Page:Christiaan Snouck Hurgronje - The Revolt in Arabia (1917).djvu/19

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The Revolt in Arabia

Mecca, Jidda, Taʾif, and Medina, and has seriously hampered the movements of Turkish troops, menacing to him, by the destruction of a section of the railroad from Medina to the north. Wolff's Bureau, on the other hand, spreads a report of the "Milli Agency"—the Turkish National Agency—that a troop of Arabs, to whom robbery was no unaccustomed calling, had been persuaded by their captain, he being instigated by English marines, to bombard Mecca, that the Turkish troops had, however, speedily restored order, and that the raiders themselves, when it was proven that their leader had been seduced by English money to act thus basely, had delivered the miscreant to the Turkish authorities.

If the German-Turkish statement be correct, the occurrence was insignificant and not deserving attention. If Reuter