ANOTHER TALE FROM INCREDIBLE INDIA: THE DEATH OF A PRIME MINISTER
Mystery surrounds the fate of not only Subhas Chandra Bose, but also the death of former Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri.
Diplomat's diary | Rai Singh
India
is one rare country where mysteries continue to shroud the deaths of
top political leaders. In a way, it is not surprising that a definite
conclusion is still eluding the Netaji disappearance controversy. Subhas
Chandra Bose's disappearance occurred at the end of second world war
when India was under the British rule. Subhas had engaged himself with
the Japanese and later in August 1945 he had escaped to the Soviet
Union. So, the mystery about his disappearance is understandable --
because the sources of information available at that time, and
thereafter in the Soviet Union, were few and far between.
But the controversy about the death of Prime Minister Lal Bahadur
Shastri in Tashkent (now in Uzbekistan) is in a different league
altogether. Mystery surrounds Shastri's death due to several reasons --
foremost being the absence of a proper medical report stating the cause
of death. It is all the more puzzling because Shastri's personal
physician had accompanied him to Tashkent, then in the USSR. But he did
not ensure a proper medical investigation. It is rumoured that he was
drunk at that time. Though a post-mortem report was given by the Soviet
authorities at Tashkent, nothing was done in India to determine the
exact cause of the Prime Minister's death despite tell-tale signs of
poisoning.
It was very baffling indeed why such indifference was shown when
three Cabinet Ministers -- Jagjivan Ram, YB Chavan and Swarn Singh --
were present in January 1966 at Tashkent, where Shastri breathed his
last.
According to the Soviet sources, a glass of milk was bought for
Shastri by personal servant of Indian Ambassador TN Kaul. This personal
servant, Jan Mohammad, was never questioned or interrogated by any one
in the Soviet Union or in India despite his being the prime suspect.
This is indeed mystifying, because just after consuming milk Shastri
complained of "pain in the chest" and "difficulty in breathing."
Thereafter the Prime Minister slipped into coma. The Soviet doctors were
called in and they pronounced him dead.
At present, it appears that no headway can be made in inquiring into
the death of Lal Bahadur Shastri. Nonetheless the incident warrants a
through inquiry so that adequate measures can be taken to safeguard the
Prime Minister during his/her visits abroad.
Rai
Singh, a former Director of the erstwhile Information Service of India,
had worked with late Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri.
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