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Nowhere Man: A biography of Captain Kamal Bakshi, taken as Prisoner of War in the 1971 IndoPak War

Nowhere Man: A biography of Captain Kamal Bakshi, taken as Prisoner of War in the 1971 IndoPak War

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Current price: $3.99
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Nowhere Man: A biography of Captain Kamal Bakshi, taken as Prisoner of War in the 1971 IndoPak War

By None

Nowhere Man: A biography of Captain Kamal Bakshi, taken as Prisoner of War in the 1971 IndoPak War

Current price: $3.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

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Capt. Kamal Bakshi fought in the 1971 IndoPak War and went missing after the Battle of Chhambthe bloodiest battle of 1971. Although no one from his battalion had seen him get killed, no one had been able to locate his body. And so, the military declared him 'Missing, Believed Killed'the ambiguous status assigned to soldiers when their death cannot be confirmed. However, six years after the war, the Indian government changed its mind. The Ministry of External Affairs announced in Parliament that Indian intelligence agencies have reason to believe that Pakistan had not been truthful when it handed over the list of Indian POWs in its custody. It went on to state the names of at least forty Indian soldiers still believed to be in Pakistani custody and one of the names was Kamal Bakshi's. This book has been written by his nephew Shivalik Bakshi. It is his story, recreated from his letters, diaries, recollections of those who crossed paths with him and published accounts of the Battle of Chhamb.
Capt. Kamal Bakshi fought in the 1971 IndoPak War and went missing after the Battle of Chhambthe bloodiest battle of 1971. Although no one from his battalion had seen him get killed, no one had been able to locate his body. And so, the military declared him 'Missing, Believed Killed'the ambiguous status assigned to soldiers when their death cannot be confirmed. However, six years after the war, the Indian government changed its mind. The Ministry of External Affairs announced in Parliament that Indian intelligence agencies have reason to believe that Pakistan had not been truthful when it handed over the list of Indian POWs in its custody. It went on to state the names of at least forty Indian soldiers still believed to be in Pakistani custody and one of the names was Kamal Bakshi's. This book has been written by his nephew Shivalik Bakshi. It is his story, recreated from his letters, diaries, recollections of those who crossed paths with him and published accounts of the Battle of Chhamb.

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