CO129-471 - Public Offices - 1921 — Page 279

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All

YTS

278

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-ġnknak ban remanuŸ

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TAGOJ * 2;

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pasuntować to asanlyog auromortojus adj

nacjebni to drag sila no amei ELEau ben

SZENTĒLSTĪ Belə şď heretio roneed evilo odd

to, nt ridebran urey oð boðtogar kar riu Ertu 六

brandon flog #st to wɑ galyties uzla eruben of

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not far to seek. The person responsible for this pelle in

Generel Chân Yun-p'mg, Prine Kinister of a doverment created

and maintained by a elique of Berthern Military Governors or

Tushuns consisting of Chang Tse-lin, Inspector General of Manoharia, and Ta-me X'un, Inspester General of Chihli, Shantung

and Fionan; and with them must be reckoned, since the resent

Tientsin Conference, Wang Chan-yuan, Inspecter General of Hupeh

and ihmaYL, Chang Tao-lin has loyally stood by the Premier

and the "elections" in his thres provinces have been completed.

Ta'ao K'un would personally like to carry out the same polisy,

but is unable to do so owing to the fact that power in two of

his provinces, Chihli and lionan, is largely in the hands of his

Assistant Inspector, General Wu Plat-fu, who has let him kno W

that no elestions will be permitted in legalities which he or

his subordinates sontrol; while the province of Shantung remains

in the hands of the Military (overer T'ion Chung-yu who bestas suspect of "anfu" sympathies at the time of last sumer's Civil

Ter, and who has hitherto steadfastly refused to do anything to

fasilitate elections.

Military leaders opposed at the present time to the

summoning of Parliament are able to support their refusal by

the argument of popular apposition. Radioal China does not

wish to ses another puppet Farliament which would give a show of legality to the "illegal" nota of the country's present

rulers; the merchant classes do not desire the large expenditure

of funds which elestions always matmil, funus to obtain

which they would be milked; the old-fashioned gantry are, as

always, opposed to a Parliament, particularly when they s00

so chance of their securing control of it.

A

The idea of Chân Yun-p'ong and Chang Tso-lin is that

the new Parliament should be one which would basic them through

thisk and thin, As it appears that powers hostile to this

are so largely in control of the country as to

sombinatio

250

46 12

enable,

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