Gareth’s
Press Release in New York Evening Post,
- - - -
Famine Grips Russia
Millions Dying, Idle on Rise, Says Briton
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Gareth Jones, Lloyd George Aid, Reports
Devastation
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TOURS FARM AREAS,
FINDS FOOD GONE
Asserts Reds Arrest British to Check Public
Wrath-Peasants. “Wait for Death”
Evening Post Foreign
Service New York
1933
BERLIN, March. 29th, - Russia today is in
the grip of a famine which is proving as disastrous as the catastrophe of
1921 when millions died, reported Gareth Jones, Foreign Affairs secretary to
former Prime Minister David Lloyd George of Great Britain, who arrived in
Berlin this morning en route to London after a long walking tour through the
Ukraine and other districts in the Soviet Union.
Mr. Jones, who speaks Russian fluently, is the first
foreigner to visit the Russian countryside since the Moscow authorities
forbade foreign correspondents to leave the city. His report, which he will
deliver to the Royal Institute of International Affairs tomorrow, explains
the reason for this prohibition. Famine on a colossal scale, impending
death of millions from hunger, murderous terror and the beginnings of
serious unemployment in a land that had hitherto prided itself on the fact
that very man had a job-this is the summary of Mr. Jones’s first-hand
observations.
He told the EVENING POST: “The
arrest of the British engineers in Moscow is a symbol of panic in
consequence of conditions worse than in 1921. Millions are dying of
hunger. The trial, beginning Saturday, of the British engineers is merely a
pendant to the recent shooting of thirty-five prominent workers in
agriculture, including the Vice-Commissar of the Ministry of Agriculture,
and is an attempt to check the popular wrath at the famine which haunts
every district of the Soviet Union.
“I walked along through villages end twelve collective
farms. Everywhere was the cry, ‘There is no bread. We are dying. This cry
came from every part of Russia, from the Volga, Siberia, White Russia, the
North Caucasus, Central Asia. I tramped through the black earth region
because that was once the richest farm land in Russia and because the
correspondents have been forbidden to go there to see for themselves what is
happening.
“In the train a Communist denied ‘to me that there was
a famine. I flung a crust of bread which I had been eating from my own
supply into a spittoon. A peasant fellow-passenger fished it out and
ravenously ate it. I threw an orange peel into the spittoon and the peasant
again grabbed it and devoured it. The Communist subsided. I stayed
overnight in a village where there used to be 200 oxen and where there now
are six. The peasants were eating the cattle fodder and had only a month’s
supply left. They told me that many had already died of hunger. Two
soldiers came to arrest a thief. They warned me against travel by night as
there were too many ‘starving’ desperate men.
“‘We are waiting for death’ was my welcome, but See,
we still, have our cattle fodder. Go farther south. There they have
nothing. Many houses are empty of people already dead,’ they cried.
“A foreign expert returning from Kazakstan told me
that 1,000,000 out of 5,000,000 there have died of hunger - those who read
his glowing descriptions of plentiful food in their starving land. “The
future is blacker than the present. There is insufficient seed. Many
peasants are too weak physically to work on the land. The new taxation
policy, promising to take only a fixed amount of grain from the peasants,
will fail to encourage production because the peasants refuse to trust the
Government.” In short, Mr. Jones concluded, the collectivization policy of
the Government and the resistance of the peasants to it have brought Russia
to the worst catastrophe since the famine of 1921 and have swept away the
population of whole districts.
Coupled with this, the prime reason for the breakdown,
he added, is the terror, lack of skill and collapse of transport and
finance. Unemployment is rapidly increasing, he declared, because of the
lack of raw materials. The lack of food and the wrecking of the currency
and credit system have forced many of the factories to close or to dismiss
great numbers of workers.
The Jones
report, because of his position, because of his reputation for reliability
and impartiality and because he is the only first-hand observer who has
visited the Russian countryside since it was officially closed to
foreigners, is bound to receive widespread attention in official England as
well as among the public of the country.
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