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MUTUAL AID AFTER WAR

Seen As Duty Of Allies (British Official Wireless.) RUGBY, October 31. “As far as the Netherlands and Belgium are concerned, I have no doubts that their independent existence will be guaranteed by the close co-opera-tion of the United Nations, of which I have seen striking examples in London,” declared General Smuts, broadcasting in Dutch tonight to the people of the Netherlands and Belgium. “We in South Africa share your conviction that beyond frontier and ocean all men who want to uphold the rights of civilization are allies in the great struggle, the final victory of which will renew the world. Nothing or nobody will divide us. Nothing or nobody will keep us from our resolution to crush the enemy and the, dark powers with which he would taint the soul of men.

“Humanity will yet gather the fruit of the sacrifices endured by our sorely stricken generation. If wo maintain our firm confidence in victory, then it is our duty to prepare for a peace which could grow organically from the united will of the United Nations. The mutual aid now rendered by the United Nations must be continued in peace to achieve the elaboration of the Atlantic Charter in the economic and social spheres.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19421102.2.55

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 32, 2 November 1942, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
209

MUTUAL AID AFTER WAR Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 32, 2 November 1942, Page 5

MUTUAL AID AFTER WAR Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 32, 2 November 1942, Page 5

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