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IRELAND’S ATTITUDE

DISTINCTLY FAVOURABLE TO THE EMPIRE. London, October 5. The departure is reported from Eire of most of hei- German residents, including men well on in years who had a substantial stake in the country; only the German Minister qnd his small staff, and one or two families, have not returned to the Fatherland. Eire has announced her neutrality in the War, but that has not prevented this general exodus of Germans; nor has it prevented the large majority of the people of Eire from sympathising with the Empire’s cause. A story is going the rounds of an Irish harbour official, making no move to detain the crew of a British seaplane that had made a forced landing (who, if their craft had landed in ' a neutral foreign country, ought by international law to have been interned) said, “Sure we are neutral! But who are we neutral against ? ” In the meantime the British Government has decided to appoint a representative in Eire, and Sir John Maffey has been chosen for that post. There are numerous questions concerning the . economic, commercial and political relations of the two countries which require close and constant discussion, and, as The Times says editorially, “The neutrality of Eire need not prevent that country from maintaining close touch with the larger Islands; the links of

commerce and finance in particular’ require to be well guarded and strengthened in the present crisis.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAWC19391030.2.55

Bibliographic details

Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4204, 30 October 1939, Page 8

Word Count
236

IRELAND’S ATTITUDE Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4204, 30 October 1939, Page 8

IRELAND’S ATTITUDE Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 59, Issue 4204, 30 October 1939, Page 8