#OnThisDay 11th January 1966, India's 2nd Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri died in Tashkent unexpectedly.
Was it a heart attack? Was he poisoned? Was foreign forces at play?
#TimeTravelWithMe to revisit the biggest unresolved Indian political mystery ever.
A chilling 🧵
The story starts on May 27th 1964, when Pandit Nehru, India's 1st PM died. A succession battle ensued. A faction wanted Indira Gandhi to be named the PM.
But the Congress President Kamaraj intervened to name Lal Bahadur Shastri as the next PM. A silent kind personality.
2/n
Nehru had been a flashy, popular & charismatic world leader. Shastri, on the other hand, was a simple Gandhian who wore a traditional dhoti and stood 5'2 in height.
There was a shift in the leadership brand. And many people assumed simplicity to be same as weak. 3/n
India was already reeling from the war with China in 1962. Pakistan's leader Ayub Khan took this change as a signal to test waters & play up Kashmir against a 'weaker' Shastri. He sent military infiltrators in 1965 & captured several Indian posts in Kashmir.
Shastri gave it back
India captured the critical Hazipir Pass & the Indian Army reached as far inland as Lahore threating to move further. A response that was not expected of India's leadership.
India had the upper hand when the world powers USA & USSR intervened afraid of further casualties 5/n
India was more closer to USSR and the USA didnt want to be drawn into supporting Pak & cause a bigger war.
USSR & USA jointly pushed for ceasefire and to draw an agreement in Tashkent in modern day Uzbekistan in Jan 1966 6/n
Shastri & Ayub Khan signed the Tashkent declaration & announced moving back to borders. On that night, Shastri had a light dinner of vegetables & phoned his family to ask about the reaction for the declaration
That was the last he spoke. He died mysteriously same night!! 😥 7/n
USSR quickly did a check & termed it as an heart attack. But no post mortem was done! The family suspected foul play & requested post mortem when the body came to Delhi but Indian Govt declined it as well.
Also, they witnessed blue patches in the body to suspect poisoning! 8/n
There was definitely some foul play suspected but the govt refused to divulge any further details.
The country was reeling in shock.. but within 13 days
Homi J Bhabha, head of India's nuclear program died in a air accident suddenly 😱😱😱 9/n
Post the China war defeat, Shastri had been closely working with Homi Bhabha to create India's own nuclear bomb which the other nuclear powers obviously didnt like.
Both of them dying within 2 weeks of each other created a national intrigue. Rumours flew everywhere 10/n
But hardly any meaningful investigation was carried out to understand the 2 deaths more. And if there was any information, it was withheld.
Was there any foreign higher power at play? Why didnt India's own government push for an answer more?
There wasnt clarity.
When the Congress rule ended 11 years later in 1977, the new Janata Party led alliance set up a probe to look into the deaths
Guess what
Dr.Chugh, Shastri's doctor and Ramnath, his servant - key witnesses in the probe both died in road accidents within a few days...😥 12/n
Several future Indian goverments continue to not disclose key documents pertaining to Shastri's death. RTI petitions were turned down stating foreign relations & diplomacy.
Was the CIA involved? Was the KGB involved? The documents might say but is not available to be read. 13/n
A 2013 book talking to Robert Crowley, senior CIA official in 1966 reveals astonishing statements about how CIA was worried about India getting a nuke & cozying with USSR and they decided to 'nail' both Shastri & Bhabha.
How much of it is true? Nobody knows
A sitting Prime Minister of a country dying in mysterious circumstances on foreign land while signing a peace treaty should create enough alarm & probing.
For some reason, Shastriji didnt get that respect.
His mystery still remains!
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#OnThisDay 121 years ago on Dec 10th 1901, the first ever Nobel Prize Awards were given out amidst a lot of tension, drama and secrecy.
Join me on a #HistoryTour to revisit that memorable day that kickstarted a global tradition of excellence.
A brief thread🧵
Alfred Nobel was born in 1833 into a family of engineers & was an inventor himself. He bought the now infamous 'Bofors' steel mill to develop multiple weapons - most famous of which was the Dynamite.
Nobel amassed a fortune by selling all of his ammunition inventions
2/n
In 1888, Alfred's brother Ludvig Nobel died. A French newspaper mistook that Alfred had died & published an obituary titled 'The merchant of death is dead' in reference his weapons
This disconcerted Alfred very much as he didnt want to be remembered this way post his death
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A mix of bad luck, small acts of carelessness, human negligence led to the deadly Bhopal gas leak
Join me on a #historytour to revisit that unforgettable crazy night
🧵
Union Carbide India Ltd set up a pesticide plant in Bhopal, MP in 1939. It was owned by an US company UCC & produced the pesticide Sevin.
The plant produced a gas Methyl isocyanate(MIC), a highly deadly component, which combined with Naphthol produced the final pesticide
2/n
The world had moved to making pesticide without using MIC but UCIL still made & stored MIC in large pressurized gas tanks & used them in the final reaction.
In early 1980s, the demand for pesticides were low leading to large amount of unused MIC getting stored at the plant
A commercial flight from London to NewYork takes 8+ hours today. But a few decades ago this trip took less than 3 hrs!
Made possible by The Concorde, the supersonic flight! Join me on a #HistoryTour to know how it was to fly in the greatest plane ever made & how it all ended
🧵
The Concorde was a collaborative effort between the British & the french. It was researched to become the first supersonic flight which could reach 2000+km/hr & reach altitudes of more than 60,000ft
Normal planes dont fly more than 800km/hr generally to get a perspective! 2/n
Introduced in the 70s, the main market was Trans Atlantic flights between main cities in Europe & the US. The supersonic speed meant London to NY could be done in < 3 hrs. 2 Financial capitals of the world. People could be in London for breakfast & be back in NY for dinner 3/n
#OnThisDay Exactly 100 years ago, Nov 4th 1922, the world witnessed one of the greatest archaeological finds - the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamen - the boy pharaoh of Egypt!
Come join me on a #HistoryTour to witness the thrilling story behind this amazing find 🧵
The story starts way back around 3000 BC where the earliest Egyptian kings called Pharaohs came into power. Called the 'Old Kingdom' a series of kings built one of the oldest civilizations known to us in history.
And one thing fascinated all Pharaohs.
Death.
2/n
Egyptians believed that post death, the spiritual body lived in an afterlife very similar to the living world. So a large part of life went in preparing for a comfortable death!
Pharaohs used everyone to build large memorials to prepare for their death
#IndiaAt75 In 1926, British Archaeologist Ernest Mckay dug up a small bronze statue in Mohenjodaro and it changed the way the world looked at India's history!
Join me to know the story of the 'Dancing Girl' from Mohenjodaro - the greatest find of the Indus Valley Civilization 🧵
The first Indus Valley major find was the discovery of Harappa in 1829 on the banks of Ravi river in Punjab. It excited the British a bit but the find was still largely academic that they had found an ancient inhabited town that no one knew existed. 2/n
Over the next 50 years, several such sites were found but more than history, Britishers and locals were interested in the high quality bricks that these sites provided.
They were plundered for building houses, ballast for railway lines all the way between Karachi to Delhi. 3/n