PM declassifies 100 files relating to Netaji
Prime Minister Narendra Modi today made public digital copies of 100
secret files relating to Subhas Chandra Bose on his 119th birth
anniversary, which could throw some light on the controversy over his
death.
The files were declassified and put on digital display at the National
Archives of India (NAI) here by the Prime Minister, who pressed a button
in the presence of Bose family members and Union Ministers Mahesh
Sharma and Babul Supriyo.
Later, Modi and his ministerial colleagues went around glancing at the
declassified files, spending over half an hour at the National Archives.
He also spoke to the members of the Bose family.
The NAI also plans to release digital copies of 25 declassified files on Bose in the public domain every month.
In October last year, the Prime Minister had met the family members of
Netaji and announced that the government would declassify the files
relating to the leader whose disappearance 70 years ago remains a
mystery.
While two commissions of inquiry had concluded that Netaji had died in a
plane crash in Taipei on August 18, 1945, a third probe panel, headed
by Justice MK Mukherjee, had contested it and suggested that Bose was
alive after that. The controversy had split members of the Bose family,
too.
The first lot of 33 files were declassified by the Prime Minister’s
Office (PMO) and handed over to the NAI on December 4, last year.
Subsequently, the Ministries of Home Affairs and External Affairs too
initiated the process of declassification of files relating to Bose in
their respective collection which were then transferred over to the NAI,
it added.
In his reaction to the declassification, Chandra Kumar Bose,
spokesperson of the Bose family and grand—nephew of Subhas Chandra Bose
who was present at the ceremony, said “we welcome this step by Prime
Minister wholeheartedly. This is a day of transparency in India.”
Earlier in day, he told PTI, “We feel that certain very important files
were destroyed during the Congress regime in order to hide the truth. We
have documentary evidence to understand this. So we feel that the
Indian government should take steps to ensure the release of files lying
in Russia, Germany, UK, USA.”
Chandra Kumar Bose also said “We couldn’t go through all the files as of
now. But as of now, what we could go through, there are only
circumstantial evidence of the air-crash but no conclusive evidence of
the air crash.”
“Even in one of the letters that we saw here which was written by Lal
Bahadur Shastri to Suresh Bose that there is no conclusive evidence
about the air crash, only few circumstantial evidence,” he told PTI
after the files were declassified.
Chandra Bose said “there is a change in the attitude of the government
from that of the previous ones. First, the attitude of suppressing the
facts about Netaji has been negated. And this is the biggest thing in
unraveling the truth about Netaji,” Bose said.
Netaji’s nephew Ardhendu Bose, who was also at the ceremony here, said
“the Bose family and the entire country has been waiting for this moment
for the last seven decades nearly. We feel that these files would be
able to throw some light on it.”
He also stressed that the files lying in KGB archives in Russia and
those with Germany, UK and USA “will bring out more that what lies in
those files. As we apprehend that certain files might have been
destroyed.”
Just ahead of the declassification ceremony, an aged family member broke down in the presence of the Prime Minister.
An official said the National Archives placed 100 files relating to Bose
in public domain “after preliminary conservation treatment and
digitization”.
The digital copies of these files coming out in public domain meets a
“long—standing public demand” which would facilitate scholars to carry
out further research on Bose, the official said.
Besides the controversy over whether Netaji died in the 1945 aircrash or
not, those who believe he was alive after that have different theories
about what happened to the leader after that.
While one of them says Bose fled to the former Soviet Union to continue
to fight for India’s independence but was later killed there, the other
says that Netaji returned to India as an ascetic, named ‘Gumnami Baba,
and continued to live in Uttar Pradesh’s Faizabad till 1985.
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