Page 300 - PERSIAN 2C 1890_1899_Neat
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6       ADMINISTRATION RETORT ON THE TERSIAN GULP POLITICAL

                         The Surs caused some trouble; tho Al-Kathir tribe, incensed at tbeal'
                     tion of lands they claimed, began raiding near Dizful, and a punitivo cx^"
                     dition became necessary. Bauds of lawless Surs however, by their depredati ***
                     caused tho desertion of many villages in that district.   1    0  Q8,
                         In order to recover taxes, tho payment of which had been resisted by th
                     Beni Truf tribe of the Howeizah district, a raid under Syod Naamah was directed
                     against them and a largo number of their cattle was seized and carried ofL
                     Tho tribe followed in order to recover the animals, and towards tho close of the
                     year under report n critical position had been brought about by tho highhanded
                     proceedings which the Governor-General had taken.
                         A most brutal attack, which might have bad tho gravest and even a fatal
                     result, was committed on British subjects in November by the soldiers stationed
                     at Ahvraz. These men maintained ostensibly for the preservation of peace and
                     order, have in fact on this and other occasions lent themselves to violence and
                      excess. On this occasion the representatives of Messrs. Lynch Brothers were
                      proceeding in a perfectly orderly manner to lodge a complaint with the local
                      Governor against the soldiery, whose highhanded and lawless proceedings in
                      prosecuting an utterly unjustifiable search had caused a serious fracas on board
                      the company’s steamer. The soldiers, some of whom were actually on guard
                      at the Governor’s House, resenting this lawful and most temperately conducted
                      action, rushed to their arms and most savagely assaulted the gentlemen, caus­
                      ing serious injuries. For this gross outrage no redress had been given up to
                      the close of the year under report, for though a show of it was made by the
                      arrest of some of those concerned in the fracas on the steamer,—a matter of
                      comparatively quite insignificant moment,—the actual perpetrators of the sub­
                      sequent brutal violence were allowed to escape.
                          A new company under the name of Shah-in-Shahi was established under
                      the auspices of the Muez-es-Sultaneh and certain Shushta merchants for tho
                      carrying trade on the Karun.
                          Difficulties appeared in the levy of duty on goods, owing to tlie conflicting
                      interests therein of the authorities at the mouth of the river, and of the Govern­
                      or-General whose sphere of control inland hardly extends in an effective form
                      to Mohammerah. Double demands were accordingly made, and the matter
                      was not arranged without an appeal to the Central Government.
                          In the summer an outbreak of cattle disease on the Turkish side of the
                      river spread to Mohammerali and the Karun; it continued with occasional
                      reappearance till the winter, but on the whole with much milder effect than in
                      Turkish territory and no serious loss occurred.
                                         7.—FARS AND PERSIAN COAST.
                          Fars continued under the control of Elis Boyal Highness Rukn-ud-Dowlah
                      whose reappointment for a second year to the Governor-Generalship of the pro­
                      vince was made public early after the Persian new year. His Royal Highness
                      appointed his son, Ain-ul-Mulk, Governor of ceitain of the nomad tribes, and
                      subsequently also of Laristan, and bis younger son, Nasrullnh Mirza, Governor
                      of Kazeran. Busliire and the Gulf ports were retained by His Excellency
                       Kowam-ul-Mulk, but towards the end of the year a very determined cabal "as
                       formed against his authority. The ostensible cause seized upon to bring
                       matter to an issue was an imprudent attempt to construe as an order lor
                       peremptory deportation, and to carry out with some indignity, instructions from
                       the capital suggesting the desirability of the temporary absence from the coun-
                       try of the titular head of the mercantile community, thcMalek-ut-Tujjar " ^
                       thereupon at once took' refuge in a neighbouring shrine known as the lwa
                       Zadeb. This aroused the greatest excitement and a very general and ugoio
                       popular demonstration was easily got up. Bazaars, shops, and °^e^.^e(j
                       closed, and business came completely to a standstill and the people J?CS1C,=
                       the Persian Telegraph Office day and night in large crowds, after ^
                       manner of the populace in Persia whose first resort in times of publ]Gov-
                       turbance or panic is to the telegraph. No haste was shown by the Cent1? ^
                       emmeDt to take measures to allay the excited popular feeling by the is.
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