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ABOLITION OF SLAVERY

ITALY’S PROCLAMATION. Sir John Harris, Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society, in a letter to “The Times,” says:— “Every lover of human liberty will welcome the proclamation made by Marshal Badoglio abolishing slavery throughout the Tigre, Amhara and Gojjam Provinces of Abyssinia. It is unfortunate, however, that nothing has been published by the Italian Government upon the action to be taken to give practical effect to the decision. Slavery dies hard; it has never yet been abolished by proclamation alone. If this manifesto is to be anything other than a ‘dead letter,’ several things will have to be done. These include: — “(a) Financial Measures. —The parallels are the British slave vote of £20,000,000 to set free 700,000 slaves within four years; the recent emancipation of about 10,000 slaves in Burma, which has cost the Indian Government R 5.5,165,688; the emancipation in Nepal in 1926, when 57,000 slaves were set free, for which the Prime Minister - of Nepal obtained a vote of £500,000 to carry through emancipation within seven years. No information has yet been made available as to - what sum has been set aside by the Fascist Council to carry through a more extensive measure of emancipation than any of the foregoing. “(b) Slavery Courts.—No arrangements have yet been announced for the creation of slavery courts for settling the many claims and disputes that must inevitably arise, nor do we know what consequential procedure is to be adopted for the issue of thousands of manumission papers. “(c) Nothing has yet been published upon the creation and maintence of freed slave home, such as that established by Lord Cromer in Egypt. “When information is supplied upon these and similar questions, the public will know whether the proclamation is of a practical or of a propaganda value. “If practical steps are taken to give effect to the proclamation, there will be no lack of British appreciation, even by those of us who find it so difficult to forgive and so impossible to forget the indifference and even actual opposition shown through many years by Italy towards efforts to secure emancipation in Ethiopia—indifference and opposition which continued from 1925 until thei nvasion took place, including opposition to Sir Austen Chamberlain's proposals for stronger measures against the slave traders of Ethiopia.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAWC19360619.2.71

Bibliographic details

Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 52, Issue 3771, 19 June 1936, Page 11

Word Count
379

ABOLITION OF SLAVERY Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 52, Issue 3771, 19 June 1936, Page 11

ABOLITION OF SLAVERY Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 52, Issue 3771, 19 June 1936, Page 11