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MR FOX ON NEW ZEALAND AFFAIRS.

TO THE EDITOE OF THE LONDON TIMES. Sib— Temporary absence from home has prevented my noticing the important debate in the House of Lords on the removal of the troops from New Zealand, which occurred on the 15th instant, but I trust that the lapse of a week will not hays obliterated all interest on the subject, and that you will allow me the opportunity of making a few remarks on the subject from a colonist's point of view. The general impression left on the mind of the reader of the debate in question, and particularly of Lord De Grey's speech, must be that the Colonial Government, either apart from or acting in unison with the Governor, has been the cause of the detention of the Imperial troops in the colony. It is due to the colonists that it should be known that that this is not the case. As far back as December, 1864, resolutions were passed by both Houses of Assembly, almost unanimously, requesting the Imperial Government to remove the whole of the troops without delay. Since that period, they have been detained by the Governor on his own responsibility, without, if not actually against, the express advice of two successive Ministries, and the colonists have had absolutely nothing whatever to do with the matter. The Colonial Government never consented to retain any portion of the troops on the terms proposed by Mr Cardwell ; and it has been owing in no way to its action or advice tJiat they have been retained by Governor. Why, then, should Lord De Grey complain that the colony has not paid a tingle shilling on account of these troops ? Another reason why the Government demurs to this and other charges which the Imperial Government seeks to impose upon it is the fact that, owing to the bitter quarrels between Sir George Grey and the successive Generals in command, about matters over which the Colonial Government had no control, the troops, during the period of their detention, and for a long period before they were ordered home, were absolutely of little or no use to the colony. Nay, more, their inaction and mismanagement involved the waste of very large colonial expenditure incurred in support of the Queen's troops, by the maintenance of a colonial force amounting to nearly 5000 men, who, during pJI the period referred to, were almost as useless as the Queen's troops, all owing to the unhappy and discreditable quarrels between the officers of the Imperial Government. If Lord De Grey had dismissed one of his footmen, who still persisted in remaining in his lordship's house, and when there spent his time in perpetual combats with the butler, would his lordship have considered himself bound to pay him his wages for the period after his dismissal ? The demand made on the colony to pay for the troops, whose removal it had requested, seems to us colonists exactly parallel. But let it not be supposed that the colony has not borne its fair share of the war, so long as the troops remained with its consent or by its desire. Responding to the call of the Duke of Newcastle, when^ he sent the troops, it at once organised its militia, enrolled a standing force of nearly 5000 men, and has since paid a military expenditure of from three to four millions sterling in support of the operations of the Imperial forces. No colony, I will venture to say, has ever, in analagous circumstances, in proportion to its population and resources, borne so large a share of the burden of its defence against either internal or external disturbances. The little that can be gathered from his Grace the Duke of Buckingham's remarks is extremely unsatisfactory, particularly the hint which he gives of renewing the commutation of the capitation money for a fixed sum of LoO.OOO a-year to be paid "for securing certain ends." The end hitherto secured by the payment of this native civil list by the colony has been in one way or other the maintenance of the interference of the Colonialoffice in the Government of the natives. Lord Carnavon is correct in stating that the Duke of Newcastle relieved the colony from this interference ; but he is wrong in saying that Mr Cardwell reversed it, and told the Governor ' that so long as Imperial troops remained in the colony, he was to act on his own judgment whenever he differed from his colonial advisers. It was to get rid of this interference that ihe Assembly, in 1864, passed the resolutions refered to, requesting the immediate removal of the troops. If his Grace the Secretary for the Colonies hopes to regain the right of interference by giving the colony a regiment on these terms he has made a mistake. The colony will, on no consideration, consent to the renewal of the right of interference in native affairs by the Home Government. To the exercise of such interference it unanimously attributes all the native difficulties, and so long as it is maintained the colony will have the corresponding right to demand mditary protection, There is, however, little tear of the colony accepting any such proposal, and of the detention of a regiment depends upon it, it will not be detained. ' Sir George Grey has always manifested

a large amount of Wallenstein's faith in "big battalions," and was not the man to denude himself of troops if he could help it. I think, however, he might have been compelled to do it without the step taken by Lord Carnarvon. Anything — the Governor's recall, or any other equally strong measure — would have been better than the provocation to conflict between the civil and military authorities, which ensued as the natural consequence of the transfer of the power from the former to the latter. Stung by the implied slight, Sir Georgo Grey at once threw himself into open opposition, and while forced to admit the General's power to remove the troops from the colony he defied him to take the necessary preliminary steps of moving them in the colony. The General was checkmated, referred the matter home, and retired into a position of sulky inactivity, which involved the waste of a great expenditure and the suspension of all active operations. But this was not the worst result. The '• demonstration" of the forces in a technical sense had been bad enough before. It now became far worse. The quarrel had been a singlecombat between the Governor and the General. It now became what the Americans call a free fight. Encouraged by Lord Carnarvon's action, every officer who could nib a pen and had the use of official stationery for nothing, every colonel who was tired of the war, and every commissary and deputy commis-sary-general rushed into foolscap, and the Governor and lus Ministry became involved in hot controversy with all sorts of military antagonists. The Governor might well have exclaimed, " Little dogs and all, Tray, Blanche, and Sweetheart — see, they bark at me." The disorganisation between the two services, civil and lniKtar} 7 ", became complete, as any one may see who will read the blue-books of the period. In the meantime the removal of the troops went on no faster than before, while their continuance in the colony became, if possible, of less utility than it had ever been. We have probably seen the last of the Imperial army in New Zealand, but it is to be hoped that if any troops are left there the injudicious step taken by Lord Carnarvon will not again be repeated. Nothing but conflict and inefficiency can possibly result from such division of authority. The suggestion of the recall of the Governor on the ground of his contumacy was made by more than one noble lord. It would probably have been the wisest course to adopt, but the impending effluxion of his term of office will no doubt render auy such step unnecessary. It is to be hoped that no consideration will induce the Home Government to prolong his tenure of office for another term, It seems to have • been an axiom at the Colonial office that so long as there are native difficulties in New Zealand, Sir George Grey must remain Governor. The opinion of many of the old colonists is that so long as he remains Governor there will be native difficulties. He has never acted in native affairs on any principle, but trusted solely to tact, diplomacy, and personal influence. During his first administration these sufficed to enable him to manage the natives, but before he returned to the colony in 1861. the temper of the natives had changed ; he found his personal influence entirely gone, and no man has ever been regarded with more dislike and suspicion by the natives, as a body, than .he has been since that period. How little he understood the problem he was sent to solve, and how little qualified he was to grapple with its difficulties has been proved by almost every successive step ho has taken, and at this moment he appears to have no more settled principles of native government than he ever had. So long as he remains in the colony as Governor, he will prove, in my humble opinion, the greatest impediment to the adjustment of the "native difficulty." I cannot conclude without expressing my satisfaction as a colonist at the handsome and candid retraction by Lord Carnarvon of the very undeserved imputations which ho had hazarded against the colonial forces on one occasion while he was Secretary of State for the Colonies. -The colonists have on more than one occasion had to smart under similar imputations made in high and official quarters and in Parliament. In the particular instances referred to, they were generally withdrawn on receipt of better information ; but it leaves the impression on the mind of colonists, much to be deplored, that people at homo are ready to believe anything bad of them. Notwithstanding many slanderous statements which have been circulated on high and often apparently respectable authority, I am convinced lhat neither the Colonial Government nor colonial forces deserve anything but approbation at the hands of their fellow-countrymen at home for their conduct during the very trying period of the history of the colony, which is now, I trust, fast drawing to a close. The colonists are thoroughly loyal to the Queen and affectionate to their fellowcountrymen at home ; but they do resent, and I trust, always will, the expression of feelings which indicate in the minds of those who express them a preconceived conception of what colonists arc, derogatory to their characters as Englismen and members of the British empire. I am, &c, Wiliiam Foi, Star Bedon, Norfolk, July 22.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WCT18671023.2.14

Bibliographic details

West Coast Times, Issue 649, 23 October 1867, Page 3

Word Count
1,796

MR FOX ON NEW ZEALAND AFFAIRS. West Coast Times, Issue 649, 23 October 1867, Page 3

MR FOX ON NEW ZEALAND AFFAIRS. West Coast Times, Issue 649, 23 October 1867, Page 3