RA
EUROPE AND AFRICA
to make a contribution of over $3,450,000 to its budget in
1911 in order that the revenues might equal the general ex-
penditures. From a commercial standpoint, however, this
protectorate was a source of considerable profit to the mer-
chants of the Empire. The sum of its imports and exports,
which in 1899 equaled only $2,585,150, reached by 1913 the
very creditable total of $27,160,000, of which the share of
Germany was approximately 80 per cent. One half of the
total value exported consisted of diamonds. The total trade
of the three colonies — Togoland, Cameroons, and Ger-
man South-west Africa — in the same year approximated
$47,000,000.
During the Great War, the British conquered German
Southwest Africa and placed it under the government of the
Union of South Africa.! Togoland and the German Cam-
eroons were seized by the Franco-British forces. And in the
settlement after the war, Southwest Africa was assigned to
the Union of South Africa as a mandated territory of Class
C, i.e., one which the mandatory may govern as an integral
part of its territory, even to the extent of discriminating
{e.g., by a customs tariff) against nationals of other states
members of the League of Nations.? Togoland and the
Cameroons (not including the 100,000 square miles ceded
in 1911 and now recovered by France) have been divided
between Great Britain and France as mandatories, France
obtaining about two thirds of Togoland and five sixths of the
Cameroons. These two, like German East Africa, became
mandated territories of Class B in which the “open door”
must be maintained. The mandated territories of this class
are subject to the supervision of the League, in that the man-
1 See Chapter VIIL
2 League of Nations: Official Journal, 11, pp. 12, 89; Documents de I’ As-
semblée, No. 161, Dec. 6, 1920. Report by the Council to the Assembly, p. 17.
3 League of Nations: Official Journal, 111, pp. 791, 847.