Oral Answers to Questions — Southern Rhodesia – in the House of Commons at 12:00 am on 21 July 1964.
Mr John Stonehouse
, Wednesbury
12:00,
21 July 1964
asked the Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations and the Colonies what further action Her Majesty's Government are intending to take to solve the problem of Southern Rhodesia.
Mr Duncan Sandys
, Wandsworth Streatham
The next step is to discuss the problem of Southern Rhodesia's independence with Mr. Ian Smith. My right hon. Friend the Prime Minister has invited Mr. Smith to come to London for that purpose and we are awaiting his reply.
Mr John Stonehouse
, Wednesbury
Is the Secretary of State not aware that Mr. Ian Smith really represents only a minority of a minority and that if there is going to be peaceful development towards an agreed independence the other political leaders must be consulted? What is the Secretary of State doing towards that end? Is he pressing for the political leaders, like Mr. Nkomo, to be released forthwith and for the constitutional conference to be held at which all the political groups are represented?
Mr Duncan Sandys
, Wandsworth Streatham
There is a later Question to the Prime Minister on that point.
Mr Cyril Osborne
, Louth Borough
Would not my right hon. Friend agree that this very difficult problem would be solved more easily if we stopped niggling so much about it in this House?
Mr Arthur Bottomley
, Middlesbrough East
Does not the Secretary of State think it rather farcical that just two hours after the end of the Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference, at which the leaders of Commonwealth countries had urged in strong terms that Her Majesty's Government should do something about Southern Rhodesia, the Prime Minister should appear at a Press conference and treat the matter so light-heartedly as a mere nothing and about which he proposed to do nothing?
Mr Duncan Sandys
, Wandsworth Streatham
I do not accept that description at all.
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.