Page 80 - PERSIAN 8 1912_1920_Neat
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70              PE HSIAN GULP ADMINISTRATION REPORT
                      Last year closed -with the Shaikh’s Deputy acting as Deputy Governor   at
                  Shushtar after the Shaikh had restored' order in that place, at the special and
                  urgent request of the Persian Government. The executive Khans on reaching
                  their winter quarters, at Ab-bid, north of Shushtar, informed the Shaikh twj
                  unless his Deputy were removed from the town immediately ho would bo turned
                  out by force.
  !                   The situation becoming critical, after reference to His Majesty’s Ministe.
                  and to the Resident, it was agreed by the Chiefs of both sides that tno points at
                  issue should be discussed by representatives of both sides in the presence of
                  British Consular officers for Arabistan and Ahwaz.
                      The Shaikh, relyingon this meeting, had taken small precautions to protect
                  himself: the Khans in Tehran also had promised the Legation that no hostile
                  movement should take place.
                      The Shaikh then realised too late that the local Executive Khans proposed
                  to make good the threats which they had made against him and he had but a
                  few Arabs in Shushtar when, at the end of April, the Bakhtiaris attacked and
                  took that town.
                      On seeing the stage which matters had reached the Shaikh collected at
                  Naseri an army of 6ome ten to fifteen thousand men and proceeded to inarch
                  on Shushtar. In the meantime the Khans in Tehran promised the Legation
                  that the town should be evacuated. This, however, was not done till the day
                  the Shaikh’s forces advanced from Ahwaz whereon the Khans retired to their
                  own country by double marches.
                      This evacuation wa3 claimed to be the result of orders which had been issued
                  from Tehran. This would not, however, appear to be very probable since, while
                  at Shushtar, the executive Khans were writing letters to the tribes around asking
                  them to join them in attacking the Shaikh and boasting that they would take
                  Ahwaz and. even Hchammerah.
                      The Arab contingent then occupied Shushtar but, ou being informed through
                  the Minister and His Majesty’s Consul that tbeie would be no further hostile
                  movement against him, the Chaikh immediately disbanded his forces. At the
                  request of the Peirian Deputy Governor who had, previous to this, arrived at his
                  post, a few men were left at his disposal to assist him in keeping order.
                      An incident, however, occurred which has been the cause of much subse­
                  quent trouble.
                      The forces on both sides, Arab or Bakhtiari, are composed of irregular
                  troops with the smallest amount of discipline: there is, it need hardly be said,
                  no commissariat department yet men and horses have to be fed. Thus an army
                  lives on the country through which it passes and is notan unmixed blessing, be it
                  a friendly or a hostile force. There is no means of preventing looting which
                  indeed is the sign manual of an army throughout the length and breadth of
                  Persia.
                      Some of the Shaikh’s forces in fact, so he maintains, friends of w’hom he
                  had asked no assistance, looted the Aqili lands beyond Shushtar, the property
                  of the Bakhtiaris and more especially of the Sardar Muhtashem, the Minister
                  for War.
                      This act, which greatly annoyed the Shaikh when he heard of it, has been
                  made the subject of a large claim for damages by the Bakhtiari, though it
                  as far as the Shaikh is concerned, an act of gratuitous license by a clan
                  doubtful loyalty, which had his strongest disapproval.
                      The 8haikh, though willing to give compensation and to return any Bakh­
                  tiari property which could be found, rejected the claim of the Bakhtiari to
                  demand compensation as a right.
                      In the month of May the Muwaggar-ed-Dowleh, Governor of Bushire,
                  sent by the Persian Government to enquire into the question. He gave it as n1
                  opinion that the Shaikh had been entirely in the right; this was not, however*
                  what he had been sent for and did not advance matters. "While these question*
                  were under discusaon the matter was considerably complicated by the purchase
                  by the Bakhtiari of a half share of the country known as the Jarrahi lanpj
                  This country, which was in the occupation of the Shaikh’s Arab tribes and wbio»
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