Monday 9 September 2019

NASA Says Earth Is Greener Today Than 20 Years Ago Thanks To China, India

NASA Says Earth Is Greener Today Than 20 Years Ago Thanks To China, India
Greening of China and IndiaGreening of China and India
NASA

NASA has some good news, the world is a greener place today than it was 20 years ago. What prompted the change? Well, it appears China and India can take the majority of the credit.

In contrast to the perception of China and India's willingness to overexploit land, water and resources for economic gain, the countries are responsible for the largest greening of the planet in the past two decades. The two most populous countries have implemented ambitious tree planting programs and scaled up their implementation and technology around agriculture.

India continues to break world records in tree planting, with 800,000 Indians planting 50 million trees in just 24 hours.


The recent finding by NASA and published in the journal Nature Sustainability, compared satellite data from the mid-1990s to today using high-resolution imagery. Initially, the researchers were unsure what caused the significant uptick in greening around the planet. It was unclear whether a warming planet, increased carbon dioxide (CO2) or a wetter climate could have caused more plants to grow.

After further investigation of the satellite imagery, the researchers found that greening was disproportionately located in China and India. If the greening was primarily a response from climate change and a warming planet, the increased vegetation shouldn't be limited to country borders. In addition, higher latitude regions should become greener faster than lower latitudes as permafrost melts and areas like northern Russia become more habitable.

The greening of the planet.

The map above shows the relative greening (increase in vegetation) and browning (decrease in vegetation) around the globe. As you can see both China and India have significant greening.

The United States sits at number 7 in the total change in vegetation percent by decade. Of course, the chart below can hide where each country started. For example, a country that largely kept their forests and vegetation intact would have little room to increase percent vegetation whereas a country that heavily relied on deforestation would have more room to grow.
Comparing the greening of various countries around the globe.Comparing the greening of various countries around the globe.Comparing the greening of various countries around the globe.
NASA used Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) to get a detailed picture of Earth's global vegetation through time. The technique provided up to 500-meter resolution for the past two decades.

Both China and India went through phases of large scale deforestation in the 1970s and 80s, clearing old growth forests for urban development, farming and agriculture. However, it is clear that when presented with a problem, humans are incredibly adept at finding a solution. When the focus shifted in the 90s to reducing air and soil pollution and combating climate change the two countries made tremendous shifts in their overall land use.

It is encouraging to see swift and rapid change in governance and land use when presented with a dilemma. It is something that will continue to be a necessary skill in the decades to come.

Source-
https://www.forbes.com/sites/trevornace/2019/02/28/nasa-says-earth-is-greener-today-than-20-years-ago-thanks-to-china-india/#5477add26e13

Feb 28, 2019, 12:22pm
Trevor Nace

Friday 12 July 2019

Indians had an advanced model Flight 8yrs before Wright Brothers.

Our puranas have ample mentions of flying machines. However our dumb leftist 'intellectuals', overblown rotten historians and media ridiculed all of it and successfully promoted a narrative of an impoverished Indian past.

Did you know that a full fledged public demonstration of a flying machine was made in front of the King and general public, including British people, 8 years before the demonstration done by the Wright Brothers.

Shivkar Bapuji Talpade first flight MARUTSAKHA before Wright Brothers

Shivkar Bāpuji Talpade (1864–1916) and Subbarāya Shāstry were two Indian scientists, who have constructed and flown modern world’s first unmanned airplane in the year 1895 to a height of 1500 feet.

Wright brothers did it in the year 1903 (8 years later) and got recognized as the inventors of modern day aeroplane.

Shivkar flew an unmanned flying saucer which was an advanced Vedic Mercury ion plasma , imploding and expanding vortex noiseless flying machine, which could move in all directions.

Accelerated pressurised Mercury when spun and thus heated gives out latent energy.

Infact mercury was the fuel of many ancent vimanas, including the one described in ‘Samarangana Sutradhara‘, which was written by Paramara King, Raja Bhoja during 1050 AD.

Vedas had a deep understanding of Quantum physics.
Shivkar’s feat was witnessed by more than three thousand people including Britishers at Chowpatty beach in 1895.

(Unfortunately, Indian science was not given prominence by the British, so few inventions like this and Jagadish Chandra Bose, who demonstrated publicly the use of radio waves in Calcutta in 1894, but he was not interested in patenting his work.)

He was threatened by Britishers for flying an unmanned plane in public.


Talpade’s airplane was named Marutsakhā, a term used for the goddess Sarasvati in the Rigveda (RV 7.96.2) – a portmanteau of Marut meaning stream of air and Sakha meaning friend.

This was built under the guidance of Pandit Subbarāya Shāstry. It was airborne for 18 minutes and after that the Naksha Rasa accumulators ran out of energy.

Bal Gangadhara Tilak the editor of Kesari Pune had put in an editorial . It was also reported by two other English newspapers, a terse account. Eminent Indian judge Mahadeva Govin-da Ranade and King of Baroda H H Sayaji Rao Gaekwad witessed the flight.

Shivakar’s wife was very technie savvy and was his partner on the day the flight of MARUTSAKHA took place.

One of Talpade’s students, Pt. S. D. Satawlekar, wrote that Marutsakhā sustained flight for a few minutes.
Deccan Herald in 2003 stated “scholarly audience headed by a famous Indian judge and a nationalist, Mahadeva Govin-da Ranade and H H Sayaji Rao Gaekwad, respectively, had the good fortune to see the unmanned aircraft named as ‘Marutsakha’ take off, fly to a height of 1500 feet and then fall down to earth“.

Few days after this first flight, Talpade’s wife, who was his partner in this experiment, died mysteriously! After her death, Talpade went into depression, ran out of finances and ultimately died in 1916.

However, Marutsakhā was stored at Talpade’s house until well after his death. Velakara quotes one of Talpade’s nieces, Roshan Talpade, as saying the family used to sit in the aircraft’s frame and imagine they were flying.

A model reconstruction of Marutsakhā was exhibited at an exhibition on aviation at Vile Parle, and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited has preserved documents relating to the experiment

Source - https://www.booksfact.com/technology/modern-technology/shivkar-bapuji-talpade-first-flight-marutsakha-before-wright-brothers.html

Wednesday 27 February 2019

PAF gets thrashed in their 1st incursion into India aerospace.

PAF gets thrashed in their 1st incursion into India aerospace. 

The brave Indian Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman shot down the 2 seater F16 in his single seater old Mig21. How the Mig21 downed the F-16-





Picture of a portion of the downed Pakistani Air Force F16 from yesterday’s failed PAF raid, wreckage was in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir. Also seen in pic, Commanding Officer of Pakistan’s 7 Northern Light Infantry. Same picture circulating on social media claims that this is an Indian MiG fighter, however multiple IAF sources confirm this is the wreckage of Pakistani F16 downed yesterday.





Pakistan Military quickly removes wreckage of F16


Indian pilot fired into air before being captured

MUZAFFARABAD: Mohammad Razzaq Chaudhry was in the courtyard of his house in Horra’n village, located barely 7km from the Line of Control (LoC) in Azad Jammu and Kashmir’s Bhimber district, at about 8:45am on Wednesday when the “smoke and sound” made him realise that a dogfight was going on up above in the sky.

Upon watching them carefully, the 58-year-old political and social activist of the area noticed that two aircraft had caught fire but while one of them sped across the LoC, the other burst into flames and came down speedily.

Its wreckage fell more than one kilometre away from the house of Mr Razzaq towards the eastern side in a deserted field.

Mr Razzaq said he saw a parachute descending towards the ground, which made landing around one kilometre away from his house but on the southern side.

He jumped into a small pond where he tried to swallow some documents and maps

“A pilot emerged out of the parachute safe and sound,” he told Dawn from Horra’n village by telephone.

Mr Razzaq said he had in the meantime made calls to several youngsters in the village, asking them not to go close to the wreckage until arrival of the army personnel but get hold of the pilot.

The pilot, who was equipped with a pistol, asked the youngsters whether it was India or Pakistan. On this, one of them intelligently responded that it was India. The pilot, later identified as Wing Commander Abhi Nandan, shouted some slogans and asked which place exactly it was in India.

To this, the same boy responded that it was Qilla’n.

The pilot told them that his “back was broken” and he needed water to drink.

Some emotional youth, who could not digest the slogans, shouted Pakistan army zindabad. On this, Abhinandan shot a fire in the air while the boys picked up stones in their hands.

According to Mr Razzaq, the Indian pilot ran a distance of half a kilometre in backward direction while pointing his pistol towards the boys who were chasing him.

During this brisk movement, he fired some more gunshots in the air to frighten them but to no avail, he said. Then he jumped into a small pond where he took out some documents and maps from his pockets, some of which he tried to swallow and soaked others in water.

The boys kept on asking him to drop his weapon and in the meanwhile one boy shot at his leg, Mr Razzaq said.

Finally, he came out and said he should not be killed. The boys got hold of him from both arms. Some of them roughed him up, in a fit of rage, while others kept on stopping them.

In the meanwhile, army personnel arrived there and took him into their custody and saved him from the wrath of the youths, he said.

“Thanks God, none of the furious boys shot him dead because he had given them quite a tough time,” he said.

The detained pilot was then taken to an army installation in Bhimber in a convoy of military vehicles.

As the convoy passed through Khalil Chowk of Bhimber city, some 50km away from Horra’n, it was greeted by dozens of cheerful citizens standing on both sides of the road. They showered rose petals on the military vehicles, amid slogans like Long Live Pakistan army, Long Live Pakistan Air Force, Long Live Pakistan and Long Live Kashmir.

Published in Dawn, February 28th, 2019

Veteran Air Marshal and father of Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, thanked people for their concern and wishes.

"I thank God for his blessings. Abhi is alive, not injured, sound in mind. Just look at the way he talked so bravely. A true soldier. We are so proud of him. I am sure all your hands and blessings are on his head; prayers for his safe return. I pray that he does not get tortured, and comes home safe and sound in body and mind. Thank you all for being with us in this hour of need. We draw our strengths from your support and energy." 

Varthaman Senior, who last served as Eastern Air Command chief, had even seen action during Kargil. An experienced test pilot with more than 4,000 flying hours on 40 types of aircraft to his credit, Varthaman senior had joined the IAF as a fighter pilot in 1973. "During the Kargil conflict, Varthaman was the chief operations officer of Gwalior where he used his flight test experience to coordinate the upgradation of the Mirage 2000 aircraft that proved instrumental in the success of the air campaign."


FRI, MAR 01, 2019
European Foundation for South Asian Studies
In response to Pak-backed terrorism, India has definitively changed the rules of the game: EFSAS

Amsterdam [The Netherlands], Mar 1 (ANI): With India carrying out a daring aerial strike operation at a large Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) camp deep inside Pakistan on Tuesday, New Delhi has finally discarded its policy of strategic restraint and unveiled a new security doctrine in which Pakistan can no longer export terror to India without paying a heavy price for it, according to a European think-tank.

In its commentary, the European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS), a non-profit think tank, based in Amsterdam, chronicles the events leading to the airstrikes by India and the subsequent foiled military action by Pakistan across the Line of Control (LoC).

The air raids were in response to the Pulwama terror attack on February 14, in which around 40 CRPF personnel lost their lives after a suicide bomber rammed his explosive-laden vehicle into their convoy. The deadly assault, orchestrated by Pakistan-based JeM, was the deadliest one on security forces in Kashmir.

The strikes destroyed a major camp of JeM and eliminating a “large number” of terrorists, including top commanders.

In the swift operation, launched at around 3.30 am and completed within minutes, 12 Mirage-2000 fighter jets pounded the training centre, housing around 300 terrorists, in Balakot area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province with six bombs while SU-30 combat aircraft maintained air superiority to ward off any retaliation by the Pakistan Air Force.

The camp, located in a forest area atop a hill, was headed by JeM chief Masood Azhar’s brother-in-law Yusuf Azhar alias Ustad Gauri, who was involved in the 1999 hijack of Indian Airlines plane IC-814 and was on Interpol lookout notice since 2000.

After the Indian Air Force (IAF) successfully completed their operation, a "startled, dazed and embarrassed Pakistan, after initially denying that any such incident had occurred, subsequently reluctantly acknowledged that Indian fighter aircrafts had indeed penetrated deep into Pakistani territory undetected and had dropped bombs near Balakot."

The Pakistani government, led by Prime Minister Imran Khan, had condemned on what it called "uncalled Indian aggression" and said that a befitting response would be given "at the time and place of its choosing", warning of military action against New Delhi, while calling for de-escalating of tensions and resuming of bilateral dialogue.

After the IAF jets were on its way back to India following their successful foray 80 km into Pakistani territory, India's Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale said the “pre-emptive” strike by India had become absolutely necessary as there was credible information that JeM, which recently carried out the terror attack in Pulwama, was planning further attacks in the country.

He underlined that despite repeated requests by India, “Pakistan has taken no concrete actions to dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism on its soil”, which, he contended, “could not have functioned without the knowledge of Pakistan authorities”.

Referring to the Pulwama attack, Gokhale asserted that “credible intelligence was received that JeM was attempting another suicide terror attack in various parts of the country, and the fidayeen jihadis were being trained for this purpose," adding that “the selection of the target was also conditioned by our desire to avoid civilian casualties”.

These carefully chosen words conveyed that what India had undertaken was essentially a counter-terrorist operation aimed at neutralising terrorist attacks against India that specific intelligence had indicated was imminent, the commentary said.

"It was not directed against the Pakistani State or the Pakistani Army but at terrorists, and great care had been taken to avoid civilian casualties. The core message to Pakistan was that India was willing and capable of acting against anti-India terrorist groups being harboured by Pakistan, and while it was not inclined to provoke Pakistan militarily, it was now seriously intent on protecting itself no matter what the potential response from Pakistan would be," it added.

On Wednesday, Pakistan violated the Indian airspace and its botched attempt at retaliation through an airstrike targeting Indian military installations was repulsed by the IAF near the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir.

While the IAF shot down a Pakistani F-16 fighter, it also lost one of its MIG-21 fighters, who ejected before the impact, drifted across the LoC and was taken into custody by the Pakistan Army.

On the very next day, Imran Khan announced in the Pakistani Parliament that the IAF pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, would be released as a "peace gesture". However, the cricketer-turned-premier did not make a commitment on clamping down "terrorist proxies of the Pakistani military establishment demonstrably".

"Anything short of that is not likely to appease the infuriated Indian government. The situation between the two countries, therefore, remains highly tense and volatile," the commentary outlined.

While India made it clear that there would be a military response in the aftermath of the Pulwama attack, the only mystery was over the form that it would take. New Delhi had described Islamabad's foiled air attack as an "act of aggression".

"It has also made it clear that only immediate and verifiable action by Pakistan against terrorists and terror groups operating from territories under its control was acceptable to it, not talks on terror as Imran Khan has suggested as a ruse to secure de-escalation without any significant concessions," it said.

Amidst calls for de-escalation of tensions, the international community rallied behind India, backing its counter-terrorism action and urging Pakistan to take strong and effective action to combat terror outfits operating in Pakistani soil.

The P3 nations -- the US, the UK and France, meanwhile, once again asked the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions committee to list JeM chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist, thereby leading to an arms embargo, global travel ban and asset freeze.

“India has been a perpetual prisoner of its own self-restraint. I think Indians are now simply tired of being the punching bag for Pakistani terrorism. What they decided to do was send a signal that conspicuous attacks would not go unanswered (and that) Pakistani territory would not remain immune from Indian retaliation”, said Ashley Tellis, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Echoing similar sentiments, Alyssa Ayres, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, put forth, “There’s real exhaustion and fatigue with Pakistan in India, the same fatigue that is felt by nations around the world. There’s been a real hardening on whether talks can provide any benefits and whether Pakistan is genuine in its calls for dialogue”.

India's air strikes led to serious questions in Pakistan over its forces failing to even detect the IAF jets entering into its territory. Furthermore, the country's defence minister Pervez Khatak contention that the military was ready to repel the Indian attack, but "it was dark" invited further scepticism, the commentary continued.

This also includes foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi's vague statement that “the defenders of the nation are awake, and the nation has nothing to worry about”.

"The vacillating statements on whether or not and exactly where the strike took place, and with what impact, which were intermittently emanating from the spokesman of the Pakistan Army, did not help matters. The fact that India chose a target deep in the Pakistani heartland and not on contiguous Pakistan-occupied Kashmir that India claims as legally belonging to it amped up the jitters felt in Pakistan," the commentary further said.

Not only this, India’s External Affairs Minister, Sushma Swaraj, was invited to attend the 46th session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Abu Dhabi from March 1-2, in a significant first. This move was criticised by Pakistan, which said that it would attend the conclave if Swaraj participated in it. Subsequently, Islamabad boycotted the meeting of the 57-member organisation.

"Whichever turn the current situation takes, one fact on which there is little ambiguity is that India has definitively changed the rules of the game as far as its response to Pakistan-backed terrorism is concerned. Pakistan’s calculation that a low-cost asymmetrical war fought by terrorist proxies would keep India tied down and its assumption that the threat of nuclear war will inhibit India from retaliating in a conventional manner can now be consigned to history," the commentary further stated.

"It is Pakistan which will now have to decide whether it has the appetite or resources to stand up to the escalation that future terrorist attacks on India will invariably invite," the commentary concluded.


Some general analysis

1. Pakistan sent 24 jets: 8 F16, 4 Mirage3, 4 JF-17 + 8 escorts
2. Intercepted by 8 Indian jets: 4 Sukhoi 30, 2 Mirage 2000 & 2 MiG21 Bisons
3. One F16 jet shot by Indian jet and one MiG21 shot by Pak anti-aircraft gun

(F16wreckage proof) https://t.co/cM0vbWZg9Y

Baba je on Pakistan side explaining how 3 pilots fell from parachute. 1 Indian (MiG21) and two Pakistani (F16) https://t.co/nSCnF8phzM

Conclusion:
-Formation of 24 Pak jets couldn't bomb one military installation.
-24 Pak jet scooted & couldn't fight 8 Indian jet.
-Pak jet shot by Ind jet
-Ind jet shot by anti-aircraft gun
-Ind pilot ejected on Indian side but taken by wind
-2 Pak pilot eject fall on Pak side

The modest tone of Ghafoora and PM Niazi cry for peace only confirms, world no1 fauj shat bricks and now desperately pray that India doesn't retaliate. I doubt. Wishing is not reality. India will retaliate.

In its eagerness to claim victory on Twitter ispr released pics claiming two Indian plane down and shared all pics, later realising one was theirs and so back tracked to 1 indian down. Airframe of f16 https://t.co/jDhDoyagZD

MiG 21 debris were kept open for jurno tours until late evening, f16 debris were shuttled off hurriedly.


On the Indian side, debris of exhausted AMRAAM missile of f16 found. But Ghafoora lied to nation claiming no f16 deployed. Loser prick. https://t.co/prjKVG7pn0

This was posted by Dawn. ISPR got it censored. If ISPR can disown the son of an Air Marshal, imagine about footsoldiers. 

The details of PAF pilot of the F 16. The pilot who was killed by Wg Cdr Abhinandan has been now identified by PAF as Wg Cdr Shahzaz Ud Din of No 19 Squadron (Sherdils) flying F-16 A/B. He was the son of Air Marshal Waseem Ud Din, Deputy Chief of Air Staff (Operations) .

Air Marshal Waseem Ud Din is currently retired. He served as the DCAS (Ops) a while ago. The incumbent is Air Marshal Paracha. Commissioned in 77 just a few years after Air Marshal Varthaman. 

Thread Link - https://twitter.com/GernailSaheb/status/1101153923317096449

Tuesday 26 February 2019

How did the Indian fighter aircraft Mirage attack Pakistan's Balakot

How did the Indian fighter aircraft Mirage attack Pakistan's Balakot

BBC Hindi, New Delhi Updated Tue, 26 Feb 2019 06:38 PM
How did Indian fighter aircraft
On the morning of February 26, people were sleepy, Pakistani spokesman Asif Gafoor tweeted, informing that the fighter aircraft of India had entered the Muzaffarabad sector within the control of three to four kilometers across the Line of Control. Gafoor also said that after immediate response to Pakistan, India had to retreat and there was no harm.

After this, India said that the Indian Air Force in Balakot, Pakistan, has demolished the hideouts of extremist organizations. This time Pakistan has acknowledged that India's fighter aircraft had come while the last time Pakistan had rejected India's claim of surgical strike. Now, the questions are being raised that Indian fighter planes enter Pakistan and come out after the attack; Pakistan on the other hand does not do anything.

Even Pakistanis are asking their army questions why their army did not kill these Indian planes? Pakistani citizen Fawad Javed has asked the Pakistani Army questions how the Indian aircraft cross the border? Javed tweeted, they entered our airspace and our army did not kill them. Now you are only firing on Twitter Does Pakistan not know from its Air Force surveillance system that the Indian aircrafts have entered its borders? After all, why can not Pakistan take any action?

Laxman Kumar Bahera, director of The Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis, says that Pakistan's Air Force is very weak compared to the Indian Air Force. Bahera says that Pakistan's Air Force is not capable of responding to such attacks. The preparations of the Indian Air Force were so precise that it was not easy for Pakistan to make an estimate. India has carried out this attack in a very short time. Pakistan's air surveillance system and jammer are very lax. Handling the attack of such a short time is not the case with Pakistan's current air surveillance bus.

Media reports of India are being claimed that 12 Mirage fighter aircraft of India had crossed the border and returned within 21 minutes by executing the assault. It is being said that in the last five decades, after the 1971 war, India has for the first time crossed the border. In April 2000, Indian Air Force bought two A-50 AWAC (Airborne Warning and Control) aircraft from Russia. This was very important for radar systems and electronic surveillance. 

When India had bought it, then retired Air Marshal Ayaz Ahmed Khan of Pakistan had described it as dangerous for Pakistan. Ayaz Khan had said that India has been able to spy this system within Pakistan and spy the Pakistani airspace. Ayaz Khan had warned that the Indian Air Force would know the activities of the Pakistani Air Force base from this system beforehand.

Khan had said that from the A-50 AWAC, India will already know where the Pakistani radar system is located, where the deployment of the missile is and what activities the Pakistani Air Force is doing. The A-50 AWAC made in Russia is capable of detecting all the activities of Pakistan's Air Force and is worrisome for Pakistan.

A report of Defense.PK, a website reporting on defense related issues in Pakistan, says that the Airborne Radars of Pakistan have gone old. According to this report, India has spent a lot on its airborne surveillance. Although Pakistan has also tried to upgrade Khud but India is a very large country, there is so much to do for Pakistan's surveillance system. Ayaz Khan's report has said that after the arrival of Airborne Warning and Control from Russia to India, the Pakistani Air Force's defense system has gone a lot behind.

America is at the forefront of the technology that deals with airborne warning and control technology. Pakistan is now reliant on China in defense matters. But in case of air surveillance, Pakistan has not received much help from China. Defense help and defense technology that has been given to Pakistan by the United States has been completely stopped. 

Within a few months of the end of the Obama administration, the US Congress banned F-16 fighter aircraft from selling it to Pakistan. After this, the F-16 Fighter jets started with the attention of developing JF-17 fighter jets in collaboration with China. The US Congress took a tough stand against Pakistan on F-16, then Pakistan started looking for military equipment in another partner.

According to the report of the International Peace Research Institute, the arms deal between USA and Pakistan has slipped from $ 1 billion to $ 2.1 million last year. However, between China and Pakistan, the size of arms deals declined but its speed is slow. Pakistan's arms deal with China reached $ 74.4 million to $ 51.4 million. Simultaneously, China was ranked number one in terms of arms sales to Pakistan. 

According to the American Defense Website Global Fire Power, Pakistan has 1281 aircraft, while India has 2185. Laxman Kumar Behra also believes that Pakistan is a nuclear power country but in many cases it is very weak compared to India. According to the news agency PTI, BSF will be able to achieve surveillance capacity of 2000 km on the border with Pakistan and Bangladesh soon.

https://www.amarujala.com/india-news/how-did-indian-fighter-aircraft-mirage-attack-pakistan-balakot

Saturday 26 January 2019

Historic INA soldiers and All-Women Assam Rifles Contingent at 70th Republic Day




For the first time, more than 70 years after independence, 4 personnel of the Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's Indian National Army (INA) take part in the Republic Day parade. The four soldiers are aged between 97 and 100 and they hail from nearby areas of Delhi-NCR.

The senior-most soldier is 100 years old, named Bhagmal resident of Manesar, Haryana who had joined and fought for INA in 1942.

Asked why only four soldiers of INA are taking part, Major General Rajpal Poonia, Parade Deputy Commander, said it was difficult to find members of the INA who are still alive.

The other three members include Lalti Ram, 98, from Panchkula, Hira Singh, 97, from Narnaul in Haryana and Parmanand Yadav from Chandigarh.

Founded in 1942 by Ras Bihari Bose, INA was led into war by Netaji who had fought fierce battles with the British till Independence.

However, the INA soldiers were not allowed to merge with the Indian Army due to certain policies of the Congress government at that time.

All of them are in their late 90s and have hailed PM Narendra Modi for recognising their contribution to the country.

Lalti Ram, 96, said this is for the second time he will be honoured by the government. The first time he was honoured on October 21 last year.

Recalling his association with Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, the soldier said, “I was posted in the artillery of the INA and had worked very closely with Netaji”.

Till today, Lalti Ram refuses to accept the plane crash theory that claimed Netaji Bose’s life.

He said, “Hours after the news of Netaji’s plane crash was aired, Bose was sitting with his brigade.” Lalit Ram feels that Bose is still alive.

Another INA veteran Hira Singh, who is 97-year-old, has also thanked the Prime Minister, for this honour of participating in the Republic Day parade.

The team also includes Baghmal, who is 100 years old and 99-year-old Parmanand.

Hailing Prime Minister Modi, Defence Expert, Major General GD Bakshi told that though late but at least now, these great soldiers were being recognized for their contribution to the freedom struggle.

“It is sad that they are being given the honour at this age when one of them is 100 years old. Only about seven to eight soldiers of the great Army are left and we could get some who are staying nearby,” Major General Bakshi said. 

All-Women Assam Rifles Contingent March Past Rajpath On Republic Day

An all-women contingent of the Assam Rifles, created history by walking down Rajpath for the first time on Republic Day.

The decision to open Assam Rifles to women was taken in 2012. After a lot of research and preparation, the force was opened to women in 2015. A year later, in 2016, the first batch took its commencement oath and 127 women recruits became Assam Rifles’ first batch of Rifle women. Today, this number has gone up to about 365. Eventually, women will form five per cent of the entire force, approximately 2,500. This year, the Assam Rifles has advertised for 1,500 vacancies. Thirty-three per cent of the force consists of residents of the Northeast, the remaining include candidates from all over the country.

Maj Khushboo Kanwar, 30, and mother of a child, who led the contingent of the Assam Rifles, the oldest paramilitary force in the country, was brimming with pride. 

"Leading an all-women contingent of the Assam Rifles was a matter of great honour and pride for me. We practiced very hard...I am a daughter of a bus conductor from Rajasthan and if I can accomplish this, then any girl can fulfil her dream," she told PTI. 

But, it wasn't the only first for women, as Capt Shikha Surabhi from the Corps of Signals performed bike stunts alongside her male teammates as part of daredevils team. 

And, firsts were created this Republic Day not just on ground but also in air. 

During the flypast segment, IAF's An-32 aircraft flew in a 'vic' formation, whose lead plane was flown using a mix of traditional and biofuel for the first time during the parade, a senior IAF official said. 

The An-32 (Satluj) formation also exhibited India's quest to seek alternative sources of fuel. The lead aircraft of the formation, was flown utilizing Aviation Turbine Fuel blended with 10 per cent biofuel, the senior official said. 

The biofuel has been extracted from Jatropha plant seeds using a technology patented by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) and the Indian Institute of Petroleum, Dehradun, the IAF said. 

For the first time, Shankhnaad, a military tune composed by an Indian classical music exponent based on a poem penned by a Mahar Regiment veteran, was also played during the parade. The combination of military bands of the Sikh Light Infantry, Mahar Regiment and the Ladakh Scouts played the tune. 

Tuesday 22 January 2019

Netaji and Veer Surendra Sai - heroes of India

On the 122nd birth anniversary of #NetajiSubhasChandraBose @narendramodi to inaugurate museum dedicated to the great leader at #RedFort today.On 21st Oct 1943,Bose declared independence of undivided India at Red Fort in Delhi.

Those who set out to do good to India are sabotaged even now. 

While we celebrate the Jayanti of #NetajiSubhasChandraBose today, it is also the Jayanti of another great revolutionary Veer Surendra Sai, who led a long uprising against British in Sambalpur, but not so well known.




The Prisoner of Yakutsk- The New Indian Express
http://www.newindianexpress.com/magazine/2014/dec/20/The-Prisoner-of-Yakutsk-696549.html

When he was alive, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose was an enigma. His death in an alleged plane crash on August 18, 1945, in Taiwan remains a mystery wrapped in enigma. Sixty-nine years later, declassified files on the inquiries into Bose’s death indicate that he died alone in a Soviet prison in Siberia where over 516,841 perished under Joseph Stalin’s rule. 

The evidence, presented by a whistle-blower and now deceased Congress MP and diplomat Dr Satyanarayan Sinha in 1952, throws up too many uncomfortable questions, which could upset the established notion that Bose died in that crash and it is his ashes that rest in Renkoji Temple in Japan. Two inquiry reports by Shah Nawaz Committee and one-man GD Khosla Commission, set up in 1956 and 1970 by the Congress governments led by Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter Indira Gandhi respectively, concluded that Bose died in a plane crash at Taihoku airport.

The declassified documents and exhibits in the National Archives raise serious doubts about the veracity of these reports. However, the third and last report of the Mukherjee Commission established in 1999 had trashed the probe findings, though it doesn’t explain what exactly happened to Netaji. 

But the NDA government too did not disclose the new findings which were disowned by the UPA government, which chose to accept the findings of two previous reports. Sinha’s deposition before the Khosla Commission disclosed that Netaji was imprisoned in cell number 45 of Yakutsk Prison in Siberia, where over half a million slave labourers perished; Yakutsk is the coldest city on earth. But mysteriously, the committee decided not to probe Sinha’s testimony. 

Very few prisoners in Yakutsk survived the brutal conditions, but a former NKVD agent, Kozlov, who was rehabilitated later by the Soviet government, told Sinha about meeting Bose in Siberia. Sinha had an adventurous career, serving in the Russian Army in 1932 as an interpreter; he even fought in the battle of 1935-36 on the side of the Italians in Ethiopia before he became an aide to Nehru.

On October 17, 1970, Sinha, then in his 60s, was summoned before the Khosla Commission constituted by Indira. The files running into hundreds of pages reveal that Sinha had a trove of information regarding Netaji. He told the commission that Netaji did not die in the plane crash and was imprisoned by the Soviets in Siberia. This was Sinha’s first appearance before the commission and under oath, he testified that in 1954, he met Kozlov in Moscow, who told him that Netaji was lodged in Yakutsk Prison. It appears from the proceedings that the commission had received overwhelming evidence from Sinha but ultimately decided to ignore them.

Excerpts from the proceedings regarding the meeting between Kuzlov and Subhas Chandra Bose:

Khosla Commission: I want you to be more specific about this information which you received. Who gave you the information and what were the exact words used by him as far as you can remember?

Sinha: Kuzlov was the name of the man who was connected with the training of Indians till 1934. The same man was later treated by Stalin as a Trotskyist and sent to Yakutsk prison. From there, after the war, he had come back. I met him in Moscow. He said that he had seen Bose in Cell No. 45 in Yakutsk.

Commission: Did he name Bose or did he say some important Indian?

Sinha: He knew Bose. He had been a Soviet agent in India in 30s. He had met Bose in Calcutta and he knew his residence.

British India was crawling with spies of all nationalities, notably the Russians and Germans. ‘The Great Game’—a term coined by the English spy and cavalry officer Arthur Conolly—was raging as a conflict between the British and the Russian empires for supremacy in Central Asia. Afghanistan was the buffer state both wanted to control. The British believed that the Russians, both before and after the revolution, wanted to annex India. Stalin had even sent two British Communists to India to lead the disorganised Indian Communists to revolt against British rule, and create a red India. Their efforts failed and both were captured. 

Naturally, many Indian freedom fighters believed that Russia would help them overthrow the British. In 1940, Bose who disagreed with Mahatma Gandhi’s peaceful protest principle escaped house arrest and fled to Russia through Peshawar, with the help of German Intelligence agents operating in India. Since the USSR, on the surface, maintained diplomatic relations with the UK, Stalin was reluctant to give asylum to a man the British considered a traitor and a subversive. However, he helped Bose escape to Germany from where he reached Japan. The transfer of Bose in African waters from a German submarine to a Japanese sub is the only submarine-to-submarine transfer of any person during World War II.

DID NEHRU KNOW BOSE WAS ALIVE?

Sinha, who was elected to the first Lok Sabha in 1952 from Bihar, made scathing observations in Parliament indicating a cover-up in the Netaji probe at the top levels in the Indian government. Born in 1910 in Bihar, Sinha had been tasked by Nehru to report on the political situation in Europe in 1947. 

Sinha told the commission that he got the funds from Nehru’s personal account in The National Herald and it was through Nehru confidant Rafi Ahmed Kidwai that he received money for his travel and investigations. In this capacity as an informal secret agent, he travelled to Germany, Italy, France and Yugoslavia before joining the Indian Foreign Service in 1950 and served as First Secretary in the Indian legation in Berne, Switzerland. Sinha told the Khosla Commission that he had gathered further evidence from Russian spies that Bose was living in captivity in Russia, which he had already informed Nehru in 1950. Sinha began probing into Netaji’s disappearance in 1949. In 1950 in Leipzig, Germany, he had met Karl Leonhard, a former Abwehr spy who had served time in Siberia, after Germany lost the war in USSR. Leonhard reportedly told Sinha: “I have come to know that your leader Bose is also a prisoner.”

Sinha deposed that in a meeting with Nehru on April 13, 1950, he had given the prime minister the new information, but Nehru was disinterested. Though initially relations between USSR and India were cool after 1947, Stalin, who had refused to meet the Indian Ambassador to Moscow Vijayalakshmi Pandit, gave an audience to Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, who was then the Indian envoy. Stalin also offered a treaty of friendship between both countries. The USSR then supported India on the Kashmir issue. Nehru visited Soviet Union in 1955 and in return Premier Nikita Khrushchev and Defence Minister Nikolai Bulganin visited India in 1956. Meanwhile, Indo-US relations had cooled and the USSR stepped in with technological and economical aid. On the 1962 India-China war, the USSR blamed China as responsible for the war. India started buying Soviet arms in 1963 on a large scale when Nehru was PM.

Khosla Commission: Did you meet him (Nehru) in Delhi or elsewhere?

Sinha: In Delhi.

Commission: You went to see him and told him that a Russian had given you this information?

Sinha: Yes, that is on 13th April, 1950.

Commission: What did Pandit Nehru say to that?

Sinha: He said that he would check up the matter. But he said, “I think, this is American propaganda.”

Commission: After that, did you take any further steps to enquire into the matter?

Sinha: I did. Another talk on this subject which I had with Pandit Nehru was on 16th January 1951 in Paris where there was the ambassadors’ meeting.

Sinha also claimed that he had raised the issue with Radhakrishnan, who warned him that any further probe in the matter may harm his (Sinha’s) career. Sinha had worked as interpreter to Radhakrishnan while the latter was serving in Geneva. They had met on the sidelines of the ambassadors’ conference in 1951 in Paris. “He (Radhakrishnan) warned me that I should not meddle in these things. I asked him why. Then he said ‘you will be spoiling your career, you will not be anywhere’.”

Sinha told the Khosla Commission that he was making the charges “with full responsibility to prove them before the commission and before the wide world.” Sinha also said that he did not believe that the government wanted matters regarding Bose to come out in the public domain. He said, “Nehru was a very very strong man. When Khrushchev came, I was acting as an interpreter. I asked him ‘Will you in your next visit bring Netaji with you? Then Russia and India will become best of friends.’”

Sinha had also told the commission that Chinese officials had told him that Nehru was the only person who could repatriate Netaji.

THE COVER-UP

In 2006, the Justice Mukherjee Commission report concluded that Netaji did not die in the plane crash at Taihoku airport and the ashes in the Japanese temple are not his, and that in the absence of any clinching evidence a positive answer cannot be given

Former Minister of State for Home Mullappally Ramchandran in a written reply on May 7, 2013, told Parliament that “the Government of India did not agree with the finding of Justice Mukherjee Commission of Inquiry (JMCI) that Netaji did not die in the plane crash. The government of India based on the reports of Shah Nawaz Committee and Justice Khosla Commission constituted on the question of the alleged death/disappearance of Bose came to the conclusion that Netaji died in the plane crash on August 18, 1945.”

However, Sinha had accessed classified Soviet documents from Berlin that concerned Netaji’s death but was stopped by the government. Later he asked the Khosla Commission whether he could quote at least three lines from the documents, but it appears from the proceedings that the commission was not interested in listening to what Soviet intelligence documents had to say about Netaji and the topic was changed. 

In 1963, Sinha went to Taipei to probe into Netaji’s death. He took hundreds of photographs of the alleged crash site and runway, making at least 30 sorties. He also submitted five photographs to the Khosla Commission marking the Taihoku runway. He made the sensational disclosure that the earlier photographs shown to the public featuring the crash site could be fakes because any photograph showing the crash site should have the Keelung River in the frame which was missing. But the commission again changed the topic instead of probing the new photos.

“The conclusion which I immediately came to was that if the runway was south of Keelung River, east-west and in the photographs, if the contour of the hills come, any photographs of the wreckage taken must show the Keelung River in between. There is no way out for taking any photograph without it,” Sinha had told the commission.

Probe not given secret files

In 1956, the Shah Nawaz Committee refused to consider the document “Allied secret report No. 10/Misc/INA”. The document says, “Gandhi stated publicly at the beginning of January that he believed that Bose was alive and in hiding, ascribing it to an inner voice. Congressmen believe that Gandhi’s inner voice is secret information, which he had received. This is however a secret report, which says Nehru received a letter from Bose saying he was in Russia and that he wanted to escape to India. The information alleges that Gandhi and Sarat Bose are among those who are aware of this.”

Interestingly, the contents of the letter were omitted from Shah Nawaz Committee report. The committee did not find it necessary either to visit the alleged crash site in Taihoku to make further probes that suggested that Netaji was alive.

The File No. JMCI/ Russia/ UO Papers/ 2001 revealed that the Mukherjee Commission tried to get in touch with Sinha’s family members to find out if he had left any diary or notes pertaining to his depositions. It appears that the commission was surprised at the omission of Sinha’s finding in the Khosla Commission report.

Even in 2000, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) had claimed privilege and told the commission that the “documents are kept secret for ensuring the proper functioning of the public service.” The PMO affidavit said: “These are unpublished official records, the disclosure of which would cause injury to the public service.”

MYSTERIOUS EVENTS AFTER AUGUST 1945

A Top Secret cipher telegram number 3,338 dated October 20, 1945, was sent to the Secretary of State for India from the Home Department of the British Government on treason trials after World War II. It reveals that they were not convinced about Netaji’s death in the plane crash. The British government had prepared a list of 13 civilians in the Western countries and 12 in the Eastern countries for capture and subsequent prosecution. The telegram said Bose could be tried for collaborating with enemy if he was still alive although his trial would present grave difficulties. Sinha said that he had received notes dated 1946 from British military missions in Berlin from General Stewart and Major Warren saying that Bose did not die but was suffering at the hands of the Russians which they thought he deserved.

Commission: Any documents? Military missions in Berlin?

Sinha: Yes, in Major Warren’s possession, there were certain notes which said that Japanese had once more bluffed us and we had been cheated. But Gen Stewart and Maj Warren were very happy that Bose, who was a traitor, was being punished by Russians.

Commission: Was his name mentioned or it merely said in general terms?

Sinha: In the case of Bose, they had used words like ‘traitor’ and ‘quisling’, all these adjectives. I can give the number of the military mission papers. If it is possible, the commission may get hold of those papers.

In a debate in February 1947, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel said the government was not in a position to make any authoritative statement on Netaji’s whereabouts. Patel also denied that the government had ordered any inquiry to find out if Netaji was dead or alive, although a note dated August 27, 1945, prepared that after discussions between senior British commander Lord Wavell and British lader A Arthur Henderson, the Viceroy had already initiated an inquiry to ascertain whether it was true that Bose had been killed in an air accident.

“As I have said, not only myself but the House will be very glad if it turns out to be true that he is alive,” Patel told the Assembly.

Over time, more Netaji documents are likely to be declassified. Then the truth about the national hero’s mysterious disappearance could expose the Nehru government’s indifference to the fate of an inconvenient adversary.

Who is Dr Satya Narayan Sinha?

Born in 1910 in Chhapra town of Bihar, Sinha was introduced to Acharya Kripalani, Acharya Narendra Dev and Mahatma Gandhi at a very young age, and he spent close to two years in Sabarmati Ashram in 1924. On March 5, 1930, Sinha sailed for Europe and stayed at Sorrento near Naples with Maxim Gorky. Fluent in many foreign languages, including German and Russian, Sinha studied medicine in Vienna but ended up as staff captain in the Soviet Army and served for two years from April 1932 to July 1934. He served as an interpreter for six months in Siberia where he befriended many Russian and German spies. 

Later, Sinha went to Ethiopia where he joined Mussolini’s forces, fought the allies during 1935-36 before returning to India in the late 1936. Sinha left India again on January 1947 and served in various countries on the direction of Pandit Nehru. Later, he joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1950 but resigned two years later. He was elected as a member of the first Lok Sabha from Bihar in 1952. Justice Mukherjee Commission, constituted by the NDA government in 2001, was dismayed by the sheer negligence of the Khosla Commission which omitted several crucial leads that Sinha provided to unravel the Netaji mystery.

World’s Coldest Prison Camp

Several camps were erected in Yakutsk by the river Lena to lodge prisoners of war and political dissidents. They were employed in building new shafts for coal mines, roads, dams etc. Each camp, known as Gulag, had 500 to 1,000 captives living with minimum facilities. The majority couldn’t survive the harsh weather and primitive living conditions, and died while building roads in this coldest city on earth.

The Confusion Over Ashes

The Shah Nawaz Committee that was constituted by Nehru had concluded that ashes preserved at Renkoji temple was that of Bose. However, declassified principal points of the committee which later formed the basis of official report suggest that the three-member committee was not convinced about it. The members, including Shah Nawaz, Netaji’s brother Suresh Chandra Bose and S N Maitra, opined that Renkoji was very far from the cremation site and although there was no tampering with ashes, it cannot be definitely said that ashes were those of Netaji. But, despite this candid admission, all three members agreed to cover up the truth emerging out of facts.

“Ashes from the crematorium to Renkoji temple is a long way—first to Nishi Hongaji temple, then to Tokyo etc. There is nothing to show that there was tampering, but to prove that it was definitely those of Netaji, much more stringent measures required by law should have been taken and a different and very strict procedure by way of seals, guards etc should have been taken. In all probability, the ashes could be said to be those of Netaji,” stated Principal Points of Shah Nawaz Commission drafted on June 30, 1956.

How Sinha was Branded an American Agent

Sinha claimed he did not appear before the Shah Nawaz Committee in 1956 because of rebuke from Jawaharlal Nehru Commission: You mean the rebuke which he administered to you in 1951 or on some later occasion?

Sinha: 1954 

Commission: What did he say?

Sinha: There was an open debate in Parliament after that and then he asked me in a private letter: how many times I had been to the American Embassy and whether I was their agent or not?

Commission: Was it in connection with Netaji?

Sinha: Netaji Subhas Bose case.


Veer Surendra Sai

When one looks at the history of the freedom struggle in Odisha, one name that would stand out would be that of Veer Surender Sai, who led a tribal revolt in Sambalpur that nearly rattled the British. A born rebel, Surendra, hailed from the small village of Khinda, and was a Rajput belonging to the Chauhan clan of Khinda-Rajpur. His father Dharam Singh, was a descendant of Aniruddha Sai, the fourth Chauhan ruler of Sambalpur. When Maharaja Sai passed away in 1827 AD, Surendra Sai presented his legitimate claim to the throne of Sambalpur, as the Maharaja had no male heir.


The British however found Surendra too much of an independent thinker for their own good. Predictably they were looking for some one more pliable, and their first choice was the Maharaja’s widow Mohana Kumari. The British had already occupied Sambalpur in 1804 AD after their victory in the 3rd Anglo Maratha War, when Odisha was one of the territories ceded by the Marathas. The British allowed Mohana Kumari to rule over the State, the decision however led to a lot of resentment between her and other claimants to the throne. With Mohana Kumari proving herself to be incapable, the people themselves revolted against her.

The British put down the rebellion, deposed Mohana Kumari, and sent her to Cuttack in 1833 AD, where she lived as a pensioner. The British then placed another puppet ruler Narayan Singh, one of the offspring on the throne. However Narayan, by then was already too old, not capable of handling the responsibilities of the state, and soon there was an outright challenge from other members of the Rajpur-Khinda Chauhan clan. Surender was backed by his uncle Balaram Singh( brother of his father), on the grounds that being the direct descendants, they had a legitimate claim over the throne. The Gond tribals in Sambalpur too revolted against Narayan Singh, who died in September 1849 with no male heir.

Under the Doctrine of Lapse, Lord Dalhousie annexed Sambalpur, and Surendra Sai, revolted against the British. Surendra felt he had a legitimate claim to the throne, however the British were wary of his popularity and strong personality. Aware that he would not be the puppet ruler they wanted him to be, the British did their best to keep him away from the throne. And thus began an intense and epic struggle against the British, that in fact had it’s genesis much earlier in 1827 AD.

The Beginning

Since 1827, Surendra backed by his uncle Balram, had repeatedly laid claim to the “Gadi” of Sambalpur as the legal heir apparent. However with the British ignoring his claim, Surendra decided to go down the path of total revolt. His 6 brothers Udyanta, Ujjala, Chabila, Jajjala and Medini too supported him, as did all the local Zamindars and Gauntias. When Narayan Singh’s men killed the Gond Zamindar of Lakhanpur, Balabhadra Deo, the furious Gonds too supported Surendra in his revolt. Some of them murdered the unpopular Zamindar of Rampur, Durjaya Singh, a camp follower of Narayan Singh. Though Surendra had no role in it, the British neverthless implicated him in the case, and he was arrested along with his uncle Balaram and his brother Udyanta Sai. Sent to Hazaribagh jail in 1840 AD, Surendra spent as many as 17 years in prison, till the 1857 Revolt, when the mutineers, broke down the prison. His uncle who was his guiding force and mentor, however died in prison itself.

In the meantime, the Zamindars of Sambalpur, as well as the ordinary people, were fed up with some of the oppressive measures taken by the British, after they annexed the state. The British indiscriminately raised the revenue to be paid by the Tribal Zamindars as well as the Gauntias. When the 1857 revolt broke out and Surendra Sai was liberated from prison, the tribal masses in Sambalpur, gathered under him. And this marked the second phase in his long struggle with the British.

1857 Revolt and Later

When the 1857 Revolt broke out and Surendra was released from prison by the rebels, he was declared a fugitive by the British. The authorities put a bounty of Rs 250 for his arrest as well as that of his brother Udyanta. Surendra however had become a hero for the common people, and returned to a rousing reception in Sambalpur. Surendra made a petition to Capt R.T.Leigh, the Senior Asst Comissioner of Sambalpur to recognize him as the Raja of Sambalpur and remit his life imprisonment. However the Odisha Comissioner, G.F.Cockburn, strongly opposed any kind of amnesty to Surendra Sai, and recommended his deportation. The British bought in more troops and put Surendra under house arrest in Sambalpur. He however managed to give them the slip and escaped to Khinda village where his brother Udyant was located.

31st October 1857, Surendra began his rebellion against the British, and soon many of the ordinary people, the tribal Zamindars, Gauntias all joined hands with him. It was primarily a tribal revolt, with the Zamindars of Kolabira, Laidia, Loisinga, Lakhanpur etc, sacrificing all their comforts, and joining Veer Surendra Sai in his guerilla war against the British. Fighting in the thick jungles of Sambalpur, some of them lost their lives, while some had their estates confiscated, and some were arrested and hanged. The selfless spirit of sacrifice and heroism shown by the tribals, was Veer Surendra Sai’s greatest source of strength and support.

Surendra organized the rebels into different groups, and soon they began to cut off all the routes of communication used by the British to Hazaribagh, Ranchi, Cuttack. The dawk road to Bombay was blockaded, and the British by now had completely lost control over Sambalpur. Veer Surendra Sai, regularly harassed the British with his guerilla attacks, and it became difficult for them to venture in to the thick forests. The soldiers were regularly ambushed, and when Capt Leigh undertook the operations, the rebels struck back hard, killing and wounding several of his 50 strong contingent.

Cockburn despatched more forces to Sambalpur, and the Government transferred Sambalpur from the Chota Nagpur division to Orissa division for more effective handling. With the Chota Nagpur division Comissioner having his hands full, and the difficulties in controlling Sambalpur from the North, it was felt that having it in Orissa, would be better. And by Dec 19, 1857, it became a part of the Cuttack division. Capt Wood arrived in the meantime from Nagpur with a large cavalry and made a surprise attack on the rebels at Kudopali on Dec 30, 1857. Though Surendra Sai, managed to escape, he lost one of his brother Chabila Sai, as also about fifty rebels in the skirmish.

Major Bates arrived in Sambalpur on January 7, 1858 to take charge of the situation, and occupied the Jharghati pass connecting Ranchi, that was blocked by Udyant Sai. Bates destroyed the village of Kolabira, it’s gauntia was arrested and hanged. Captain Woodbridge and Wood then launched another attack on the hill stronghold of the rebels Paharsgira on February 12, 1858. However the rebels managed to counter the British, and Woodbridge was killed, his headless body was later found in the forests.

With the situation in Sambalpur, slipping out of control, the British sent Col Forster in March 1858, and gave him wide ranging military and civil power. Forster cracked down hard, blocking the food stocks of the rebels. He convened a meeting of all the neighboring Rajas and Zamindars, and demanded their cooperation in suppresing the revolt of Veer Surendra Sai. Ujjal Sai, another brother of Surendra Sai, was captured and hanged without a trial at Bolangir. The Zamindars of Kharsal and Ghens who were sympathetic to Veer Surendar Sai, were also captured and hanged. In spite of all the repressive measures and crackdown, though Forster still could not capture Veer Surender Sai.

Major Impey was appointed as Dy. Comissioner of Sambalpur in April 1861, and believed a carrot and stick approach was better suited to end the revolt. He announced a policy of amnesty for all rebels who surrendered in September 1861, except Surendra Sai, his brother Udyant and son Mitrabhanu. He issued another proclamation in October 1861, promising free pardon to all the rebels who surrendered. Weary of the long conflict, and seeking a normal, peaceful life, many of the rebels surrendered to the British leaving the jungles. Impey’s conciliatory approach worked, with many rebels now surrendering, and the local people too more or less reconciled to the inevitability. The Zamindar of Kolabira, one of Veer Surendra Sai’s strongest supporters, received generous treatment after his surrender and this made many rebels trust the Government’s intentions. Mitrabhanu surrendered on on January 7th, 1862 and 2 days later his two brother Udyanta and Dhruva Sai too surrendered.

Surendra Sai once again negotiated with the British authorities for his claim to the throne of Sambalpur. They however rejected it, and and Impey assured him a liberal pension in lieu of that. He then demanded payment of arrears to his soldiers, to which Impey agreed, and soon Surendra surrendered on May 16th, 1862, bringing the long revolt to an end. It was however not the end of the story, some of the British officers were not satisfied with the conciliatory moves towards the rebels and Veer Surendra Sai.

British officers like Berial, the Superintendent of Police, felt that Surendra Sai should have been charged with dacoity and murder. Pressure was put on the Dy. Comissioner for the arrest of Surendra Sai, and when Major Impey passed away in December 1863, they saw it as a golden opportunity. Capt Cumberledge joined as Dy. Comissioner, Sambalpur on January 19, 1864 and soon Surendra Sai, his son and some close followers were arrested on January 23, at their native village of Khinda. His brothers Udayant and Medini too were arrested, and all of them were sent to Raipur for trial. After what was clearly a farcical and hasty trial, the Comissioner announced Veer Surendra Sai and others guilty, and sentenced them to deportation for life.

Even though the then Judicial Comissioner John Scarlett Campbell, called the trial a farce and the charges as baseless, Surendra along with 6 others was detained at Nagpur. Fearing his presence in Sambalpur would provoke another mass uprising, the British kept him at Nagpur till April, 1866 and and thereafter to the Fort of Asirgarh. Medini passed away at Asirgarh, Dhruva and Mitrabhanu were released on January 1876. Surendra however had to spend the rest of his life in prison, and it’s believed he passed away there at an unknown date. One of the great revolutionaries, a man who was a terror to the British in Sambalpur, passed away in anonymity in a remote prison.

Veer Surendra Sai was a true valiant warrior against British imperialism, who fought against them till 1862. An inspiring leader of the tribals in Western Odisha, spent 37 years in prison. His aim was to drive the British out of his native Sambalpur, and though he could not succeed in his goal, he inspired a generation of freedom fighters in Odisha, and Jharkhand later on. A man who gave up the comforts, suffered untold miseries for the cause of his people, Veer Surendra Sai, was a true hero, worthy of emulation. When the history of Odisha is written, the resistance led by Surendra Sai, would forever be in letters of gold.

Source: http://magazines.odisha.gov.in/Orissareview/august-2007/engpdf/Page72-75.pdf
https://historyunderyourfeet.wordpress.com/2018/01/25/veer-surendra-sai/