Indian Express: New Delhi: Saturday, June 03, 2017.
Indicating
that the Centre has an open mind on the issue of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's
death in 1945, the Ministry of Home Affairs on Friday said its reply to an RTI
was based on available official information and that if anything new comes up
in the case, "it will be examined".
The
government is "not denying" the findings of the Shah Nawaz Committee
or any other panel that probed the matter but anything new will be examined, a
Ministry official told IANS.
"This is
the fact that is available as of date... any other fact (coming our way) will
be examined," he said.
The
controversy was triggered by a reply from the Ministry to a Right To
Information query filed by a Kolkata resident.
"The
government has come to the conclusion that Netaji died in the plane crash on
August 18, 1945," the Ministry said on May 31, referring to the findings
of the Shah Nawaz Committee and other inquiry commissions on the subject.
"There
was a conclusion in 2006 that Netaji was dead. The RTI reply was based on that
conclusion. However, the issue is not closed. Any new fact, if it comes up,
will be
examined by
the government on merit and appropriate decision taken," the Ministry
spokesperson said earlier in the day.
West Bengal
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Friday criticised the Centre for its
"casual" handling of the RTI response which she dubbed as
"shocking as it was without evidence".
"The
Centre recently gave information about Netaji through a reply under the RTI
Act. I am shocked to see this unilateral decision of the central government
without evidence," Banerjee said in a Facebook post.
Many among
Netaji's supporters, especially in Bengal, refused at the time and have refused
since to believe either the fact or the circumstances connected with his death.