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                                              CHAPTER V.
                  Administration Kki'ORt ok IIis Majesty's Consulate, Kerman, for the year 1934.




                                           A.—British Interests.

                      1.  Ilis Majesty’s Consulate—Personnel.—Major C. II. Lincoln, 0.13.E.,
                  remained in charge of the Consulate throughout the year.
                                                                           #
                      Major Lincoln left for Bandar Abbas, on tour, on the 39th January and
                  returned to Kerman on the 25th March. He proceeded on a short visit to
                  Tehran on the 20th May and returned on the 2nd June. A short visit was paid
                  to Bandar Abbas, in company with Major Pvbus, Military Attache, to His
                  Majesty’s Minister, Tehran, between the 19th and 23rd June.
                      His Majesty’s Consul left for Bandar Abbas, en route to Charbur, on the
                  26th November, to enquire into the complaints received from certain British
                  subjects at the latter place.
                      2.  Consulate work, etc.—(a) 29 British subjects were registered at the
                  Consulate during the year, the number for 1933 also being 29.
                      (b)  The espionage on the Consulate, which continued during 1931 and
                  1932 and relaxed in the early part of 1933, was again revived for some time in
                  October 1934, when men of the local Secret Police were seen t«> be prying
                  round the Consulate and houses of members of the clerical staff. It was again
                  relaxed after His Majesty’s Consul left for Charbar.
                      (c)  The King's Birthday was celebrated in the usual manner on the 4th
                  June. A reception was held in the morning and attended by the Goveruor-
                  •Goneral, his assistant, the Chief of the Municipality, the European community
                  and heads of foreign firms. InjLhc evening a dinner party was given, to which
                  the three Persian officials mentioned above find all members of the European
                  -colony were invited. The Governor-General was unable to come to the latter
                  function, owing to sudden ill-health, while the Chief of Police was absent on
                  Loth occasions, on the ground of his having been recalled and his relief’s arrival
                  being awaited tlie same day.
                      (d)  Four British Indian motor drivers from Zahidan complained to the
                  Consulate in the month of April that the Police authorities in Kerman had
                  confiscated their driving licences and told them that foreigners were not
                  allowed to work in Persia as motor drivers any more ! The local Chief of
                  Police, who was approached privately by the Consulate, explained that the men
                  had been taken to task not on account of their nationality, but because they
                  had failed to comply with transport regulations. Private enquiries, however,
                  elucidated the fact that the interference by the Police was nothing more, or
                  less, than an attempt to induce the parties concerned to part with a portion
                  of their hire, and, as the complainants eventually proceeded to Yezd without
                  calling at the Consulate again, it was presumed that the matter had ended by
                  an 4 amicable ’ settlement.
                      (e)  An ignorant cultivator incurred the Governor-General’s displeasure
                  in August by remarking that the hulk of water in a certain under-ground channel
                  had increased through,the activities of a former British Consul. The offender,
                  after being profusely abused, was taken to the Government House in a car, but
                  released after severe warning.
                     The channel in question is the one passing through the Consulate grounds
                  and, having been properly repaired by the efforts of Lieut-Colonol E. W. C.
                  Noel in 1930, is one of the few that were not affected by the floods of 1932.
                      (/) Steps were taken early in the year to have the Consulate buildings
                  and garden, as well as the Christian cemetery, registered at the local Registra­
                  tion office. The necessary fees were paid and the required formalities fulfilled,
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