British Civil Servant

Chapter 341 Gandhi Is a Traitor

As a paper-maker, Alan Wilson thought he had done everything he could. Of course, this is also inseparable from the full support of the warm family of the British Indian civil servants.

The situation in British India has undergone a slight but definitely beneficial change to the British Empire. Every day of social stability, British India will create a day of wealth for the British Empire.

But is it now? It is also time to return to the traditional divide and rule that governed British India. Under the premise that the independence of British India has become a foregone conclusion, there is nothing wrong with muddying the water and creating some contradictions.

Contradictions already exist, so is it wrong to use them? Accusing the British Empire of using contradictions to maintain the rule of British India, Alan Wilson said that the grapes are sour. No matter how upright it is to blame the British country, it is actually the case.

What anti-colonial, anti-imperialist and anti-feudalism! Later, I didn’t look at the countries that supported Indians, what they really did to help India. Of course, when you accuse others, you are justified, but it's your turn and you can't stand it anymore.

But this is the way the world is, India can’t do it, but the British Empire can do it well...

Conflicts such as war and turmoil are the basic manifestations of the current international community. Although peace and development are still recognized by all countries, when a major crisis occurs, all countries still put their own security and interests first, so that the entire international community has closed part of its sense of fairness to external and internal speech for various reasons.

Indians also know that family ugliness should not be publicized, but at the crossroads where British India is destined to be independent, Alan Wilson feels that there is nothing wrong with being transparent. What is wrong with maintaining transparency?

Nehru and Patel have their own fans, and there are quite a few supporters. In fact, you can see with your own eyes just by walking around.

Thanks to Gandhi's mediation, Patel and Nehru's supporters are still stable in political rallies, but how can such an occasion be 100% sure? Such a large gathering, with tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of people participating, is quite normal for a little incident to happen.

This political rally originated in Mumbai is no longer strictly prohibited in what is now British India. The local colonial establishment turned a blind eye to this.

No one knows when the conflict started. A group of Patel's supporters started their own super god journey, holding a machete and shouting Patel's name Sardar, which means leader's pun, and launched a bloody massacre against the enemy, Nehru's supporters, at the rally.

There was a sudden massacre, and the unarmed Nehru supporters became victims of the knife, and the whole block became a shura field, but for the large number of people who participated in the rally, this little confusion was really not a problem.

When the vast majority of people who participated in the rally discovered this, greater chaos occurred. The crowd pushed and trampled each other, coupled with the fanatical atmosphere, resulting in huge chaos.

By this time the colonial government in Bombay, knowing the supporters of Nehru and Patel, had caused the conflict. Only then hastily assumed the responsibility of the government and went to the place where the incident happened to quell the incident.

The conflict between two candidate supporters in Mumbai, and the resulting tragedy, spread to New Delhi immediately.

"Mr. Nehru, it seems that we still can't reach an agreement on the distribution of Nepalese soldiers." Allen Wilson shook his head indifferently. "With all due respect, the Nepalese battalion, like the Indian troops, is an armed force of the British Empire. In the future, when India becomes independent, why should the Nepalese be owned by India? Is there any reason for that?"

In 1815, the British Army had its first combat battalion composed of Gurkhas. Since then, the tradition of Gurkhas serving in the British Army has continued to this day.

During World War II, there were 200,000 Gurkhas who fought for the British Empire. Of course, there were not so many Gurkhas after the war. However, there are more than 20 combat battalions,

Does Britain need these mercenaries now?

Of course it is needed. London has asked British India to try its best to send these mercenaries to Malaya to prevent the Netherlands in the East Indies from posing a threat to Malaya if they can't hold on.

In fact, what Alan Wilson is doing now is the Kathmandu Agreement in history, but it is impossible for him to go to Nepal, so the Rana delegation, which has just left for a short time, has returned.

In fact, Alan Wilson is not familiar with the Nepalese mercenaries at all, nor does he know the role of these people. He fought here only because London let him fight.

The place where I am most familiar with the history of Nepalese mercenaries is that Fukang'an crossed the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau once and fought against this mountainous country once. Of course, due to the logistical problems that exist in the 21st century, that war was just closed as soon as it was good.

I don't even know how many times Alan Wilson argued with Nehru or Patel. He is now somewhat accustomed to arguing with different Congress leaders in different fields.

During the sensitive period of the handover of power, Nehru and Patel must be present at any time. After all, there is still a position of Deputy Prime Minister of British India in London, and two people are being caught.

At this moment, the commissioner's secretary, Edel, came in with a telegram, "Assistant Allen, Sir Barron asked me to give you this telegram, and you decide whether to hand it over to Mr. Nehru."

As soon as Nehru heard that it was related to him, he looked at it with concern. Is it the appointment letter of the Deputy Prime Minister of British India?

"Dear Mr. Nehru, you really need to know about this matter." With a sad look and an ignorant tone, Alan Wilson forwarded the telegram to Nehru, the emergence of the Mumbai tragedy and the number of casualties caused.

"Such a thing happened?" Nehru looked sad, even he himself didn't realize it, and there was a hint of disappointment when he spoke.

Wasn't it the letter of appointment for the Deputy Prime Minister of British India? Alan Wilson raised his eyebrows, picked up the teacup on his own, and took the time to glance at the hanging clock to see if it was time to get off work.

Immediately Nehru left, and Alan Wilson came out to say goodbye, saying, I hope Nehru will consider the position of the British Empire and reach a win-win agreement on the issue of Nepalese mercenaries.

As for the Mumbai tragedy, this is the internal affairs of the Indians, and as a British colonial government, it is inconvenient for him to interfere. I believe the Congress Party will handle this issue well.

The occurrence of the Mumbai tragedy marked that under the premise that the British left the subcontinent, an undercurrent of receiving the British Empire's heritage had begun to surge, and everyone believed that they should be the beneficiaries. If you are not qualified to be that beneficiary, try to support someone who has that ability and wait for the cake to be distributed.

"The incident in Mumbai is really shocking." Edel was still sighing. "More than 400 people were hacked to death, and thousands of people were killed or injured because of the stampede. It's too shocking."

Alan Wilson squinted at Edel, thinking that there was nothing shocking about it, but it was just a group of Nepalese dressed up as Sikhs and killing people at the rally.

If there is no accident, these platoons of Nepalese mercenaries who came back from Malaya urgently should have left British India by now, and will appear on the Malaya death list in a short time.

The families of these fallen soldiers will receive a pension that is absolutely expensive in the subcontinent. Isn't this a good thing? Do Nepalese naturally like to be soldiers? Is it not for money?

The occurrence of the Mumbai tragedy temporarily kept Nehru and Patel busy, as did Gandhi. Supporters of Nehru and Patel were also furious, accusing each other, and at the same time wanted to bring the murderer to justice.

The last thought was very normal. Alan Wilson was in a hurry, and he had fulfilled their wish and brought the murderer to justice.

Gandhi once again came forward to mediate the conflict between the two giants in the party, pointing out that at this time, do not show the desire to fight for power and profit. This will only make the pursuit of independence a joke.

These words were immediately refuted by the resident writers of The Hindu newspaper, who believed that this was a bloody case created by some peace believers pretending to be Hindus, and wanted to profit from it. And definitely not what Patel supporters intended.

In British India, when things go wrong, the religion of peace is advocated, especially for Patel’s supporters. This is what they believe most. At the same time, the writer of the Hindu newspaper is the widely respected Mr. Singh. He found the precious wealth of Indian history and verified many valuable aspects of Indian civilization, including but not limited to ancient nuclear wars...

Isinger found the peace believers as targets for Patel's conservatives and avoided the internal division of the Congress Party. He felt that as a colonial official of the suzerain country, his father was nothing more than that.

So Alan Wilson used another pseudonym, Jipal, to refute Singh's remarks, and said in a mocking tone, "Gandhi expressed his wish to hand over the future of British India to Ali Jinnah at the internal meeting of the Congress Party. Let the Muslim League rule us..."

When this news appeared in the newspapers, it immediately caused an uproar across the country. None of the Hindus thought that the leader they respected so much would even have the idea of ​​betraying the interests of Hinduism.

For a while, the verbal criticism of Gandhi and the supporters who supported Gandhi overshadowed Nehru, Patel and the Mumbai tragedy.

The leaders of the Congress Party who participated in the meeting that day were recalling who looked suspicious that day. There is no doubt that "a traitor appeared among us."

This is a carnival for key politicians. The world is in chaos and the situation is good. Nehru, Patel, Gandhi, Ali Jinnah, and the top traffic in the subcontinent are all there today, and public opinion has become a pot of porridge.

Chapter 343/1791
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British Civil ServantCh.343/1791 [19.15%]