§ MR. MOLLOYasked the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Whether it is a fact, as stated in a public telegram from Egypt, that Lord Dufferin has appointed Mr. Sheldon Amos to be the English Member of a Committee of three to arrange measures for giving effect to His Lord ship's scheme for the establishment of a Constitution in Egypt; whether he has read an article in the October number of the "Contemporary Review," entitled "Spoiling the Egyptians, revised version," in which the writer applauds "the seemingly severe determination," in the days of the first control, "that the coupon must at all hazards be paid," and further states that such determination "was based on well founded apprehension for the country generally if the slightest show of indulgence was admitted;" and, whether Her Majesty's Government will sanction the appointment of a gentleman holding these views?
§ LORD EDMOND FITZMAURICESir, Professor Amos is well known in this country as a distinguished student of public law, and is the author of several works of high authority on this subject; but Her Majesty's Government have received no information of the intention to confer on him the appointment to which the hon. Member refers.
§ MR. MOLLOYasked whether he was to understand the noble Lord to say that there was no truth in the telegram?
§ LORD EDMOND FITZMAURICEThe Government have no information on the subject.