Indian PM stands defiant in face of P.U.F. incursion.
Prime Minister Subhadra Nehru posing with newly adopted Garuda flag. The flag is a throwback to an Indonesian Garuda flag, as is the new national song:
Sept. 18 2049
As country after country has fallen to The P.U.F. and its growing of army of vassal (see Slave) countries the free remaining holdouts have shrunk considerably in size, India’s former deputy minister of home affairs, Subhadra Nehru, now India’s prime minister and defacto spiritual leader holds little more than the clean island of Sri Lanka, and small pockets of impassable mountain and snow in the himalayas, somehow remaining under P.U.F. radar while bouncing back and forth frequently between an outdated historical military base atop Pidurutalagala, Sri Lanka’s highest mountain peak. and Kangchenjunga, India’s highest peak, and home of the mythical and likely fictional valley of immortality.
“Beyul Demoshon”
But the ever defiant prime minister has been rallying troops in the form of guerrilla insurgents not just in India but in far flung countries around the world.
These agents of Anti-P.U.F. insurgency have taken to calling themselves Garuda’s feathers, or simply feathers.
Meanwhile the considerably more stable nations of Britain and France, two of india’s closest allies, have relinquished the fight and become P.U.F. affiliates in a move many are referring to as the death knell of European freedom. U.S. president McMahon has intensified pro P.U.F. statements in recent weeks, despite remaining independent.
Sri Lanka’s floating island city commissioned from Sweden has recently been completely and many experts say it would be more defensible if properly militarized, but PM Nehru has vowed to remain on land until an undisclosed missing national treasure has been found and secured.