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Agreement between
Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, G. C. S. I., and Sir Henry Mortimer
Durand, K. C. I. E., C. S. I.
Whereas certain questions have
arisen regarding the frontier of Afghanistan on the side of
India, and whereas both His Highness the Amir and the
Government of India are desirous of settling these questions
by friendly understanding, and of fixing the limit of their
respective spheres of influence, so that for the future
there may be no difference of opinion on the subject between
the allied Governments, it is hereby agreed as follows:
- The eastern and southern
frontier of his Highness’s dominions, from Wakhan to the
Persian border, shall follow the line shown in the map
attached to this agreement.
- The Government of India will
at no time exercise interference in the territories
lying beyond this line on the side of Afghanistan, and
His Highness the Amir will at no time exercise
interference in the territories lying beyond this line
on the side of India.
- The British Government thus
agrees to His Highness the Amir retaining Asmar and the
valley above it, as far as Chanak. His Highness agrees,
on the other hand, that he will at no time exercise
interference in Swat, Bajaur, or Chitral, including the
Arnawai or Bashgal valley. The British Government also
agrees to leave to His Highness the Birmal tract as
shown in the detailed map already given to his Highness,
who relinquishes his claim to the rest of the Waziri
country and Dawar. His Highness also relinquishes his
claim to Chageh.
- The frontier line will
hereafter be laid down in detail and demarcated,
wherever this may be practicable and desirable, by joint
British and Afghan commissioners, whose object will be
to arrive by mutual understanding at a boundary which
shall adhere with the greatest possible exactness to the
line shown in the map attached to this agreement, having
due regard to the existing local rights of villages
adjoining the frontier.
- With reference to the question
of Chaman, the Amir withdraws his objection to the new
British cantonment and concedes to the British
Governmeni the rights purchased by him in the Sirkai
Tilerai water. At this part of the frontier the line
will be drawn as follows:
From the crest of the Khwaja Amran range near the Psha
Kotal, which remains in British territory, the line will
run in such a direction as to leave Murgha Chaman and
the Sharobo spring to Afghanistan, and to pass half-way
between the New Chaman Fort and the Afghan outpost known
locally as Lashkar Dand. The line will then pass
half-way between the railway station and the hill known
as the Mian Baldak, and, turning south-wards, will
rejoin the Khwaja Amran range, leaving the Gwasha Post
in British territory, and the road to Shorawak to the
west and south of Gwasha in Afghanistan. The British
Government will not exercise any interference within
half a mile of the road.
- The above articles of'
agreement are regarded by the Government of India and
His Highness the Amir of Afghanistan as a full and
satisfactory settlement of all the principal differences
of opinion which have arisen between them in regard to
the frontier; and both the Government of India and His
Highness the Amir undertake that any differences of
detail, such as those which will have to be considered
hereafter by the officers appointed to demarcate the
boundary line, shall be settled in a friendly spirit, so
as to remove for the future as far as possible all
causes of doubt and misunderstanding between the two
Governments.
- Being fully satisfied of His
Highness’s goodwill to the British Government, and
wishing to see Afghanistan independent and strong, the
Government of India will raise no objection to the
purchase and import by His Highness of munitions of war,
and they will themselves grant him some help in this
respect. Further, in order to mark their sense of the
friendly spirit in which His Highness the Amir has
entered into these negotiations, the Government of India
undertake to increase by the sum of six lakhs of rupees
a year the subsidy of twelve lakhs now granted to His
Highness.
H. M. Durand,
Amir Abdur Rahman Khan.
Kabul, November 12, 1893 |