Essays in Liberalism - Being the Lectures and Papers Which Were Delivered at the - Liberal Summer School at Oxford, 1922 by Various
page 86 of 207 (41%)
page 86 of 207 (41%)
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pay for tribal corps to police their own borders, arming themselves and
providing their own ammunition and equipment. In this way we give honourable employment and secure an effective safeguard against raiders without pouring more arms into tribal territory. (4) We must have efficient irregular civil forces, militia, frontier constabulary, and police, well paid and contented. (5) We should revert to the old system of a separate frontier force in the army, specially trained in the work of guarding the marches. Those who remember the magnificent old Punjab frontier force will agree with me in deploring its abolition in pursuance of a scheme of army reorganisation. (6) We should improve communications, telephones, telegraphs, and lateral M.T. roads. (7) We should give liberal rewards for the interception and destruction of raiding gangs, and the rounding up of villages from which raids emanate. (8) We should admit that the Amir of Afghanistani for religious reasons exercises a paramount influence over our tribes, and we should get him to use that influence for the maintenance of peace on our common border. It has been the practise of our statesmen to adopt the attitude that because the Amir was by treaty precluded from interfering with our tribes, therefore he must have nothing to do with them. This is a short-sighted view. We found during the Great War the late Amir's influence, particularly over the Mahsuds, of the greatest value, when he agreed to use it on our behalf. |
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