Chapter 1026: Advance Team (7)

After a few days of investigation, Morgan believes that the indigenous tribes in the Houlongxi basin do pose a certain threat to Haihan's movement in the local area, and the possibility of such conflicts of interest related to the living environment can be reconciled is very low. According to the safety and security plan for key industrial projects, this kind of potential hidden danger is the object that must be eliminated at the beginning of the project implementation, so Morgan has been thinking about how to implement the means to cleanly defuse these time bombs.

The other party would take some countermeasures to express his dissatisfaction after discovering Haihan's activities, this possibility Morgan naturally considered, but he didn't expect these natives to be so rampant, and several people ran directly to the camp gate to call for battle. The only plausible explanation is that they mistook Morgan and his party as Han Chinese immigrants who had been brought here by Shibazhi to settle here, thinking that beating and scaring them would drive outsiders out of the place as they had done in the past. But what they didn't expect was that the immigrants who came to the Miaoli coast this time were not peasants who could only hold hoes, but troops armed almost to the teeth with loaded guns, and they had no taboos about armed conflicts, and the speed of turning their faces was not slower than them.

If you want to compete in the toughness of your attitude, how can the natives on the small island of Taiwan be able to resist the traversers who want to conquer the world. Morgan asked the interpreter to immediately ask the three surviving natives if they had come here to make trouble on behalf of their tribe's intentions, and if there were any other means of follow-up.

Perhaps it was Hai Han's merciless killing just now that had a certain deterrent effect, and these natives did not try to resist the interrogation, and explained everything they knew in a trembling manner.

It turned out that when Morgan led a team into the mountains by boat a few days ago, he saw a few natives holding bamboo spears and piercing fish in Houlongxi, and they were among these people. When these natives discovered the activities of outsiders, they reported the situation to their tribe and began to search for the whereabouts of these uninvited guests in the Houlong River Valley. However, the camp that Haihan had set up on the coastline was nearly twenty miles away from their tribe, so it was not until today that a group of people had found it.

As Morgan had predicted, the natives regarded them as Han Chinese immigrants who had been moved here by Shibazhi a few years earlier, thinking that if they made a noise and killed at most a few lives, they would be able to scare these weak-natured outsiders into evacuating themselves. But it's a pity that they miscalculated the wishful thinking, and the Haihan people directly hit the heavy hand mercilessly.

Judging from the accounts of these natives, the conflict should have been an impulsive personal act of these people, and did not represent the "official attitude" of the tribe to which they belonged, but Morgan insisted that this hostile attitude was not an isolated phenomenon, but the general view of the local natives on outsiders. Haihan has set up a large camp here, and the natives still dare to come to make trouble, and it is not known what ordinary immigrants will suffer if they live in a scattered manner. The 18 Zhi who organized the migration were not a professional colonization team, and all they could do was to transport the Han people here and leave them to fend for themselves, and it was naturally difficult for the unorganized people to fight against the local indigenous forces.

This book was first published on the Genesis Chinese website, and the following content will be re-edited later for anti-theft

After a few days of investigation, Morgan believes that the indigenous tribes in the Houlongxi basin do pose a certain threat to Haihan's movement in the local area, and the possibility of such conflicts of interest related to the living environment can be reconciled is very low. According to the safety and security plan for key industrial projects, this kind of potential hidden danger is the object that must be eliminated at the beginning of the project implementation, so Morgan has been thinking about how to implement the means to cleanly defuse these time bombs.

The other party would take some countermeasures to express his dissatisfaction after discovering Haihan's activities, this possibility Morgan naturally considered, but he didn't expect these natives to be so rampant, and several people ran directly to the camp gate to call for battle. The only plausible explanation is that they mistook Morgan and his party as Han Chinese immigrants who had been brought here by Shibazhi to settle here, thinking that beating and scaring them would drive outsiders out of the place as they had done in the past. But what they didn't expect was that the immigrants who came to the Miaoli coast this time were not peasants who could only hold hoes, but troops armed almost to the teeth with loaded guns, and they had no taboos about armed conflicts, and the speed of turning their faces was not slower than them.

If you want to compete in the toughness of your attitude, how can the natives on the small island of Taiwan be able to resist the traversers who want to conquer the world. Morgan asked the interpreter to immediately ask the three surviving natives if they had come here to make trouble on behalf of their tribe's intentions, and if there were any other means of follow-up.

Perhaps it was Hai Han's merciless killing just now that had a certain deterrent effect, and these natives did not try to resist the interrogation, and explained everything they knew in a trembling manner.

It turned out that when Morgan led a team into the mountains by boat a few days ago, he saw a few natives holding bamboo spears and piercing fish in Houlongxi, and they were among these people. When these natives discovered the activities of outsiders, they reported the situation to their tribe and began to search for the whereabouts of these uninvited guests in the Houlong River Valley. However, the camp that Haihan had set up on the coastline was nearly twenty miles away from their tribe, so it was not until today that a group of people had found it.

As Morgan had predicted, the natives regarded them as Han Chinese immigrants who had been moved here by Shibazhi a few years earlier, thinking that if they made a noise and killed at most a few lives, they would be able to scare these weak-natured outsiders into evacuating themselves. But it's a pity that they miscalculated the wishful thinking, and the Haihan people directly hit the heavy hand mercilessly.

Judging from the accounts of these natives, the conflict should have been an impulsive personal act of these people, and did not represent the "official attitude" of the tribe to which they belonged, but Morgan insisted that this hostile attitude was not an isolated phenomenon, but the general view of the local natives on outsiders. Haihan has set up a large camp here, and the natives still dare to come to make trouble, and it is not known what ordinary immigrants will suffer if they live in a scattered manner. The 18 Zhi who organized the migration were not a professional colonization team, and all they could do was to transport the Han people here and leave them to fend for themselves, and it was naturally difficult for the unorganized people to fight against the local indigenous forces. After a few days of investigation, Morgan believes that the indigenous tribes in the Houlongxi basin do pose a certain threat to Haihan's movement in the local area, and the possibility of such conflicts of interest related to the living environment can be reconciled is very low. According to the safety and security plan for key industrial projects, this kind of potential hidden danger is the object that must be eliminated at the beginning of the project implementation, so Morgan has been thinking about how to implement the means to cleanly defuse these time bombs.

The other party would take some countermeasures to express his dissatisfaction after discovering Haihan's activities, this possibility Morgan naturally considered, but he didn't expect these natives to be so rampant, and several people ran directly to the camp gate to call for battle. The only plausible explanation is that they mistook Morgan and his party as Han Chinese immigrants who had been brought here by Shibazhi to settle here, thinking that beating and scaring them would drive outsiders out of the place as they had done in the past. But what they didn't expect was that the immigrants who came to the Miaoli coast this time were not peasants who could only hold hoes, but troops armed almost to the teeth with loaded guns, and they had no taboos about armed conflicts, and the speed of turning their faces was not slower than them.

If you want to compete in the toughness of your attitude, how can the natives on the small island of Taiwan be able to resist the traversers who want to conquer the world. Morgan asked the interpreter to immediately ask the three surviving natives if they had come here to make trouble on behalf of their tribe's intentions, and if there were any other means of follow-up.

Perhaps it was Hai Han's merciless killing just now that had a certain deterrent effect, and these natives did not try to resist the interrogation, and explained everything they knew in a trembling manner.

It turned out that when Morgan led a team into the mountains by boat a few days ago, he saw a few natives holding bamboo spears and piercing fish in Houlongxi, and they were among these people. When these natives discovered the activities of outsiders, they reported the situation to their tribe and began to search for the whereabouts of these uninvited guests in the Houlong River Valley. However, the camp that Haihan had set up on the coastline was nearly twenty miles away from their tribe, so it was not until today that a group of people had found it.

As Morgan had predicted, the natives regarded them as Han Chinese immigrants who had been moved here by Shibazhi a few years earlier, thinking that if they made a noise and killed at most a few lives, they would be able to scare these weak-natured outsiders into evacuating themselves. But it's a pity that they miscalculated the wishful thinking, and the Haihan people directly hit the heavy hand mercilessly.

Judging from the accounts of these natives, the conflict should have been an impulsive personal act of these people, and did not represent the "official attitude" of the tribe to which they belonged, but Morgan insisted that this hostile attitude was not an isolated phenomenon, but the general view of the local natives on outsiders. Haihan has set up a large camp here, and the natives still dare to come to make trouble, and it is not known what ordinary immigrants will suffer if they live in a scattered manner. The 18 Zhi who organized the migration were not a professional colonization team, and all they could do was to transport the Han people here and leave them to fend for themselves, and it was naturally difficult for the unorganized people to fight against the local indigenous forces. After a few days of investigation, Morgan believes that the indigenous tribes in the Houlongxi basin do pose a certain threat to Haihan's movement in the local area, and the possibility of such conflicts of interest related to the living environment can be reconciled is very low. According to the safety and security plan for key industrial projects, this kind of potential hidden danger is the object that must be eliminated at the beginning of the project implementation, so Morgan has been thinking about how to implement the means to cleanly defuse these time bombs.

The other party would take some countermeasures to express his dissatisfaction after discovering Haihan's activities, this possibility Morgan naturally considered, but he didn't expect these natives to be so rampant, and several people ran directly to the camp gate to call for battle. The only plausible explanation is that they mistook Morgan and his party as Han Chinese immigrants who had been brought here by Shibazhi to settle here, thinking that beating and scaring them would drive outsiders out of the place as they had done in the past. But what they didn't expect was that the immigrants who came to the Miaoli coast this time were not peasants who could only hold hoes, but troops armed almost to the teeth with loaded guns, and they had no taboos about armed conflicts, and the speed of turning their faces was not slower than them.

If you want to compete in the toughness of your attitude, how can the natives on the small island of Taiwan be able to resist the traversers who want to conquer the world. Morgan asked the interpreter to immediately ask the three surviving natives if they had come here to make trouble on behalf of their tribe's intentions, and if there were any other means of follow-up.

Perhaps it was Hai Han's merciless killing just now that had a certain deterrent effect, and these natives did not try to resist the interrogation, and explained everything they knew in a trembling manner.

It turned out that when Morgan led a team into the mountains by boat a few days ago, he saw a few natives holding bamboo spears and piercing fish in Houlongxi, and they were among these people. When these natives discovered the activities of outsiders, they reported the situation to their tribe and began to search for the whereabouts of these uninvited guests in the Houlong River Valley. However, the camp that Haihan had set up on the coastline was nearly twenty miles away from their tribe, so it was not until today that a group of people had found it.

As Morgan had predicted, the natives regarded them as Han Chinese immigrants who had been moved here by Shibazhi a few years earlier, thinking that if they made a noise and killed at most a few lives, they would be able to scare these weak-natured outsiders into evacuating themselves. But it's a pity that they miscalculated the wishful thinking, and the Haihan people directly hit the heavy hand mercilessly.

Judging from the accounts of these natives, the conflict should have been an impulsive personal act of these people, and did not represent the "official attitude" of the tribe to which they belonged, but Morgan insisted that this hostile attitude was not an isolated phenomenon, but the general view of the local natives on outsiders. Haihan has set up a large camp here, and the natives still dare to come to make trouble, and it is not known what ordinary immigrants will suffer if they live in a scattered manner. The 18 Zhi who organized the migration were not a professional colonization team, and all they could do was to transport the Han people here and leave them to fend for themselves, and it was naturally difficult for the unorganized people to fight against the local indigenous forces.