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INDIAN NATIONAL
ARMY
A representative
conference of Indians settled in South-East Asia was held at Bangkok
in June 1942. it was presided over by the well-known Indian
revolutionary, Rash Behari Bose. He had settled in Japan, but
continued to work for the liberation of his motherland. This
conference was also attended by Captain Mohan Singh and a few Indian
soldiers of the British Indian Army who had renounced their
allegiance to the British after their capture by the Japanese and
were willing to fight for India’s freedom. No less than 25,000
Indian prisoners of war in Japanese hands had signified their
willingness to join the “Army of Liberation’ under the command of
Mohan Singh before he came to attend the Bangkok Conference. It was
at this conference that the decision was taken to form an Indian
national Army’ comprising Indian prisoners of was and civilian
residents of South-East Asia. Rash Behari Bose was elected President
of the Council of Action and Mohan Singh took up the command of the
‘Army’. Unfortunately, the Council could not work in a concerted
manner and failed to make any headway in the mobilization of men,
money and material. The arrival of Subhas Bose at Tokyo on June 13,
1943, and the declaration of his determination to launch an armed
attack against the British along the eastern borders of India
electrified the entire scene and the Indians overseas felt that
their long-awaited savious had at last come. Rash Behari handed over
the leader ship of the Indian Independence Movement to Subhas Bose,
who formed the Provisional Government of Free India and gave the
battle-cry ‘Chalo Delhi’ (on to Delhi) to the Azad Hind Fauz
(I.N.A.) Subhas also made a total mobilization of the resources of
overseas Indians. Defining the task of the Provisional Government,
Subhas Declared; “It will be the task of the Provisional Government
to launch and conduct the struggle that will bring about the
expulsion of the British and their allies from the soil of India.”
In the beginning, the Japanese were
reluctant to give the Indian National Army an important role in
their offensive campaign against British India. Netaji, as Subhash
used to be lovingly addressed by his followers, refused to accept
such a proposition and the Japanese had to agree that, in the
campaign for liberation of India, the soldiers of the Indian
National Army had the inalienable right to make the maximum
contribution. The I.N.A. formed the vanguard of the attack which was
launched across the India-Burma border, Netaji himself came to
Rangoon and established the advance headquarters their. The I.N.A.
brigades, named after Gandhi, Azad, Nehru and Subhas, distinguished
themselves in several battles which they won by dint of sheer
bravery, courage and superb discipline. A lofty spirit of patriotism
impelled the men and women of the I.N.A. to make the supreme
sacrifice in the field of battle and undergo all sorts of privations
and suffering with a smiling face. They went into ecstatic joy when
they succeeded in capturing Mowdok, a small town on the Indian side
of the border. They fell prostrate on the ground and kissed the soil
with great reverence to reaffirm their determination to free India
from foreign rule. The main objective of the I.N.A. offensive in
1944 was the capture of Imphal, the capital of Manipur. The advance
units of the I.N.A. reached within two miles of Imphal and succeeded
in besieging the city.
In June 1944, the fortunes of war
were turning against the Axis powers. Due to heavy bombing by the
Americans, as also due to the rapid American advance in the Pacific,
the Japanese decided to withdraw from the India-Burma border. The
monsoon started in all the fury and it became impossible to supply
rations and ammunition to the I.N.A. forces. This, along with the
pressure of the reinforced British forces, compelled the Japanese
Army and the I.N.A. to fall further back.
During the winter of 1944-45, the
British began their counter-offensive. They occupied Arakan and
marched towards Rangoon. The Japanese evacuated Rangoon, asking the
I.N.A. to hold it as best as they could. By May 1945, the British
forces had occupied Rangoon and a large number of I.N.A. soldiers
were taken prisoner. The Japanese surrender in the middle of August
18, 1945. Subhas Bose was last seen boarding a Japanese bomber at
Taipeh. What happened afterwards is still uncertain.
The I.N.A. was not successful in
winning the freedom of the country, but they certainly hastened the
dissolution of the British Empire in India.
Join India Union Movement
Soon after his election
as President of the Hyderabad State Congress in May, 1947, Swami
Ramanand Tirtha began to mobilize the political workers, students
and youth under the banner of the State Congress. He demanded that
the Nizam’s Government of Hyderabad should join the Indian Union and
also participate in the Indian Constituent Assembly. In Hyderabad,
he decided to launch the Satyagraha movement on a mass scale. The
“Join Indian Union” satyagraha movement was launched on August 7,
1947. Processions were taken out through the main thorough fares of
Hyderabad city. The police lathi-charged the processionists. On
August 15, 1947, the Hyderabad State Congress hoisted the Indian
Union flag. The Nizam’s police immediately reacted by arresting the
leaders. The movement now assumed a real mass character. The people
all over Hyderabad State and the bon\rdering district organized
themselves for defence against marauding bands of Razakars and the
Nizam’s police.
Meanwhile, the Nizam’s
Government was trying to negotiate an understanding with the Indian
Union. It declared that is wanted to remain on good terms with both
the Dominations of India and Pakistan. While attempting to arrive at
an understanding with the Indian Union, It had always to reckon with
the opinion of the Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen organization, which, by this
time, had evolved a paramilitary body of volunteers known as the
Razakars. Their activities began to increase and there were several
border incidents between the Razakar forces and the Nizam’s police
on the one side and the people of the villages on the other. Clashes
also occurred in the camps set up by the Hyderabad State Congress
where the trained kisan Dal workers resisted the Razakars. Arson and
loot became a common feature and a large number of villages were
attacked and burnt down by the Razakars. The atrocities committed by
the Razakars went on mounting and there was a reign of terror in
Parbhani and Nanded districts. There were instances of people being
killed and their eyes taken out. Several women were molested in the
villages and houses were burnt in large numbers.
The Government of India
declared on September 9, 1948, that it had no other alternative
except to order Indian troops into the Hyderabad territory in order
to save the State and its neighbouring provinces from complete
chaos. In the early hours of Monday, September 13, 1948, all
resistance to the Indian forces was completely broken. On the
morning of September 18, the Indian forces entered Hyderabad city to
the great joy and rejoicing of the people. Major General J. N.
Chaudhari then took charge as the Military Governor of Hyderabad.
In March 1952, the first
popular general elections were held in the State and a Ministry
under B. Ramakrishna Rao was formed. With the formation of the first
popular ministry, the people of the Hyderabad state were also
brought into the mainstream of India’s national life.
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Dr. P. N. Chopra
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