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the deputation of a special officer from India to inquire into the matter. Mr. Brodhurst, of the Bengal Civil Service, was accordingly deputed. This officer extended his inquiries to the cases of other convicts brought specially to his notice by the Straits Government; and on receipt of his report, the Government of India granted unconditional releases in certain cases, while in others the convicts were pardoned conditionally on their not leaving the Straits. On this representation by the Straits Government, His Excellency the Governor-General in Council, having reconsidered the subject, decided that any Indian or Burmese, who had completed twenty-five years' imprisonment and bore a good character, should be released, with permission to return to India or Burmah, provided he, or she, as the case might be, was not convicted of one of the offences enumerated below, viz.:-- 1. Thuggee. 2. Dacoity. 3. Professional poisoning. 4. Belonging to a gang of Dacoits. 5. Belonging to a gang of Thugs. 6. Mutiny or rebellion with murder. Of those who did not come under this category, some were pardoned unconditionally; others were released after they had completed twenty-five years' imprisonment, on condition that their conduct continued satisfactory. Of those who were pardoned unconditionally many returned to their own country; but when they arrived there they found things so uncongenial that they returned to the Straits and settled down as shopkeepers, cowkeepers, cartmen, etc., and most of them sought and obtained employment either with private individuals or in the Public Works Department. Several of the skilled artificers, who had been petty officers, were employed as sub-assistant overseers and gangers on public works, where their services proved to be of great utility, their prison training having rendered them much more to be relied upon than free men, and, as far as we have been able to ascertain, none of them have been reconvicted. Of the total number of convicts in the Straits at the time when the convict establishment was broken up in 1873-- 256 had been transported for Thuggee. 581 " " " " Dacoity. 21 " " " " Professional poisoning. 269 " " " " Robbery with murder, including highway robbery and gang robbery. ----- 1,127 The remainder were nearly all for murder, for bein
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