Standing up for truth:
(From left) Sayantan, Anuj & Chandrachur
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In June last year, when the Right to Information
(RTI) had just begun to catch the fancy of the nation, some guys in Delhi thought to try it out on old mystery surrounding
the "death" of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose. The idea was both novel and bold -- because till now the RTI had mostly been used
by disgruntled employees or troubled citizens to redress personal issues. Not many thought that the RTI could be utilised
to seek concealed facts concerning events that shaped the destiny of India.
Anuj Dhar, Chandrachur Ghose and Sayantan
Dasgupta gave it a shot. And unlike most cases, they engaged not some petty officials, but the Prime Minister's Office, Ministry
of External Affairs, Ministry of Home Affairs and even the elusive but know-all R&AW, India's premier external intelligence
agency. All this, without any assistance from any quarter.
However, the results
have so far been shocking, to put it mildly. The Manmohan Singh Government have shown suspicious reluctance in disclosing
even the rudimentary records. Of course they admit -- skeptics please note -- that they are maintaining secret records on
Netaji. One wonders why they would be doing so. But whatever it is, it's no indicator of any forlorn love for Subhas Bose.
The entire nation knows how Netaji's legacy was treated in free India. You don't need the RTI to figure that out.
Team MN with Netaji's daughter Dr Anita
Pfaff
Come to think of it, the Government's refusal to disclose records pertaining
to Subhas Bose relate to transparency in governance. We need to know truth not because we now have a right to know, but because
we want to understand our present better in the light of recent past. If the system can shut it self up over such a long-drawn,
high-profile case, it may as well ignore many other vital issues.
The establishment's retrogressive panache for secrecy, exemplified by the
Subhas Bose case, must end. Keeping things under wraps forever is not something that the mature democracies indulge in. The Government of India should realize that this is 2007 and the people of India are now mature
enough to seek and accept truth. World over an era has long dawned that stipulates that all information is to be made available
to people unless there are strong reasons for withholding it. One wonders what could be the reason in the instance of Subhas
Bose, who the Government holds to have died more than 60 years ago.
for details vist : http://justiceforsubhas.blogspot.com/
Governemtn should tell the truth about
Netaji
Also visit latest media reports on NETAJI
Rediff special: Mission Netaji
RTI makes Netaji rise from 'ashes'
Petition to Dr Manmohan Singh
Netaji ‘death’ to stay off limits
Guardian on Mukherjee inquiry
Washington Post on Subhas Bose
Netaji air crash: Taiwan's denial
'Govt destroyed evidence'