|
Later, another Afghan ruler, Muhammad Ghauri, invaded this
area and Islam began to spread here. The Yousafzai Pathan
tribe came to inhabit this area is the wake of the invasion.
About 400 years ago, successive Mughal rulers attemped in
vain to capture this area. After the fall of the Mughals,
Sikh rulers tried to conquer this area but we repulsed. The
British had always looked at this area with covetous eyes
but dared no venture to flirt with it openly. In 1882, The
British approached to the elders of Malakand Agency with the
request to allow the passage of post to Chitral, which was
then in the Administrative sphere of Gilgit. With the common
consent of Aslam Khan and Inayat Khan of Thana, Saadat khan
of Alladand and Sarbiland Khan of Palai, the postal runners
were allowed through the Agency in exchange for a considerable
amount of money to be paid yearly to each. In 1885, the Chitral
relief expedition however necessitated the British intervention
in this area. British officer and troops had been besieged
in Chitral by Chitralis under Sher Afzal in association with
Umara Khan of jandol. To reinforce their forces there, they
needed a route to Chitral as the Gilgit-Chitral road, the
only route at that time, was covered with snow and they had
no option left except to pass through Malakand Agency. The
British therefore, laid siege of the Malakand pass. The people
fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to the enemy.
The British artillery particularly proving more than a match
for the old and rusty guns and swords of the natives. To fortify
their position and ensure the safety of the strategically
Important Chitral road, they constructed two forts at Malakand
and Chakdara with many piquet overhead the surrounding hills.
One of them Churchill piquet, was name after Lt. Churchill
who later on became the Prime Minister of Britain. Since then
the British intervened in the politics of the area. A political
Agent was stationed at Malakand to mediate between the British
and the people of the Area.
|