 International Labor Organization › Improve working conditions and establish global standards for minimum wage/pensions  League Mandates › Responsible.

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 International Labor Organization › Improve working conditions and establish global standards for minimum wage/pensions  League Mandates › Responsible for territories (former colonies) › Goal was to lead regions to independence (not effective, as seen in the Middle East and Africa today)  Councils for drugs (opium), health, leprosy  Councils for refugees, slavery and minorities

› 1920 Finland vs Sweden (territory) › 1923 Italy vs Greece (territory) › 1925 Turkey vs Iraq (resources) › 1925 Bulgaria vs Greece (territory)

 Åland has about 6,500 islands mid-way between Sweden and Finland. The people all speak Swedish, but in 1809 Sweden had lost both Finland and the Åland islands to Imperial Russia.  When Finland after the 1917 revolution declared independence, most of the Ålanders wanted become part of Sweden again; Finland, however, felt that the islands were part of their new nation, as the Russians had included them in the Grand Duchy of Finland formed in  This is kind of like Iraq’s claim to Kuwait. The Swedish government went to the League in 1921.

 The League decided that the islands should remain a part of Finland, but be governed autonomously, averting a potential war between the two countries.

 Italian general Enrico Tellini was overseeing the border dispute between Greece and Albania when, in August 1923 while examining the Greek side of the border, Tellini and his staff were murdered. Mussolini demanded the Greeks pay reparations and execute the murderers. The Greeks refused.

 Days later the Italians occupied Corfu, with fifteen people killed. Initially, the League condemned Mussolini's invasion, but also recommended Greece pay compensation, to be held by the League until Tellini's killers were found.  Mussolini, though initially agreeing, set about trying to change them. By working with the Council of Ambassadors, he managed to make the League change its decision. Greece was forced to apologise and pay directly and immediately.  Mussolini left Corfu in triumph. By bowing to a large country, the League again set a dangerous example, one of the League's major failures

 The UK, awarded a League of Nations mandate over Iraq in 1920 and therefore represented it in foreign affairs, Mosul belonged to Iraq;, the new Turkish republic claimed the province as part of its historic heartland.  A three person League of Nations committee was sent to the region in 1924 and in 1925 recommended the region be connected to Iraq provided the UK holds the mandate over Iraq for another 25 years, to assure the autonomous rights of the Kurdish population.  Although Turkey had accepted the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, it rejected this decision. Nonetheless, Britain, Iraq and Turkey made a treaty on 5 June 1926, that mostly followed the decision of the League Council and also assigned Mosul to Iraq.

 After an incident between sentries on the border between Greece and Bulgaria in 1925, Greek troops invaded their neighbour.  Bulgaria ordered its troops to provide only token resistance, trusting the League to settle the dispute.  The League did condemn the Greeks, and called for both Greek withdrawal and compensation to Bulgaria. Greece complied, but complained about the disparity between their treatment and that of Italy.

- The League also worked to combat the international trade in opium and sexual slavery and helped alleviate the plight of refugees, particularly in Turkey in the period to One of its innovations in this area was its 1922 introduction of the Nansen passport, which was the first internationally recognised identity card for stateless refugees. Many of the League's successes were accomplished by its various Agencies and Commissions.