, involving, as it
           would do, the loss of a source of blackmail which the various Khans along
           the road have come to regard as a permanent one,   was naturally viewed by
           the interested parties with undisguised, if passive disfavour.
               The Khan of Borasjun, Ghazanfar-cs-Sultaneh, who, in 1909 (vide
           Administration Report), made himself conspicuous by his discourteous treat­
           ment of a detachment of British troops en route for Shiraz, now took an
           active part in anti-foreign intrigues, and though he made no attempt to
           interfere with the first party of 2 squadrons, which went up the road, in
           November, he must be held in some degree responsible for the hostile attitude
           adopted by the tribes further up the road to the second party, which culmi­
           nated in the attack of December 24th. It is interesting to note here that,
           during this unrest, Haidar Khan of Hayat Daud kept aloof, as far as is
           known, from any sort of anti-British propaganda and in his conversations
           with Haji Rais-up-Tujjar of Mohammerah, who visited him in connection
            with the endeavour to effect the safe conduct of the Nizam-es-Sultaneh from
           the neighbourhood of Daliki to Mohammerah, he adopted a discreet and
            satisfactory attitude, saying that it was not worth his while to take sides
           one way or the other or to do anything to bring himself into conflict with
            the British authorities, on whose good faith he relied and whose good-will
            was a valuable asset which he was anxious to retain.
                The situation at Shiraz dominated the political horizon of Fars and
                                           indeed of South-Western Persia gene­
                   Diiturbancca at Shiraz.
                                           rally throughout the year, almost to the
            exclusion of other questions. The number of important personalities in­
            volved, and the interdependence of the forces at work in Shiraz and Tehran
            make it extremely difficult to give in a moderate compass an intelligible
            resume of the complicated intrigues of which the Province was a victim, and
            of the anarchy which resulted from their miscarriage.
                It seems best to commence by enumerating very briefly the principal
            personalities involved, and their political predilections.
                Nisam-cs-Svltazek had been appointed Governor-General of Fars in
            order to restore order on the roads, in the hope that by so doing he might
            render unnecessary the execution of our intention, adumbrated in our note
            of 1910, to take measures ourselves with that object. He was an able but
            unscrupulous man; a dose friend of the Shaikh of Mohammerah; in touch
            with the Wali of Pusht-i-Kuli; and with a large stake in Fars, as in Arabis-
            tan, in the shape of extensive and valuable estates. Whilst himself not
            definitely hostile to the Bakhtiaris (as were his friends the Shaikh and the
            Wali) his interest generally tended to run counter to theirs.
                With the Kawami family he was from the first 'persona ingrata largely,
            it is said, for family reasons, his forbears Laving occupied a subordinate, if
            not a menial, position under the ancestors of the present Kawam-ul-Mulk.
                But when at Bushire he repeatedly assured the Resident, as he had the
            Shaikh of Mohammerah a few days previously, that he was fully alive to the
            fact that his only chance of solving the problems of Fars was to'find a modus
            vivendi between the Kawam and the Sowlet and to render himself independ­
            ent of both. The latter’s action, however, in coming to meet him at Bushire,
            upset his calculations, and he found himself committed, before he parted
            company with Sowlet, to the acceptance for the time being of tht offers of
            co-operation adroitly thrust upon him by that Chief. He went a step further
            in this direction before arriving at Shiraz in appointing Kashgai nominees
            to the Governorships of Behbehan and Dashtistan, whereby he provoked the
            active resentment of the Bakhtiaris as well as of the Kawamis. He left
            Bushire, however, with every intention, it seems, of serving British interests
            to the best of his ability, and if his acts subsequently took an anti-British
            turn, it was due rather to the miscarriage of his carefully laid plans than to
            any deliberate intention in that direction.
                Sowlet-ed-DouUh, Ilkhani of the Kashgai, and an old enemy of the
             Kawami family, as will be seen from the Shiraz Administration Reports for
             previous yea^ commanded at the beginning of the year the support of the
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