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According to The Times of India, the recently declassified files on Netaji show that the then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru was aware of the treasures of Bose’s Indian National Army being stolen. Not just that, the report claims that the Nehru government decided to look the other way and reward one of them.
Bose “must have carried very much more than has now been handed over to us [by Murti and Ayer], and even if allowances are made for the loss of the part of the treasures when the plane crashed,” Tokyo Mission Head, KK Chettur reported.
A secret report authored by RD Sathe on 1 November 1955 confirmed suspicious activities committed by Iyer in ‘INA treasure and their handling by Messrs Ayer and Ramamurti’.
Chettur went on to write on 20 October 1951 that the Japanese government confidentially informed the Mission that Bose had with him “substantial quantity of gold ornaments and precious stones, but that he was allowed to carry only two suitcases on the ill-fated flight.’’
Nehru welcomed Ayer by appointing him, in 1953, as an advisor for the publicity of his flagship five-year plans. Ramamurti, on the other hand, flourished in Japan for a little while longer.
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