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FOR TDK TEAR 1016.                      10




                                     CHAPTER IV.

            ADMINISTRATION REPORT FOR THE KERMAN CONSULATE FOR
                                   THE YEAR 1916.

               The post of Consul was vacant until tho arrival of Major D. L. R. Lorimer,
                     ,,. . , „  .,        on July 24th, when he proceeded to take
                    «. *jcs y •   *       ovcr tlie Consular and political work
            which had been initiated and carried on by General Sykes and hi6 staff dur­
            ing the preceding six weeks.
               In September it was decided to revive and maintain, till at least six
            months arter the conclusion of tho war, the appointment of Vice-Consul and
            Assistant, and Mr. C. P. Skrinc, I.C.8., then Assistant Political Officer, Sibi,
            was  nominated to the post. Ho arrived in Kerman on 10th November.
               As it was not intended to continuo to employ Mirza Nasrullah Khan,
                                          Honorary Vice-Consul, in tho Consulate,
                   Clerical E&tnblifhiucnt.
                                          sanction was obtained for the appoint­
            ment of an Indian Head Clerk on a relatively high rate of pay and of an
            Indian Accountant on a lower rate. Khan Sahib Abdul Alim was appointed
            to the former post and accompanied Major Lorimer on the journey up to
            Kerman.
               It was arranged that Mirza Nasrullah Khan should be taken into
            the service of General Sykes, or the South Persia Rifles, and that on the
            departure of the Column for Yozd he should remain temporarily in Kerman,
            fly General Sykes* courtesy His Majesty’s Consul was granted a share of his
            services, and, as no other Mirza could be procured in Kerman at the time,
            this arrangement was a very fortunate one.
               Mirza Nasrullah Khan eventually left for Yezd and Shiraz in the begin­
            ning of November and a temporary Mirza with no knowledge of English w'as
            with some difficulty engaged. The arrangement is for many reasons unsatis­
            factory, but it has been impossible as yet to improve on it.
               The question of clerks* salaries has been rendered very difficult by the
            fall in tho exchange value of the kran aggravated by a rise in the kran
            prices of all necessaries. The rupee, which in 1913-15 averaged about 3*65
            krans, stood, in august 1916, at 2*60 and continued to fall till, at the end
            of the year, it reached 1*70 brans. The increase in kran prices of local and
            imported necessaries of life varied from 20 to 100 per cent. Living, at any rate
            in recent years, was never particularly cheap, and it is now some two to four
            times more expensive than it was in 1914, reckoning in rupees. Repeated
            references were made on the subject, and it is understood to be now under the
            consideration of the Government of India, but no relief has yet teen afforded.
            In the meantime the Accountant has found it necessary to resign. The contract
            between the treatment of members of the South Persia Rifles and of other
            services is very marked. The South Persia Rifles have all the privileges of
            f ield 8crvice and are allowed to convert their Rupee salaries at a fixed rate of
            •>'65 krans to the rupee.
               The Indian Jiscort.—On hia appointment His Majesty’s Consul proposed
            that, instead of an Indian Escort, he should bo furnished with a Persian one
            hy tho South Persia Rifles, or should be allowed to raise a local one. The
            oonth Persia Rifles were not however yet in a position to furnish one, and
            eventually it was decided to attach to the Consulate a detachment of 1 Native
             fficer and 26 Non-Commissioned Officers and men of the 39th Central India
             torso who had accompanied General Sykes to Kerman.
               Political History.—After the departure of the British and Russian
                                          communities from Kerman, on 17th
                   K«rpiu mu lei AngUI*.
                                          December 1915, which lias been related
            to last  year’s report, tho control of affairs both in the town and province
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