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NO ROOM FOR PANIC

THE FALL OF SINGAPORE

CALL TO GREATER EFFORT

The significance of the fall o.f Singapore to New Zealand was referred to by the Prime Minister (Mr. Fraser) in a statement he made this afternoon. Mr. Fraser said that it would be idle and wrong to pretend that the loss of Singapore had not brought danger nearer to our shores. At the same time there : was no room for foolish or frantic panic. New Zealand would face up courageously to whatever situation developed, and the danger to the country would decrease in ratio to the efforts made to defend bur own shores against the possibility of attack and to contribute to the programme for victory now being planned by Britain and her Allies.

"The fall of Singapore is a severe blow to the Allied cause," said Mr. leaser. "To the democratic nations of the Pacific it is at once an increased menace and a further call to additional effort and even more unremitting work to stern the advance of the enemy; to prepare with all possible speed and efficiency to .meet any further attacks* that may be made on Allied territory; and to lay surely and truly the foundations of ultimate victory—a task in which all the Pacific Allies are very Closely and effectively co-operating. "In my opinion Mr. Churchill's speech this- morning struck a true, realistic, ■ unflinching note. He hid nothing of the seriousness of the loss; he faced the adverse consequences of the fall of the city and naval base; analysed its effect upon the whole world war situation generally, and examined very frankly the position in all the fields of war activity. "Mr. Churchill's speech was again a clarion call to all of us neither to falter nor fail. New Zealand responded instantly. THE NATION'S RESPONSIBILITY. "In every New Zealand heart today there is increased determination to strive more strenuously than ever for victory. Our future as a nation, our future as part of the British Commonwealth of- Nations, the safety of our own shores, the fate of alj our people, of our children, of future generations in our fair land, depend !upon the sincerity, the energy, and the efficiency •we put into our national war task and the" discharge of our respective responsibilities.

* "It would be idle and wrong to pretend that the fall of Singapore has not brought danger nearer to our shores. It has done so. But while there is ample cause for wellgrounded concern, there is no room for foolish or frantic panic. "We will neither wince nor tremble. We will not fall into undignified complaining, or weeping, or grizzling, or growling, or indulge in stupid, uninformed, unhelpful, carping criticism about those who have had the higher direction of our joint war effort, and who with the forces and means;at their disposal could not possibly overcome the huge handicaps of :- time and material which confronted them. New Zealand will face courageously whatever situation will develop. It will do so with calm assurance and dignity as well as with courage. "Our danger, which I do not minimise, will decrease in ratio to the effort we all make to build up resistance to any possible, attack and to contribute to the programme for victory now being planned in the Pacific and progressively and' increasingly operated by our Mother Country, Great Britain, by our sister , Dominion, Australia, by our great ally, the United States, and by* our "other brave partners, the Netherlands East Indies and China, as well as India and Burma. "At the nerve centre of the struggle, the courageous example set by. the United Kingdom, Holland, Belgium, Norway, and the other European allies, particularly the ■' tenacious and indomitable fight put up by Russia, is a stimulus to all of us."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19420216.2.39

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 39, 16 February 1942, Page 6

Word Count
629

NO ROOM FOR PANIC Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 39, 16 February 1942, Page 6

NO ROOM FOR PANIC Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 39, 16 February 1942, Page 6

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