Oral Answers to Questions — India – in the House of Commons at 12:00 am on 17 March 1947.
Sir Toby Low
, Blackpool North
12:00,
17 March 1947
asked the Under-Secretary of State for India whether he is now able to announce His Majesty's Government's proposals for the compensation and proportionate pension to be paid to Indian and British members of his Department's Services in India when those Services are brought to an end.
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
I am not yet able to add to my previous answers to Questions on this subject, but I hope that an announcement on the subject will be able to be made shortly.
Mr William Brown
, Rugby
May I ask whether the terms agreed to at the time of the setting up of the Irish Free State might give the Minister some guidance as to what ought to happen here?
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
I can assure my hon. Friend that everything will be taken into consideration.
Mr. R. A. Butter:
Is not the Minister aware that continued delay in making an announcement on this subject is causing grave anxiety to people who wish to remain in India as members of these Services; is he further aware that nothing concrete is apparently coming out of his recent Mission, and will be persuade the Government to come to a decision satisfactory to these men as soon as possible?
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
I am sure that, if the right hon. Gentleman will await the announcement which will be made shortly, he will not necessarily take it that nothing concrete came out of my recent visit to India. At the moment, I cannot go beyond the statement set out in my reply.
Major Donald Bruce
, Portsmouth North
Will my right hon. and learned Friend's Department accept responsibility for compensation for British officers serving with the Indian Army?
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
The Secretary of State is responsible for all those who are members of his Services, and he would certainly accept responsibility for securing any compensation payable to those serving with the Armed Forces.
Mr Campbell Stephen
, Glasgow Camlachie
Will the right hon. and learned Gentleman see that the rank and file get compensation on the same terms as the officers?
Sir Toby Low
, Blackpool North
Is it not a fact that the Secretary of State gave a pledge, in conversation with representatives of the Secretary of State's Services, that he would see that compensation was paid, and is it not further a fact that, on 26th July last year, an Order was published by G.H.O. India saying that compensation would be given to those officers to whom other employment was not offered?
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
It is quite true to say that two pledges have been given that compensation will be paid to members of the Secretary of State's Services; the first, in 1945, was given by Mr. Amery, and the second, a reaffirmation of that pledge, was given by my noble Friend.
Colonel Sir Alan Gomme-Duncan
, Perth
Does not the right hon. and learned Gentleman recall that, in answer to a previous Question of mine, he said that the Indian Government were responsible for the pensions payable to the men with whom they had finished? If the Indian Government default—which they are likely to do—will the right hon. and learned Gentleman guarantee that the British Government will pay those pensions?
Mr Arthur Henderson
, Kingswinford
The question of pensions is an entirely different matter. I am not prepared to accept any hypothetical suggestion that the Indian Government may default.
Secretary of State was originally the title given to the two officials who conducted the Royal Correspondence under Elizabeth I. Now it is the title held by some of the more important Government Ministers, for example the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.
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