GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 989, sig. 110-9/5 (damaged)

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English Translation

Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, I should like to begin by thanking the rapporteur for his excellent report. I have no intention of brutally throwing the tax around about 100 degrees, and I am now making great waves in public with a new Czech policy, rather it will be in cold ways and without a stir an approximation of the Czech policy in the Sudetengau to the policy I have carried out in the Protectorate, in agreement with its leader. we say a little milder or, perhaps there and there with regard to the necessity of war, a little bit less (resettlement) √z.h.ar Fan gal tere TourVeinfallen, andergeits but with the ge- Cpon Mfefiffor Seste Jr. Anfoneinng wrestlichsten Widerstand and with the least Iloyality, Mfefifr Lranm aleo everywhere, where a Czech also only some rapant gor can be found It is not a question of the fact that, in the case of the United Kingdom, the Commission has not been able to take a decision on this matter. As in the Protectorate, I will never forget the main objective in the Sudetenland valley, and I ask you, too, today from this point, to always remember that, although one can once leave the broad Reichsstraße in the popular politics and continue along a side road, one can, however, say that in all the measures that one has to take and take, which are imposed on us today by the war, nothing can be built up and that it is so unstable that one can change it at any time. I am thinking of the problem of the Czech labour force in the gau and of the danger of Czech sub-nationalization, for example, in the area of Bruxelles, when these forces, instead of acting as fluctuating forces in camps ka Imabusegeleap