POLISH MINISTERS
OBSCURE POSITION IN RUMANIA THREAT BY GERMANY MORE PRIVILEGES TO MINORITIES (United Press Assn.—Elec. Tel. Copyright) (Received Sept. 25, 3.15 p.m.) LONDON, Sept. 22 The Bucharest correspondent of the New York Times says that President Moscicki and Colonel Beck are watching the interests of 100,000 of their fellow refugees in Rumania, hut their position under international law is obscure. The position is complicated by clear suggestions that unless they were promptly interned it would be regarded by Germany as a breach of neutrality. Rumania is studying the position and is anxious punctiliously to observe neutrality while preserving courtesy to Poland, with which it has a friendly alliance. The Russian forces have revived uneasiness which had been latent since the occupation of Bessarabia. The Government has announced that it will grant fresh minority privileges to German communities in Bessarabia, presumably with the object of countering the Russian designs. BUDAPEST, Sept. 22 Soviet troops have arrived on the Russian-ilungarian frontier.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume 125, Issue 20917, 23 September 1939, Page 8
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160POLISH MINISTERS Waikato Times, Volume 125, Issue 20917, 23 September 1939, Page 8
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