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accident at the gate of the airport, thus temporarily blocking it.  The second option

                   was to have Nasser driven in the Residency’s car with a British flag flown on the


                   car’s front side.  But before any of the possible solutions could be acted upon the


                   process of refueling the plane was completed and the Egyptians were ready to

                   board.  Nasser remained in Bahrain for a total of approximately thirty minutes,


                   according to Belgrave.  Al-Bakir arrived late and managed to have a few words with

                   the Egyptian leader.  He apologised to Nasser in the name of the people of Bahrain


                   for not knowing earlier about his arrival.  As a consequence of this curtailed visit

                   Egyptian media outlets attacked the British in Bahrain for their failure to publicise


                   Nasser’s visit although British officials were only informed of it a few hours before

                   to his brief stopover. 333


                          In a letter to Harold Macmillan, the then new Foreign Secretary in Eden’s

                   Cabinet dated 9 May from Burrows, he explained the Residency’s objective in aiding


                   the Administration in its process of setting up the new Government Labour

                   Committee.  The Resident said:


                          We are in fact making the rather curious experiment of introducing
                          industrial  democratic  processes  in  a  society  in  which  political
                          democracy  is  almost  entirely  absent  and  in  which  it  continues  to
                          appear  most  unwise  to  tamper  too  rapidly  with  the  existing
                          constitutional position.

                   Burrows also made the point that although the frontline members of the HEC were


                   pushing strongly for a trade union, none of them were labourers.  It was hoped that





                   333  Sir Charles Dalrymple Belgrave’s Personal Diaries, 2 May 1955; ‘Bernard Burrows, Monthly Report
                   for June 1955’, in Political Diaries of the Persian Gulf, vol. 20 1955-1958, ed. R.L. Jarman (London:
                   1990), 1-7 (2); B. Burrows, Footnotes in the Sand: The Gulf in Transition 1953–1958 (Wiltshire: 1990)
                   38-39, hereafter Footnotes in the Sand; and Al-Bakir, From Bahrain to Exile, 106.



                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                       111
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