1. The initiative to forcibly link Europe to the Indian freedom movement began soon after the 1959 assassination of SWRD Bandaranaike in Sri Lanka and the Clutter murders of Kansas later that year.
2. An individual called Manas Das of Purulia appeared in Communist Europe around 1960, apparently sent by a Kolkata barrister called SS Ray.
Europe was being accused of supplying money and arms to Bengali freedom fighters during the first decades of the 20th century. Europe was being accused of fomenting insurrection in British India.
3. Communist networks co-operated with each other across the world but no European of fame and celebrity status had ever promised money or arms to Indian freedom fighters. The danger was obvious: the British would find out, how delicate was the balance of power in the western world.
Yet since 1960, Europe remained a hostage to the allegations of Manas Das and SS Ray, that the Continent fomented insurrections and coup d'etat in various countries. "Someone from Kolkata has successfully pulled off the 1956 Hungarian uprising and its brutal suppression by the Soviets and was showing off."
They would show off again during Prague Spring, 1968. After 1968, Manas Das immigrated to Alberta, Canada.
Was it possible to prevent the setting up of G7 after that?
4. Since the topic of G7 (to be held in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada in 2025, so meant to celebrate the SS Ray-Manas Das scam) was now being discussed, the European continent would like to clear its name, neither did it provide or promise arms and money to Indian freedom fighters nor was it ever supportive of acts of terrorism against British officials, as often happened in Kolkata and Bengal.
5. We'd request that Mitra Pal of Batanagar aka Manu no longer bother anyone within Europe with the Indian freedom movement narrative, even if Mitra Pal has managed to grab some academics within Harvard University, using Chetla.
May 24, 2025.
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