Page 68 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
P. 68

50                         Records of Bahrain

                    400                         TJTTOOBEES.

                    necessary, as  the return to tlieir homes of their Guttur subsidiaries
                    being suddenly called for, in consequence of advantage having been
                    taken of their absence by the Monasir, an inland Bedouin Tribe, to
                    plunder their territory, they were deprived of the services of a large
                    proportion of their fighting men.
                      Immediately antecedent to the active hostilities which lost Bahrein to
                    the old chief, a Charrak boat (sailing under the neutral flag of Persia),
                    into which property just arrived from Bombay, consigned to two
                    Banyan merchants of Bahrein, had been transhipped, was plundered
                    in the harbour of Munama by the men of the Huwajir and Suloota
                    Tribes, his dependents. The latter, howcvcv, passing over to the side of
                    the conqueror, and becoming under his control, cast upon him the re­
                    sponsibility of their act, and the consequent obligation of recovering the
                    value of the plunder which had fallen to their share. It would have
                    been objectionable, and in a measure un just, immediately to have urged
                    payment upon Mahomed bin Khalccfa, while the contest appeared yet
                    doubtful, and while, from his fallen state, and consequent want of means,
                    as asserted by himself, and moreover from the intangibility of his
                    position to our naval force, similar redress could not be exacted from
                    his rival. It was not, therefore, till February in the following year,
                    when the authority of the former was firmly established, that he was call­
                    ed upon to restore the value of that portion of the properly plundered by
                    the Suloota, a demand which he acceded to without hesitation.
                      Abdoolla bin Ahmed commencing a system of annoyance upon the
                    trade of Bahrein (June 1S-13), the colleagues despatched several vessels
                    to blockade Dcmaum, and restrain his boats within the limits of its
                    harbour.
                      The recent contentions between the contending chieftains, and their
                    present doubtful position, afforded the legitimate Wahabcc ruler, Ameer
                    Fysul, who had now succeeded in re-establishing his authority in Nujd,
                    the opportunity and pretence for interference j indeed, his aid and
                    countenance being earnestly solicited by cither, he very soon exercised
                    an important influence in the affairs of the island, and its dependencies
                    on the opposite Coast of Guttur, with the almost certain prospect of
                    restoring the payment of the annual tribute, which had not been exacted
                    since the early days of the rule of his father, Toorkey bin Saood.
                      It would appear that Fysul had not forgotten nor forgiven his former
                    disputes and quarrels with the old chief, who had had generally the
                    advantage, and from the first was inclined to favour the cause of the
                    younger. Much lime was spent in negotiations with either, which
                    their presents and templing promises, and the yet unstable nature of his
                    newly recovered position, rendered it his interest to prolong, and also
                    prevented his immediately taking an active part.
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