1964 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference
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The 1964 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference was the 13th Meeting of the Heads of Government of the Commonwealth of Nations. It was held in the United Kingdom in July 1964, and was hosted by British Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home.
| 13th Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference | |
|---|---|
| Host country | |
| Dates | 8–15 July 1964 |
| Cities | London |
| Participants | 18 |
| Chair | Sir Alec Douglas-Home (Prime Minister) |
| Follows | 1962 |
| Precedes | 1965 |
| Key points | |
With the collapse of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, the Commonwealth decided to exclude the white minority ruled regime of Southern Rhodesia from the conference for the first time, as it was not an independent state. The conference communique rejected any prospective Unilateral Declaration of Independence by the colony and called for all-party talks to achieve a multi-racial state. The meeting also reaffirmed its opposition to apartheid, and expressed concern about racial strife in British Guiana and the situation in Cyprus. The Commonwealth meeting expressed sympathy for Malaysia in its conflict with Indonesia. The creation of a Commonwealth Secretariat was also proposed.[1]