CO129-501-2 Chinese situation- Boxer indemnity 5-2-1927 - 14-12-1927 — Page 71

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

He said that he know that and thought we could pick

the ones we wanted. He added that though his name was on

the list he himself gravely doubted the wisdom in the

present chaos of moving further for the moment.

I have seen Ting since my retum to Peking and he

is in fact leaving for Wei-hai-wei immediately: he was

more than ever ready to stand down. He on his part was

very insistent that Nanking govemment having shown this

direct interest in the question, it was most desirable

for future Anglo-Chinese relations that we should not

miss this opportunity to secure their genuine co-opera-

tion: even if Nanking govemment fell we could always

point to this demonstration of our goodwill to Chin a

as a whole. There is pssibly something in this. At

the same time I am averse to proceeding too fast for the

present. The main question, namely whether we adhere to

our present policy regarding the use of Indemnity Fund

st ill remains open and I do not consider that we should

decide one way or the other until the political situation

is less obscure. We might proceed for the present as

proposed in last sentence of last paragraph of your

telegram No. 56 to me in Shanghai and I should be inclined

to ask Hushi to sound Tsai Wang Chung-hui and either of

the last two as to serving on provisional committee.

Yen, whom I have con sulted, approves of

Do you agree?

list, but I would omit Wu and Chow Pei-chen.

He thinks that the list may be acceptable to

present Cabinet as Weng and himself are personal friends

of Pan-fu. He is sounding latter and will let me know

Meanwhile it would help to know what

the result.

prospect

71

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