Oral Answers to Questions — Royal Air Force – in the House of Commons am 12:00 am ar 12 Chwefror 1947.
Mr. Baker White:
asked the Secretary of State for Air if he is aware that, on 16th December, 1946, the departure schedule board at the Mauripur airfield at Karachi bore the entry 'Lancaster Plane, Special. Rations for 'V.I.P. Bound for United Kingdom"; whether he will state the names of the 'V.I.Ps.": whether they travelled in this or another aeroplane; and what was the nature of the rations.
Yes, Sir. The names of the passengers were Sir Leslie Boyce chairman of the Gloster Carriage & Wagon Co.; Mr. Morgan, consulting engineer of Sir William Halcrow & Partners; Mr. Carmichael, director of British Non-Ferrous Metals Federation; Mr. Thornton, secretary, United Textiles Factories Workers' Association; Mr. Haworth of Unilever Ltd.; Mr. Scott, of Dorman, Long & Co. These passengers were all members of a trade mission to China; they travelled on the Lancaster in question, which had been chartered for them by the Board of Trade; they received as rations for their journey between Karachi and Cairo the normal lunchbox, which contained some sandwiches, an egg, a little fruit, a small piece of chocolate and, to the best of my belief, some chewing gum.
Mr. White:
May I ask the Minister if the schedule board also bore these words, relating to a separate plane altogether:
"Flight. | Bound | Carrying |
Special V.I.P. | U.K | Lady Cripps daughter and retinue |
Special (Rations for V.I.P.)"?On the schedule board, the trade delegation were not referred to as "V.I.Ps."
In fact it was the plane which carried the trade mission. That is the plane about which the hon. Member has asked. They were a trade mission. They were not technical "V.I.Ps.," according to the verbal usages that are customary, but they had to be given "V.I.P." treatment and a special plane. Otherwise their trade mission to China could not have been carried out.
Mr. White:
May I ask the Minister whether he is aware that my Question refers to "V.I.Ps." specifically, and that the schedule board also referred to "V.I.Ps."; and, further, that that is not the plane in which the trade mission travelled?
Yes, it is the plane in which the trade mission travelled. The expression "V.I.P."was used in order to make plain to those who had to provide the rations that the plane was leaving not at the ordinary scheduled time but at a special time and that the rations had to be there.
Had Lady Cripps and her daughter a special plane, in addition?
That is another question. Perhaps the hon. Gentleman will put it down.