Enclosure No. 1

35

21

Translation.

(Extract from Kwok Man San Man, Canton, 19th January 1927)

Resolution made at the Provisional Joint Conference

of the Propaganda Sections of various Political Departments

at the rear.

1.

General rules re Anti-British Propaganda.

Policy of the British Imperialists against China.

In the past the British Imperialists acquired many special privileges from China to an extent surpassing all others, through threats and cunning diplomacy. They have

also suppressed Chinase revolutionary movements by much more severe and drastic measures than any other Imperialists. The incidents of May the 30th, June the 23rd and at Wansien in the year past are no accidental tragedies. Such a policy against China differs not from that they adopted against the On Chat Lai tribe (?) in India. (In 1919 more than 10,000

of the Cn Chat Lai (?) tribe held a meeting in a public garden, and the British soldiers swept them with machine guns from the entrance, leaving none of them unkilled.)

This massacre brought the subject races in their colonies and semi-colonies to entire submission, and they attempted to apply to China the same "heroic measures" as proved effective in India. The policy of the British Imperialists has not even been so simple. They have also had in China their tame dogs, such as Wu Pei-fu and Sun Ch'uan-fang whom they set to work to enable them to carry out their intrigue for grasping the control of the economic administration of China. And as a result China cannot do anything as a free people. Chan Kwing Ming, Ngai Pong Ping and Chan Lim Pak have all failed in their attempts to cause

disturbance in the South, and Wu Pei-fu and Sun Ch'uan-fang

are

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