The Andamans were the only part of India actually controlled by the
Indian National Army. But the brutality of the Japanese occupiers earned
Subash Chandra Bose the wrath of residents.
Today,
Manipur chief minister Okram Ibobi Singh will be the chief patron at a
ceremony to mark the 70th anniversary of the Battles of Imphal and
Kohima, when Allied troops – mainly Indian – drove back the Japanese
army from India's borders. The battle was among the key events of World
War II, helping change the fortunes of the Allies.
But though the
Japanese were beaten back from the northeastern border, few people
remember that the East Asian nation actually managed to capture one part
of India and to hold on to it until 1945. As a result, seven decades
after the conflict ended, WWII bunkers are still a common sight along
the beaches of Port Blair in the Andaman Islands, the site of a murky
episode in Indian history.
As it turns out, the Andaman Islands were the only part of India that
was actually controlled by the Indian National Army, the liberation
force headed by Subash Chandra Bose. But its administration over the
islands was only nominal. In reality, power was exercised by the
Japanese forces – so brutally that they caused the residents of the
islands to develop a deep hatred both for the Japanese and Bose's army.
The
Japanese sailed into Port Blair in March 1942, shortly after the fall
of Rangoon earlier that month. They faced little resistance from the
small local garrison and enrolled the Indian soldiers into the INA. But
things soon turned sour. As Jayant Dasgupta recounts in his book
Japanese in Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Red Sun over Black Water,
several residents were executed on charges of spying, local women were
forced into sexual slavery and hundreds were rounded up to provide
forced labour for an airstrip and other projects.
Bose visited
Port Blair to raise the tricolour and technically take charge of the
islands in December 1943, renaming the Andamans “Shahid Dweep” (Martyr
Island) and the Nicobars “Swaraj Dweep” (Self-Rule Island). Locals are
said to have told him about the atrocities that had been meted out on
them, only to be ignored, earning him their wrath.
Anger
with the Japanese grew more intense as the months passed and food
became scarce. Starvation became widespread and hundreds of people are
thought to have been deported to an uninhabited island to grow food.
Many perished. It is estimated that 2,000 Indians died as a result of
Japan's occupation of the Andamans.
The Allies finally recaptured the islands in October 1945.
The Japanese delegation at the ceremony to mark the surrender of Japanese forces in the Andaman Islands.
Japanese soldiers unload stores for the Allied occupation forces at Port Blair in the Andaman Islands.
Men of the Rajput Rifles embark for the Andaman Islands aboard the troopship Dilwara.
6/28/2014 | |
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