17-12-2024
12:30 PM
Prelims: History of India & Indian National Movement.
Mains: Modern Indian history from about the middle of the eighteenth century until the present- significant events, personalities, issues.
The Kanpur Conspiracy Case (Kanpur Bolshevik Conspiracy Case) was a controversial court case initiated by the British government in 1924 in British India. The case targeted several newly turned communists, including M.N. Roy, Muzaffar Ahmad, S.A. Dange, Shaukat Usmani, Nalini Gupta, and Singaravelu Chettiar. They were charged with conspiring to overthrow British rule in India through a violent revolution.
The case brought significant attention to communism in India, as newspapers extensively covered the trial and the communist doctrines
The Kanpur Bolshevik Conspiracy Case, a highly controversial legal trial, was initiated in British India in 1924. It marked one of the first major government actions against communist activities in the country. After the Peshawar case in 1922, the British government initiated two more conspiracy trials: one in Kanpur in 1924 and another in Meerut in 1929.
Before the Kanpur Conspiracy Case was initiated, India was undergoing significant political and social changes. During this period, the Indian masses joined the national freedom movement, and major political ideologies emerged on the national stage. Further, international influences played a significant role in shaping the ideas of Indian political thinkers during this time.
Inspired by Karl Marx and socialist thinkers, groups advocating socialism and communism influenced the rise of a left-wing faction within Congress, led by Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose.
The Communist Party of India (CPI) in Tashkent (1920), was established by M.N. Roy, Abani Mukherji, and others. M.N. Roy became the first person elected to lead the Comintern. Communists aimed to overthrow the King Emperor's sovereignty over British India through a revolution and achieve complete independence from Britain.
The trial took place in Kanpur (then Cawnpore). Defendants were accused of receiving funding and ideological support from the Soviet Union. The prosecution presented evidence of pamphlets, speeches, and secret meetings promoting communist ideology.
The court sentenced the accused to varying prison terms, but the trial brought widespread attention to communist movements in India. It also highlighted the increasing influence of Marxist and socialist ideas among Indian nationalists.
The Kanpur Conspiracy Case played a significant role in actively introducing communism to the Indian public. After the Kanpur case, Britain claimed to have finished off the communists.
Q1. What happened in the Kanpur Conspiracy Case?
Ans. The Case involved the arrest and trial of several prominent Indian communists: S.A. Dange, Muzaffar Ahmed, Nalini Gupta, and Shaukat Usmani, in 1924.
Q2. What is Kanpur Conspiracy Case?
Ans. The Kanpur Conspiracy Case was a legal trial held in 1924 in British India targeting revolutionaries accused of plotting to incite a violent revolution inspired by Bolshevik ideals.
Q3. What was the reason for the Kanpur Conspiracy Case?
Ans. The Case was initiated because British government believed that a group of newly turned communists were conspiring to overthrow British rule in India through a violent revolution
Q4. What were the charges in the Kanpur Conspiracy Case?
Ans. The charges against the accused in the Kanpur Conspiracy Case included attempting to overthrow the King Emperor's rule in British India through a violent revolution.
Q5. What is another name for the Kanpur Conspiracy Case?
Ans. Another name for the Kanpur Conspiracy Case is the Kanpur Bolshevik Conspiracy Case of 1924.
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