
˛Hajjı Müsa
Frah˛ (here called by the nickname of ‘Igarreh’), the most trusted
and highest ranking Somali official in the Protectorate administration,
on whom he, in other letters, often heaped scorn. Risaldar-
Major Müs Fra˛, had started his colonial career as a policeman
in Aden. He had joined the Protectorate staff as a member of the
mounted police and distinguished himself during the British expeditions
against the Sayyid. In 1906 he became a ‘native chief politician,
and in 1912 he became ‘Chief Native Assistant’, He was the most trusted Somali adviser of
Swayne and later governors. For Jardine, Müs Fra˛ was the
Sayyid’s counterpart, as he was in the pro-government camp
what the Sayyid was in the anticolonial resistance movement.4
Jardine, Mad Mullah, 77-8, 311-12; Sheik-Abdi, Divine Madness, 186-7
and PRO CO 535, vol. 42.

