a FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1966 VOL. 27, NO. 2 po 10¢ / Ghana demands action while talks drag on ewe the member nations of a sritish Commonwealth were s eed in Lagos, Nigeria to once ten N discuss the Rhodes‘an prob- a President Nkrumah of Ghana pi ared that an armed force _ Pfovided by African states and tthorized by the UN should in- €rvene, eve Tumal’s call came on the a of the Lagos so-called Summit” conference, Ae Britain wishes to convince Risk a, States of its sincerity it declare forthwith that once 3 Settler revolt has been crush- Settler rule will be ended for time,” Nkrumah saidin Accra. a and Tanzania, both of ake broke off diplomatic rela- the with Britain last month over Rhodesian white settler prob- 1 ai are not attending the Com- Onwealth parley, President Nkrumah’s statement SES ey How to End the War in Vietnam =See Page 3- ee called on Britain to convene a meeting of the UN Security Coun- cil and to propose the imposition of mandatory sanctions against the Smith regime of Rhodesia, The solution to the Rhodesian question was the establishment of majority rule at the earliest possible moment, he said. «Ghana believes that Britain has lost all control of the situa- tion and is unwilling to take any steps by which its authority might pe reasserted, In such curcum- stances it is time for those more determined and more capable than Britain to take charge. «It is time that the United Nations declared that the Rho- desian situation is a danger to world peace and invited African states to carry out the task which Britain is unable or unwilling to perform.” Present economic sanctions were inadequate, and even if successful, their only effect would be to substitute another settler regime for the Smith one, Brit- ain did not at heart accept the principle of immediate majority rule for Rhodesia, the Ghanaian leader charged. The Organization of African Unity was the proper organiza~ tion to deal with Rhodesia, under authority of the UN and with the support of other friendly nations, if necessary, Nkrumah stated, —ieeia Napalm, chemicals an J da “si Me NP ie ry on silt wel 7 tl oe scorched earth _ The whole world felt a sense of deep shame, mingled with shock and out- rage, when the full scope of Nazi atrocities was revealed after the end of World War Il. What then, should humanity feel like now — when U.S. barbarism in Vietnam has exceeded by many timesthe terrible Nazi practice of so-called “scientific experiments’ conducted on human beings? As in all wars, the people of the perpetrating country probably won’t find out about the full scope of crimes eommitted by their Wan government until the war is over — if then. But already enough ~