October Coup
By: Mohammed Hyder
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It is 1948. A newly-independent India is trying to persuade Hyderabad to join the Indian union. Negations are difficult for both sides. State Congress, now operating from Indian territory, has launched a
campaign of violent raids, designed to cripple civil administration in
the border areas, and provoke an annexation. The leading Islamic party
in Hyderabad, in an equally rash move, has created a para-military
body, the Razakars, to counter the threat to Hyderabad’s borders.
For Mohammed Hyder of the Hyderabad Civil Service, the newly appointed Collector of Osmanabad District, both the wayward State
Congress and the Razakars are a threat to law and order.
In September 1948, its patience at an end, India invades Hyderabad and sets up a military's government. Many senior officials are suspended, Hyder included. In due course he is arrested and 23 cases are filed against him, including 14 murders, arson and loot. With grace and wit, this memoir gently assails our preconceptions –
while supporting its claims with telling evidence from government
It is 1948. A newly-independent India is trying to persuade Hyderabad to join the Indian union. Negations are difficult for both sides. State Congress, now operating from Indian territory, has launched a
campaign of violent raids, designed to cripple civil administration in
the border areas, and provoke an annexation. The leading Islamic party
in Hyderabad, in an equally rash move, has created a para-military
body, the Razakars, to counter the threat to Hyderabad’s borders.
For Mohammed Hyder of the Hyderabad Civil Service, the newly appointed Collector of Osmanabad District, both the wayward State
Congress and the Razakars are a threat to law and order.
In September 1948, its patience at an end, India invades Hyderabad and sets up a military's government. Many senior officials are suspended, Hyder included. In due course he is arrested and 23 cases are filed against him, including 14 murders, arson and loot. With grace and wit, this memoir gently assails our preconceptions –
while supporting its claims with telling evidence from government