| After
the defeat (massacre) of the Egyptian army at the battle of “Tel El
Kebir”, the British cavalry did not waste much time and advanced towards
Cairo,
which it occupied on September 14, 1882, without much resistance.
General
Joseph Garnet Wolseley entered Cairo accompanied by Mohammad
Sultan Pasha (the father of the late Hoda Hanem Sha’arawi, the
famous Egyptian feminist), representing Khedive Tawfik. On
September
25, the Khedive, accompanied by Mohammad Cherif Pasha, his new
Prime Minister, made a triumphal entry in Cairo.
Before
analyzing the fourth and last Cherif Cabinet I would like
to compare between the British invasion of Egypt in 1882 and the
American invasion of Iraq in 2003. In 1882,
the British invaded Egypt claiming that the country and its people
were not ready for the democracy proclaimed by Orabi, while in 2003
the American invaded Iraq to establish democracy. In fact
both invaders had other strategical and economical objectives on their
mind.
The
leaders of the 1882 and 1952 revolutions, Orabi and
Mohammad
Naguib, were both of solid Egyptian background and were genuinely guided
by their resolve to establish a true democracy in Egypt. Both failed
in their sacred objective defeated from without, in 1882, and from
within, in 1952. Both paid dearly for their love of freedom
and democracy.

As
mentioned in the previous episode, Khedive Tawfik ‘s choice of Cherif
as Prime Minister was because of his popularity, which could counter
the people ‘s love of Orabi. Cherif was also believed,
rightly or wrongly, to be a promoter of a Democratic government.
The new Cabinet was the first under the British occupation and domination
of Egypt.
The
first priority of the Cherif Cabinet was the complete liquidation
of the Orabi Revolution. New Provinces‘ Governors were appointed
with the strict orders to arrest all those who participated or supported
the Orabi Revolution in their respective Provinces. As a result,
all the Revolution Leaders, along with a large number of officers and civilians
were arrested and put on trial.
In
a historical Cabinet meeting, in Alexandria, on September 17,
1882, the Cherif Cabinet, under the Presidency of the Khedive
decreed to abolish the Egyptian Army. Exceptions were made of those
(Turkish and Cherkess) officers who did not support Orabi and those
troops who were garrisoning the Sudanese Provinces during the Revolution.
The
seven leaders of the Revolution (Ahmad Orabi, Tolba Sami, Abdel
A’al Helmi, Mahmoud Sami Al Baroudi, Ali Fahmi, Mahmoud Fahmi and Ya’acoub
Sami) were condemned to death and their assets and properties confiscated.
But, at the insistence of the occupying power, the death sentence was commuted
to exile for life in the island of Ceylon (now called Sri Lanka).
In a sudden impulse of kindness and generosity, the Government allocated
a monthly amount of thirty pounds to each of the exiles. Furthermore,
a yearly amount of five hundred dollars was allocated to the Ceylon
chief of police to help financially whoever needed help among the exiles!!!
On
the other hand, when General Wolseley asked the Egyptian Government
to grant a pardon for those officers below the rank of Major (Second
Lieutenant, Lieutenant and Captains), Moustafa Ryad Pasha, the Minister
of Defense in the Cherif Cabinet, refused the British request
declaring that the financial situation of the country could sustain their
pensions!!!
That
same Cabinet, that refused to pay the pension of the fired subalterns,
agreed to pay the amount of 75,316.00 English Pounds to the British
occupation army as a contribution to the cost of its campaign in Egypt
evaluated at 1,152,000.00 English pounds until July 1883.
On
the light side, the Cherif Government agreed to build twenty-three
public lavatories in the different streets of Cairo at the cost
of thirty Egyptian Pounds each.
The
cholera
epidemic hit Egypt in 1883 and the Cherif Government
promptly approved an extra budget to fight successfully against that deadly
disease. But it was also during the Cherif Cabinet that British
officials occupied the senior civil and military positions of the Government,
particularly at the Ministries of Public works, Finances and National
Defense. The army was to be reorganized and led by a British
Commander with the title of Sirdar. Even the Police Force
was reshuffled and an English General, Valentine Baker Pasha, was
appointed to lead it. A new British Resident General, Sir Evelyn
Baring (Lord Cromer), was appointed in Cairo where he became
the virtual leader of Egypt.
In
1883, the Mahdist Rebellion in the Sudan was gaining
ground and the British Resident urged the Egyptian Government to withdraw
its troops from the Sudan. Cherif Pasha, who felt the Sudanese
Provinces belonged to the Ottoman Sultan and only held in custody
by Egypt, refused to abide by the British request and had to resign
his Cabinet on January 7, 1884.

Sir
Evelyn Baring (Lord Cromer) was born in 1841 to a wealthy Jewish
banking family of German origin (like the Rotchilds). He did not
have an Oxbridge (either Oxford or Cambridge) education,
like many British Leaders of the Victorian Era, but he graduated from the
Woolwich
Military Academy, a well-known Artillery School. He was sent
to India as a Secretary to his cousin, Lord Northbrook, the
British Viceroy in India.
His
ability in the administration field was quickly recognized and, eight years
after, he was sent to Egypt (in 1877) as Britain‘s Representative
to the “SANDOUK EL DAYN” (the fund for the administration of the
Egyptian
debt). In 1883, just after the British occupation of Egypt,
he was named as the British Agent (Resident) General
in Egypt.
Thus,
Baring
was a solid member of the British Establishment. He represented the
status quo and, by breeding and by instinct, he defended it with a steady
zeal and unemotional discipline. He was a cold, composed and methodical
man who belonged, from the beginning of his career to the inner ring of
high finance in Europe.
As
soon as he arrived in Egypt, he made himself its virtual ruler.
He completely lacked spontaneity and the flair of seeing into the simple
truth of things. His was the official world of caution and safe negative.
His
mission in Egypt was to promote to the maximum the British interests,
to solidify the British Occupation and to pay back the Egyptian National
Debt. He succeeded in all these objectives and, as a reward,
Queen
Victoria granted him the title of Lord Cromer in 1892.
To raise the necessary funds to eradicate the Egyptian Debt, he
reduced drastically the Egyptian Budgets allocated for Education, Health
and
Social
Services, the results of which are still felt in
Egypt to the
present time.
From
the British point of view he was an extremely successful Agent, but, from
the Egyptian side, his twenty four years “RULE” was a black
chapter in its Modern History.
After
the sad massacre of “DENSHIWAY” (in 1906), his presence in
Egypt
became
intolerable and he was recalled to England in
1907.
He
had a well-deserved reputation of rudeness and he managed to become the
“ BÊTE NOIRE” not only of the Egyptian People but also of
his own British Subordinates, one of them (name unknown) wrote the following
verses:
"The virtues
of patience are known,
but I think that,
when put to the touch,
the people of
Egypt will own, with a groan,
there is an evil
in Baring too much."
(To be continued)
Kamal K. Katba
General
Wolseley reviewing British troops in Egypt ( Painting By Ishinan )


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