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THE KANAKA WAIL.

AND THE EMPLOYERS’ TALES.

By Telegraph— Press Association—Copyright Received 1.6 a.m., March 28. London, March 27.

Lord Onslow, [in reply to Lord Lamington, said that he interpreted tho cable published in tho Daily Mail in reference to tho deportation of Kanakas from Queensland to mean that if a Kanaka was repatriated he would bo immediately killed, cooked, and eaten. It was Captain Rawson’s special business to inform Kanakas about tho repatriated opportunities awaiting them, and to give them assurance that if they feared ill treatment they would bo sent to the British possession, where they would be welcomed and safe.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GIST19030328.2.25

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Times, Volume IX, Issue 852, 28 March 1903, Page 2

Word Count
103

THE KANAKA WAIL. Gisborne Times, Volume IX, Issue 852, 28 March 1903, Page 2

THE KANAKA WAIL. Gisborne Times, Volume IX, Issue 852, 28 March 1903, Page 2

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