Legislation Against Anarchists.
♦ (Per Press Association) London. Julj 7. The Marquis of Salisbury, in moving the first reading of his Bill dealing with aliens and foreign plotters, declared that Great Britain was the laboratory and head centre of Anarchists who hatched plots to be executed elsewhere. It was, therefore, necessary to abandon the theory of the rights of asylum, and cease to offer special facilities for assassins. Lord Rosebery denied that Great Britain had willingly harboured assassins, and he pointed out that many leading Anarchists had been arrested and their designs upset. He feared the Marquis of Salisbury's measure would have a disastrous effect on the Continent, and complicate foreign relations. Paris, July 8. The French Cabinet has drafted a Bill increasing the penalties for Anarchist crimes. The new measure levelled at the Anarchists gives Magistrate's sum mary jurisdiction, and prohibita the reports of trials being published.
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Bibliographic details
Feilding Star, Volume XVI, Issue 8, 10 July 1894, Page 2
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147Legislation Against Anarchists. Feilding Star, Volume XVI, Issue 8, 10 July 1894, Page 2
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