Government highlights correct history of Liberation War
Bangladesh celebrates the glorious true victory of 1971. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said this in a statement on its Facebook post on Wednesday (December 18).
According to diplomatic sources, the statement was made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in response to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's message on social media X, claiming the final victory achieved on December 16, 1971 as a 'historic victory for India'.
In a Facebook post today titled 'Historical Reality', the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that sovereign and independent Bangladesh emerged on December 16, 1971, after a 9-month-long struggle and bloody war. In the Facebook post, the ministry highlighted what happened and what could have happened at the historic Suhrawardy Udyan in Dhaka on December 16, 1971, based on the description of that day given by former Indian Foreign Secretary and National Security Advisor JN Dixit in his book 'Liberation and Beyond: India-Bangladesh Relations'.
Dixit said, “The failure of the Indian military high command to ensure the presence of Bangladeshi commander General M.A.G. Osmany in the joint forces at the surrender ceremony [of the Pakistani army] and not to include him as one of the signatories [to the surrender document] was a major political blunder; a major political blunder.”
[There] The official excuse given for his absence was that a helicopter had left to carry him. But it did not reach Dhaka in time for the surrender ceremony. The widely held suspicion is that his [Osmany] helicopter was diverted to keep the focus on the Indian military commanders throughout the surrender ceremony, so that he could not reach Dhaka in time. This unfortunate blunder could have been avoided by India. The incident caused quite a stir in political circles in Bangladesh.
Many political misunderstandings arose in the early days of India-Bangladesh relations after Bangladesh's independence, which could have been avoided if Osmany had been present at the surrender ceremony.'
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs concluded the Facebook post by saying, "We celebrate our glorious victory in 1971; we celebrate the truth."