Page 437 - PERSIAN 8 1931_1940_Neat
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            March, impairing the traffic and mail service for about a   week. No new
            alignments of road's worthy of note were opened during the year.   The
            Kerman-Jiruft motor road is still in abeyance.
                {b) Security.—The security on all motor roads throughout the province
            was satisfactory, and no attacks on motor vehicles were reported.
                (<;) Posts and Tclegrajihs.—No new post and telegraph offices  were
             opened in the province during the year. The postal services maintained in
             Kerman were the same as reported in the previous year.
                (d)  Wireless.—The Wireless station remained closed throughout the
             year except for testing purposes once a week.
                 (e)  A viation.—No civil or military aeroplanes visited Kerman during
             the year, and the two aerodromes continued to remain uncared for.


                                     Local Government.
                 9. Condition of the country.—(i) Law and order were maintained
             satisfactorily throughout the year.
                 (ii) Several Government inspectors of different departments visited
             Kerman.
                 (iii) Aqavi Arbab Kaikhosrou Shahrokh, M.P., for the Zoroastrian
             community in Iran arrived at Kerman via Yezd on the 2nd June. The
             object of his visit to the above places was to persuade his community to
             fall in with the views of the Government in discontinuing the almost obso­
             lete method of disposing of their dead in the Towers of Silence which was
             considered non-hygienic.
                 10.  II. I. 1\I. the Shah's Birthday.—The Acting Governor-General, on
             behalf of the Municipality gave a soir4e on the 14th March in the Governo-
             rate-General, in honour of the occasion. The invitation included, for the
             first time, the ladies, and required gentlemen to attend in frock coats, as
             a result of which only 50 people of both sexes (including Europeans) at­
             tended. His Britannic Majesty’s Consul did not attend the function on
             account of court-mourning.
                 11.  Local Officials and Departments.—His Excellency Aqayi Abul
             Hassan Peernia, the Governor-General, was summoned to Tehran in Febru­
             ary and was suspended on arrival there, owing, it is said, to his slackness
             in enforcing orders about discarding the veils. He handed over charge of
             the Governorate-General to his assistant Aqayi Muhammad Mirza Arasteh.
                 His Excellency Aqayi Amanullah Ardelan, late Governor of Gulf
             Ports, arrived on transfer from Bushire on 2nd June and assumed charge
             as Governor-General of the Kerman province. He is more active, than his
             predecessor and many improvements in the town have been put into effect
             since his appointment. His relations with the Consulate throughout the
             year were most cordial and courteous.
                 Finance and Revenue.—Aqayi Muhammad Taqi Beenish remained in
             charge as Provincial Director of Finance. The opium crop which was said
             to be extraordinarily good, sufferedi slight damage just before the harvesting
             season, nevertheless a quantity of about 700 Tabrizi maunds was delivered
             at the Finance Department for bonderolhng purposes. A similar quantity
             is said to have been retained by the culitvators for smuggling purposes.
             Towards the close of the year the price of bonderolled opium which was
             Kials 1-25 per misqal of about 5 grammes was increased by 10 dinars in
             January, and by another 10 dinars in October, thus bringing the retail price
             to Rials 1-45 per misqal. The Finance Department notified the opium
             cultivators during the year that the Government intended to curtail the
             cultivation of opium in the province and to encourage the growing of cotton
              in its place. The scheme is considered to be detrimental to the prosperity
             of the province.                                              1 J
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