#NetajiSubhashChandraBose
He is not dead, don’t perform #Shradd..
Gandhi sent a telegram to Subhash Chandra Bose’s elder brother when he received the news that Subhash passed away in air crash.
Few months later, he did a massive U turn & said, he believed his inner conscience.
Bose arriving at the 1939 annual meet of the Congress, where he was re-elected as president. He later resigned due to constant clashes with Gandhi and Nehru.

What Transpired?
If there is one person who knows more about Netaji than any other today, it is @anujdhar,
Yet, I try to write what I know & ofcourse, I have taken liberty to take points from Dhar sahab’s book, India’s Biggest Cover Up.
Dhar on his part is confident that Bose did not die in any air crash in Taiwan in Aug 1945, because no Japanese bomber crashed in Taipei that month.
He has in his possession an email from the Taiwan Minister of Transportation & Communication, Lin Ling-San, dating back to 2003, that says, “After reviewing all hand-over records during the period from 8/14/1945 to 10/25/1945, there was no evidence to show that one plane had
ever crashed at old Matsuyama airport (now Taipei domestic airport) carrying Mr Subhas Chandra Bose.”
The evidence in support of Bose’s death in the Taipei air crash relies on the accounts of Japanese army officers which were published in the Yomiuri Shimbun, a Japanese NP in
serialised form starting August 27 1945, and on the eyewitness testimony of Habib ur Rahman, who was the only Indian other than Bose on that flight.
Maj Gen Mohd Zaman Kiani, who Bose had appointed as representative of the “Provisional Govern-ment of Azad Hind” in his absence,
recounted in his memoirs that “apparently the crash itself was not serious, but since the plane caught fire on impact, Subhas, whose clothes got sprinkled with gasoline, got seriously burnt before his clothes could be removed. By the time he managed to leave the plane he was
badly charred.”

Nehru’s Role…..

The man Bose picked as his deputy on reaching Berlin was a communist from Kerala, A.C.N. Nambiar, After setting up the Free India Centre, Azad Hind Office and the India Legion of Indian soldiers Bose left for the Far East secretly on Feb 8,1943
handing over the charge to Nambiar,”
“Nambiar, who had fled Germany after being expelled in 1933 by the Nazis for his alleged Communist activities, returned to Germany in style in 1951, after being appointed the first ambassador of India to Germany by Nehru’s government.
Bose’s lieutenant Shah Nawaz Khan, who led the first commission of enquiry that concluded he died in Taipei, became a minister in Nehru’s cabinet. Also, was appointed in numerous commissions & was a minister for more than a decade.
The three-member commission had one member,
Subhas Bose’s brother Suresh Chandra Bose, who submitted a dissenting note disagreeing with the committee’s conclusion.
He also charged Nehru with pressurising him to accept the conclusions of the other two members. Habibur Rahman and MZ Kiani both ended up in Pakistan, where
both became senior officials of the Pakistan government in Gilgit-Baltistan.
Another Proof from Paris-based historian, J B P More, who claimed that the freedom fighter did not die in the air crash of August 18, 1945. He has based his theory on an old French secret service report
that was dated December 11, 1947. More chanced upon the report at the National Archives of France.
“He escaped from Indo-China border alive and his whereabouts were unknown as late as December 11, 1947, as reported in the secret document. This implies that he was alive somewhere
but not dead in 1947,” said More.
Remember Veerendranath Chattopadhyaya, brother of Sarojini Naidu & a legendary freedom fighter who was MURDERED by Nehru’s friend Stalin?
Well, his son, Nikhil Chattopadhyaya said that he met Netaji at Siberian Town called OMSK in 1968.
When
@PMOIndia disclosed few files, there was this affidavit of Narendranath Sindkar, a journalist who was based in Moscow between 1966 and 1991. It claims that Nikhil Chattopadhyay & his wife met Bose in the Siberian town 23 years after he was apparently killed in a plane crash.
Filed before the Mukherjee Commission in 2000, Sindkar's affidavit quotes Nikhil Chattopadhyay as saying that Bose was in hiding in Russia because he feared being prosecuted as a war criminal in India.
The affidavit mentions that Sindkar met Nikhil in Moscow soon after the death
of Veer Savarkar in 1966.
"During our conversation he accused Nehru of forcing Netaji Subhas to exile in Soviet Russia.

"It was an exile because Netaji feared that he would be declared a war criminal with the connivance of Nehru. On his arrival in the then USSR via Manchuria,
Stalin, Molotov & Voroshilov consulted with the Indologists who advised Stalin to consult Krishna Menon in London through the Soviet embassy. Krishna Menon categorically asserted in favour of Nehru and urged Stalin not to divulge the information.," Sindkar's affidavit, claimed.
Retd Major Gen GD Bakshi in his book, Bose: The Indian Samurai, claimed that Netaji set up an Azad Hind Government embassy in Russia with the help of the then Soviet Ambassador to Tokyo, Jacob Malik, Netaji then made three radio broadcasts from Siberia, which unveiled to the
British the truth of his successful escape to the Soviet Union.
Sources based in Russia claim that "the aircraft landed safely in a Manchurian airbase" and that the former president of @INCIndia was "taken custody of by Soviet troops & security personnel" and "flown to Moscow".
According to them, Bose was taken away to a gulag within 17 months of internment in a security prison in Moscow, and passed away 11 years later. They add that the Soviet leaders, who came after Stalin, kept the circumstances of Netaji Subhas Bose's capture and passing secret
"out of a desire to ensure good relations with India".
Sources claim that Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin was asked by UK Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin through Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov to "ensure that Bose never returned to India and was never heard from again".
According to them, "because of Bose's policy of collaboration with Germany under Hitler and Japan under Tojo, the Soviet dictator saw him as an enemy" and therefore presumably did not need much persuasion in carrying out the British request.
There are reports of the then
Ambassador of India to the USSR, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, having a meeting with Netaji Subhas Bose in a prison near Moscow soon after taking charge at the embassy in 1949.
The disclosure that members of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's family were snooped upon for two decades
has given rise to the conclusion that Nehru was worried about Bose's family coming across evidence that he was alive, or about the circumstances of his fake death.
It’s a mystery that nobody knows clearly what happened to Netaji after purported crash, but 2 things are clear…
1) Netaji didn’t die on 18th August 1945.
2) NEHRU played a big big role in this.
What is clear is that if Subhas Bose had returned to India, rather than either been killed in an air crash or gone permanently missing, he would have easily been the most popular leader in the
country, and could quite possibly have displaced Mahatma Gandhi's favourite, Jawaharlal Nehru, from the effective leadership of the Congress party and consequently the Prime Ministership.
Given the fact that Netaji attracted both Muslims & Hindus to his fold in like manner,
there is a high probability that a Bose-led Congress could have checkmated the plans of both Whitehall as well as M.A. Jinnah to partition India. The INA was a completely secular force, with patriots from all communities joining out of admiration for Netaji. Certainly, his
return to the political arena would have upset the plans of the British & their agents Gandhi, Nehru.

Not to forget the crores of rupees & gold looted by Nehru which belonged to INA.

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