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File 1880/1904 Pt 1 'Perso-Afghan Frontier: - Seistan Arbitration.' [‎50v] (105/520)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (254 folios). It was created in 26 Feb 1903-31 Dec 1910. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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27. The Afghan Government deputed Musa Khan of Herat to Seistan
to meet a Persian representative and settle up boundary and water disputes.
Musa Khan arrived in Seistan in November 1901, and the Persian represent
ative, the Yamin-i-Nizam, arrived in May 1902.
28. The Kussian Consul, Mr. Miller, incited both sides against the other,
as admitted freely to me by both, in the hope that, when things readied a
crisis, his intervention would be called for,
29. The Yamin-i-Nizam declined to meet the Afghan representative, and
the Governor of Chakansur, Akbundzada Pakir Muhammad Khan, abandoning
all hope of amicable settlement, occupied Deh Dost Muhammad in Miankangi
on 6th July 1902. Persia was reminded by the British Government of her
obligations under Article 6 of the Treaty of 1857, and on 24th July 1902, the
Persian Government asked for British intervention. His Highness the Amir
agreed to a settlement of Seistan disputes by British arbitration, and an arbi
trator was duly appointed. Persia, in accepting arbitration, laid down as a
condition thereof that both the arbitral award and the final decision of His
Majesty s Secretary of State for Poreign Affairs should be in accordance with
the terms of the Goldsmid award.
30. In the meantime, owing to long continued drought in the catchment
area of the Helmand, the river during 1902 was of abnormally small volume,
and scarcity of water in Seistan, occurring just at the time when mutual rela
tions were strained, led to irrigation works being carried out on both sides to
injure each other.
Pariun, which, from that time onwards, has taken the main volume of the whole
river due northwards, between Jelalabad and Jehanabad, and through the
Ashkin lands to the Hamun.
23. Owing to the above changes in the river, it became necessary, in the
autumn of 1896, to take measures for keeping up the supply in the Nad Ali
channel, and the Persians and Afghans mutually decided to co-operate to build
a band across the Pariun. About three-quarters of a mile below Hie bifurcation,
a hard bed was found in the Pariun. This was chosen as the site of the band;
but as it was about three-quarters of a mile below the bifurcation, it was
thought necessary to dig a leading cut to the Nad Ali channel. Although the
band was built in concert, each party dug his own feeding cut, dropping it into
the Nad Ali channel near Deh Khoja above the Shela-i-Jehanabad.
24. This arrangement was continued in 1897, but in 1898 the Afghans
began work on another cut above the Pariun band; the Persians objected to this
as being in their territory, and the Afghan gangs were removed to Afghan
territory, and the present Afghan cut (Ju-i-Afghan) was made from the river
to the Nad Ali channel to the south, and upstream, of the bifurcation. They
also built a band at its head, called the Band-i-Shahgul, which has been made
each year since then, except in 1903, when the supply that went down the Nad
Ali channel was ample, and no band was required. The Persians began to
build a Pariun band, but did not complete it, and never built it again until
1904.
25. The Governors of Persian and Afghan Seistan seem to have settled
amicably any water disputes that arose
The water disputes of 1901 and 1902. p i. j x i f •
from time to time, and no disputes of im
portance arose until 1901, when the Persians extended one of their canals from
the Rud-i-Pariun, past Takht-i-Shah, into the Naizar, and the Afghans cut a
a small canal to take off the Sikhsar water from near Deh Gul Shah to the
west.
26. It is probable that these disputes, like previous ones, would have been
mutually settled by the local Governors, but outside influences, which had by
that time reached Seistan, prevented this. 4. Russian Consul had now come to
Seistan, and he seized the opportunity to embitter the mutual relations existing
between the countries. This and other subsequent water disputes, themselves
of a trifling nature, were made to assume fictitous importance, until all hope of
local settlement lapsed.

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Content

The volume contains printed selections from official papers of the Foreign Department of the Government of India (telegrams, official letters, and extracts from official diaries), and maps, concerning the settlement of the disputed frontier between Afghanistan and Persia in Seistan (also spelled Sistan in the volume) [Sīstān] during the period 1901-10. The papers are mainly in the form of dispatches from the Government of India, Foreign Department, addressed to the Secretary of State for India. Each despatch includes a list of documents ('enclosures') cited. The later papers are accompanied by minute sheets of the Secret Department, Government of India.

The papers cover: the work of the Arbitration Mission under Colonel (Arthur) Henry McMahon (British Commissioner, Seistan Arbitration Commission), 1903-05, including events up to the departure of the Arbitration Mission, proceedings of the Mission, demarcation of the boundary from Koh-i-Malik Siah to Siah Koh, the Seistan water dispute, and McMahon's report (folios 22-30) on the final settlement and demarcation of the boundary between Persia and Afghanistan, followed by a complete list (folios 31-34) of the boundary pillars on the Perso-Afghan boundary; and reports on the distribution of water in Helmand, 1909-10.

The main correspondents are: McMahon; His Britannic Majesty's Minister, Tehran; the Secretary of State for India; His Britannic Majesty's Chargé d’Affaires, Tehran; His Britannic Majesty's Consul for Seistan and Kain [Kūh-e Kā’īn]; and the Amir of Afghanistan.

Each part includes a divider which gives the subject and part numbers, year the subject file was opened, subject heading, and list of correspondence references contained in that part by year. This is placed at the back of the correspondence.

The map in the back of the volume, on folio 254, relates to the work of the Sistan Arbitration Commission of 1872 under General Sir Frederick John Goldsmid. The last dated addition to the volume is a note on folio 4 stating that a copy of a paper had been sent to the Foreign Office on 12 January 1911.

Extent and format
1 volume (254 folios)
Arrangement

The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume.

The subject 1880 (Perso-Afghan Frontier) consists of two volumes, IOR/L/PS/10/52-53. The volumes are divided into two parts with each part comprising one volume.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 256; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. side of each folio.

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English in Latin script
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File 1880/1904 Pt 1 'Perso-Afghan Frontier: - Seistan Arbitration.' [‎50v] (105/520), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/52, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100040047749.0x00006a> [accessed 19 April 2024]

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