Page 17 - PERSIAN 8 1912_1920_Neat
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FOE THE YEAS 1012.                       7

              leave at the end of September a general state of chaos prevailed and
            onntinued up to the end of the year.
                j£r. Newman, Manager of the Imperial Bank, held charge of British
            . tcrcsts on Colonel Haig’s departure pending the arrival of his successor, Captain
            p Jj. R Lorimer, from Bahrain, at the beginning of the New Year.
                The state of anarchy prevailing naturally had a most demoralising effect
              german trade with tne result that bankruptcy real and fraudulent was very
            rife and some British traders were badly hit.
                As in 1911, the peace of this district was little disturbed by the advent
                                          of Afghans, and the grant to the principal
                    roriLvn-MoVrnn Coast.
                                          chiefs of permits for the purchase of rifles
            on a restricted scale for their own use, served to minimise the resentment felt
            by the chiefs of the district at the stringent measures taken in connection With
            the Arms Traffic by His Majesty’s Ships, who have been indebted to the Indo-
            European Telegraph Department for a great deal of useful intelligence and
            much painstaking work on shore, during the year.
                There is some reason to hope that, with the closure of Maskat as an arms
            entrepot, this district may before long revert to its normal condition of
            cheerful and innocuous anarchy. The Persian Government having long ceased
            to exercise any authority or take any interest in this region, it is the more a
            matter for congratulation that our local representatives have contrived to
            remain on friendly terms with most of the chiefs and keep the telegraph lino
            open throughout the year, in spite of the difficulties and embarrassments caused
            by the Arms Traffic.
                A reconnaissance survey for the “Karachi Extension Project” towards
            Bandar Abbas and Kerman was carried out in the spring under the orders of
                                           the Government of India by Mr. W. A-
                     Railway Surveys. '
                                           Johns, G.I.E., assisted by Major L. P.
            Hopkins, R. E., and other officers.
                A careful survey was made of the alignment between Karachi and Gwadur*
             and from the latter point—
                  ({) via Gaih, Bampur and Bam, or Sarbaz and Fahrah to Kerman ;
                  (ti) from Bampur to the Shelag River near Robat.
                It was estimated that the Gaih-Bampur-Bam route, which was recom­
             mended in preference to the others, would cost Rs. 1,43,000 a mile for the broad
             and Rs. 1,13,000 for the metre guage.
                The problems of Arabistan, both political and commercial, have continued
                                           to demand their full share of attention
                       Anbia&tn.
                                           from higher authority. The protocol of
             1911 between Turkey and Persia providing for the formation at Constantinople
             of a Commission to delimit the Turko-Persian frontier, and for a reference
                                           to the Hague Tribunal in case of failure
                   Turko-Persian Frontier.
                                           to reach an agreement, revived this vexed
             question as a definite and uzgent issue early in the year ; and in view of the
             possibility of a reference to the Hague it was considered necessary to re-examine
             the whole Arabistan frontier from the Dawairij to the mouth of the Shatt-el-
             jkah both on the spot, and in the light of the archives of His Majesty’s
             government with a view to defining the present status quo and ascertaining
             how far it was based on ancient custom .or could he justified on historical
             grounds.
                In response to an urgent enquiry from His Majesty’s Eoreign Office as to
             “p precise distance of the locally recognised frontier west of Hawizeh, the
             Resident proceeded there via Ahwaz accompanied by a native surveyor kindly
             tent by the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, visiting Shuaib on the Karkhah^ the
             Westernmost point of the Turko-Persian frontier as locally observed, and
             ^turning to Mohammerah via Kishk-i-Hawizeh, Kishk-i-Basri and Diaiji,
             JJhere the frontier approached the Shatt-el-Ar&b; the frontier from Hawizeh to
             he 8hatt-el-Arab was carefully examined and a map prepared showing the
             precise location of the locally observed boundary.





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