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2                PERSIAN GULF ADMINISTRATION REPORT
                        No improvement in the general state of the country hits taken place
                                                    during the year under review; on the
                           General iltufltlon in Portia.
                                                    contrary the weakness of the Central
                    Government in the South, which the events of 1911 had accentuated, has be,
                    come ohronio, and the appointments of new Governors-General to the variou8
                   provinces have not availed to stem the tide of disorder.
                        T7ith the enforced departure of Mr. Shuster from Tehran, the general
                   Ecoptioiam prevailing amongst intelligent Persians of the possibility of any
                   improvement in the moral and material condition of the country without
                   elective foreign intervention, has given place to a settled conviction of the
                   futility of any efforts made by the Central Government to restore order.
                   Bursian troops have remained in considerable numbers in Northern Persia, and
                   on our part, it has not yet been found practicable to effect any reduction in the
                   numbers of British troops employed as Consular guards in the South, though
                   His Majesty’s Government are anxious to withdraw them as soon as possible.
                       No loans were raised by the Persian Government during the year; His
                   Majesty’s Government, however, accorded advances, totalling £50,000 to be
                   devoted to the administrative necessities of Pars: local authorities all over the
                   country declared their inability to carry on the administration, or even- collect
                   revenue without the assistance of large subventions from the Central Govern­
                   ment, whoze failure to meet such demand^ was urged in extenuation of the
                   general incapacity of local authorities to maintain law and order. The fear is
                   mat the demoralization of the country generally and the decay of the whole
                   organization of Government have progressed too far to be cured by the most
                   liberal subventions : and that, failing some unforeceen development, the most
                   that can he hoped from the grant of financial assistance is that the inevitable
                   day of reckoning will be postponed for a few years longer, the account becom­
                   ing meanwhile steadily more formidable, and less within the power of the
                   country to liquidate. Pinancial assistance, and the measure of control over
                   local administration involved thereby, once withdrawn, there must always be
                   the danger that the administration would relapse into chaos, owing to the fact
                   that tribesmen and peasantry alike are now well armed, and are conscious of
                   their power, whilst men of sufficient honesty of purpose and capability to take
                   up the reins when we lay them down, cannot be produced by Persia now, nor
                   could they be produced in the present generation.
                       As in the previous year, the position of affairs in Pars generally, and on
                           Shiraz and Far,.           Bushire-Ispahau road,, loomed large on
                                                   the political nonzon, and it seems increas­
                   ingly clear that for some time to come the line of action pursued by His
                   Majesty’s Government in regard to the problems presented by the roads of
                   this province will form the touchstone upon which our subsequent policy in
                   South Persia will be tested and regulated.
                       The negatively unsatisfactory state in which things remained during the
                   Kawam’s acting incumbency of the post of Governor-General, gave place, on
                   the arrival of the Mukhbir-es-Sultaneh, to a brief period of hope tnat some
                   permanent improvement might result from his appointment. Such hopes were
                   not fulfilled : it was anticipated by Mr. Smart, when this nomination was first-
                   mooted, that he would prove rather too civilised for so turbulent a province as
                   Pars, which only a Governor-General of the old fire eating type could hope to
                   bring under control, without ample funds, which the Central Government was
                   in no position to provide^
                       He had scarcely had time to take stock of the situation and to commence
                  to formulate his plans, when the murder of Captain Eckford, in December, as
                  related in detail elsewhere, and his subsequent inability to take any sort of
                  measures to exact reparation from the responsible tribes, demonstrated his help­
                  lessness to cope with the ever increasing forces of disorder in the province,
                  which, with every year of anarchy, are gathering strength and mating the
                  restoration of order in the future more difficult.
                      The year has, generally speaking, been one of expectant inactivity :   the
                    Political and eooDomio development* in the Turko-Balkan war necessitated the tem­
                  Qvll apbere generally.           porary postponement of negotiations with
                  the Porte, which are touched on  elsewnere ; the installation of wirel ess
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