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File 3122/1921 Pt 1 'Persia: Quarantine arrangements' [‎88r] (171/1174)

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The record is made up of 586 folios. It was created in 1921-1931. It was written in English and French. 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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5
slievo Assisiam
Patently left ^
3 the ilmistetti
•nment of I*
'antine officeijin
a, 1 eymourtaclil
an doctor slionlj
d that he woulj
for the services
•ing the changei
o vote money |i
i Government |
■rsian doctor \i
mglo-PersianQ
"lie, forwardings
aphed to BusHit,
to Dr. Lincolett
ammerah hy|
h May, No. 976-S
igainst the act
y as likely tofe
the resolutions c
■ested with Ini
ith Persia and 4
panied by a tlm
; Persian Gov®
chief difficnltk
uestion, to final
ersia to secure! :
1 Counsellor to I
• on the 29th Apri
irrangements k
sted, too, that!
might usefully 1>
such instructions, or were not acting in accordance with them. On the
21st May" he added that, should the promised instructions not be given, and * Teh. tei. iso,
this lead to inefficiency this summer, there would then be a strono- case for p - 2660 ; Teh.Desp.
submission of the question to the International Sanitary Councif that the p VionT 21 1928,
Ajig'lo-Persian Oil Company had offered for one year to pay Dr. Lincoln an
additional sum equal to what he would lose as quarantine officer on the
understanding that his Persian successor would be bound to co-operate in all
quarantine matters with the Company’s medical officer, that, thanks to their
helpful attitude, no difficulty need therefore be anticipated at Mohammerah,
and that it was to be hoped that the Dritish quarantine medical officer at
Bushire, by maintaining tactful relations with the Persian doctor there,
would in fact be able to see the quarantine service satisfactorily maintained!
1-A. In the light of the developments set out above, the Foreign Office on
the 11th June, officially asked the concurrence of the 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. in the
acceptance of the Minister s recommendations, forwarding at the same time p. 3018 / 28 .
a despatch from the Ministerj" in which Sir Robert Olive pointed out that t No. 251 , May 21
Persia was entirely within her sovereign rights in sending her own doctors 1928 '
to the Gulf, that she was under no contract to the Government of India to
maintain a British-controlled quarantine service, that she was not bound by r
any promise made at the last International Quarantine Conference not to do
what she had clone, and that, in the circumstances, the only possible policy
was to minimise as far as possible any ill effects on our prestige in the Gulf
by the 1 eisian action, and to endeavour to induce the Persians to continue
to avail themselves of the wide experience and knowledge of the British
quarantine officers, with a view to maintaining an efficient quarantine
service.
II. At this stage the matter rested until July 1928, action being
postponed by the 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. pending a decision on the proposal to set up
a Sub-Committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence on the position
of His Majesty’s Government in the Gulf generally, and the subjects to be
considered by that Sub-Committee.
15. On 13th July, however, the Charge d’Affaires at Teheran^ reported I Teh. tei. 223 ,
that the Minister of Court had spoken to him with unusual vehemence on
the quarantine question, stating that Persia must be allowed to take over at ‘
all costs and even hinting at the use of force. It transpired that the Persian
attitude was to some extent due to the fact that Dr. Lincoln, the British
quarantine officer at Mohammerah, had not yet been authorised by the chief
quarantine medical officer, acting under the orders of the Government of
India, to hand over control of his Persian successor and that effect had thus Teh. tei. to f.o. 227 ,
not yet been given to the arrangement agreed in Mav between the Minister p^Llyo 928,
of Court and Sir R. Clive. " • / •
.10. On 18th July the Foreign Office wrote to the India Office§ urging § P. 3755 ,
then concurrence in regularisation oi the position at an early date on the lines
referred to in para. 12 above, and expressing the view that the delay which
had taken place in giving effect to the arrangements made in May with the
Minister of Court was regrettable. On the same date the Government of
India telegraphed that three Persian doctors had arrived in Bushire, one to
take over the quarantine at Bushire, one for duty at Lingah, while the
tiind expected early orders for Jask and a fourth was reported to be
proceeding to Bunder Abbas. The Government of India, while strongly
reiterating their previous protests against the relinquishment of control by
His Majesty s Government, stated that they were ready to issue immediate
instructions for the handing over of charge to the Persian doctors should
His Majesty s . Government consider that this was necessitated by the
discussions which had taken place at Teheran, or by consideration of the
widei interests.involved. The Indian officers would be instructed to afford
all possible assistance to their successors. The Government of India added
t nit the Charge d Affaires would no doubt be able to arrange that the latter
s lould be instructed, to act in close consultation with the outgoing officers,
who could be retained for say six months to see that the quarantine
regulations were properly carried out and to give the new regime a fair start.
2979a -o

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Correspondence, minutes, memoranda, and draft papers relating to quarantine services in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. . The correspondence is between officials at the 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. , Foreign Office, Government of India (Foreign and Political Department), and Ministry of Health. Further correspondence, included as enclosures, comes from officials at the British Legation in Tehran, Political Residency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, established in the provinces and regions considered part of, or under the influence of, British India. in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. at Bushire, HM Consulate at Bandar Abbas, HM Consulate-General at Fars, Government of India (Marine Department), the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, and the Government of Persia.

Throughout the file are regular reports on the quarantine service in general. Matters covered by the papers include:

  • Persian objections to British control of the service and the eventual handover in 1928
  • Quarantine regulations
  • Cases of outbreaks of disease
  • Finances
  • Maintenance and replacement of equipment
  • Staffing
  • The proposal for establishing a station at Henjam
  • Relations with international bodies such as the League of Nations.
Extent and format
586 folios
Written in
English and French in Latin script
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File 3122/1921 Pt 1 'Persia: Quarantine arrangements' [‎88r] (171/1174), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/1006/1, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100084617912.0x0000b7> [accessed 23 May 2024]

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