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‘A most auspicious begining’: the 1946 United Nations General Assembly and the question of the treatment of Indians in South Africa*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
Extract
On 22 June 1946 the Government of India asked that the treatment of Indians in South Africa be placed on the agenda of the Second Part of the First UN General Assembly. This was the first dispute to be taken to the General Assembly and it resulted in the UN's first attack on South Africa. From the perspective of the 1990s the only striking thing about the 1946 UN resolution is its mild tone and the limitation of its criticism to South Africa's, policies relating to just one group. However, from the perspective of 1946 it is remarkable that the UN should even have discussed South Africa's treatment of her Indian citizens, let alone have decided by a two-thirds majority that she had failed to treat them in conformity with. her international obligations and the relevant provisions of the UN Charter.
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References
1 Draft Memorandum by C. Heathcote-Smith (Second Secretary, Foreign Office), 30 Apr. 1946, London, Public Record Office (PRO), U 3979/36/70 FO 371/57137 and DO 35/1122/G715/30.
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8 The ‘more impermanent Indian elements not willing to conform to western standards of life’ were offered voluntary repatriation. Very few took up the offer.
9 The doctrine of inter-se was a constitutional device developed by Britain to take account of the emergence of the Dominions onto the international stage. It was based on the fact that the British sovereign was the head of all Commonwealth countries. By virtue of their shared loyalty to the King, Commonwealth countries were held to enjoy a special kind of relationship which was not international and was not governed by international law.
10 Memorandum by Sir Tej Bahadur Sapru, 3 Oct. 1946, New Delhi, National Archives of India (NAI), Appendix E, 2(19)-UNO 1/47. See also Jha, C. S., From Bandung to Tashkent: Glimpses of India's Foreign Policy (London, 1983), pp. 23–25Google Scholar.
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12 Commonwealth Relations Department, ‘Presentation of the Case of Indians in South Africa before the United Nations’, c. 15 May 1946, NAI, External Affairs 14(25) PWR/46.
13 India deliberately avoided the reference to human rights in Article 62.2 since it related to the functions and powers of the Economic and Social Council. India most definitely wanted to keep her dispute away from ECOSOC where it ‘would be relegated to the economic and social plane and would not focus the attention of the world as it would if it were kept alive purely as a political issue before the General Assembly’. (Minute by B. K. Kapur [an official in the External Affairs Department], 24 May 1946, NAI, SN7 14(25) PWR/46).
14 Commonwealth Relations Department, ‘Presentation of the Case’, NAI, External Affairs 14(25) PWR/46.
15 Sapru memorandum, NAI, Appendix E to 2(19) UNOI/47.
16 Lord Wavell (Viceroy of India) to Lord Pethick-Lawrence (Secretary of State for India), 3 Sep. 1946, Telegram 1842-S, IOR, L/E/9/1403 and L/PO/471.
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25 The Assembly president, Paul-Henri Spaak of Belgium, chaired the Committee. The seven vice-presidents represented China, France, South Africa, Venezuela, the Soviet Union, the United States and Britain. The committee chairmen represented the Ukraine, Poland, New Zealand, Syria, Uruguay and Panama.
26 Note by Ben Cockram (a Dominions Office official who was acting as Counsellor in the British Embassy in Washington and was attached to the UK Delegation) for Arthur Bottomley (Under Secretary, Dominions Office), 19 Dec. 1946, PRO, DO 35/1214/WR208/5/64.
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31 By 4 to 3 with 4 abstentions.
32 Minute by R. N. Gilchrist (Principal, India Office) for J. P. Gibson (Head of Political Department, India Office), 29 June 1946, IOR, L/E/9/1403.
33 Curson to Anderson, 28 Oct. 1946, IOR, L/E/9/1396.
34 Ibid.
35 Note by Cockram for Bottomley, PRO, DO 35/1214/WR208/5/64.
36 Telegram from Pandit to Nehru, 25 Oct. 1946, Personal, NAI, SN31 6(22)-CC/46.
37 Cockram to Sir John Stephenson (Deputy Under Secretary, Dominions Office), 8 Nov. 1946, Secret & Personal, PRO, DO 35/128.
38 Ibid.
39 The Indian resolution stated that South Africa's discriminatory treatment of Asians and Indians constituted ‘a denial of human rights and fundamental freedoms’, was ‘contrary to the Charter’, and had impaired and was further likely to impair Indian-South African relations. Accordingly, the Union Government ‘should revise their general policy and their legislative and administrative measures affecting Asiatics … so as to bring them into conformity with the principles and purposes of the Charter’. (Report of the Indian Delegation, 27 Feb. 1947, NAI, 2(19)-UNOI/47 1947 and IOR, EXT 8593 1947 180/7 L/E/9/1392.)
40 Jha, , Bandung to Tashkent, p. 26Google Scholar.
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42 Smuts argued that the ‘Ghetto’ Act, like the temporary ‘Pegging’ Act of 1943, resulted from the failure to repatriate all but the ‘irreducable minimum’ of Indians capable of being assimilated under the Capetown Agreement; the Act did not discriminate against Indians since it also applied to Europeans; and under the Act Indians were for the first time recognized as members of the South African community by being granted representation in the Natal Provincial Council.
43 UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 21 Nov. 1946, Telegram 1878, Cambridge, Churchill College Archives, Noel-Baker Papers 4/745.
44 ‘Note on the Indian Delegation’ by Curson, 27 Dec. 1946, IOR, L/E/9/1392.
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51 Report of Indian Delegation, NAI, 2(19)-UNOI/47 1947.
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55 Cited in UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 26 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2002, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
56 Report of Indian Delegation, NAI, 2(19)-UNOI/47 1947. Those who spoke in support of India were China, Poland, the Philippines, Egypt, Iran, Ethiopia, Colombia, Uruguay, Panama, France, Mexico, Byelorussia, Yugoslavia, the Ukraine, and the USSR.
57 Curson to Anderson, 28 Nov. 1946, IOR, L/E/9/1396.
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59 Cited in UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 29 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2101, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
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61 Curson to Anderson, 28 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2090, Top Secret and Personal, Immediate, IOR, C&O 6226 1946 L/E/9/1396.
62 Report on Second Part of First Session of the General Assembly. Note by the Foreign Office, IOC 47(21), IOR, L/E/9/1392.
63 UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 29 Oct. 1946, Telegram 1332, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
64 Minute by P. Mason (Acting Counsellor, Foreign Office), 19 Nov. 1946, PRO, UN 4150/432/78 FO 371/59797.
65 Curson to the author, 17 Oct. 1988.
66 Curson to Anderson, 28 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2090, IOR, L/E/9/1396.
67 Pandit to Nehru, 29 Nov. 1946, Cypher Telegram GA41, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
68 Curson to Anderson, Telegram 2090, IOR, L/E/9/1396.
69 Curson to Anderson, 28 Nov. 1946, Secret, IOR, L/E/9/1396. See also Cockram to Stephenson, 8 Nov. 1946, PRO, DO 35/1289.
70 Bottomley to Sir E. Machtig (Permanent Under Secretary, Dominions Office), 27 Nov. 1946, Cypher Telegram 2059, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
71 See UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 27 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2058, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46; Bottomley to Machtig, Telegram 2059, DO 35/1293/G715/46.
72 See UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 27 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2058, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46; UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 29 Nov. 1946, Telegram 2102, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46; Yearbook of the United Nations 1946–7, pp. 146–7. On the US position see memorandum by Mr Sandifer, 26 Nov. 1946, Washington D.C., US National Archives, US Mission to the UN, 1945–9, Box 78.
73 Telegram from Banerjee to Nehru, 28 Nov. 1946, NAI, 6(22)-CC/46.
74 Minute by Sir P. J. Patrick (Assistant Under Secretary, India Office), 3 Dec. 1946, IOR, L/E/9/1404.
75 Telegram from Banerjee to Nehru, 28 Nov. 1946, NAI, 6(22)-CC/46.
The resolution was as follows:
The General Assembly, having taken note of the application made by the Government of India regarding the treatment of Indians in South Africa, and having considered the matter:
(1) states that, because of that treatment, friendly relations between two member-States have been impaired, and unless a satisfactory settlement is reached are likely to be further impaired;
(2) is of the opinion that the treatment of Indians in the Union should be in conformity with international obligations under the agreements concluded between the two Governments, and the relevant provisions of the Charter;
(3) and requests the two Governments to report to the next session of the Assembly the measures adopted to this effect.
76 General Assembly, Official Records. General Committee. Summary Record of Meetings, p. 72.
77 United Nations General Assembly Official Records of the Second Part of the First Session, Lake Success, New York, Joint Committee of the First and Sixth Committees, Summary Record of Meetings, p. 43Google Scholar.
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80 Reuters report on the Joint Committee meeting on 30 Nov. The majority included the East Europeans, Arabs, Africans, Asians and some Latin Americans. The minority included the UK, Canada, Australia, South Africa, the USA, Western Europe other than France, Scandinavia other than Denmark and a majority of Latin Americans. New Zealand, Denmark, Ecuador, Honduras, Panama and Turkey abstained.
81 UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 2 Dec. 1946, Telegram 2200, IOR, L/E/9/1404.
82 Hindustan Times, 5 12 1946Google Scholar.
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84 Jha, , Bandung to Tashkent, pp. 28, 88–89Google Scholar.
85 This was because nearly every delegation had made its views clear on this issue but there had been no committee vote on the proposal and there was reason to think that it might have won more than the 19 votes cast against the French–Mexican resolution in the Joint Committee. Tired and overworked delegates would, however, be inclined to abstain on a different resolution on which they had not made up their minds or obtained instructions. Moreover, this amendment would go down best in South Africa and the Assembly president might keep its discussion to a minimum because it had already been discussed in committee. (UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 7 Dec. 1946, Cypher Telegram 2370, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46.).
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89 Addison to Bottomley, 10 Dec. 1946, Cypher Telegram 2479, IOR, L/E/9/1405.
90 UK Delegation to Foreign Office, 9 Dec. 1946, Telegram 2443, PRO, DO 35/1293/G715/46; General Assembly Official Records, 51st Plenary, 8 Dec. 1946, pp. 1,035–6.
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105 Resolution 265(III). It was passed by 39 to 2 with 9 abstentions in the First Committee, and by 47 to 1 (South Africa) with 10 abstentions in plenary. South Africa's resolution was rejected in the First Committee by 5 to 33 with 12 abstentions.
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