Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

British had probed incident three times, concluded he died

- Prasun Sonwalkar letters@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: THE BOOK BY LONDONBASE­D JOURNALIST ASHIS RAY SEEKS TO ADD TO THE CONCLUSION THAT SUBHAS CHANDRA BOSE DIED IN THE CRASH

The British considered iconic leader “Netaji” Subhas Chandra Bose an enemy in the years before independen­ce, and spared no efforts to ascertain and establish his alleged death in the plane crash on August 18, 1945, in Taipei, a new book on the controvers­ial subject says.

The book, Laid to Rest: The Controvers­y over Subhas Chandra Bose’s Death, by Londonbase­d journalist Ashis Ray seeks to add to the conclusion that Bose indeed died in the crash, and cites several documents to back his claim, including some lesserknow­n reports. It is scheduled to be released in New Delhi on February 12.

Ray said the first British investigat­ion into the crash was led by TS Finney, a superinten­dent of police in colonial India, in 1945. His team of detectives visited Bangkok, Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City), and Taipei, producing four reports dated October 5, 7, 10, and 12. “They categorica­lly confirmed Bose had died as a result of an air tragedy,” the book states.

On December 31, 1945, the British Combined Services Detailed Interrogat­ion Centre in India submitted its report after interviewi­ng Col Habibur Rehman, Netaji’s aide-de-camp who survived the crash. It said Rehman “remained with Bose from the time of the crash until the death of Bose at about 2100 hours that night, Tokyo time”.

Finally, the book says Lt Col John Figgess, a British officer based in Tokyo, cross-examined Japanese officials connected with the crash, including the two survivors, Lt Col Shiro Nonogaki and Lt Col Tadeo Sakai, and Toyoshi Tsurita, the doctor who principall­y treated Bose at a Japanese military hospital before he passed away.

On July 25, 1946, Figgess reported: “As a result of a series of interrogat­ions of individual­s it is confirmed as certain that SC Bose died in a Taihoku (Taipei) military hospital (Nanmon ward) sometime between 1900 hours and 2000 hours local time on August 18, 1945.”

The investigat­ions are among 11 official and unofficial inquests — four Indian, three Japanese and one Taiwanese — highlighte­d by the book. All concluded that Bose died as a result of a plane crash, the author says.

“I have written the book for humanitari­an reasons. Netaji’s widow Emilie Schenkl passed away in 1996 without closure on the matter of her husband’s mortal remains. His only child Professor Anita Pfaff, 75, is anxious to bring these from Tokyo for immersion in Ganga,” Ray adds.

Ray, in a chapter titled Enemy of the Raj, also outlines British hostility towards Bose from the time he was a student in Presidency College, Kolkata, to refusing his offer of food supplies from Myanmar (where he was then based) for famine-hit Bengal in 1943, in which millions had died.

It also cites the British government’s approval of a plan to assassinat­e him through its intelligen­ce unit in Turkey in 1941.

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