Indian independance movement articles

SLAVERY IN BRITISH INDIA.

SLAVERY IN BRITISH INDIA.

COOLIE SLAVERY IN THE BRITISH COLONIES.
The British government emancipated the negro slaves held under its authority in the West Indies, thereby greatly depreciating the value of the islands, permitting a half-tamed race to fall back into a state of moral and mental darkness, and adding twenty millions to the national debt, to be paid out of the sweat and blood of her own white serfs. This was termed a grand act of humanity; those who laboured for it have been lauded and laurelled without stint, and English writers have been exceedingly solicitous that the world should not "burst in ignorance" of the achievement.
COOLIES.
Being free, the negroes, with the indolence inherent in their nature, would not work. Many purses suffered in consequence, and the purse is a very tender place to injure many persons. It became necessary to substitute other labourers for the free negroes, and the Coolies of India were taken to the Antilles for experiment. These labourers were generally sober, [Pg 434] steady, and industrious. But how were they treated? A colonist of Martinique, who visited Trinidad in June, 1848, thus writes to the French author of a treatise on free and slave labour:—
"If I could fully describe to you the evils and suffering endured by the Indian immigrants (Coolies) in that horribly governed colony, I should rend the heart of the Christian world by a recital of enormities unknown in the worst periods of colonial slavery.
"Borrowing the language of the prophet, I can truly say,'The whole head is sick, and the whole heart is sad; from the sole of the foot to the top of the head nothing is sound;' wounds, sores, swollen ulcers, which are neither bandaged, nor soothed, nor rubbed with oil.
"My soul has been deeply afflicted by all that I have seen. How many human beings lost! So far as I can judge, in spite of their wasting away, all are young, perishing under the weight of disease. Most of them are dropsical, for want of nourishment. Groups of children, the most interesting I have ever seen, scions of a race doomed to misfortune, were remarkable for their small limbs, wrinkled and reduced to the size of spindles—and not a rag to cover them! And to think that all this misery, all this destruction of humanity, all this waste of the stock of a ruined colony, might have been avoided, but has not been! Great God! it is painful beyond expression to think that such a neglect of duty and of humanity on the part of the colonial authorities, as well of the metropolis as of the colony—a neglect which calls for a repressive if not a retributive justice—will go entirely unpunished, as it has hitherto done, notwithstanding the indefatigable efforts of Colonel Fagan, the superintendent of the immigrants in this colony, an old Indian officer of large experience, of whom I have heard nothing but good, and never any evil thing spoken, in all my travels through the island.
"I am told that Colonel Fagan prepared a regulation for the government and protection of the immigrants—which regulation [Pg 435] would probably realize, beyond all expectation, the object aimed at; but scarcely had he commenced his operations when orders arrived from the metropolis to suppress it, and substitute another which proceeded from the ministry. The Governor, Mr. Harris, displeased that his own regulation was thus annulled, pronounced the new order impossible to be executed, and it was withdrawn without having been properly tried. The minister sent another order in regard to immigration, prepared in his hotel in Downing street; but Governor Harris pronounced it to be still more difficult of execution than the first, and it, too, failed. It is in this manner that, from beginning to end, the affairs of the Indian immigrants have been conducted. It was only necessary to treat them with justice and kindness to render them—thanks to their active superintendent—the best labourers that could be imported into the colony. They are now protected neither by regulations nor ordinances; no attention is paid to the experienced voice of their superintendent—full of benevolence for them, and always indefatigably profiting by what can be of advantage to them. If disease renders a Coolie incapable of work, he is driven from his habitation. This happens continually; he is not in that case even paid his wages. What, then, can the unfortunate creature do? Very different from the Creole or the African; far distant from his country, without food, without money; disease, the result of insufficient food and too severe labour, makes it impossible for him to find employment. He drags himself into the forests or upon the skirts of the roads, lies there and dies!
"Some years since, the unfortunate Governor (Wall) of Gorea was hung for having pitilessly inflicted a fatal corporal punishment on a negro soldier found guilty of mutiny; and this soldier, moreover, was under his orders. In the present case, I can prove a neglect to a great extent murderous. The victims are Indian Coolies of Trinidad. In less than one year, as is shown by official documents, two thousand corpses of these unfortunate creatures have furnished food to the crows of the island; and a similar system is pursued, not only without punishment, but without even forming the subject of an official inquest. Strange and deplorable contradiction! and yet the nation which gives us [Pg 436] this example boasts of extending the ægis of its protection over all its subjects, without distinction! It is this nation, also, that complacently takes to itself the credit of extending justice equally over all classes, over the lordly peer and the humblest subject, without fear, favour, or affection!"
In the Mauritius, the Coolies who have been imported are in a miserable condition. The planters have profited by enslaving these mild and gentle Hindoos, and rendering them wretched.
"By aid of continued Coolie immigration," says Mr. Henry C. Carey, [103] "the export of sugar from the Mauritius has been doubled in the last sixteen years, having risen from seventy to one hundred and forty millions of pounds. Sugar is therefore very cheap, and the foreign competition is thereby driven from the British market. 'Such conquests,' however, says, very truly, the London Spectator, 'don't always bring profit to the conqueror; nor does production itself prove prosperity. Competition for the possession of a field may be carried so far as to reduce prices below prime cost; and it is clear, from the notorious facts of the West Indies—from the change of property, from the total unproductiveness of much property still—that the West India production of sugar has been carried on not only without replacing capital, but with a constant sinking of capital.' The 'free' Coolie and the 'free' negro of Jamaica have been urged to competition for the sale of sugar, and they seem likely to perish together; but compensation for this is found in the fact that 'free trade has, in reducing the prices of commodities for home consumption, enabled the labourer to devote a greater share of his income toward purchasing clothing and luxuries, and has increased the home trade to an enormous extent.' What effect this reduction of 'the prices of commodities for home consumption' [Pg 437] has had upon the poor Coolies, may be judged from the following passage:—'I here beheld, for the first time, a class of beings of whom we have heard much, and for whom I have felt considerable interest. I refer to the Coolies imported by the British government to take the places of the faineant negroes, when the apprenticeship system was abolished. Those I saw were wandering about the streets, dressed rather tastefully, but always meanly, and usually carrying over their shoulder a sort of chiffonnier's sack, in which they threw whatever refuse stuff they found in the streets or received as charity. Their figures are generally superb, and their Eastern costume, to which they adhere as far as their poverty will permit of any clothing, sets off their lithe and graceful forms to great advantage. Their faces are almost uniformly of the finest classic mould, and illuminated by pairs of those dark, swimming, and propitiatory eyes which exhaust the language of tenderness and passion at a glance. But they are the most inveterate mendicants on the island. It is said that those brought from the interior of India are faithful and efficient workmen, while those from Calcutta and its vicinity are good for nothing. Those that were prowling about the streets of Spanish Town and Kingston, I presume were of the latter class, for there is not a planter on the island, it is said, from whom it would be more difficult to get any work than from one of them. They subsist by begging altogether. They are not vicious nor intemperate, nor troublesome particularly, except as beggars. In that calling they have a pertinacity before which a Northern mendicant would grow pale. They will not be denied. They will stand perfectly still and look through a window from the street for a quarter of an hour, if not driven away, with their imploring eyes fixed upon you like a stricken deer, without saying a word or moving a muscle. They act as if it were no disgrace for them to beg, as if an indemnification which they are entitled to expect, for the outrage perpetrated upon them in bringing them from their distant homes to this strange island, is a daily supply of their few and cheap necessities, as they call for them. I confess that their begging did not leave upon my mind the impression produced by ordinary mendicancy. They do not look as if they ought to [Pg 438] work. I never saw one smile; and though they showed no positive suffering, I never saw one look happy. Each face seemed to be constantly telling the unhappy story of their woes, and, like fragments of a broken mirror, each reflecting in all its hateful proportions the national outrage of which they are the victims.'"
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White Slaves of England -2




Image result for John Ross, an inspiring teacher whom many in Travancore





















White Slaves of England ...
gutenberg.org


https://images.app.goo.gl/eSgLiZi3p


The Project Gutenberg

eBook of White Slaves of England, by John C ...click and read








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NOW AFTER BREXIT SCOTLAND IS KEEPING THE EUROPEAN UNION FLAG[NOT THE BRITISH FLAG] ,WHILE NORTHERN IRELAND NOW IS CLOSER TO IRELAND BECAUSE  ENGLAND HAS ALLOWED IT FOR SPECIAL TRADE RELATIONSHIP  WITH EUROPEAN UNION THROUGH IRELAND

WHAT REMAINS IS PLAIN OLD ENGLAND WITH POOR WALES, WITH NO EXIT POSSIBLE FOR WALES FROM ENGLAND
Reparations for war have a long history – the British liked to impose them at the drop of a hat, for example billing the Tibetan government Rs. 2.5 million after invading Tibet in 1904. Compensation for larger and more nebulous crimes is, like many ideas now floating in the intellectual ether, American in origin. In Martin Luther King Jr’s 1963 speech at the Lincoln Memorial, he said the promise of ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ was not being fulfilled: ‘It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note, insofar as her citizens of color are concerned.’ Ta-Nehisi Coates returned to the theme last year with an influential article in the Atlantic suggesting the US needed a ‘national reckoning’ over the debts of slavery. Coates has a point: anyone who passes time in the southern states of America or in the Caribbean will notice the enduring consequences of chattel slavery.
Tharoor’s demand that Britain should pay reparations to India for historic damage rests, though, on insecure foundations. He observed that India’s share of the world economy dropped from 23 to 4 per cent during the centuries of informal and formal British rule. This change had more to do with the rapid economic transformation of western Europe by the Industrial Revolution than it did with adjustments inside India: a largely agricultural economy could not match an industrialising one. His claim rests on the ‘drain theory’ — that Britain sucked away India’s prosperity — proposed by late 19th century nationalists like the Liberal MP Dadabhai Naoroji. When India gained independence and the ‘drain’ stopped, there was no sign of the promised surplus.
Tharoor argued that Britain owed a debt of £1.25 billion to the Indian government at the end of the second world war for the 2.5 million volunteers who had fought the Axis powers, but it was ‘never actually paid.’ Not only was this debt honoured, but it formed an essential part of Jawaharlal Nehru’s early economic planning. The governor of the Reserve Bank of India later complained that the new prime minister had run through the sterling balances ‘as if there was no tomorrow.’
Tharoor concluded his witty and entertaining speech by saying his concern was not monetary value, but ‘the principle that reparations are owed’ – saying he would be happy for India to be paid £1 a year by Britain for the next 200 years. It was here that he betrayed the essential frivolity of his case. He was appealing not for the rebalancing of entrenched global financial structures that date to the 18th century, but for moral victory. Like a surface-to-air missile, he locked on to the spot where he knew his well-heeled Oxford Union audience would be most vulnerable: postcolonial guilt. It did the speaker no harm that his voice is of the orotund type heard in early television documentaries about the royal family. Tharoor told an Indian TV anchor that so many of the audience trooped through the yes lobby in support of his reparations motion that the ‘swank dinner’ following the debate was delayed.
The irony of the case for compensation is that it would have made little sense to those who were actually subjects of the British empire. Indian politicians in the 21st century sometimes appear to be more anti-imperialist than their predecessors who risked their lives for independence in the 1930s and 40s. For much of his public career, Gandhi viewed the empire as a guarantor of his civil rights. Even after spending eleven years in British jails, Nehru was happy to toast the King Emperor and to make sure the Union Jack was not lowered when the Indian tricolor was raised. The Indian National Congress, the forerunner of Tharoor’s party, was for most of its existence a collaborationist movement. India’s hereditary princes were almost without exception imperialists. Only a small number of people in the 20th century sought the violent overthrow of British rule in India. Even nationalists who were infuriated by the structural racism inherent in the empire often saw empire as a progressive force. British rule in India was an act of complicity, a joint venture between the elites of the two nations. Today, all of that historical complexity has been forgotten: an attack on the empire by a politician is a risk-free way of ensuring cross-party unity and vigorous applause.
Paying a token reparation of £1 a year would be an absurdity. It presupposes that the government which might have arisen in India in the absence of the British would have been preferable to the one that resulted. Particularly, it supposes that the alternative regime would have produced comparable stability for the growth of internal trade. At the start of the 18th century after the depredations of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, the subcontinent was in a state of bitter, broken conflict. In its wake, outsiders from Europe were able to pay mercenaries to assert dominance on their behalf. Looking forward towards the period after independence in 1947, there is nothing in the conduct of the Congress party during their long decades in power to suggest they might have used compensation wisely or well. The 1970s marked a growth rate in India of below 1 per cent. Nor is there the slightest chance that an expression of British remorse for long forgotten political choices, which occurred at a different time and in an entirely different historical context, would engender any respect in India, a country with no tradition of contrition. Being an Indian politician means never having to say you’re sorry.
Patrick French is the author of India: A Portrait (Penguin)Image result for old british lion

Sorry, Shashi Tharoor, but Britain doesn’t owe[HAVE ANY MONEY] India any reparations


Reparations for war have a long history – the British liked to impose them at the drop of a hat, for example billing the Tibetan government Rs. 2.5 million after invading Tibet in 1904. Compensation for larger and more nebulous crimes is, like many ideas now floating in the intellectual ether, American in origin. In Martin Luther King Jr’s 1963 speech at the Lincoln Memorial, he said the promise of ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ was not being fulfilled: ‘It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note, insofar as her citizens of color are concerned.’ Ta-Nehisi Coates returned to the theme last year with an influential article in the Atlantic suggesting the US needed a ‘national reckoning’ over the debts of slavery. Coates has a point: anyone who passes time in the southern states of America or in the Caribbean will notice the enduring consequences of chattel slavery.
Tharoor’s demand that Britain should pay reparations to India for historic damage rests, though, on insecure foundations. He observed that India’s share of the world economy dropped from 23 to 4 per cent during the centuries of informal and formal British rule. This change had more to do with the rapid economic transformation of western Europe by the Industrial Revolution than it did with adjustments inside India: a largely agricultural economy could not match an industrialising one. His claim rests on the ‘drain theory’ — that Britain sucked away India’s prosperity — proposed by late 19th century nationalists like the Liberal MP Dadabhai Naoroji. When India gained independence and the ‘drain’ stopped, there was no sign of the promised surplus.
Tharoor argued that Britain owed a debt of £1.25 billion to the Indian government at the end of the second world war for the 2.5 million volunteers who had fought the Axis powers, but it was ‘never actually paid.’ Not only was this debt honoured, but it formed an essential part of Jawaharlal Nehru’s early economic planning. The governor of the Reserve Bank of India later complained that the new prime minister had run through the sterling balances ‘as if there was no tomorrow.’
Tharoor concluded his witty and entertaining speech by saying his concern was not monetary value, but ‘the principle that reparations are owed’ – saying he would be happy for India to be paid £1 a year by Britain for the next 200 years. It was here that he betrayed the essential frivolity of his case. He was appealing not for the rebalancing of entrenched global financial structures that date to the 18th century, but for moral victory. Like a surface-to-air missile, he locked on to the spot where he knew his well-heeled Oxford Union audience would be most vulnerable: postcolonial guilt. It did the speaker no harm that his voice is of the orotund type heard in early television documentaries about the royal family. Tharoor told an Indian TV anchor that so many of the audience trooped through the yes lobby in support of his reparations motion that the ‘swank dinner’ following the debate was delayed.

The irony of the case for compensation is that it would have made little sense to those who were actually subjects of the British empire. Indian politicians in the 21st century sometimes appear to be more anti-imperialist than their predecessors who risked their lives for independence in the 1930s and 40s. For much of his public career, Gandhi viewed the empire as a guarantor of his civil rights. Even after spending eleven years in British jails, Nehru was happy to toast the King Emperor and to make sure the Union Jack was not lowered when the Indian tricolor was raised. The Indian National Congress, the forerunner of Tharoor’s party, was for most of its existence a collaborationist movement. India’s hereditary princes were almost without exception imperialists. Only a small number of people in the 20th century sought the violent overthrow of British rule in India. Even nationalists who were infuriated by the structural racism inherent in the empire often saw empire as a progressive force.

 British rule in India was an act of complicity, a joint venture between the elites of the two nations. Today, all of that historical complexity has been forgotten: an attack on the empire by a politician is a risk-free way of ensuring cross-party unity and vigorous applause.

Paying a token reparation of £1 a year would be an absurdity. It presupposes that the government which might have arisen in India in the absence of the British would have been preferable to the one that resulted. Particularly, it supposes that the alternative regime would have produced comparable stability for the growth of internal trade. At the start of the 18th century after the depredations of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, the subcontinent was in a state of bitter, broken conflict. In its wake, outsiders from Europe were able to pay mercenaries to assert dominance on their behalf. Looking forward towards the period after independence in 1947, there is nothing in the conduct of the Congress party during their long decades in power to suggest they might have used compensation wisely or well. The 1970s marked a growth rate in India of below 1 per cent. 

Nor is there the slightest chance that an expression of British remorse for long forgotten political choices, which occurred at a different time and in an entirely different historical context, would engender any respect in India, a country with no tradition of contrition. Being an Indian politician means never having to say you’re sorry.
Patrick French is the author of India: A Portrait (Penguin)


British EMPIRE 1938
 British lion then :-  Image result for old british lion

 British lion NOW

 Image result for old british lion

British EMPIRE 2018

Image result for BRITISH EMPIRE 2018 WALES+SCOTLAND+NORTHERN IRELAND

Russia mocks Britain, the little island - Telegraph

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/.../europe/.../Russia-mocks-Britain-the-little-island.htm...
Sep 5, 2013 - Russia mocked Britain today as “a small island no one listens to”, sparking a .
..............................................................................................................................

PSLV to launch two U.K. satellites today

A PSLV (polar satellite launch vehicle) will be launched on September 16 night from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota to put two earth observation ...

PSLV-C42 puts 2 UK satellites into orbit - The Hindu BusinessLine

https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/.../isro-launches...uk-satellites/article24965948....
5 days ago - The launch of two satellites of the United Kingdom — NovaSAR and S1-4 from Sriharikota Space Port on Sunday night by the Indian Space ...

ISRO's PSLV-C-42 launches two U.K. satellites - The Hindu

https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/.../isros-pslv...two...satellites/article24962349.ece
ISRO's PSLV-C-42 launches two U.K. satellites. T.K. Rohit. Sriharikota, September 16, 2018 22:56 IST. Updated: September 17, 2018 13:30 IST. Share Article ...

India's PSLV rocket successfully puts into orbit two UK satellites ...

https://www.firstpost.com › Technology News › Science
6 days ago - Two satellites aboard the Indian rocket - Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) - belonged to Surrey Satellite Technologies Ltd (SSTL), UKImage result for INDIAN PULLING BRITISHER ON RICKSHAW


THEN WE CARRIED WHITE MEN AND WOMEN  ON RICKSHAWS
NOW we carry satellites

קובץ:1 AD to 2003 AD Historical Trends in global distribution of GDP China India Western Europe USA Middle East.png
גודל התצוגה המקדימה הזאת: 800 × 477 פיקסלים. רזולוציות אחרות: 320 × 191 פיקסלים | 640 × 381 פיקסלים | 1,024 × 610 פיקסלים | 1,280 × 763 פיקסלים | 9,606 × 5,725 פיקסלים.
ImageMapEdit

 India yellow line was first super power of the world from A.D. 1 TO A.D. 1000

  AFTER BRITISH LOOTING RULE FROM 1800 TO 1947 INDIA BECAME POOR

Image result for BRITISH LOOTING

What is the evidence to show that the Britons had looted India? - Quora
Quora
When britishers came to India , India was like


Legacy of British Rule Is Still Holding India Back - Bloomberg

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/.../legacy-of-british-rule-is-still-holding-india-back
Apr 11, 2017 - Evidence mounts that the former colony would have been better off without its master. ... Mason University and writes for the blog Marginal Revolution. ... hear about India is whether British colonialism has been good or bad for ...
In terms PPP, Indian GDP will overtake USA by 2030, and go on to overtake China by 2050 as world’s largest economy.



According to a CITI Financial Services Group report summarized in REDIFF and reproduced below,

 China should overtake the US to become the largest economy in the world by 2020, 

then be overtaken by India by 2050. 

Following will be the 10 largest economies in the world in 2050:
1. India: $85.97 trillion



2. China: $80.02 trillion
3. United States: $39.07 trillion
4. Indonesia: $13.93 trillion
5. Brazil: $11.58 trillion
6. Nigeria: $9.51 trillion
7. Russia: $7.77 trillion
8. Mexico: $6.57 trillion




US Will Be the World's Third Largest Economy: Citi - CNBC.com

https://www.cnbc.com/id/41775174
Feb 25, 2011 - "China should overtake the US to become the largest economy in the world by 2020, then be overtaken by India by 2050," he predicted.

US will slip to world's third biggest economy by 2050 | Daily Mail Online

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article.../US-slip-worlds-biggest-economy-2050.html
Feb 25, 2011 - 'China should overtake the US to become the largest economy in the world by 2020, then be overtaken by India by 2050,' Buiter predicted.

Why India will be world's No. 1 economy by 2050 - Rediff.com Business

www.rediff.com › Business
Feb 24, 2011 - "China should overtake the US to become the largest economy in the world by 2020, then be overtaken by India by 2050," financial services ...





NATURALLY WESTERN POWERS WILL TRY ALL DIRTY TRICKS TO KEEP CHINA AND INDIA FROM ACHIEVING THIS ,INCLUDING POLITICAL AND ECONOMICAL SABOTAGE

.looting of india by British :-

"Mutinous Sepoys Dividing Spoil," a steel engraving, c.1858
Source: ebay, Oct. 2001


British soldiers looting the Qaisar Bagh, Lucknow, after its recapture
Source: ebay, Oct. 2001
"The engraving depicts the 'Times' correspondent looking on at the sacking of the Kaiser Bagh, after the capture of Lucknow on March 15, 1858. "'Is this string of little white stones (pearls) worth anything, Gentlemen?' asks the plunderer." From 'The History of the Indian Mutiny' by Charles Ball (London: London Printing and Publishing Co. Ltd., 1858).


The Red Fort was of course looted too , and parts of it were heavily damaged as well (Illustrated London News, 1858): very large scans of *the upper picture* and *the lower picture*
Source: ebay, Mar. 2010


"The Plunder of the Kaiserbagh," William Howard Russell, 'My Diary in India', vol. 1, 1860
Source: ebay, Jan. 2007

"Sikh Troops Dividing the Spoil Taken from Mutineers," from 'History of the Indian Mutiny', c.1860; with modern hand coloring
Source: http://www.antiqueprints.com/products.php?cat=34
(downloaded Dec. 2004)

== Indian Routes index == Indian Routes sitemap == Glossary == FWP's main page ==



Image result for BRITISH LOOTING



Image result for BRITISH LOOTING
The ghost of colonial loot is coming back to haunt Britain - Rediff ...
Rediff.com
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh


Great Britain has looted a whopping 9.184 trillion pounds of wealth from India in a period of 173 years.
Just to put things in a perspective, as per Wikipedia, Britain’s current economy is worth 1.83 trillion pounds. In simple terms, the amount of wealth Britain has drained out of India is worth several times the size of that country’s GDP today. So, if Britain even tried to pay back that money to India, its economy would collapse to a point of no return. The estimate has been calculated by eminent economist Utsa Patnaik.

Will Britain ever be able to take off the burden of what it did to India? Above:
24th June 1939: The Viceroy of India, Lord Linlithgow (1887 - 1952), with his wife Lady Linlithgow © Getty Images Sourced from 
Sott.net
Patnaik is Professor Emerita at the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning (CESP), JNU. Patnaik said that the policies followed by Britain during its colonial rule in India were so disastrous that per capita food grains availability in India declined drastically from 197.3 kg per year in 1909-14 to 136.8 kg per year in 1946.
In India, just as also happened in many countries in the Caribbean, local producers were set to work to produce commodities – particularly primary commodities which the colonial powers could never produce themselves in their home countries. The colonial powers then proceeded to appropriate these commodities.
In the Indian case, this appropriation took the form of getting Indian peasants and labourers to produce an enormous global export surplus which earned gold and foreign exchange. “But the whole of this global export surplus earnings disappeared into the account of the Secretary of State for India in London. Not a penny of it, of sterling or financial gold, was allowed to flow back to the colonised country. Then how did the producers get paid? Very clever. They got paid out of their own taxes!” said Patnaik.
Surplus budgets were being operated systematically in British-ruled India for the best part of 200 years. “When you tax a population and you do not spend all the taxation within the country, but you set aside a third or more for purchasing export goods, the operation of such surplus budgets deflates mass incomes. It puts a tremendous squeeze on the peasantry.”
“No country in the world today in the Global South has a per capita food availability as low as the level India had reached by the year 1946.”
How was this amount calculated? By estimating the present value of the commodity export surplus - the estimate of 9.184 trillion pounds has been arrived at by calculating the present value at a relatively low 5 percent interest rate.
Info Source: https://newsclick.in/britain-wou...

(By the way, Dadabhai Naoroji, one of the co-founders of Indian National Congress in his book “Poverty And Un-British Rule In India” estimated that the siphoning of wealth from India by the British was to the tune of 4 million pounds a year. 

 Poverty and Un-British Rule in India : Dadabhai Naoroji Image result for Dadabhai Naoroji :: Free ...
https://archive.org/details/povertyandunbri00naorgoog
May 8, 2009 - Book digitized by Google from the library of the University of Michigan and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.
his he calculated from the year 1857 onwards which went unabated till 1947. Assuming that the drainage was an estimated 2 million pounds a year from 1757 (Battle of Plassey) to 1856 and 4 million pounds from the year 1857 to 1947 as mentioned before, then the total amount swindled would be an astonishing eye-opener in today’s terms. Source: http://bwindia.net/content/briti...)

British 'looters' kept the world's art safe | GulfNews.com

https://gulfnews.com/opinion/.../british-looters-kept-the-world-s-art-safe-1.2230981
Jun 3, 2018 - The demand by TV historian David Olusoga for British museums to repatriate “looted” treasures is a familiar anti-colonial trope that has little ..

UK investigates WW2 shipwreck looting claims - BBC News - BBC.com

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-45238158
Aug 19, 2018 - The UK will investigate allegations that British World War Two wrecks in Asia have been targeted by scavengers, the defence secretary says.

The British Museum Returns Iraqi Antiquities Looted During the US ...

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/british-museum-repatriates-antiquities-iraq-1331390
Aug 10, 2018 - The British Museum has repatriated a trove of 5,000-year-old antiquities that were looted from an ancient site in Iraq shortly after the US ...

What are the things stolen by the British during their governance ...

https://www.quora.com/What-are-the-things-stolen-by-the-British-during-their-govern...


Aug 31, 2015 - After the heroic death of the Tiger of Mysore – Tipu Sultan, the British forces took ... In 1851, it was displayed with other treasures of the Indian Empire at the ...
What is the evidence to show that the Britons had looted India ...
16 Sep 2017
What happened to all the gold that the British stole from its ...
8 Apr 2017
Shouldn't the British return the Indian wealth or at least the ...
18 Mar 2015
What could have been the total wealth that was drained out of ...
28 Dec 2014
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Facts in Telugu తెలుగు లొ...
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LONDON: The BRITISH MUSEUM & the priceless INDIAN TREASURES
Vic Stefanu - World...
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'Poor' India and 'Robber' Britain
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YouTube - Nov 13, 2012

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BharatSwabhimanFAQ
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World Wide Biographies
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YouTube - May 1, 2018

Web results

Forget Kohinoor, The British Looted Greater Treasures From India

https://swarajyamag.com/.../forget-kohinoor-the-british-looted-greater-treasures-from-...



Apr 30, 2016 - The extent of British Plunder makes the Kohinoor appear a small loss. So let the Britishkeep the stone. The British caused irreparable losses to ...

British museums shine thanks to all the loot from India | The Indian ...

https://indianexpress.com › Research › Express Originals


Aug 15, 2016 - In Britain, a museum visitor from India is suddenly made aware of how his or ... about the display of their national treasures in British museums.

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Web results

Not just the Kohinoor: Four other artefacts that India wants Britain to ...

https://scroll.in › Culture › History Revisited



Apr 22, 2016 - Not just the Kohinoor: Four other artefacts that India wants Britain to return ... is at the top of every list of national treasures that India wants back from its ... of India's lost or stolen artefacts, prompting British parliamentarian Keith ...

On display here, wanted by India | The Independent

https://www.independent.co.uk › News › UK › Home News


Jun 1, 2010 - Some 150 years ago, a British engineer overseeing the construction of the ... "As efforts so far to reclaim stolen treasures have proved futile, ...

The Stolen Wealth of India During British Rule! | Indian Defence Forum

https://defenceforumindia.com › Forums › Indian Affairs › Politics & Society


Dec 22, 2009 - The Stolen Wealth of India During British Rule Though it is a bitter ... to bring to account atrocities of the British and stolen national treasures.

9 Priceless artifacts you didn't know India had - InstaBlogs - Global ...

https://instablogs.com/9-priceless-artifacts-know-india1.html


Aug 2, 2012 - The golden throne is king Ranjit Singh's another example of the British looting the magnificent treasures of India. A skilled yet hitherto unknown ...

British Museum to display millennia-old looted treasures from ...

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/.../British-Museum-display-millennia-old-looted-treasures-A...
Mar 2, 2011 - 'Beautiful and priceless' ancient treasures stolen from Afghanistan on ... from 200-150 BC and Indian ivory furniture legs from the first century ...

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5 Ways the British Empire Ruthlessly Exploited India | News | teleSUR ...

https://www.telesurtv.net/.../5-Ways-the-British-Empire-Ruthlessly-Exploited-India-20...
Apr 25, 2017 - It's a myth that British imperialism benefited one of its richest colony, India, when in ... A British man gets a pedicure from an Indian servant.
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Legacy of British Rule Is Still Holding India Back - Bloomberg

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/.../legacy-of-british-rule-is-still-holding-india-back
Apr 11, 2017 - Evidence mounts that the former colony would have been better off without its master. ... Mason University and writes for the blog Marginal Revolution. ... hear about India is whether British colonialism has been good or bad for ...

Without strong data law, India will end up as a digital colony of US ...

https://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com › Blogs › India Blogs
Apr 15, 2018 - Write for TOI Blogs ... Without strong data law, India will end up as a digital colony of US, Chinese firms ... The British East India Company forcefully colonised India and converted Indian weavers from producers of the world's .


STORY -- CURSE OF THE KOHINOOR DIAMOND

 It was the property of kakatiya kings of south india 1200 AD


                                                              GOLCONDA FORT
The Khilji dynasty,commander Ulugh Khan in 1323 to defeated the Kakatiya  king Prataparudra,and looted the kohinoor diamond
                                                                   Sultan Ala-ud-din Khilji.
Next it is found in the hands of kachwaha kings of city of gwalior ;inherited by tomara kings of 14th century

                                                                    Kachwaha fort at rohtas

                                                         tomb of king sikander lodi at delhi
Tomara kings were defeated by sikander lodi sultan of delhi & the diamond looted ;
Next it comes in the hands of moghal emperors

                                                                    moghal emperor akbar

 In 1734 nader shah of persia (iran)looted it from moghals,after destroying delhi and agra

                                                         Nader shah of persia
Next Nader shah is killed and the diamond comes into the hands of ahmed shah abdali of Afganistan

                                                    Ahmad shah abdali OF Afganistan
N ext in 1830 the deposed king shah shuja of Afganistan flees with the diamond

                                                    
                                                    Shuja Shah Durrani of Afghanistan
N ext it comes in the hand of punjab king maharaja Ranjit king and on his death


                                                            Maharajah Ranjit singhit came in the
hands of the british
                                                             Queen Victoria



                                            [  Many  of the owners of the diamond had violent deaths   ]
 Now it is in british hands from 1840's
FUTURE:-
LET US WAIT AND SEE WHAT HAPPENS NEXT  BECAUSE OF THE CURSE OF THE KOHINOOR;EVERYTIME  SOMETHING TERRIBLE HAPPENED;TO THE OWNER OF THE DIAMOND WITHIN  A SHORT TIME OF GETTING

THE DIAMOND.

EACH OF THE PREVIOUS OWNER'S(KING'S) KINGDOMS WERE DESTROYED AND  THEIR EMPIRES  ALSO WIPED OUT OR HAVE BECOME PART OF ANOTHER COUNTRY.

 ALREADY BRITISH EMPIRE IS GONE .NOW WHAT WILL HAPPEN??
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

14 October 2012 Last updated at 23:47 GMT

Scottish independence: What are the legal steps to a referendum?

James Cook By James Cook Scotland Correspondent, BBC News
Man dressed in saltire flag outside polling booth  

Regions of United Kingdom


Regions of United Kingdom                  
A legal process takes place before electors vote in the referendum

Scotland's Future

The legal authority to hold a referendum resides with the UK parliament at Westminster.
On Monday, the prime minister David Cameron and Scotland's first minister Alex Salmond signed an agreement which temporarily transfers that authority to the Scottish Parliament, using an order under Section 30 of the Scotland Act 1998.
The order will be debated in the House of Commons and House of Lords before going to the Privy Council for approval, which is likely to be given in February.
The transfer of powers includes all detail relating to the referendum.
MPs and peers will have no subsequent role in the process.
Rather, MSPs in the Scottish Parliament will debate the details of the poll - including the question, the timing and the franchise - in a Referendum Bill, which is expected to be introduced next spring.
Given that the Scottish National Party has a majority at Holyrood, it seems certain that the SNP policy of extending the vote to 16- and 17-year-olds will be approved.
The SNP's preferred timing for the poll, autumn 2014, is also likely to become law.
In the meantime, it is expected that the Scottish government will formally ask the Electoral Commission to "test" its proposed question.
The question which was outlined in the Scottish consultation on the referendum is: "Do you agree that Scotland should be an independent country?"
The testing by the Electoral Commission involves research with experts and with the public.

Electoral Commission guidelinesIn assessing the referendum question it must....

  • be easy to understand
  • be to the point
  • be unambiguous
  • avoid encouraging voters to consider one response more favourably than another
  • and avoid misleading voters.
The process could take up to 12 weeks, after which the commission will submit a report to the Scottish government.
The recommendations are advisory, not binding, and ministers could theoretically choose to ignore them.
More likely they could accept the report, which might include tweaks to the the wording of the question, or they could suggest an alternative question.
The commission would then give its view on the alternative. If it had already considered that alternative during the initial testing period this could happen almost immediately, if not that process might have to begin anew.
Exactly how 16- and 17-year-olds would be enfranchised is complicated.
The challenge would be how to get them all on the electoral register in time for the poll.
The register is at present geared towards ensuring that all eligible voters are registered by the time they reach the voting age of 18.
 The ballot paper question as proposed by the Scottish government earlier this year
Ordinarily the electoral roll is canvassed annually, although individual voters can register up to 11 working days before any poll.
Inconveniently, the 2014 canvas would have been held in the autumn, but changes being proposed in the Electoral Registration and Administration Bill presently being considered at Westminster would shift that year's canvas to April.
The age at which someone can first be listed on the register is complicated.
According to the Representation of the People Act 1983: "A person otherwise qualified is ... entitled to be registered in a register of parliamentary electors or local government electors if he will attain voting age before the end of the period of 12 months beginning with the 1st December next following the relevant date..."
In other words, not all 16- and 17-year-olds would be eligible under the present rules, which are reserved to Westminster.

More on This Story

Scotland's Future

More Scotland politics stories

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  • Alex Salmond and David CameronScottish referendum deal struck

    A deal setting out terms for a Scottish independence referendum is signed by Prime Minister David Cameron and First Minister Alex Salmond.
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

WILL BRITAIN AS A NATION WILL ALSO DISAPPEAR AS PART OF THE EUROPEAN UNION?

News » International

London, June 4, 2010

Can't return Kohinoor diamond to India: Britain

PTI
Share  ·   print   ·   T+ 


NOW AFTER BREXIT SCOTLAND IS KEEPING THE EUROPEAN UNION FLAG[NOT THE BRITISH FLAG] ,WHILE NORTHERN IRELAND NOW  IS CLOSER TO IRELAND BECAUSE  ENGLAND HAS ALLOWED IT FOR SPECIAL TRADE RELATIONSHIP  WITH EUROPEAN UNION THROUGH IRELAND

WHAT REMAINS IS PLAIN OLD ENGLAND WITH POOR WALES, WITH NO EXIT POSSIBLE FOR WALES FROM ENGLAND
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