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INDIAN SEDITIONISTS

ME It lit. EXT ASSASSINATIONS. HELPING NATIVE STUDENTS. By Cable.—Press Amociation.—Coj., London, Jaij „ Viecount Morlcy, Secretary of!' t* for India, recently established an I. .. in bureau of information to advUt and assist Indian students regarding the lion of education aud u t ,ier ma, .•«, riio students have largely themselves of the advantages. I'lie Earl of Minto, Viceroy of L.dta. nas published arrangements for u* formation of provincial commute* throughout India in order to put IM Students' Information Bureau of London in toueh with Indian parents wivti. ing to send their ions to England 10 he educated.

It Is suggested that soma police u«» d«i standing tire language of lnJa should .be imported to Milet in waulj. rag suspects In London. l)ingfira subscribed to the newbpi 'n r* Bandee and Mataram, attended navtings of the Indian revolutionary a London and met seditlonlsts in Paris. He wrote to his brother! "I ccnut j.roceed with my studiesj my first duty is to emancipate the fatherland." RENEWAL OF POLITICAL EXCITEMENT. SO-CALLED LOYALISTS Received 6, 10.15 p.m. Bombay, July J, ReuterV correspondent states that there is a renewal ot' political excitcnient in Eastern Bengal as a desult of the recent speeches of Arabido Uhose and others sympathising with the d* portods.

The Statesman and Englishman at Calcutta connect Sir William Wylllo'e murder with the recent events' in Bengal and blame the professedly loyal public men and writers in Indian who, -while denouncing anarchism, lote no opportunity of inflaming student* against the Government.

The native papers, the Bengalee and Amrita Bazaar Partika, express horror' at the murder.

VIOLENT SPEECH BY VICTOR GRAYSON. EXPRESSES SYMPATHY WITH TBS MURDERER. PREMIER'S ATTENTION fiAT.T.ttp TO HIS KKMAWR ■ Received July 5, 10.55 p^n. London, July 5. Mr. Victor Grayson, M.P., speaking at Hudders&eld, said the recent murder was very regrettable and with the relatives lie expressed the deepest sympathy. He had seqn m the newspaper! portraits of the murderer, whom they called an assassin, and be said to' himself, "Why not put Lord Morley in and say 'another assassin'?" He went 011 to say that for yean India had been misruled by the British Government. He did not condemn the act, but extended his sympathy to the poor Indian, "mad and exasperated by the horrors endured by his people." The Daily Graphio calls tthe attention of the Premier to the speech. ,

THE FEELING IN INDIA; ; UNANIMOUS CONDEMNATION. Received July 5, 10.55 p.m. London, July S, Tln> Times' Bombay correspondent say» the opinion in India regarding the double tragedy is remarkably unanimous. The newspaper Parsi remark* that * majority of cowardly scoundrels are re-> sponsible for betraying young Indian* 1 < ! into dastardly paths. The whole of India ought to demand that these moral lepers be brought hack to India from , Europe. • » Another newspaper recommends •» ■ • * clean swvep of India House and tighten- " ing the control over the Indian stu- - dents in England. '' ["lndia House" is a boardlnghouio ' - from which seditious literature is drafted t and distributed. It ia owned by . Krishnavarina, an Indian barrister, an M.A. of Oxford, editor of thu "Indian Sociologist," who was recently expelled from the Bar for publishing revolutionary literature.] ' ' ■

The Laj Patrai, at Lahore, telegraph- . v cd to the Timts, in reply to the insinuations circulated from Europe, that it views with abhorrence Sir William Wyllie's murder and strongly condemn* • the political assassinations. It never ( knew the murderer.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19090706.2.33

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Taranaki Daily News, Volume LII, Issue 135, 6 July 1909, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
561

INDIAN SEDITIONISTS Taranaki Daily News, Volume LII, Issue 135, 6 July 1909, Page 2

INDIAN SEDITIONISTS Taranaki Daily News, Volume LII, Issue 135, 6 July 1909, Page 2

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