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GERMAN SOUTH AFRICA.

A TROUBLESOME TASK. MORE MEN WANTED. Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright, BERLIN, March 21. (Received March 22, at 8.26 a.m.) The chief Morenga and his followers escaped and fled northwards after a sharp fight with the Germans. Colonel Deimling, speaking in the Reichstag, declared that the troops in South-west Africa were tied to their base, and that only 2,000 were available against Morenga and Bondelzarts. It was impossible to suppress the Hottentots without building a railway to Keetmanslsoep.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19060322.2.69

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 12768, 22 March 1906, Page 7

Word Count
79

GERMAN SOUTH AFRICA. Evening Star, Issue 12768, 22 March 1906, Page 7

GERMAN SOUTH AFRICA. Evening Star, Issue 12768, 22 March 1906, Page 7

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