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MEXICAN OIL

REPORTED GOVERNMENT CONTRACT SALE TO MR. F. W. RICKETT AT CURRENT WORLD PRICES (By Telegraph—Press Association — Copyright.) NEW YORK, April 19. The Mexican Government is reported to have made contract with Mr F. W. Rickett foi' the sale of a quantity of oil at the current world price, says the Mexico City correspondent of the United Press News Agency. A message from Mexico City on March 31 announced that Mr F. W. Rickett. of Ethiopian oil deal fame, conferred with the Government, which offered large contracts for Government produced oil priced well below world prices. The impression prevailed that should the scheme prove sufficiently successful to provide funds to pay the expropriated companies a solution might be found. Otherwise the courts are likely to nullify or ameliorate the decree in order to take the Government out of the serious predicament precipitated by the seizure. The expropriated companies announced that they would place an embargo on oils exported from their properties, althought it was believed this would be difficult in the event of transhipments by a, third country. Mr Rickett became internationally prominent in August, 1935, when Italy’s aggressive attitude toward Abyssinia was creating great concern, by an announcement that he had secured from the Emperor Haile Selassie sole rights to oil, mineral and other natural resources in half the Abyssinian Empire for a period of 75 years. Mr Rickett was acting as the envoy of the African Exploitation and Development Company, an American concern. It was generally considered that the concession was a move on Haile Selassie’s part to accentuate American and British interest in preserving peace between Italy and Abyssinia. Britain, however, immediately advised the Emperor to withhold the concession, and the United States Government refused to become involved in the dispute. It was subsequently announced by the American Secretary of State, Mr Cordell Hull, that as the result of discussions he had with oil company officials they had agreed to withdraw from the concession, the news being welcomed in Europe as removing an embarrassing complication from the Abyssinian situation.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19380420.2.77

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 20 April 1938, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
343

MEXICAN OIL Wairarapa Times-Age, 20 April 1938, Page 7

MEXICAN OIL Wairarapa Times-Age, 20 April 1938, Page 7

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