THE. TIBETAN TROUBLE.
_3:e—_ PEESST— OH" china.
LONDON, March 13. _ Under the guise of friendly representations, the British Government are bringing heavy- pressure to bear on China to remove her troops from Tibet as speedily as possible. ' Authorities state that there is ho co cealing the anxiety which has been aroused over the military spirit shown by China, which the invasion of Tibet indicates. According to British students of Oriental conditions, the possibilities •of this new peril causing trouble in India are not to be minimised. "It cannot be pretended," says the ndon "Daily Telegraph," "that the un-looked-for turn of events does not raise one problem of vital importance. For the first time since tain took over the government of India we shall have to use force against China, which is encamped at our very gates, and we shall be fortunate indeed if the new northern frontier does not soon prove as constant and costly a source of anxiety as the more famous north-west of India."
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Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 69, 22 March 1910, Page 6
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166THE. TIBETAN TROUBLE. Auckland Star, Volume XLI, Issue 69, 22 March 1910, Page 6
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