MAHARAJA'S EXILE
INDIAN PRINCE IN LONDON BANISHED EOll TWO YEARS Banished from his State for two years by order of the Government of India, His Highness Shir Eewai Maliaraj Raj Rishi Dey of Alwar, arrived in London last month. He took with him a case labelled “rules,, reference books and speeches,” and over iOG trunks and packages. AH these we. e hastily packed in the 48 hours which the Viceroy of India gave the maharaja, to leave his State. The object of the maharaja’s visit was to state his case to the British Government, and he intended to seek to interview Sir Samuel Hbare, Secretary of State for India, and Sir John Simon, the Foreign Secretary. The exiled ruler was received at Victoria station on his arrival in London bv Colonel S. B. A. Patterson, politicai A.D.C. to the India Office. He wore a plum-coloured suit, a brown velvet beretta, and a soft collar with a blue, amber and black striped tie.
Tiie maharaja is the Hindu ruler of a Moslem State, and contends that the recent uprisings of his people are not directed against him personally, but are in accordance with a Mohammedan conspiracy to unite the whole of Northern India, against the Hindus. The Government of India holds that the treasury of the State of Alwar j s empty, anj that the revolutionary, uprisings of the maharaja’s people arc due to. the overtaxing of his subjects. ’ “The Government of India’s policy,” to quote' its .. definition of paramountcy, ‘ Is, with rare exceptions, one of noninterferences in the internal affairs of native States. But in guaranteeing the internal independence of these States and undertaking their protection against external aggression, the Imperial Government has assumed a certain degree of responsibility for the general soundness of the chief’s administration, and cannot incur the reproach of being an indirect instrument of misrule.” It is in pursuance of this last clause that the Government of India has stepped in to reorganise the administration of the State of Alwar. > ~r
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Hokitika Guardian, 30 August 1933, Page 8
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335MAHARAJA'S EXILE Hokitika Guardian, 30 August 1933, Page 8
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