...The fate of Subhas Chandra Bose, leader of the Indian National Army which collaborated with the Japanese and Germans against the British in the second world war, remains a mystery after a six-year investigation into his disappearance contradicted the official version of events. Bose, known in India as Netaji or respected leader, was presumed to have died of burns in a plane crash in Taiwan shortly after the Japanese surrender in August 1945. However a commission led by supreme court judge M.K. Mukherjee said yesterday Bose did not die in the crash and his supposed ashes, kept at Renkoji Temple near Tokyo, were those of a Japanese soldier not those of the Indian hero...All this, the report concludes, was a "smokescreen" by the Japanese authorities to ensure "Netaji's safe passage"...more...
See also the Hindustan Times and the Times of India. One man who is convinced he died is Netaji-loyalist A M Nair, of Nair's restaurant in Ginza (who cropped up in this thread). His reasoning? "If he had survived, he would have contacted Nairsan. What other evidence did the world need to believe that Netaji was not alive?"