"IMPLACABLE ENGLAND."
(Received 11.35 a.m.) WASHINGTON, November 25. Said Zaghoul Pasha, leader of the Egyptian Nationalists, appealed to President Wilson against "The barbarous treatment of implacable England."—(A. and NJZ. Cable.) Said Zaghbul Pasha is the leader of the largest of the many Nationalist parties formed in Egypt. He was at the head of the last revolt against British rule, and was deported in March last. He was educated in Cairo, and was appointed Minister of Public Instruction in 1006, and was later appointed Minister of Justice. His active adhesion to the Nationalist movement led to his resignation at Kitchener's request, and just before the war he was elected te the Legislative Assembly, being selected as one of its vice-presidents. He has led the agitation for intervention by the League of Nations and by America in Egypt.
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Auckland Star, Volume L, Issue 281, 26 November 1919, Page 7
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136"IMPLACABLE ENGLAND." Auckland Star, Volume L, Issue 281, 26 November 1919, Page 7
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