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48                         Records of Bahrain

                  390                          UTTOOHEKS.

                     The quarrels and dissensions among the members of the Uttoobcc
                  Chief’s family were by no means smothered by the sense of the
                  impending danger. Finding that the heads of the tribe would not lake
                  part with him’in an attack upon his sons and nephews, from the dread
                  of encountering the effects of their deep and uncontrolled resentment,
                  when, as before, they should have adjusted their misunderstanding by
                  apparent submission, Shaikh Abdoolla bin Ahmed had recourse to the
                  plan of entertaining a number of men belonging to the independent
                  Bedouin Tribes on the main, for the purpose of overawing his disobe­
                  dient kinsmen.
                     So great was the disgust created in the minds of the inhabitants of
                  Bahrein by his weak and vacillating conduct, and the heavy exactions
                  which, encouraged by the promised support of Korshid Pacha, he was*
                  beginning to levy, that the Boo Gowarah, a tribe numbering about 2,000
                  men, residing principally at Fowarah, applied for permission to quit,
                  with a view to placing themselves under the protection of the British
                  Government; and the most influential inhabitants only wanted a leader,
                  to unite together and remove him from the chief authority.
                     No sooner had Esai bin Tarif and the greater portion of his depend­
                  ents settled on the island of Kenn, on their peaceful removal from
                  Aboothabcc, than their desire to retaliate for the losses they had
                  sustained at the hands of the Chief of Bahrein returned, and Shaikh
                  Esai more than once expressed his wish to be permitted to cruise against
                  the trade of that island, and also to seize from the Shaikh of Dobayc a
                  Butccl formerly belonging to himself, but confiscated, subsequent to his
                  secession, by Shaikh Abdoolla bin Ahmed, and presented by that chief
                  to the Debaye Chief (Muktoom bin Butyc). Although by the evacuation
                  of Nujd by Korshid Pacha and the Egyptian army one great obstacle
                  to the renewal of hostilities against Bahrein had been removed, yet the
                  restrictive war limit having been once established, its infringement
                  could on no account be permitted; more especially as it had been fully
                  explained to Shaikh Esai, when in Muskat, that so long as he remained
                  on ICcnn, whose peculiar position without the boundary was pointed
                  out to him, he must give up all idea of carrying on aggressive war
                  against any part of the Arabian Coast. A similar reply was again given
                  in May 1841, on the Resident’s visiting the island of Kenn.
                    The project of Mahomed bin Khalccfa, of establishing himself at
                  Kateef and Lahsa, the prosecution of which  was    favoured by the
                  disaffection produced by the highly oppressive conduct of the Agent of
                  Korshid Pacha, proved to be decidedly in opposition to the views of
                  Shaikh Abdoolla bin Ahmed, the superior chief; and great risk was in­
                  curred of the two coming to open collision., and thus hastening a result
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