Now that
the Republic of Yemen is an united country, the way in
which it was divided between British and Turkish spheres
of influence will be the object of curiosity to future
historians. This article records the operations mounted by
the British and British Indian armies in support of the
Boundary Commission set up to demarcate the border between
the two parts of the Yemen.
In October 1901 the British and
Turkish governments agreed that the border between the
Turkish province of Yemen and the British Protectorate of
Aden should be demarcated. This agreement followed a
series of disputes which had culminated in the Ad Dareja
incident in the previous July. Diplomacy had failed to
remove a tower, erected by tribesmen owing allegiance to
the Turks, in Haushabi country. It was being used as a
customs post. A British expedition was despatched from
Aden which, by blowing up the tower, succeeded where
diplomacy had failed.
On 11th February 1902 the two
Boundary Commissions met at Dhala’ for the first of many
conferences. The British party was led by Colonel Wahab
CIE., RE. and Lt. Colonel Abud of the Bombay Political
Service, later replaced by Mr. Fitzmaurice of the British
embassy at Constantinople. The Turkish Commission was
headed by Colonel Mustafa Rienzi. Both sides were
accompanied by surveyors and an escort of not more than
200 men.
The British Commission was
surprised to find that the Turks were hostile and had
seized the area in dispute. The British camp was quickly
enclosed on three sides by armed Arabs who fired at anyone
attempting to advance towards the border. No border
delineation was possible.
In August the British government
protested to the Porte without effect. A show of force was
called for and the Resident in Aden asked India for
reinforcements. When these arrived, it became possible to
despatch a column to Dhala’. This consisted of men of
the second battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers, the
102nd Grenadiers from Bombay, the Aden troop of cavalry
and a section of two guns from 45 Company Royal Garrison
Artillery. It took the force of 500 officers and men nine
days to reach Dhala’, some 88 miles from Aden.
The Turks had also reinforced
their garrison at Qataba, opposite Dhala’, which now
consisted of 800 soldiers, 600 Arab levies and eight guns.
The Resident, Major General Maitland, considered that the
situation was serious enough for him to ask for yet more
troops, although he still considered that it was unlikely
that Turkey would go to war with Britain over the Yemen
frontier.
By 8th March 1903 the ‘Aden
Column’ consisted of 700 British troops, 860 Indian
troops, eighteen mountain guns and a detachment from the
Aden cavalry troop, a total of 2,200 combatants plus the
Commission’s escort of 200. This force was split between
Dhala’ and Nobat Dakim. On 13th March the British
ambassador made another demarche to the Porte. This one
was successful and the Turks withdrew, basing themselves
in Qataba, while the British Commission camped two miles
south of the town. The British troops settled down to road
building and training. In May a small force was sent to
punish the Al Ajud who had been interfering with the
traffic through the Haradaba defiles. Otherwise all was
peaceful.
In June events in Somaliland
forced the Resident to sent all available troops there,
leaving himself without a reserve closer than India.
Rumours abounded and the trihes believed that the British
army had been defeated and became restless. Nevertheless
the survey got under way at last on 1st September in
Shaibi country.
Initally all went well, although
one Indian surveyor was killed by fire from a village
called Hadara. The survey party moved across Wadi Bana,
leaving a garrison of 200 men at Awabil and stopped at a
bill beyond Rubiatain. On 12 September the heliograph
reported that over 1,000 Yafa’is had crossed the Bana
into Shaibi country, intending to cut off the two British
parties. Awabil was attacked, but the garrison
successfully beat off the Yafa’is at the cost of one
soldier from the Hampshires killed and four wounded.
The Turks insisted that Rubiatain
was on their side of the border and the survey party
withdrew. This was the furthest point to the north east
that the border was surveyed. On 11th October the first
boundary pillar along the Shaibi border was erected and
from then on the two commissions cooperated reasonably
amicably.
While security improved along the
border, it deteriorated rapidly on the British lines of
communication back to Aden. The Subaihi tribe fired at the
British camp at Nobat Dakim on several nights, while the
Dhambari and Qutaibi tribes began to interfere with the
traffic between Nobat Dakim and Dhala’. In October 1903
the first ‘Radfan Operation’ was launched, when a
strong force advanced to Nakhlain and destroyed its
fortifications. This action failed to stop the trouble.
The Qutaibis murdered two sowars who were carrying mail to
Aden and later attacked the post at Sulek. A punitive
expedition marched through Qutaibi country in November,
losing nine killed and twenty one wounded in a number of
skirmishes.
At the end of 1903 boundary
pillars marked the entire border between the Amir of
Dhala’s territory and the Turks and the two Commissions
moved together to Tusan in the Tiban before splitting up.
The British Commission moved to Musaimir and then to Ad
Dareja. Most of the ‘Aden Column’ was now withdrawn to
Al Mileb or Musaimir.
Good progress was made in
delineating the Haushabi border, but the Commission was
now faced with the territory belonging to the Subaihi
tribe. They had caused the British a great deal of trouble
over the previous years, and the Resident, wisely,
reinforced the Commission’s escort and established the
‘Subaihi Column.’ This consisted of three hundred men
of the Buffs, a double company of the 123rd Rifles and two
guns from the camel battery.
However, there was little trouble
and the two Commissions joined up at Mufalis, having
agreed the border. At this stage there was still a total
of 1640 infantry, eight mountain guns, 45 sappers and 130
mounted men spread out in garrisons from Dhala’ to
Mufalis.
There was now a hold up caused by
a dispute about the ownership of a tower near Mufalis. The
problem was solved in a military manner by blowing up the
tower and paying the owner compensation. In April the
Commissions were able to continue moving west towards
Khatabia.
All activity was now taking place
too far west for it to be sensible to supply the force
from Aden. A new base was formed 70 miles west of Aden at
Ras Ara. The Commissions had now reached sparsely
populated country and reached the Shaikh Said peninsula in
May. The Turks moved to their fort at Turba and the
British withdrew to Aden. The demarcation of the border
from north east of Dhala’ to the sea at the entrance to
the Red Sea had been completed.
The boundary outlasted the Turks
after the first world war and the withdrawal of the
British in 1967. It served its purpose at the time, but is
happily no more.
From March 1903 to April 1904
there were 2,000 British and Indian troops deployed in
support of the Boundary Commission. They suffered ten
killed and twenty five wounded in action and thirty four
deaths from other causes. The troops had fought minor
battles at Dhabri, Awabil and Nakhlain and during the
punitive expedition against the Qutaibis. It would be
interesting to know whether the Turks experienced similar
difficulties on their side of the border.
November 1993
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