Core Viewpoint - The Indian Minister of Culture and Tourism, G. Kishan Reddy, has called for Sonia Gandhi to return letters and documents belonging to India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, to the Prime Minister's Museum and Library, asserting that these materials belong to the nation rather than an individual [1][3]. Group 1 - The Prime Minister's Museum and Library, which was established after Nehru's death, is responsible for preserving documents related to all Indian Prime Ministers, with approximately 250 million documents stored, including around 400,000 related to Nehru [1][3]. - Documents related to Nehru were marked as "held in trust" rather than donated or transferred, leading to a dispute over their ownership [1][3]. - In April 2008, under Sonia Gandhi's direction, a request was made to retrieve Nehru's private family letters and notes, resulting in the transfer of over 50 boxes containing 26,000 documents to her [1][3]. Group 2 - The issue of Nehru's documents has become a point of contention between the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the opposition Indian National Congress (INC) [3]. - The Prime Minister's Museum and Library has consistently asserted the need to recover these documents, with recent discussions about whether they are "missing" [3]. - The Minister confirmed that no Nehru documents were found missing during a 2025 inspection and clarified that they are still in Sonia Gandhi's possession [3].
印政府要求保管印度首任总理尼赫鲁的信件,呼吁国大党前主席归还
Huan Qiu Shi Bao·2025-12-29 22:49