Dr Homi Nusserwanji Sethna passes away
By (FINN) Frontier India News Network | September 8th, 2010 | Category: People | 1 Comment »
Dr Homi Nusserwanji Sethna who was responsible for developing the first spent fuel reprocessing plant in Asia and played a major role in India’s first successful nuclear tests at Pokhran in 1974, passed away yesterday.
The Prime Minister in a condolence message scientist’s son Shri Rustam Sethna wrote “Dr. Sethna was a brilliant nuclear scientist and an exceptional human being. His contribution to the development and production of nuclear materials and thereby to the country’s efforts to build energy security is immense. He was a pillar of India’s nuclear energy programme in the early years.”
Dr. Sethna was a nuclear scientist and a chemical engineer. His hard work helped in establishing first ever India reprocessing plant in 1959. Plutonium for the Indian peaceful Nuclear Explosion in 1974 was extracted from this plant.
How the C.I.A. Killed Bhabha and Shastri
I am India’s expert in strategic defence and the father of India’s strategic program, including the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program. I have written in my blog titled ‘Nuclear Supremacy For India Over U.S.’, which can be found by a Yahoo search with the title, about how Robert Crowley, former Assistant Deputy Director of Clandestine Operations of the CIA, gave documents of his own top secret operations to his friend, historian Gregory Douglas and described in detail how the C.I.A. has done “business” with Russian intelligence agencies for many decades, how the C.I.A. directly arranged the plane crash which killed Homi Bhabha but relied on Russian intelligence agencies, with which it did “business”, to assassinate Shastri who had given a go ahead for an Indian nuclear weapons program. The Russian intelligence agencies — large parts of which were brought on the C.I.A.’s payroll — brought down the Soviet Union. After a letter of mine in Indian Express in the early nineties which appeared under the editor’s heading “Grab This Opportunity” regarding a Russian proposal to form a Russia-China-India alliance, P. V. Narasimha Rao sent the head of India’s submarine-launched ballistic missile program to Russia to get help, where he died as Shastri did. When, in a letter to the press, I pointed out that this was the “help” the Russians had provided, the Russians hastily withdrew a delegation that was visiting India.