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Why wasn't Lal Bahadur Shastri's body forensically examined?

Anuj DharSeptember 28, 2018 | 18:37 IST

The death of Lal Bahadur Shastri, India’s second Prime Minister, was mired in controversy right from the time his body arrived in Delhi, hours after his demise in Tashkent early morning on January 11, 1966. At the airport itself, there was an attempt to prevent his family members from taking a look at the body.

When family members, friends and followers eventually saw it, they were horrified.

As Shastri’s wife Lalita noted, his body had taken a dark blue hue, even though the PM had been dead for barely for a few hours. There were also some white patches on the face. Lalita Shastri recalled: “We were not allowed to go near it even when the dead body was being bathed. It was only after much insistence that we were allowed. Shastri ji’s face and body had turned blue and were greatly swollen. [The] body was so bloated that the vest had to be torn off it and the kurta could be removed only with difficulty… Later on, when some people pointed to the spots on the face someone present quickly brought sandal paste in a small bowl and smeared the whole face with it.. but the spots could not be hidden in spite of the sandal coating.”

Certain cut marks were noted in the stomach area and on the back of his neck.

An official explanation, coming after four inexplicably long years, elucidated that the cut in the stomach was made for introducing the embalming fluid in the body. The existence of any incision on the neck was flatly denied, despite the fact that the family members, among others, clearly saw the cut. There is no reason why they should be disbelieved.

In the words of former Delhi Congress chief and Shastri ji’s follower Jagdish Kodesia:

“We saw a cut at the back of the neck and a cut on the stomach where sticking plaster had been pasted to block the outflow. But the cut at the neck was leaking blood and the sheets, pillows and the clothes used by him were all soaked in it.. We approached the leadership with the request that the body be sent for postmortem. We were told not to make such a request as this would adversely affect international relations.”

Anuj Dhar’s latest book Your Prime Minister is Dead  will hit the stands soon. (Photo: Vitasta Publishing Private Limited)

Since a postmortem was never conducted, neither in India nor in Soviet Russia (as I was given to understand through RTI responses in 2009 and afterwards), the chance to resolve this riddle was lost. Today, all we have is the pictures of Shastri’s body taken in Tashkent and then in Delhi, details of the embalming process performed by senior Soviet doctors and accounts of those who observed the body in Delhi.

In the course of writing my book, I supplied this information to some forensic pathologists and other experts, inquiring whether the condition of Shastri’s body, as seen in the pictures and described by his family, was “consistent with the official description of his death and the subsequent embalming process?”

Many refused, not wanting to stray into a sensitive subject matter, while others, requesting anonymity, stated that as per their experience of dealing with such matters, it was a clear case of poisoning. All the same, three experts were good enough to make their observations.

Dr Ajay Kumar Gupta, a reputed forensic pathologist who served as head of the Department of Forensic Medicine at both Calcutta Medical College and Calcutta National Medical College, stated that “it is not only well-known to attending doctors, but also to all the concerned politicians and government officials that in all cases of sudden deaths of an old person above 50/60 years, it is not at all possible to decipher/declare the actual cause of death and its manner suddenly under a highly critical/peculiar/suspicious circumstances, in a foreign country”.

He added: "From the photographs of dead Lal Bahadur Shastri, a strong suspicion arises that it may be a case of death due to some vegetable poison acting on the heart, which can be excluded only by a thorough and detailed medico-legal postmortem examination".  

Photo: Twitter

He wondered why the Shastri family “did not personally go to the officer-in-charge of the local police station, and lodge a written request for holding postmortem examination”.

Dr Soumya Chakraborty, an anatomist and embalming expert, consulted with experienced forensic experts “without disclosing the identity of the subject under study”. After getting their inputs, she opined that “poisoning cannot be ruled out”.

She said, "Bluish discoloration means reduced haemoglobin, which further indicates either poisoning or asphyxial death."

Bloating, a sign of putrefaction, she added, "Occurs in freezing or cold temperature only after 48 hours,” whereas Shastri's body was embalmed and brought to India the same day he died in Tashkent. She pointed out that “postmortem can be done even after embalming, though embalming interferes with toxicological studies”.

Dr Sayan Biswas, MD in forensic medicine and toxicology also did not rule out poisoning. He too underlined that in cases of a sudden death, it is mandatory to perform an autopsy.

“According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), ‘Death is said to be sudden or unexpected when a person not known to have been suffering from any dangerous disease, injury or poisoning is found dead or dies within 24 hours after the onset of terminal illness’. In India, it is mandatory to perform an autopsy upon any death falling under the provisions of inquest as per Sections 174 and 176 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973, and so on. There are even provisions of exhumations and second autopsy too.”

Photo: The Indian Express

To this I can add that in the USSR of those days, extreme care was taken to ascertain the cause of death, particularly in cases of suspected poisoning, accidental deaths and murder. In case of suspicions of poisoning, a complete chemical examination was made of all organs and in some instances organs were sent to labs for examination.

Both Chakraborty and Biswas indicated that the quantity of embalming fluid used to preserve Shastri's body was inadequate. (There were allegations that embalming was done to fudge the telltale signs of poisoning.)

According to Biswas, the white patches on Shastri's body were a result of the embalming fluid not reaching a certain area due to some pressure. A possible explanation for the hole in the posterior part of the neck was that cerebrospinal fluid might have been drawn from Shastri's corpse. This procedure is performed in the course of forensic investigations to identify the presence of drugs or poisons in the bodies of murder, accidental overdose or suicide victims.

Since it has emerged that the Soviets suspecting poisoning and offering to carry out a postmortem examination, was deviously concealed by our government, it is highly likely that they carried out some tests before sending Shastri’s body to India. While in 2009, the Ministry of External Affairs told me under RTI that their concerned division had no records about Shastri's death, common sense would dictate that the Russians must have, till date, retained a detailed account of Shastri's death, which our government never tried to access.

On the question of poisoning, Dr Nirmalya Roychowdhury, a member of American Board of Internal Medicine, told me that an “ideal homicidal poison” is one that can “simulate the signs and symptoms of a natural disease and also which can hardly be found in autopsy or even in putrefaction”.

Photo: The Indian Express

Both, Biswas and Roychowdhury, gave example of aconite, a vegetable poison whose ingestion can cause heart attack. The suspicion in Shastri matter hovered around Jan Mohammed, the Indian ambassador’s cook, who was subsequently arrested by the KGB — and yet government of India gave him a clean chit, without ever mentioning that he had been picked up by the KGB for interrogation soon after Shastri died.  

Jan Mohammed was subsequently posted at the Rashtrapati Bhawan.

His employer, Ambassador (and future Foreign Secretary) TN Kaul later pressurised the recently-deceased journalist and Shastri's media advisor Kuldip Nayar to refute the poisoning theory. Kaul, a man who was vocal about things sundry in his long life, never uttered anything worthwhile about Shastri’s death — about which he knew more than anyone else. Our diplomats world-over are known for pontificating the need to follow a Gandhian path of truth and non-violence.

Roychowdhury made a pertinent reference to the death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat — how years after his death, his body was exhumed and upon investigation it was found that he had actually been poisoned. "I think, for any person who is going to be cremated and not buried, the authorities need to be even more sceptical as the option of exhumation and examination in future does not exist," he said.

In 1966, authorities in India comprised people who were worldly-wise and far more morally upright than people are today. They must have been aware of these basic things. What did they do? Why didn't Health Minister Sushila Nayyar, an eminent doctor and Mahatma Gandhi’s close aide, take any action? None of the official responses offer any credible explanation.

Also read: Why Lal Bahadur Shastri was one of India's greatest PMs

Last updated: September 28, 2018 | 18:37
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