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35
                                    FOR’TIIE YEAR 1915.



                                      CHAPTER VII.
             administration report for the ahwaz vice-constjlate
                                   FOR THE YEAR 1915.


                 Captain J. G. L. Ranking held charge from the beginning of the. year till
                                            relieved hy Captain E. Noel, in March
                         Personnel.
                                            1915. The latter, however, remained at
             Basrah as Assistant Political Officer, and did not take up his duties till June
             3rd.
                 Agha Mirza Muhammad Rahim continued as Head Mirza, while Mr. K. E,
             Mirza, B.A., was replaced as Dragoman, in July, hy Mr. Nadir Shah from
             Bandar Abbas.
                 Sub-Assistant Surgeon Pazal Hlalii, in charge of tlio Consulate Dispensary,
             was invalided to India in October. Dr. Moix of the Anglo-Persian Oil Com­
              pany very kindly agreed to look after the dispensary till the arrival of Sub-
              Assistant Surgeon Atta Muhammad from India. The total number of new.
              patients treated was 12,065 and 330 major and minor operations were per­
              formed.
                  The district of Ahwaz was first definitely affected by the war in January
                                             1915. No doubt Turkish emissaries and
                          G n r 1           jehad propaganda had been at work some
              time previously, but the first visible response was the appearance of Saiyid
              Essa in Hawizeh in early January, which resulted in the local Arabs taking
              up arms and in sending contingents to join the Turks at Amara, and Ghazban
              on the Karkeli. About the same time, fatwas for jehad began to make their
              appearance in the bazaars of Ahwaz.
                  The jehad movement once started grew apace. The Shaikh of Moham-
              merah mobilised the Bawi for the protection of Ahwaz but, hy the end of the
              month, a raid on the town was considered so imminent that a general exodus
              of British subjects was decided on. The latter left for Mohaminerah on the
              28th of January by the S S. “ Shushan, ” which, .as a matter of precaution,
              had boon taken down the rapids a few days previously. In the meanwhile it
              was decided to send troops to protect Ahwaz and by the 31st, the 7th Rajputs
              and two gun-boats had arrived. A position was occupied on the right bank
              below Aminiyeh.
                  By this time, the feeling in Abwaz itself had become strongly anti-British.
              On the 1st of February, Gunner Smith of the t€ Comet ” while walking through
              the town was shot dead hy one of Shaikh Chasib’s ghulams. This was an act
              of pure fanaticism. In the course of the next few days, the loyalty of the
              Bawis, which had always been a doubtful quantity, went by the board. By
              the 5th, the pipe line and telephone line had. been cut and destroyed for a con­
              siderable distance, and tbe oil-fields were thus isolated. The Bawis then
              collected for an attack on Ahwaz but were defeated on the 9th of February by
              a force of about 2,000 local Arabs under Shaikh HandzaL
                  Shaikh Ghazban and the Turks were gradually concentrating at Ghadir,
              12 miles west of Aminiyeh. On tbe 3rd of March, our force at Aminiyeh
              moved out at 2 a.m., to attack them, but finding itself heavily Out-numbered
              was forced to fight a difficult and costly rearguard action back to camp.
                  As a result of this reverse, the tribal situation round Ahwaz was somewhat
              aggravated and the Turkish and Arab force on the right bank took up a posi­
              tion of investment round our camp at Aminiyeh.
                  Owing to the unsettled condition of the district, British subjects in Ahwaz,
              who had returned in February! had to evacuate the station for a second time,
              on the 8th of March, with the exception of the Manager of the Anglo-Persian
               Oil Company—Mr. Gillespie—who remained in his house in Naseri throughout.
               He was given a guard of-50 Scpoya.
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