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By Shali Ittaman
Subhas Bose
was present in the erstwhile Soviet Union in 1946! The proof
lies in the high-security Paddolsk Military Archive, situated
40 km from Moscow.
Alexander Kolesnikov, a former major-general of the Warsaw
Pact, who accessed these files in October 1996, says Josef
Stalin, the general-secretary of the CPSU, and his cabinet
were considering various options to deal with Bose in 1946.
The discussion centred on the question:"Should he (Bose)
be kept in Russia?"
As a member of the Institute of Oriental Studies, Moscow,
Alexander Kolesnikov was permitted to visit the archive under
a Indo-Russian cultural agreement. However, owing to security
reasons, he was not allowed to copy the page, file number
and volume of the document he had studied.
During a meeting with an Indian Parliamentary Delegation
to the Russian Federation in 1996, he gave a written account
of all his findings. The delegation, which included the late
Chitta Basu and Sri Jayanta Roy of the Forward Bloc, brought
the writing back to India.
This account is the basis of the affidavit before the Mukherjee
Commission submitted by Dr Purabi Roy, a research scholar
who was sent as part of Asiatic Society's three-member team
to Russia to study Indian documents from 1917-1947. Since
Paddolsk was out of bounds for her being a foreigner, Kolesnikov
was assigned the job.
Apart from other things, the Russian account confirms the
belief in various quarters that Bose had planned to shift
base to Russia. Some of the related Russian documents discovered
by the Asiatic team include Bose's contact with Soviet leaders
seeking recognition for the Azad Hind Government and Soviet
agents activities in India during and after World War II.
The Soviet spymaster
The document which throws fiercer light on the events
of the time, is Soviet agent Sayadyants' India papers.
Sayadyants, who lived in Bombay, was gathering India related
information on "Soviet high command orders" while
operating as a seller of Soviet books, periodicals and films.
His papers
(MID. Fond. 0179. OPIS la. Papka ia. Delo 8, 1946)
[Eng. Translation ] talk extensively
about Bose, his ideology and political leanings, and his influence
over the Indian masses. He implies in the papers that if the
Soviets were to work with an Indian leader it almost surely
would have to be Subhas Bose. Whether or not Stalin was influenced
by the Sayadyants' views remains to be understood.
There is also a reference to Sayadyants' August 1946 visit
to Moscow through Tehran during which he meets Soviet Ambassador
to Iran I V Sadchikov. Dr Purabi Roy says, Sayadyants had
mentioned to the ambassador that "he was carrying Nehru's
letter to Stalin seeking the latter's support". (It is
of course, historically known that Stalin neither met Nehru
nor his ambassadoress Vijaylakshmi Pandit, despite the best
efforts of lobbyists such as Krishna Menon).
Other indicators
Whereas Kolesnikov-Purabi Roy findings, which include various
sensitive
files, establish Bose's presence in Moscow, a lot of supporting
evidence has come Hindustan Times' way since it began the
public probe 15 days ago.
For instance, there is the testimony of Ashok Rai, a former
resident of Quetta, Baluchistan, who read the Hindustan Times
appeal and came forward to submit what looks to be a vital
piece of information. If the testimony stands up to scrutiny,
this could be the start of another research to establish how
Subhas Bose reached Russia after Japan pronounced him dead
on August 18, 1945.
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