Nibmar

NIBMAR or No Independence Before Majority Rule refers to the policy where Afro-Asian-Caribbean members of the Commonwealth advocated this position with respects to the future status of Rhodesia as a sovereign nation, and were heatedly pressuring British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, to adopt the approach during a 21 July, 1961 conference in London. Wilson, however, was not inclined to do so. The row was settled when Canadian Prime Minister, Lester Pearson, formulated a draft resolution committing Wilson to NIBMAR. Pearson was to later recall: I wasnt sure whether I was being asked to commit polygamy or incest, but whatever it was, I did it. The accomplishment was short-lived, however, as Wilson continued to extend offers to Ian Smith which came considerably short of NIBMAR (offers which Smith nonetheless ultimately rejected).

References:

* Good, Robert C. U.D.I.: the International Politics of the Rhodesian Rebellion (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1973).

 

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