FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89  
90   >>  
ic, obstinate old man like the present President for instance. UITLANDERS' RIGHTS SECURED BY A SOLEMN CONVENTION. Far from deserving the title of great which some English visitors have bestowed upon Mr Kruger, it seems to be that the most fitting title would be "little." The gifts the gods have given his State he resolutely refuses. His sole purpose and object seems to be to make the South African Republic the China of South Africa. He declines to admit men who are in every way qualified to the burghership, though every other new country is competing for such men. The Americans welcomed every able-bodied incomer as a fresh ally, and valued each workman as being worth 200 pounds to the State. Thirty years ago citizenship depended upon nativity, and could never be abandoned. The idea was a relic of the Middle Ages, and was traceable to tribal superstition of prehistoric times, but as nearly every country in the civilised world has consented to admit people of all races to citizenship after a probationary period of from three to five years, the South African Republic only marks its own retrogression to barbarism by extending the term to fifteen years. Mr Kruger, instead of granting to foreigners common rights which were sealed to them by a Solemn Convention, for which let it be always remembered the independence of the State was assured, prefers to keep 80,000 uitlanders outside the pale of citizenship, to irritate them by onerous laws passed by an oligarchy of twenty-four men, and to grind them with taxes. If he made them burghers his country would be the premier State in South Africa, and he might then do almost what he liked, except invade his neighbours' territories. The worst that could befall a Boer is that some candidate might be thwarted in his hopes of the Presidency, but the inviolability of the Republic and its Independence would be placed beyond danger. WHAT KRUGER'S POLICY WILL LEAD TO. Mr Kruger professes to seek the prosperity and progress of the State, but I will simply mention the dynamite and other monopolies, of which we have heard so much lately, and point out that it is only a Boer audience that could be persuaded to believe in him. The resources of the State are forbidden to be exploited, the Minister of Mines refuses to proclaim new gold fields; the taxation on those in operation is so heavy that only a few of the richest mines on the main reef can be profitably worked. The expenditu
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89  
90   >>  



Top keywords:

Kruger

 

country

 

Republic

 

citizenship

 

African

 

refuses

 
Africa
 

candidate

 

thwarted

 

territories


neighbours
 

befall

 

invade

 

uitlanders

 

irritate

 

prefers

 

remembered

 

independence

 
assured
 

onerous


burghers

 
premier
 

Presidency

 

passed

 

oligarchy

 
twenty
 

progress

 
Minister
 

proclaim

 

fields


exploited

 

forbidden

 

persuaded

 

audience

 

resources

 

taxation

 

profitably

 
worked
 

expenditu

 

operation


richest
 
POLICY
 

professes

 
KRUGER
 
Independence
 
danger
 

prosperity

 

monopolies

 

dynamite

 

mention