Full text: Report from the Select Committee on Slave Trade (East Coast of Africa); together with the proceedings of the Committee, minutes of evidence, appendix and index

200 
APPENDIX TO REPORT FROM SELECT COMMITTEE 
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Appendix, No 8. Highness Syud Toorkee tlie decision of the Government of India with reference to the 
case of that chief. 
5. The Supreme Government having at the same time accorded its sanction to the 
appointment of a duly qualified officer as the representative of the British Government 
at Muscat, and this appointment having been conferred on you, you will, as already 
directed, proceed to Muscat in the suite of the Bev. Mr. Badger, who has been furnished 
' with a letter from his Excellency the Governor, accrediting you to his Highness Syud 
Thoweynee. On your installation at Muscat, Mr. Badger will communicate to you such 
instruction and advice as he may deem necessary for ensuring due efficacy to the pro 
ceedings which he may adopt in carrying out the objects of his mission. 
6. His Excellency the Governor in Council desires that, on your arrival at Muscat, 
you will confer with Mr. H. Rassam on all points concerning our political relations with 
his Highness Syud Thoweynee, and with other chiefs of rank, whether dependent on or 
independent oí Muscat. His Excellency in Council feels sure that you will always bear 
in mind the bond of friendship which has for so long a period existed between the Chiefs 
of Muscat and the British Government ; that you will employ your utmost influence in 
cultivating between Muscat, Zanzibar, and Sobar those amicable feelings towards the 
establishment of which so much pains are being taken by the Government of Bombay and 
the Government of India; that you will keep the Resident at Bushire fully informed on 
every subject which it may in any way concern the British representative there to be 
cognizant of; that you will constantly contemplate the prospect of our requiring the 
cordial and active co-operation of the authorities at Muscat in establishing and protecting 
(entirely at our cost) a line of electric telegraph thence along the coast of Mekran, ob 
taining with this view exact information regarding the degree of subjection in which the 
inhabitants of that coast from the Persian Gulf to Sonmeanee are held by Muscat, or 
Khelat, or by any other authority ; and that you will be courteous and circumspect in 
your intercourse with French, American, or other European officers of rank visiting the 
port of Muscat. 
7. You will not fail to bear in mind that the suppression of the slave trade is an object 
which the British Government has very much at heart, and his Excellency the Governor 
in Council relies on your good temper and tact for enlisting his Highness the Imam of 
Muscat in aid of it. 
8. In the discharge of your ordinary duties, you will be careful, as a general rule, to 
avoid all needless interference with the claims of traders and others against Arab chiefs 
and tribes within the limits of your control, and to extend the protection of the British 
flag to none save British subjects, when such protection is absolutely necessary. 
9. Finally, I am desired to request that you will keep a diary of all your proceedings 
and of such events as you may deem noteworthy, transmitting a copy of it with your 
reports, whenever opportunities offer, to the Political Department of this Government, to 
which you must consider yourself directly subordinate. 
I have, &G. 
(signed) A. Kinloclt Forhes, 
Bombay Castle, 1 May 1861. Acting Secretary to Government. 
From Sir George Clerk, K.C.B., Governor of Bombay, to His Highness Syud Tkoxoeynee 
bin Saeed bin Sultan, Sultan of Muscat. 
0,—These friendly lines are to inform your Highness that we have appointed 
Lieutenant Walter Murray Pengelley, of the Indian Navy, to be British Agent with your 
Highness at Muscat, in succession to Mr. Hormuzd Rassam, _ Confiding in his ability 
and discretion, we recommend him to your Highness’s recognition and favour. He will 
be the ordinary channel of communication between the two Governments, and we doubt 
not that your Highness, as heretofore, will co-operate heartily with Lieutenant Pengelley 
in all matters connected with the interests of the British Government and its subjects 
within your territories. We regret much, on your account and our own, that it is neces 
sary for Mr. Rassam to return to Aden; but we confidently hope that Lieutenant 
Peno-elley will prove equally acceptable to you, and that he will continue to maintain 
the Sime friendly relations with your Highness which have characterised Mr. Rassam’s 
agency at Muscat, and which have gained for him the high approbation of this Govern 
ment; and so we bid you farewell. 
(signed) G. Clerk. 
Bombay, 29 April 1861.
	        
Waiting...

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