Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 44 Part 3.djvu/997

 EAST A§FRICA¢MANDATE»-GREA’D  J FmmUA11!Z.£l0;`1i!25. 4242.7 · `·¤ · .'  ·iri:r ri-} si'  T .`     'i—'*.;j· L'_.;¥·'. ' *§1";`·»·§ Q _;_j,*  b¢*w¢?Mk¤  und G*e¢¥’B#i?¢i¤ rélvfiwe €e’¤b?¤~¢  I Yin   AJTYGQ- °     F€5*T¤¤*‘!l"I0& I9?5§`j*¤*2#F9*w’¤ advised bye tlwi‘»S‘e*nii!e,‘ ·1!`drcli}‘16“,‘ —192'6;` President, March 23, 1.926; ratiiied b  Bfihin, April 20‘·"I926f ifdlificdr- takms exchanged at Londoragfluly 8,1926; proclaimed, July 12, 1926. . Br MEL Bwsmem me ¤HifUN1€¤1=i?,»~ Sfiiié ,<5¥‘»%¥#¤»w~  ,">A PROCLAMA, `TION5   ·‘d‘ _ WHEREAS a Q§;1vent;ou‘}1etween the Unitedi_States ‘America Gggggggéygdjégg and His Britannic _ ajestggconcernin therights oftheirirespective mignainma me nationals in that part of ‘ eiformer &er;aa¤,,e¤10¤y,¤; East Africa “"{»“,§2_,$f’{,,,_ iover which a mandate was conferred upon His Britannic Majesty waslconcluded and _si °ed,_byf their 1·espeetive;P1en(§potentiaries at London onthe tenth oggyrof February, one l7hOllS8.ll,,··HlD9_l1U11dT0<1 and Ylventydive, theloijiginagl of whic,li°Gonvention islword forlword as OOWSZ.  .;»,_   ·,, V  .,, .,_ _ Wrirfnms His Britaniiic_Mz}jesty has accepted a mandate for the '*`°"”°°“”°”°“°· administration of artof the ormer German colony at East Africa, the terms of which have been defined by the Council of the League of Nations as follows :—  fI‘he territorg·o+e1i`$vhich`a mandate is   His ’ Britaimio; Malestge ( hereinafter called the Maxidateigg »‘ comprises that part of t e rritory of' the former colony of rman East Africa situated to the east of the following line :-·— “From the point where the frontier between the Uganda *’°*'·P·m*· Protectorate-and German East Africa cuts:t,h.e,Q[iiqverj%fia:.)v11mba,,  as straightlineein a southwesterly direction-¢¢>·p<>i¤t 1  About . -15¢ki1¤m· Scufhesquthewwt <>f M<>¤¤¤= Gebirv; -      “ "Thence a straight line,in.,a:soutl1er1y direction to,·the north shore of Lake Mohazi, where it terminates at the confluence of a river situated about 2% kilom. west of the confluence of the River Msilala;;· .·_·  ;.).:; H   · ‘€If thetrace of the railway on the   of the·River Kagera between Buguii and Ugandaapproaches within-.16 kilom. of the 1ineIde6ned above, the boundary will. be carried to the west, following a-minimum distance of 16 kilomsfroim itheftmce, with- out, however, gassin%;'to» thmwest of the straight line Eining theltermina.1 pomton; a;hegMohazi andtheto .—0f Mount `visa, point·2100, situated on the Ug~anda·German   Africa frontier about 5 kilom. south-west of the point where the River Mavumba cuts this frontier; * ~ .»   Siam " Thence a 1ine’s0uth-eastwards tomeet the southern shore of ·LakeM0hazi;    » · ·  ··»? -.`· vi "T “·Thence the watershedbetween the Taruka and the Mkarange had continuing southwards to the north-eastern end of La e u esera; ·*·*    A ‘.,“gI`henceVth,e median, lineqof   lgce anglycoqtinniing south- M wards acrossLake  to meet the Vageras, f_},`,,;;;j{ i. ., "Thenoe the course ,0f the Kagera downstream'to` kneel: the western boundary of Buguh; 7 i `I  Q    ;

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