Page 37 - The Persian Gulf Historical Summaries (1907-1953) Vol II_Neat
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        and was found to be of little value. In 1949 Sir Herbert Stewart the agricultural
        expert at the British Middle East Office visited Bahrain and submitted a detailed
        reports,0) On his recommendation the Bahrain Government have since 1950
        employed a British Agricultural Officer on their farm at Budaiya. He has tried
        out various crops and has experimented in cattle and sheep breeding. No attempt
        yet appears to have been made to improve the date cultivation or the handling
        of the crop.
           29.  The material development of Bahrain has been effected very gradually.
        A power house was first opened in 1930. It has been extended from time to time
        since then but never seems quite to keep pace with the demand for current. A
        State Hospital was opened in 1940. In 1941 a causeway and bridge linking the
        main island and Muharraq were formally opened by Shaikh Hamad. In 1949 a
        piped water supply from Manamah and new Bahrain Government offices were
        completed. Since the last war many roads have been improved and many houses
        built both by the Bahrain Government and by private persons. The Bahrain
        Government have now embarked on a project for deepening the entrance channel
        to the Khor Qalaiyah and building a jetty and wharf at Jufair. Work on this
        started towards the end of 1953. It is hoped that when it is completed ocean-going
        steamers will be able to come alongside the wharf for the discharge of their cargoes
        instead of lying several miles off Manamah or at the Sitrah anchorage and
        discharging into lighters as at present.
           30.  Little has been done as yet to establish secondary industries. In 1946 a
        Persian mill-owner Hussain Agar wished to erect a cloth factory in Bahrain but
        abandoned the scheme because of the conditions imposed by the Bahrain
        Government. More recently Messrs. Chas. Kendall and Partner proposed to
        establish a cold storage plant but dropped the project because the Ruler insisted on
        having too much control over it. In 1953 a proposal to form a local company for
        this purpose was under consideration.!") In or about 1950 a member of the ruling
        family constructed a small lime plant. At the end of 1953 Messrs. Gray, Mackenzie
        and Company were constructing a slipway adjoining the Muharraq causeway for
        the repair of launches and other small craft, and a proposal to use natural gas from
        the oil-field for industrial development was under consideration.('*)

                               III.—The Zubarah Dispute

           31.  Zubarah is a ruined and uninhabited village on the north-west coast of
        Qatar peninsula in which the Ruler of Bahrain claims certain rather ill-defined
        rights. This claim has become an obsession with the present Ruler, as it was with
        his father; it tends to embitter his whole outlook and has at times threatened to
        cause a deterioration in his relations with Her Majesty’s Government.
            32. A note giving the history of the case down to 1946 was forwarded to the
        Foreign Office by the Political Resident in 1948 with a representation to the
        Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs which had then been received from the
        Ruler.(43) Zubarah was founded by the A1 Khalifah, the Bahrain ruling family, in
        1766 and from there they captured Bahrain in 1783. Between 1811 and 1842 the
        place became entirely deserted but it was rebuilt in the latter year by one of the Al
        Khalifah. By 1868 the Al Thani the present ruling family in Qatar had risen to
        power and in 1871 the Turks occupied the peninsula. In 1872 Shaikh Isa of
        Bahrain wished to establish a garrison at Zubarah but was advised by the Political
        Resident not to do so. In the following year the Government of India agreed that
        the Ruler of Bahrain had no clear or important rights on the mainland and
        instructed the Political Resident to advise him not to interfere there. In 1875
        Isa replied to the letter received from the Political Resident on the subject saying
        that he would refrain from interfering in the mainland except his city Zubarah
        which was his property. The Political Resident wrote to him again saying that
        reports which he had received showed an increasing necessity for “ avoidance of
        all interference in the mainland (whether at Zubarah or any other place no
        exception is made)." The Government of India also instructed the Political
           r) B.M.E.O. to F.O. 105/39/385 of May 7. 1949 (E 5865/1281/91 of 1949).
           C) P.R. to F.O. 11012/27/53 of May 20. 1953 (EA 1105/4 of 1953).
           (4J) P.R. to F.O. 1087/11/53 of December 22. 1953 (EA 11010/2 of 1953).
           (4a) P.R. to F.O. Despatch 103 of July 1. 1948 (E 9053/276/91 of 1948).
             46639                                                     E
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