The Sun Never Set on the British Empire’s Oppression

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areas of the world that were ever part of the British Empire. Current British Overseas TerritoAll ries have their names underlined in red.

The Sun Never Set on the British Empire’s Oppression

An image of Hong Kong police using their truncheons set against a Union Jack flag
Getty / Adam Maida / The Atlantic

Late last month, the leader of Myanmar’s junta, Min Aung Hlaing, stood on a huge parade field to recount the military’s “immense prestige etched in the annals of history.” Hundreds of soldiers who had not been deployed to quell an uprising against the country’s coup marched in formation at dawn. Armored vehicles spewing black smoke rumbled alongside them.

The speech marked Myanmar’s annual Armed Forces Day, telling a soaring and selectively edited tale of the institution’s “glorious past.” As in most retellings of the country’s recent history, special attention was paid to the wrongdoings of its former colonial master and the way the military “annihilated the British Imperialists.” Indeed, Myanmar (also known as Burma) might have won independence in 1948, but almost all of the country’s ills—real and perceived—are still regularly blamed on the British.

Yet that disdain is not quite enough to do away with the onerous laws Britain left behind: Successive Burmese governments have shown a fondness for wielding them to silence critics and quash dissent—and Min Aung Hlaing has proved no different. Five days after his speech, his regime charged Aung San Suu Kyi, the country’s de facto leader, who has been detained since the February 1 coup, under the Official Secrets Act. The law dates from 1923 and covers a plethora of offenses, including trespassing and possessing documents deemed secret. It carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.

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Across Asia, in places such as Myanmar, India, and Hong Kong, leaders that espouse nationalist rhetoric and bemoan their former colonial overlords see no issue with deploying laws designed by those foreign masters against their own people. These lasting vestiges of the British empire are draconian, overly broad, and vaguely worded, but they persist very much because of these traits, existing as powerful weapons of modern lawfare. In fact, rather than repealing them, some governments have tweaked and fused them with new rules, creating even more problematic regulations.

“Any government would want these laws to remain so that they could use it whenever politically convenient for them, and to silence dissenters,” Chitranshul Sinha, a lawyer and the author of The Great Repression: The Story of Sedition in India, told me of that country’s colonial legal legacy. “These laws cause a chilling effect on free speech—that archnemesis of authoritarians.”

Democratic and quasi-democratic postcolonial governments in Asia have for decades avoided abolishing or significantly reforming such laws, including Myanmar’s Official Secrets Act, sedition laws in India and Hong Kong, and a host of other colonial-era regulations, despite ample warnings about possible future misuse. In 1997, months before Britain returned Hong Kong to China, the late legal scholar Ming Kou Chan assessed the much-praised legal system that would be left behind when the Union Jack was lowered. “Despite British claims that they brought the blessings of the rule of law to Hong Kong, as in many other colonies,” he wrote, “the British have in fact created a legal system emphasizing law and order while neglecting the personal liberties and individual rights associated with the common law tradition.”

In Myanmar, the military—which in an effort at legitimacy has named itself the State Administration Council—has made liberal use of these outdated laws. Although Suu Kyi’s case has drawn the most attention, the junta makes almost nightly pronouncements through state television and radio of new arrest warrants targeting journalists, activists, models, and medical workers, all issued under a section of the country’s 1861 penal code that has long been criticized by activists and rights groups for criminalizing speech. (The military tweaked a portion of the law following its seizure of power, making possible the punishment of those who question the legitimacy of the coup or the military government.)

Among those at risk is Myat Noe Aye, a well-known actor and influencer who used her substantial social-media following to rally support for anti-coup demonstrations and document her own attendance at protests. This month, the 25-year-old saw her picture on TV alongside those of others accused of incitement. Seemingly unperturbed by the possibility of imprisonment, she turned to Facebook to do a bit of quick trolling, posting a screenshot of the broadcast with the caption “Thank you for using a beautiful photo” and a kissy-face emoji. “They want people to be afraid of them, to make them feel like they are powerful,” she told me of the junta. To do this, she said, they had resorted to their old tactics, using “stupid” laws, communications cuts, and arbitrary killings. But, she said, “we are living in the 21st century; they can’t scare us easily.”

None of Myanmar's past governments, including those elected during its period of limited democracy from 2012 through February, made serious efforts to substantively amend or abolish the Official Secrets Act or similar laws. If anything, those administrations used them to their advantage, too. In 2018, two Reuters journalists were charged with violating the Official Secrets Act for reporting on the massacre of a group of Rohingya men. Suu Kyi, whose “rule of law” refrain made at least a cameo in nearly all of her public addresses, defended the jailings both publicly and privately. When the pair—with whom I worked while I was posted to Myanmar for Reuters—were handed seven-year sentences, she explained dryly that their punishment was not repressive. “I wonder whether many people have actually read the summary of the judgment, which had nothing to do with the freedom of expression at all; it had to do with the Officials Secrets Act,” she told a forum audience in Hanoi. (The lawyer who defended the Reuters duo is now defending Suu Kyi.)

Her stance was much the same as that of the previous administration, the first after direct military rule ended, which used the act against four journalists and the chief executive of a local newspaper, Unity Journal. The paper had printed a report claiming that a defense facility was really a chemical-weapons factory. The government denied the story, which was poorly sourced and written, and all five defendants were sentenced to 10 years in jail with hard labor, though they were later released. Daniel Aguirre, a senior lecturer in law at the University of Roehampton in the U.K., who previously served as the legal adviser for the International Commission of Jurists in Myanmar, says laws such as the Official Secrets Act were created “to control colonial subjects and ensure stability for colonial economic exploitation.” What they were not designed to do, he told me, was “protect the human rights of citizens. That these laws have been maintained by successive governments since independence reflects governance that values stability and tranquility over human rights and freedoms.”

Restoring stability has become the guiding principle of Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, after she helped kick-start prodemocracy protests in 2019. She has relied on colonial-era emergency ordinances, and sedition cases have reappeared in Hong Kong courts, more than a decade after Britain abolished the offense. In 2009, a British official said that the law had hailed “from a bygone era when freedom of expression wasn’t seen as the right it is today,” and expressed hope that other countries where similar statutes were still enforced would follow suit. Even before the protests began, Lam’s government showed that it was content to reach into the past to achieve its goals, using a public-security ordinance from 1911 to ban a fringe political group in 2018, a first since the territory had been returned to China. More recently, the city’s authorities have combined pre-handover laws with new legislation aimed at quashing dissent, under the guise of maintaining security.

At the same time, the government has been stripping away mentions of colonialism from city museums as it looks to revise its history, according to local media. (It has no issue, however, with the British officers still serving in its police force’s ranks.) Pro-Beijing figures, always in search of targets to blame for their own low popularity and poor governance record, have argued that colonialism is responsible for a lack of national identity in Hong Kong. More bellicose rhetoric has come from Beijing officials who have used colonialism as a cudgel, consistently decrying Britain’s meddling. During the height of the 2019 protests, a former Chinese ambassador to London claimed that his host country had a “colonial mindset” regarding Hong Kong, which had been under British rule for 156 years. And this year, a spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry pointed out that the British had “imposed draconian restrictions on assembly, procession, and association in Hong Kong.” Ronny Tong, a prodemocracy lawmaker turned vociferous establishment cheerleader, who is now part of Lam’s cabinet, made a similar case to me. He argued that Beijing’s all-encompassing national-security law, used to arrest dozens of people and a key piece of the city’s reengineering, was actually an improvement on the colonial-era Crimes Ordinance.

Senia Ng, a barrister and member of Hong Kong’s biggest prodemocracy party, told me that the issue was not just the continued existence of such laws, but the manner in which the government was using them. “The government tries to get rid of Hong Kong’s colonial roots, but still deploys it when they find it useful,” Ng said. “At the end of the day, I think it boils down to prosecuting for political motives.” As an example, many in the prodemocracy movement point to a group of prominent activists including Martin Lee, the city’s octogenarian “Father of Democracy,” and the media tycoon Jimmy Lai, who will be sentenced on Friday for violating the Public Order Ordinance, a series of regulations enacted in 1967 to empower police during leftist riots fueled by the Cultural Revolution. The group faces five years in jail for taking part in a peaceful march that drew more than 1.5 million people to Hong Kong’s rain-soaked streets two years ago.

Similar moves can be seen in India, where the case of Disha Ravi, a 22-year-old climate activist charged in February with sedition, brought renewed global attention to the suppression of free speech under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government. The charges against Ravi stem from her compiling and sharing a document to help farmers protest against agricultural laws.

Sinha, the lawyer and author, told me the use of sedition laws in India is “downright oppressive” and “most definitely hypocritical.” Much as it does elsewhere, it “sort of mirrors the way the British handled dissent.”

Timothy McLaughlin is a Hong Kong–based contributing writer at The Atlantic.
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Commonwealth war graves: PM 'deeply troubled' over racism ...

 

 

Why the Indian soldiers of WW1 were forgotten - BBC News

02-Jul-2015 — Of the 1.3 million Indian troops who served in the conflict, however, you hear very little. 464 gray line. Find out more.

Commonwealth report finds racism against ... - The Tribune

https://www.tribuneindia.com › Nation
9 hours ago — Commonwealth report finds racism against Indian WWI martyrs, UK Defence Secy offers apology. They were 'not commemorated' the same ...
20 hours ago — Federal Report Discovers Racism Against Indian World War I Martyrs, British ... What happened a century ago was wrong at the time, but now she said it ... in related Commonwealth countries such as India to find thousands of ...
16 hours ago — The report found that at least 116,000 casualties from WW1, most of whom were of African, Indian or Egyptian origin, "were not commemorated by ...
Each division had about 13,000 men on strength, somewhat weaker than a British division in part due to the smaller infantry battalions and smaller artillery ...

Commonwealth war graves: PM 'deeply troubled' over racism

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A rose growing between the headstones at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission's Wytschaete Military Cemetery, near Ypres, Belgiumimage copyrightPA Media

Boris Johnson said he is "deeply troubled" by failures to properly commemorate black and Asian troops who died fighting for the British Empire during World War One.

Some troops were commemorated collectively or their names were recorded in registers, while their white counterparts had headstones.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace apologised in the Commons after a report blamed "pervasive racism".

Mr Wallace pledged to "take action".

The prime minister offered an "unreserved apology" over the findings of the review by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

"Our shared duty is to honour and remember all those, wherever they lived and whatever their background, who laid down their lives for our freedoms at the moment of greatest peril," he said.

Mr Wallace expressed "deep regret" in the House of Commons, as he told MPs there was "no doubt" prejudice had played a part in what happened after WWI.

media captionDefence Secretary Ben Wallace apologises: "There can be no doubt prejudice played a part in some of the commission's decisions"

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission, which is tasked with commemorating those who died in the two world wars, has also apologised over its findings.

Labour MP David Lammy, who was critical to bringing the matter to light, called it a "watershed moment".

Mr Wallace said: "On behalf of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and the government both of the time and today, I want to apologise for the failures to live up to their founding principles all those years ago and express deep regret that it has taken so long to rectify the situation.

"Whilst we can't change the past, we can make amends and take action," he said.

He said there were cases where the commission "deliberately overlooked evidence" that would have allowed it to find the names of the dead.

And he said there were examples of officials employing an "overarching imperial ideology connected to racial and religious differences" in order to "divide the dead and treat them unequally in ways that were impossible in Europe".

Outlining the next steps, Mr Wallace said the Commonwealth War Graves Commission will:

  • search in the historical record for inequalities in commemoration and act on what is found
  • renew its commitment to equality in commemoration by building physical or digital commemorative structures
  • use its online presence and wider education activities to reach out to all the communities of the former British Empire touched by the two world wars to make sure their hidden history is brought to life
  • and, over the next six months, assemble a global and diverse community of experts to help make this happen

Mr Wallace also announced a public consultation over plans to waive the visa fee for service personnel from the Commonwealth and Nepal who choose to settle in the UK in order to honour their contribution.

An inquiry by the commission was set up following a 2019 Channel 4 documentary, called Unremembered, which was presented by Mr Lammy.

The report found that at least 116,000 casualties from WW1, most of whom were of African, Indian or Egyptian origin, "were not commemorated by name or possibly not commemorated at all".

But that figure could be as high as 350,000, it said.

It also cited racist comments such as the governor of a British colony saying in 1923 that: "The average native... would not understand or appreciate a headstone."

media captionDavid Matthews tells the story of his great-uncle who fought in World War One

Shadow justice secretary Mr Lammy told the BBC that while making the documentary in Kenya and Tanzania, he discovered mass graves in which Africans had been "dumped with no commemoration whatsoever".

He said it was a travesty that men who served the British Empire were not commemorated properly, but welcomed the report.

"I'm just really, really pleased that the dignity that these men deserved - who were dragged from their villages and commandeered to work for the British Empire - that dignity that they deserve in death can be granted to them," he said.

Mr Lammy added that work must be done to find their names in archives where that is possible, and to establish how local communities would like them to be commemorated.

He also said Commonwealth soldiers should not be "whitewashed" out of history books, while Mr Wallace said it was a "deep regret" that his own WW1 education had included "very little about the contribution from the Commonwealth countries and the wider at the time British Empire".

media captionDavid Olusoga: "It's another organisation that's had to be dragged into admitting its history."

Historian Prof David Olusoga, whose TV company produced Unremembered, told BBC Breakfast that apologies were not enough and resources would need to be committed if the commission was serious about restorative justice.

"If the Commonwealth War Graves Commission had set up a committee and discovered that 100,000 white British soldiers lay in mass graves - unmarked, uncommemorated - and the documentation proved that that had been deliberate, what would they do?" he said.

Six million soldiers from the British Empire served in WW1.

Between 45,000 and 54,000 Asian and African personnel who died in the conflict were "commemorated unequally", the commission said.

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What was the role of British Empire soldiers in WW1?

During a march past of Indian troops, a woman pins flowers on to the tunic of one of the soldiers.image copyrightIWM
  • World War One was the first truly global war, fought not just in the trenches of France but in the Middle East, Asia and Africa
  • Britain's colonies sent millions of men to fight for the empire during the conflict
  • India, which at that time included Pakistan and Bangladesh, sent the most soldiers - more than 1.4 million
  • The British Army in East Africa was mainly composed of African soldiers by November 1918, according to the Imperial War Museum
  • At least 180,000 Africans served in the Carrier Corps in East Africa and provided logistic support to troops at the front
  • Around 15,000 people from the West Indies enlisted in WW1, including 10,000 from Jamaica, according to the National Army Museum
  • Colonies as far away as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) also sent a similar number between them
  • Britain had soldiers from six different continents: Europe, North America, South America, Australasia, Asia and Africa
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The report concluded that the failure to properly commemorate the individuals was influenced by a scarcity of information, errors inherited from other organisations and the opinions of colonial administrators.

"Underpinning all these decisions, however, were the entrenched prejudices, preconceptions and pervasive racism of contemporary imperial attitudes," it added.

The report picked out an example from 1923 when the governor of the Gold Coast colony, now Ghana, argued for collective memorials rather than individual ones.

At a meeting in London, it was said that the governor, F G Guggisberg, said: "The average native of the Gold Coast would not understand or appreciate a headstone."

In response, commission employee Arthur Browne said: "In perhaps two or three hundred years' time, when the native population had reached a higher stage of civilisation, they might then be glad to see that headstones had been erected on the native graves and that the native soldiers had received precisely the same treatment as their white comrades."

The report said Mr Browne's response showed "what he may have considered foresight, but one that was explicitly framed by contemporary racial prejudice".

The commission, which was founded in 1917 as the Imperial War Graves Commission, said the events of a century ago were wrong then and were wrong now.

Its director general, Claire Horton, said: "We recognise the wrongs of the past and are deeply sorry and will be acting immediately to correct them."

As part of the commission's work to search for unnamed war dead and those who are potentially not commemorated, it will also look at those who died in World War Two, although it is not thought that inequalities seen in WW1 were as widespread then.

Ms Horton said the report was "sober" reading but gave the commission the ability - "now that we know the numbers and the areas to look" - to start the searches properly to "right the wrongs of the past".

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Analysis box by Mark Easton, home editor

The war graves commission was founded with a remit to remember every individual who had died in World War One, regardless of rank, class, religion or race.

The idea of equal treatment was controversial, but it became a cornerstone of remembrance.

Outside Europe, however, the commission enacted a policy of extreme discrimination, categorising the fallen as "white", "Indians" or what it called "natives".

In southern Kenya, white soldiers lie beneath named memorials in a well-tended cemetery. Next door in a scruffy field is where their African comrades are buried - no names, just a general memorial.

The consequence of the commission's failings is not only to do a great injustice to the black and Asian soldiers, sailors and airmen who fought alongside their white European comrades in two world wars, it is to misrepresent our history.

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Do you have a relative who was not properly commemorated? Please share your story by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also get in touch in the following ways:

1945 INA trials: a rare glimpse from the lens of photojournalist Kulwant Roy

 

1945 INA trials: a rare glimpse from the lens of photojournalist Kulwant Roy

Rare images of the November 1945 Indian National Army (Azad Hind Fauj) trials from photojournalist Kulwant Roy’s work, as documented by Aditya Arya in the visual archive History in the Making.

Written by Nandini Rathi | New Delhi |
Updated: August 29, 2017 7:57:30 pm

In his book Azaadi!, English author Reginald Massey, who was born and raised in pre-Partition Lahore, recalls the reception of three INA generals shortly after they were acquitted, which he witnessed as a teenager:

There were thousands who greeted them at the historic Minto Park. In unison they chanted loudly:

Chaalis crore-on ki awaaz! (Forty crore people shout in unison!) (Editor’s note: India’s population was 40 crores – 400 million – at that time.)

Sehgal – Dhillon – Shah Nawaz!!

When the Japanese routed the Allies in south east Asia, they took some 60,000 soldiers of the British Indian army prisoners. 20,000 of them agreed to switch sides and go to war against their former masters — the British, in the Indian National Army under the command of Subhas Chandra Bose.

After the Allies won the war, the INA soldiers once again became prisoners — this time of the British. The military logic of the British India government was clear — they considered the INA joinees to be traitors, deserving of severe punishment. The furious, self-righteous government decided to make an example of the the INA leaders by performing their court martial and treason trial — the first one was to take place in Delhi’s iconic Red Fort, the same place from where Bose promised that INA would declare India’s independence.

Of the three INA generals arraigned for the first trial were a Hindu (Prem Kumar Sehgal), a Muslim (Shah Nawaz Khan) and a Sikh (Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon). The cause of their defence was taken up by the Congress, whose leaders toured the country, mobilizing support for the soldiers awaiting the trial. Jawaharlal Nehru was among the defence lawyers. While the defense lost the case and the defendants were declared guilty, the British sensed the popular mood, including within the British India Army, which was far from unsympathetic toward the INA. This was a time when the Muslim League was on the threshold of winning Pakistan, by dividing the territory of British India along communal lines. Yet, Indians, irrespective of religion were united in feeling that the ruling power was out for vengeance and in heaping curses upon it. The government was forced to commute the sentences of the convicted trio and release them.

Images

Photojournalist Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) had been among the handful of Indians who lived and worked through the exciting times before and after India’s Independence. His archive of mostly unpublished prints and negatives lay forgotten in boxes for more than 20 years after his death in 1984 until they were discovered by Aditya Arya, to whom he had left his work. Here are a few snapshots from the time around the INA trials of 1945 that Roy captured through his lens:

Indian national army, kulwant roy, jawaharlal nehru Jawaharlal Nehru with the members of the INA Defence Committee, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. Indian national army, kulwant roy, jawaharlal nehru Members of the Defence Committee, R.B. Badri Dass, Justice Acchru Ram and Asaf Ali discussing the charge sheet of the INA cadre at Delhi Red Fort, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. INA defence committee, azad hind fauj, INA trials, jawaharlal nehru Jawaharlal Nehru emerging from the Defence Committee office. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. INA trial, red fort trials, Indian national army, kulwant roy General Mohan Singh who formed the First I.N.A in Far East is seen here while chatting with Mrs. Ehsan Qadir, wife of Capt. Ehsan Qadir of the INA. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. INA, mahatma gandhi, red fort trials, azad hind fauj Mahatma Gandhi with soldiers of the INA, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. kadam kadam badhaye ja, mahatma gandhi, INA, azad hind fauj Captain Ram Singh, who had composed the patriotic song ‘Kadam Kadam Badhaye Ja’ plays the violin for Gandhiji at the Harijan Colony, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. indian national army, mahatma gandhi, jawaharlal nehru Jawaharlal Nehru attends a meeting of Gandhiji and INA soldiers, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. indian national army, mahatma gandhi, jawaharlal nehru An engrossed audience listening to Gandhiji in this rare documentation of the meeting, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. indian national army, mahatma gandhi, jawaharlal nehru, sardar patel Also seen attending the meeting is Sardar Patel, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. INA defence committee, jawaharlal nehru, indian national army Jawaharlal Nehru with members of the INA enquiry committee at the Constitution Club, New Delhi (1945). Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation. indian national army, jawaharlal nehru Jawaharlal Nehru with INA cadre, 1945. Photo by Kulwant Roy (1914-1984) and photo credit : Aditya Arya Archives, Chairman & Trustee, India Photo Archive Foundation.

Kulwant Roy gifted his work to Aditya Arya, who has since archived them under the aegis of the India Photo Archive Foundation. Arya can be reached at adityaarya@adityaarya.com

3 OCCASION WHEN INDIA DIDN'T HAVE MONEY TO PAY

 

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HOW INDIA PROGRESSED ON  THE SPOT REPORTING MY EXPERIENCE- ... -

Jan 16, 2020 — http://pazhayathu.blogspot.com/2009/09/united-states-is-not-dirty-word-in.html; u.s.a. came to our rescue:- PL-480,
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WHEN SOME POLITICAL PARTIES ACCUSE NEHRU AND CONGRESS PARTY FOR FOLLOWING PROSOCIALISTIC AND RATHER SLOW DEVELOPMENT:- -I REMEMBER THAT IN 1950 INDIA HAD ONLY 2 VERY RICH PEOPLE OTHER THAN LOCAL KINGS OF SMALL KINGDOMS IN INDIA; -ONE WAS TATA AND THE OTHER BIRLA.NEITHER OF THEM HAD THE MONEY FOR INDIA'S DEVELOPMENT AT THAT TIME .SO NEHRU WAS FORCED TO START 5 YEAR PLANS AS A VERY POOR AND PRIMITIVE RUSSIA DID IN 1920'S FOR SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT INTO A WORLD POWER

YES INDIA ALSO IS A SUPER POWER NOW IN 70 YEARS-THE DELAY WAS BECAUSE OF CHINA AND PAKISTAN WARS AND 1960'S FAMINE OR WE COULD HAVE DONE IT IN 50 YEARS OR 40 YEARS  AND NOT USING MARSHAL STALIN'S METHODS OF FORCED LABOUR BUT WITH FULL DEMOCRACY


A FEW LINES FROM WORLD EVENTS 1950:-AMERICA WAS BUSY STOPPING SOVIET RUSSIAN EXPANSIONISM UNDER DICTATOR JOSEF STALIN-SO COULD NOT GIVE AID OR TIME FOR NEWLY INDEPENDENT INDIA IN 1950;THOUGH LATER 1955 ONWARDS MASSIVE AID WAS RECIEVED BY INDIA FOR DEVLOPMENT INCLUDING FOOD .

SOVIET RUSSIA FORCIBLY ANNEXED MANY COUNTRIES OF MIDDLE EUROPE AFTER 2ND WORLD WAR INCLUDING ESTONIA;LATVIA;LITHUANIA;POLAND;HUNGARY;ROMANIA;BULGARIA AND WAS TRYING TO TAKE OVER WESTERN EUROPE THROUGH POWERFUL COMMUNIST PARTIES IN FRANCE AND ITALY.AMERICA COUNTERED RUSSIA WITH MASSIVE ECONOMIC HELP TO REBUILD EUROPE UNDER "MARSHAL PLAN"AND SAVED WESTERN EUROPE FROM RUSSIAN TAKE OVER --AMERICA WAS BUSY STOPPING RUSSIAN EXPANSION IN EAST  TO TAKE OVER SOUTH KOREA LEADING TO KOREAN WAR WITH AMERICA 

as about other countries of the world in 1950:- nobody had the money or economic power to help India following 2nd world war INCLUDING JAPAN AND GERMANY

1-INDIA WAS SO POOR THAT IT COULD NOT PAY 55 CRORE TO PAKISTAN IN 1950

The Messy Partition of the Reserve Bank of India - The Wire

https://thewire.in › banking › partition-reserve-bank-of-...
14-Aug-2017 — As the Indian subcontinent was divided in 1947, the Reserve Bank of India ... Not only did the RBI have to assist in deciding how its profits, assets and ... the time of the Partition were a little under Rs 400 crore and Pakistan's share ... of Rs 5 crore, payment of the remaining cash balance “appeared to be very ...The matter regarding release of Rs. 55 crores to Pakistan towards the second ... support of the Pakistani Army took place before the second installment was paid. ... However, linking his stand in this matter with his fast he undertook, as you will ... The press release Of the government of India did not have any mention thereof.

Why were Nehru and Patel against giving Rs.55 crore to ...

https://www.quora.com › Why-were-Nehru-and-Patel-a...
22-Mar-2015 — So, in lieu of taking those things one country has to give Price of that thing to the other country. In that respect Single-Single drops make Ocean. So, Pakistan was ...
15 answers  ·  28 votes: This is a good question, in all the other question related to Nehru and Patel, they are shown ...

Pakistan still owes India Rs 300 crore as pre-partition debt ...

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com › articleshow_comm...
Story did not explain 300 crore debt, I know that great Gandhi took stand to pay 55 crore to Pakistan at that
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2-WHEN INDIAN P.M. SHASTRI HAD TO BORROW MONEY FROM KING OF HYDERABAD

The truth about the Nizam and his gold - The Hindu
The truth about the Nizam and his gold ...
thehindu.com
11-Nov-2018 — The Prime Minister was touring the country to raise funds to steady the post-war ... The Prime Minister, Mr. Lal Bahadur Shastri and the Nizam of Hyderabad ... at the airport when the ageing ex-ruler came to greet India's Prime Minister. ... The October 1965 National Defence Gold Bonds had the additional ...

The devious case of the Nizam's fund- The New Indian Express

https://www.newindianexpress.com › opinions › nov › t...
24-Nov-2019 — This ends an interesting chapter about the annexation of Hyderabad State ... of India branch in London in October 1947 at the instance of Nawab ... On January 3, 1962, the Nizam wrote to Home Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri proposing a ... the Nizam wrote to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, stating that he had ...

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3-
In order to conserve foreign exchange, the Government decided to stop importing gold with effect from October 1,1990, and asked the SBI to use confiscated gold lying in the government mint for use by jewellery exporters.04-Sep-2013
05-Apr-2017 — In July 1991, the RBI pledged 46.91 tonnes of gold with the Bank of ... India had managed to get a bit of a breather with the first tranche of $755 ...
National sentiments were outraged and there was public outcry when it was learned that the government had pledged the country's entire gold reserves against ...
05-Jul-2017 — MUMBAI: Many now know the foreign exchange crisis India went through in the late 80s and early 90s which led to the shameful act of the government pledging its gold reserves to avoid default on overseas payment obligations.

4 reforms that pulled India back after it ran out of money in ...

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com › ... › Policy
21-Jul-2016 — By June 1991, India had less than $1 billion foreign reserves, just ... by the oil shock of 1990-91, meant India was suddenly paying more for fuel ... India did not have enough forex to conduct business with the rest of the world.

From 5 To 500: India's Forex Reserves Journey Since 1991

https://www.bloombergquint.com › Opinion
16-Jun-2020 — India's forex reserves have seen many ups and downs over the years ... forex reserves are not immediately in focus as India does not face an ...

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I HAVE SEEN ALL THESE CRISIS INDIA PASSED THROUGH FROM THE MURDER OF MAHATMA GANDHI THROUGH PAKISTAN'S 3 WARS;CHINA WAR 1960'S SEMI FAMINE CONDITION 1960;DEFEAT OF NATO MEMBER STATE PORTUGAL BY INDIA (USA VOTED AGAINST INDIA BUT RUSSIA CAME TO INDIA'S SUPPORT IN UN) INDIA'S DEFEAT OF PAKISTAN IN 1970 WHEN US AIRCRAFT CARRIER NEAR CALCUTTA WAS STOPPED BY RUSSIAN NAVY FROM HELPING PAKISTAN

ALSO I NOTICED THE HATRED OF THE THEN AMERICAN PRESIDENT NIXON FOR INDIA CALLING INDIANS AS

Declassified: Former US Prez Nixon called Indians 'pathetic ...

https://thefederal.com › News
05-Sep-2020 — Nixon also calls Indians “most sexless”, “nothing” and “pathetic”, according to the tapes. “As Americans grapple with problems of racism and ...
05-Sep-2020 — Nixon also calls Indians "most sexless", "nothing" and "pathetic", according to the tapes. Asked whether the remarks were the outcome of ...
05-Sep-2020 — Although Kissinger has since recanted and apologised for calling Indians and Indira Gandhi names, and became a great votary of US-India ties ...


.ALTHOUGH I CANNOT PROVE IT BY ANY DATA THE FOLLOWING EVENTS AFTER US DEFEAT NEAR CALCUTTA WAS FOLLOWED BY ANTI INDIA AND ANTI INDIRA GANDHI EVENTS
1- ALLAHABAD COURT CANCELLING INDIRA GANDHI'S ELECTION

2- JAYPRAKASH NARAIN AGITATION AGAINST CORRUPTION TURNS ANTI INDIRA AGITATION; FORCING THE PROCLAMATION OF EMERGENCY IN 1975

3-IN THE NEXT ELECTION INDIRA GANDHI IS DEFEATED IN NORTHERN STATES DUE TO ANTI NASHBANDI FEELING WHILE SHE GOT THUMPING SUCCESS IN SOUTH

4-next election  INDIRA GANDHI AGAIN BECOMES P.M. BUT KILLED BY KHALISTAN TERRORIST

CIA Discussed Indira Gandhi's Death 2 Years Before it ...

09-Aug-2017 — The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in a report dated January 14, 1983 ... Nearly two years before the assassination of Indira Gandhi, the CIA ...
09-Aug-2017 — WASHINGTON: Nearly two years before the assassination of Indira Gandhi, the CIA had suggested that her son Rajiv Gandhi may not succeed ...
09-Aug-2017 — Nearly two years before the assassination of Indira Gandhi, the CIA had suggested that her son Rajiv Gandhi may not succeed her in the event ...
02-Nov-1984 — The Soviet press today hinted broadly at CIA involvement in the assassination of India's prime minister Indira Gandhi. The press accounts made ...
29-Jan-2017 — CIA had prepared a very detailed and thorough 'brief' on what would happen if Rajiv Gandhi is assassinated or makes an 'abrupt departure' ...
28-Jan-2017 — CIA, Central Intelligence Agency, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, ... former PM was assassinated, was prepared keeping in mind the succession ...
India 1984[edit]. Sheel Bhadra Yagee claimed that the CIA orchestrated the Sikh uprising which later led to Indira Gandhi assassination by her Sikh body guards.
02-Nov-1984 — Soviets press to link CIA with Gandhi's murder ... The Soviet Union is stepping up efforts to tie the United States Central Intelligence Agency to the ...
THIS WAS FOLLOWED BY MANDIR (BASED ON CASTE )AND MASJID (BASED ON RELIGION)AGITATIONS WHICH WEAKENED CONGRESS PARTY IN THE NORTH.

COLONIAL BRITAIN WAS PAST MASTER OF CAUSING RELIGION BASED AND CASTE BASED RIOTS AND PROBLEMS TO SPLIT INDIANS AND TO CONTINUE THEIR LOOTING RULE OF INDIA

I SUSPECT SOME FOREIGN GUIDANCE IN ALL THESE EVENTS IN INDIA AFTER NIXON CALLED INDIRA A VULGAR NAME;AFTER AMERICAN AIRCRAFT CARRIER WAS STOPPED BY RUSSIAN SHIPS NEAR CALCUTTA;AFTER BANGLADESH WAS FORMED AGAINST AMERICAN WISHES.-BUT I CANNOT PRODUCE EVIDENCE AS CIA OF AMERICA AND
(SIS or MI6) OF BRITAIN , IS VERY SECRETIVE IN ITS ACTIVITIES

A RECENT PHOTO OF FORMER BRITISH PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR AND NIXON'S ADVISOR DURING 1972 BANGLADESH FORMATION-KISSINGER- COMING TO INDIA 
   
FOUND VERY SUSPICIOUS AND REMINDED OF KISSINGER'S ANTI INDIAN VULGARITY AND ANTI INDIRA GANDHI AND ANTI INDIAN PLANS

Opinion | Nixon and Kissinger's Forgotten Shame - The New ...

https://www.nytimes.com › 2013/09/30 › nixon-and-kissi...
29-Sep-2013 — From the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947, Pakistan was ... to warn the Pakistani generals against opening fire on their population. ... The White House tapes capture their emotional rage, going far beyond Nixon's habitual vulgarity. In the Oval Office, Nixon told Kissinger that the Indians needed “a ...
07-Sep-2020 — voiced by Nixon, who was president from 1969 to 1974, and his national security advisory Henry Kissinger, Princeton professor Gary Bass has ...
13-Jan-2014 — Kissinger : What's against our law is not what they do, but our giving them ... Rather than grappling with Nixon's racist contempt for Indians, or Kissinger's ... Office passion and bigotry only by raising the non-issue of profanity, ...

ONE THING INDIA MUST REMEMBER ABOUT AMERICA, RUSSIA,CHINA

No permanent friends or enemies

BRICS Vs QUAD: Can India Afford To Opt For US-Led 'Anti ...

https://eurasiantimes.com › South Asia

11-Mar-2021 — BRICS vs QUAD: As India gets ready for THE QUAD summit, the Modi government may have to make a tough choice between the US-led ...

India is riding both Brics and Quad ; BRICS WITH RUSSIA AND CHINA  VS QUAD WITH AMERICA AND JAPAN
MUST DECIDE SOON WHICH OF THE TWO BOATS IS GOOD FOR FUTURE INDIA

I PERSONALLY THINK AFTER FEW YEARS WHEN CHINA OVERTAKES AMERICA BRICS WILL LOOK GOOD BUT CHINA IS NOT LIKE AMERICA 
THEY WILL TRY TO DOMINATE BRICS COUNTRIES INCLUDING INDIA 
so the question is freedom as under America or dominance AS under china 

WHEN CHINA OVERTAKES AMERICA -UNLESS COMMUNIST PARTY OF CHINA IS OVERTHROWN AS IN RUSSIA NOW AND IF  CHINA IS RULED BY A BENIGN DEMOCRACY AS IN AMERICA IT WILL BE GOOD

QUESTION IS HOW MANY YEARS MORE BEFORE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CHINA AND NORTH KOREA ARE OVER THROWN AND DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS COME TO POWER?

AUTOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS WILL ALWAYS GET OVER THROWN BY PEOPLE

Quote by Henry Kissinger: “America has no permanent friends ...

https://www.goodreads.com › quotes › 633024-america...
“America has no permanent friends or enemies, only interests”. ― Henry Kissinger. tags: foreign-policy, realpolitik. Read more quotes from Henry Kissinger.