What's new

Stalin killed Netaji, Subramanian Swamy says

And what are those files about?
One cannot point at supposed evidence without knowing whats inside it.

Seems those files are even having intelligence outputs of second world war and even the reasons behind what happened and why happened.

Its seems hard evidence that's why PMO is holding those files.
 
10361373_10152469691931557_1191469238995475045_n.jpg
 
GOI should form some sort of commission to investigate this claim as it can ruin the Indo-Russia relation as well :coffee:
 
There is a strong possibility that Bose was killed by Stalin at behest of British. That does not reflect on current Russian government. Stalin has killed millions of Russians too.

But Zaid Hamid in real helps us a lot.

How does Zaid helps Indians ?
 

It was that period only when Royal Indian Navy mutiny took place and even Red fort trails were going on between November 1945 to May 1946 on Colonel Prem sahgal, Colonel Dhillon and Major general Shah Nawaz Khan.

Its understandable why Mahatma Gandhi would have said like that.

Japan Surrendered on 15th August 1945 and on 18th August 1945 news came out about his plane crash. but if you notice what Mahatma Gandhi have said on 2nd Jan 1946.
 
Secret document raises questions about Subhash Chandra Bose's 'death'
by Rajeev Sharma Dec 1, 2013 09:58 IST


A classified record from the Ministry of External Affairs lays bare the Indian government's less than honest approach towards finding out the truth about Subhash Chandra Bose' presence in Soviet Russia after his assumed death.

(Check the notes here and here)

Classified as "Secret", the second highest level of security grading for a government document after “Top Secret”, the record is from 1996 when Pranab Mukherjee, now President, was the External Affairs Minister. Mukhrjee's noting appears on the record along with that of the then Foreign Secretary Salman Haidar.


Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.

A bare reading of the two-page record shows that the controversy surrounding the freedom fighter's fate isn't limited to a bygone era and that it is not just about Jawaharlal Nehru, who has been painted with a black brush by many Netaji fans.

In essence, the document, a note created in 1996 in the Europe East Division of the ministry by Joint Secretary (later Ambassador) RL Narayan, deals with the charges that Bose was in Soviet Russia.

Contrary to official version that Bose was killed in an air crash in 1945, a widely held view has been that he was in the Soviet Russia after that. The report of the Justice Mukherjee Commission of Inquiry, summarily dismissed by the UPA government in 2006, had stated that the story of Bose's death was planted by the Japanese even as the Indian leader prepared to escape to Soviet Russia where he hoped to get an asylum.

After the fall of the Soviet empire in 1991, Asiatic Society scholars visiting Moscow came across information that convinced them that records about Bose were available in the security and intelligence related archives in that country. The researchers led by Dr Purabi Roy of Kolkata's Jadavpur University later alleged that the Government was not keen to help them access the archives for the information concerned.

Now this secret note -- made available to this writer in full by author Anuj Dhar who has used parts of it in his book No Secrets-- reveals that the ministry was in favour of seeking information from Russia but could not do so due to "political disinterest".

Significantly, this is the first time that this classified document is appearing in the public domain. Even Dhar did not reproduce it in its entirety in his recently published book No Secrets for reasons best known to him.

"Pranab Mukherjee did a wee little for finding out the truth about Netaji in spite of his protestations that he is his admirer," alleges Dhar.

The very first paragraph of the record states that "from time to time various articles have appeared in the Soviet/Russian press insinuating, though without any actual proof, that Netaji in fact stayed/was incarcerated in the Soviet Union".

In other words, the ministry admitted that the theory of Bose's survival after his death had takers in Russia also, not just in India.


The note further reads: "Since the matter is of considerable public interest, we had taken up the matter with the Russian authorities through our Embassy in Moscow. In January, 1992, we had received a disclaimer from the Russian Foreign Ministry to the effect that 'according to that data in the Central and Republican Archives, no information whatsoever is available on the stay of the former President of the Indian National Congress, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, in the former Soviet Union in 1945 and thereafter'."

Dhar snaps that there were enough reasons for India to raise the issue prior to 1992 when "statesmen and world leaders were at the helm of affairs in New Delhi".

He cites the issue of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who, like Bose, disappeared in 1945. "Wallenberg is not in the Soviet Union and is unknown to us" - the Soviets told the Swedes for a decade before admitting that he had been taken a prisoner by the Red Army.

"India never used even a jot of its diplomatic clout with the Soviets to find out whether or not Netaji was with them," Dhar adds.

All the same, Narayan countered the Russian disclaimer in his note. He stated that the Russians ending up finding without evidence of Bose's stay in the USSR was not based on the ultra secret and inaccessible KGB archives, which according to Purabi Roy and others contained records about Bose.

"Papers relating to the Stalinist period (KGB archives) are kept separately and have so far not been accessed by foreign and even Russian scholars, with the exception perhaps of very limited and selected scholars like the late historian Volkogonov, who has published biographies of Lenin and Stalin on this basis," Narayan noted.

The JS observed that the best thing one could do in the circumstance was to "request the Russian authorities to conduct a search into these archives and let us know if there is any evidence of Netaji's stay in the Soviet Union".

He ended the note recommending that the Indian Ambassador in Moscow (which would have been Ronen Sen) should "make a suitable demarche to the Russian authorities".

Below Narayan's note appears the comment of EAM (External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee) directing FS (Foreign Secretary Salman Haidar) to talk with Narayan "urgently".

Dhar claims that subsequent to this talk, no demarche was issued. "Thousands of documents such as this one have been kept secret on the pretext of national security or relation with foreign states; whereas the true reason for the secrecy is to keep the people of India in dark about Netaji's fate," he says.

Will the Government of India respond?

Note1.jpg


Note2.jpg


Secret document raises questions about Subhash Chandra Bose's 'death' - Firstpost
 
Subhas Chandra Bose was "the only leader Congress ever produced who united Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs in a common secular struggle", whose "fearless militancy and commanding intellectual gifts had made him hugely popular in the party".
I have something interesting to offer in this regard. Having read many books on this subject, I can provide something that will shake this assertion. I don't deny what's there but there is an amount of irony that will not be missed. Slightly off topic but do you mind? :)
 
I have something interesting to offer in this regard. Having read many books on this subject, I can provide something that will shake this assertion. I don't deny what's there but there is an amount of irony that will not be missed. Slightly off topic but do you mind? :)

Please do share :)
 
Russia holds clue to Netaji riddle: Historian
Jhimli Mukherjee Pandey, TNN | Feb 6, 2013, 03.40AM ISTKOLKATA:

Noted historian Hari Vasudevan has lent credence to the Russian angle to the Netaji mystery by saying that Subhas Chandra Bose's emissary had been traced in Moscow.

"We are yet to find out tangible details about how this agent might have helped Netaji reach Russian soil. However, archival papers in Russia most definitely suggest the existence of Katakachu in Moscow," Vasudevan said, adding that he is keen to examine Netaji route from South East Asia to Taiwan and Japan that was supposed to end in Russia.

The historian, along with Purabi Roy and Sovanlal Duttagupta, went to Russia in the early 1990s to hunt through the Russian archives for evidence on Netaji. This was part of a project that was commissioned by the Asiatic Society. In 1991, the Russian archives were opened up for the first time. "It has always been difficult to reach at a conclusion in the Netaji story because a lot of relevant matter is part of classified British intelligence records, which are not available to us. The opening up of the Russian archives helps us to access vital clues that might induce us to think that Netaji might have moved from Japan to Soviet Russia and spent his later life there. I tend to side with this line of thought," Vasudevan said.

Rathin Maharaj, the head of Ramakrishna Mission's Moscow unit, had recently spoken of Netaji's presence in a jail in Siberia.

Vasudevan questions the Taihoku air crash theory on grounds that it is based on the deposition of just one person - Habibur Rehman. "The crash needs to be debated because a well-linked person like Netaji should have had others in the know and not just Rehman," he argues. Netaji's moving into Russia after the Taihoku "crash" is a logical conclusion because Japan and Russia were not at war till then. However, instead of commenting directly on the view that Netaji was imprisoned in Siberia, Vasudevan held that the British and Russian intelligence networked closely at that point in history. "A Russian historian has said that Netaji corresponded with key British officials when he was in Berlin. There are many shades in the mystery," he said.

Vasudevan does not crush the theory of Netaji's presence in the Siberian prison either. He wants to find out whether Netaji was held behind the bars in Siberia as part of a greater international understanding in which India had a role to play or whether he was there as a pawn in Stalin's various political manouevres.

Russia holds clue to Netaji riddle: Historian - The Times of India
 
Please do share :)
You need to look at Habib ur Rahman Khan. One of the top 4 senior officers of the Indian National Army. Having started his career in the Indian Army, he served in the 14/1 Punjab. Captured in Singapore in 1942, he was inducted into the INA by GoC Mohan Singh. He went on to command the Nehru regiment (later reinforced to 1st Division), commanded troops at Manipur and Kohima as a secular member of the creme d'la creme INA leadership. After being recaptured by the British Army, he was tried for treason where Nehru and others defended him.

After Partition, this highly decorated and experienced Indian National Army War Veteran moved to Pakistan and was immediately tasked with taking over The Jammu and Kashmir State from Hari Singh's forces. Without approval from Gracey, he would spend next weeks preparing the mujaheedin forces, training and overseeing their equipment. In October he would personally supervise the mixed forces against the Dogra Army in Bhimber and captured it. He was the one who continued the Pakistani war from the ground, ironically using mujaheedin forces against the avowedly secular India, for whose cause he commanded a full division!

He was one of the closest associates of Subhas Chandra Bose. Yet he fought against the country he fought for, against the very men he lived with. From the aim of establishing a secular free India, he ended up being a soldier to establish Nizam e Mustafa in Kashmir. I am not judging, but just marveling at the twist of fate.

Source: Raja Habib ur Rahman Khan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Contrast this with Col. Shahnawaz Khan(later to become one of the most popular Indian politicians of the 60s)

@levina - Don't miss this.
 
Last edited:

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom