MONGOLIAN AIMS.
INDEPENDENCE WANTED. NO USE ?OZt BOLSHEVISM. (Received 9.30 a.m.) DELHI, June 18. Colonel Ekerton, Consul-General at Kashgar, interviewed en route to England, said he was satisfied regarding the attitude of the Chinese towards Bolshevism, and that apart from force there was little likelihood of the Soviet gaining ground in Chinese Turkestan, for the whole of Central Asia now realised the meaning of Bolshevik domination in Western Mongolia, lying within the Kashgar Consulate area. The Mongols are in revolt, aiming at complete separation from China and the establishment of an independent kingdom. At present Mongolian events have no appearance of being a direct menace to India, but remembering the Mongol threat to Europe and Asia in the past we .ire unable to foretell the future with any certainty.— (A. and N.Z. Cable.)
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Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 143, 19 June 1922, Page 5
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133MONGOLIAN AIMS. Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 143, 19 June 1922, Page 5
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