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Narasimha Rao, not Vajpayee, was the PM who set India on a nuclear explosion path

But u can't change the fact he was congress leader I rest my case

So was Patel, Shastri and numerous other stalwarts who did tremendous work for the nation.
It's not Congress but what it represents NOW is what we hate.

In fact what happened to PVN Rao adds to the number of things that is wrong with it and why it must either kick the family out or self-destruct.
 
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But u can't change the fact he was congress leader I rest my case

So Jinnah was a member of congress too. So can we say because of that Congress is responsible for division of India?

People legacy is not determined by membership at a certain point of time...but what transpired afterwards till the present.

Like I have said, let congress today even mention PVN Rao for something, even regarding this analysis of India's nuclear program in the 90s. No one is stopping congress from claiming his legacy. But they are mute, uncomfortable spectators when BJP brings up PVN Rao and praises him. Why is that?

Congress of today is NOT the congress of PVN Rao. It has been thoroughly corrupted by a first family and its sycophants. They are so bitter about PVN Rao, that even after they humiliated him at his own funeral and 12 years have passed since that....even today they will never credit him, never mention him,....he is just a blank era between IG/Rajiv/VP Singh and Vajpayee for them.

You can call a congress spokesperson this very day and ask for a comment on PVN Rao legacy. They will put the phone down immediately. Don't take my word for it, see for yourself.
 
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So was Patel, Shastri and numerous other stalwarts who did tremendous work for the nation.
It's not Congress but what it represents NOW is what we hate.

In fact what happened to PVN Rao adds to the number of things that is wrong with it and why it must either kick the family out or self-destruct.
Bhai mere simple question

Atal bihari legacy who will claim bjp or congress

Even today after modi government who will claim his good work

Y both chose bjp bcoz they were close and support bjp party political views whole life

@Nilgiri
 
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Bhai mere simple question

Atal bihari legacy who will claim bjp or congress

Even today after modi government who will claim his good work

Y both chose bjp bcoz they were close and support bjp party political views whole life

@Nilgiri

There is a problem with your thinking.
You assume that those who support BJP hate other parties and all it's leaders. That is not even remotely true.

There a lot of leaders from other parties who I like and there are leaders from BJP whom I hate.

This is not a zero sum issue mate :)

Coming to ABV, the day BJP insults his work, memory and legacy is the day BJP will loose ABV legacy as well. This is what happened with PVN Rao and Congress.

And no, BJP is not appropriating Rao's legacy. They are correcting historical wrong done on stalwarts of non-Family leaders by the family. If people think that BJP is appropriating their legacy, then Congress should look within to see why they let something like this happen.
 
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Bhai mere simple question

Atal bihari legacy who will claim bjp or congress

Even today after modi government who will claim his good work

Y both chose bjp bcoz they were close and support bjp party political views whole life

@Nilgiri

Of course BJP will claim ABV legacy. BJP is a consistent merit based platform for the most part. At its core there is no nepotism-ridden family that both sustains and requires sustenance from its various appendages.

In the ideal world, yes congress would claim PVN Rao legacy....but the fact of the matter is THEY DONT. Now you can investigate why they DONT....or you can keep ignoring that and keep repeating PVN Rao is a congress person blah blah blah and that bhakths cannot claim his legacy.

The fact of the matter is bhakths are driven by one thing when judging a past leader: did he do good for the country (regardless of party affiliation during tenure)? Thats why Bhakths will appreciate PVN Rao, Patel and SC Bose immensely for different reasons. Thats why they can recognise the good side of Indira Gandhi as well (like foreign policy).

Another fact of the matter is congress today is driven by one thing when judging a leader: did he do good for the "gandhi" family?

All you got to do some time in the future is check the difference between what the scamgress do for MMS funeral and compare it to PVN Rao funeral.

You will get you answer about how congress views and appreciates legacies.
 
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Narasimha Rao's final humiliation

December 27, 2004


Appropriately for the capital of a country that has witnessed the death of hope so often, Delhi is a city of tombs. To the many built to encase the remains of numerous emperors of the Mughal era and their successors has been added those from post-1947: Mohandas Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Sanjay Gandhi, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, Charan Singh and Jagjivan Ram.

Neither Mohandas Gandhi nor Sanjay Gandhi was ever the holder of any public office, although some may claim that the contribution to Indian history of the second son of Indira Priyadarshini may not entirely be on the same scale as that of the Mahatma. However, Sanjay too was granted the same privilege of a samadhi in New Delhi.

Both Rajiv Gandhi and Charan Singh died while they were out of office, while Jagjivan Ram -- who never made it to the prime ministership -- was cremated outside of New Delhi, but had his ashes brought back and re-interred in New Delhi

Four of the eight post-1947 tombs have been created to honour members of the Nehru family, whose names are etched on airports, ports, roads, townships, public conveniences and much else in a country that is presumably grateful that such a brood chose to be born in their midst.

As some are aware, Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao was not a member of the Nehru family. He was, however, the first prime minister from south of the Vindhyas, lasted a full term in office, and began the transformation of India through the economic reforms initiated by him.

Most would say that Rao's remains had at least the same right to a slice of prime New Delhi land as did Charan Singh's or Sanjay Gandhi's. The newspapers, who are extremely deferential to the actual powers-that-be, have been told and have reported that Rao was cremated in Hyderabad 'as per the wishes of his family members.'

This statement contains the same measure of truth as the comment that the former prime minister was 'regularly consulted on all important matters' by the current Congress president, Sonia Gandhi.

In fact, despite being a former AICC president and a prime minister, Narasimha Rao was not just excluded from the Congress Working Commitee since the current heir to the Nehru dynasty took charge of the party in 1998, he was not even allowed to become one of the numerous 'special invitees', most of whom get selected for their cheerleader skills rather than any other contribution.

Given that former prime ministers Rajiv Gandhi, Charan Singh and the non-prime minister Sanjay Gandhi were given state funerals and a final resting place in what may be termed the National Capital's 'Zone of the Dead,' the reasons why such a privilege was denied to Narasimha Rao are obscure.

They, however, are depressingly in line with a pattern that dogged Rao since 1992, when he refused to accept that he was not a public servant, but a Nehru Family retainer. In what follows, an account is given of the circumstances behind the final humiliation of Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao.

A short while before he got hospitalised, Narasimha Rao -- whose antennae were always active in picking up signals, especially from the many former and current officials who were admirers of his policies -- was informed of a plan by senior politicians in his own party to implicate him and another former prime minister, Chandra Shekhar, in the assasination of Rajiv Gandhi.

For eight years, Rao had been the only former prime minister to have endured the torture of a series of cases filed against him. These had been masterminded -- and the legwork for them funded -- by the very same individuals who, he was now credibly told, were plotting to implicate him in one of the most heinous crimes of the century. The motive presented for Chandra Shekhar would be revenge -- Rajiv made his life a misery and finally made it impossible for him to remain dependent on Congress support with dignity. That for Narasimha Rao would be the job that he stepped into after the 1991 Lok Sabha election.

To those scripting such Stalin-style show trials, it did not matter that Narasimha Rao had himself asked Rajiv Gandhi in 1991 for permission to retire, and was looking forward during and after the election that year only to writing and to music, and to the company of friends. Or that Rao was the sort of individual who was incapable of violence or vengeance, even against those who were his enemies, which was why -- for example -- the CBI permitted Ottavio Quatrocchi to leave the country.

In Narasimha Rao, forbearance grew to the level of a vice. It was as absurd to imagine him plotting to see Rajiv Gandhi dead as it was to believe that Rajinder Kumar Dhawan planned the demise of the only person he worshipped, Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi.

However, to the Stalinist scriptwriters within the Congress party who hated Rao for his perceived lese majeste, truth and logic were never allowed to remain in the way of a slur.

Shortly before he fell so ill that he had to be taken to hospital for the first time before the final crisis, Narasimha Rao told the writer that it had been a very ugly past few years, thanks to the constant threat of imprisonment hanging over his head. He saw these legal entanglements as a way of paralysing him, removing his capacity to emerge as a player once again, and said that because of their fear of what he could do -- whether justified or not -- they would keep immobilising him through more such stratagems.

PV was calm, he was cynical in his humorous way, but far from resigned. The old fox, whom his father had hoped would become the patwari of his village, felt he had another innings left at the crease, one in which he would once again score a double century. Indeed, he had begun the process of re-entry into active politics by giving me a lengthy interview during the 2004 Lok Sabha election on just why it was wrong to place the destruction of the Babri Masjid at his door, that was carried across a page by The Asian Age.

This was to be followed up by another interview, in which he would explain the conditions in which he and an individual he loved and respected, Manmohan Singh, rescued the Indian economy from collapse, in the process setting it almost free. I would remind him off and on about this second interview, till almost the final days.

Was it the knowledge that yet another conspiracy against him was on the way towards execution that pushed his body beyond the borderline of viable capability? For years, Narasimha Rao had been tended by Sreenath Reddy, one of the finest heart specialists in the world, the son of a close friend -- Raghunatha Reddy -- who was himself as idealistic as his boy. Ever watchful, this surrogate son had monitored PV's health and made sure that the body worked well enough to keep that superb mind working at Concorde speed.

What goes on in the human mind, what short-circuit in the synapses causes a sudden collapse, is impossible to tell. Perhaps it was not this terrible information that pushed him across the red line. Perhaps it was something else. Perhaps it was nothing except perhaps a sudden onset of the common cold.

Even in hospital, even in his final days, PV exuded confidence. The doctors -- and they included many who had grown to love PV the man, if not P V Narasimha Rao the prime minister -- were grim-faced, as were the others clustered outside his room in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. Not so PV.

Strangely, his physical collapse had led to a toughening of his will. The voice was low, one did not have the will to respond and thus force him to expend energy by replying to the reply, but PV was determined to keep on talking about what would be.

This time, he would not make the mistake of not reacting to the torment, he would resist his inbuilt aversion towards his friends fighting back on his behalf and allow them to. There had been something aloof and patrician about the man from Vangara village, that made any effort at self-defense seem a contemptible display of weakness. But he was aloof no more. The eyes were tired but fierce, the voice was often unable to reach the level of becoming audible, but there was a hardening in the timbre that had not always been present during the years in office.

But this fresh dawn never took place. Sometime after noon on December 23, 13 days after he had been brought to the hospital early in the morning following a cardiac incident, PV decided to call it quits. It was more than an hour before the doctors finally did.

Strangely -- or perhaps entirely expectedly -- despite a special Union Cabinet meeting at 3 pm on the subject of his funeral, at his 9 Motilal Nehru Marg home there were no arrangements made to receive the body and place it on a platform, nor flowers, nor any laying out of carpets by the administration for the mourning crowds to sit down on, nor even a shamiana on the lawns.

Finally, Kishore, a friend of PV's, made arrangements for both. The shamiana could get erected only by 8.15 pm. Carpets and flowers too were provided by family and friends and not by what seemed to be a totally bankrupt Government of India. As if to atone for his visible helplessness, the prime minister, Sardar Manmohan Singh, looked visibly moved as he quietly remained by the side of the body, which had been brought in from the hospital a little before 5 pm. As a gesture of supreme graciousness, Sonia Gandhi turned up and even stayed for a few minutes.

While some of those present then may be made to deny this later, the fact is that the family members -- as well as the crowd of mourners -- would have been happy to see the father of economic reform and the first prime minister from the south in the history of Free India be given the same honours as Sanjay Gandhi and Charan Singh, a State funeral in New Delhi and an appropriate memorial. Home Minister Shivraj Patil was clearly the emissary of some Unseen Power, for he came several times to the Rao home from some other place where he had apparently gone for consultations, to insist in his own courteous way on a funeral in Hyderabad.

It was clear to observers that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was not being consulted on this matter, there was not even a pretence of that on the part of the emissaries of the Unseen Power. A few such as Ahmed Patel could be observed giving regular updates via cellphone to Somebody about the situation in 9 Motilal Nehru Marg. A very useful man, Ahmed Patel.

It was decided Somewhere that PV's body would be sent back to his home state. Ironically, PV had spent the previous 30 years in New Delhi, as a Cabinet minister, as an AICC general secretary and as prime minister. Even when he had been the prime minister, no member of his family lived with him, they would come on (infrequent) visits.

In his last years to, he lived alone. Thus the attempt to justify a shift to Hyderabad on the grounds that "he was not a Delhi resident" was somewhat of a stretch. Another argument used to justify the move to Hyderabad for the final obsequies was that the Vajpayee Cabinet had passed a resolution against any more samadhis. Again, for a regime that has been talking of 'detoxifying' the country from the misdeeds of the Vajpayee Parivar era, this was somewhat ingenious.

The family behaved with quiet dignity throughout. They said that as their father had been a Congressman, a freedom fighter, a prime minister, they would leave it to the Congress party and the government as to what was to be done.

The only moment of friction came when a high official suggested that if the sentiment was so overwhelming within the circle of those who loved PV that the cremation take place in the national capital, then very well, it would take place, but in the Delhi cantonment, as though PV were some bacillus that the refined gentry living in the Lutyens Zone did not want to see contaminate their environment.

The response to this suggestion on the part of those close to PV was that they would then cremate him at the Nigambodh Ghat, along with the other common men, which after all was all that he seemed to be to the powers-that-be.

It was at this stage that a Heavy Hitter arrived, in the person of Y S Rajshekhar Reddy, chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, who 'cajoled' those close to PV into 'agreeing' that it would be best to cremate him in Hyderabad. Around this time, those who looked like Intelligence Bureau sleuths began nosing around the rooms. It had been known that PV had kept voluminous records, including the draft of a book on the Emergency. It is unlikely that any of this will ever emerge into the daylight, except in a very sanitised way.

The next day, December 24, the body of the former Congress prime minister was brought to the gates of the AICC office at 24, Akbar Road and kept there for 20 minutes, 'to pay homage.' Apparently, the body was so heavy that it would not have been possible to lift what was left of PV from the gun carriage into the Congress headquarters, which would have been the civilised thing to do.

After this final humiliation, P V Narasimha Rao left New Delhi for Hyderabad, this time for good.

http://www.rediff.com/news/2004/dec/28monu.htm



How Sonia Led Congress Tried to Destroy PV Narasimha Rao’s Legacy


Posted By: HinduPost Staff June 28, 2016

Today is the 95th birth anniversary of Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao (PVNR), arguably the best Prime Minister that Bharat has had till date. PVNR served as the 9th Prime Minister of Bharat from 1991-96 at an extraordinarily difficult time when the country was on the verge of bankruptcy and economic collapse. He is considered the architect of economic reforms & liberalization that ushered in an era of growth and rescued us from the crisis created by decades of the statist economic model (license-permit raj) enforced by Nehru and Indira.

Born in 1921 in Hyderabad State, PVNR was a freedom fighter (he fought against the Nizam of Hyderabad’s Razakar Army) who joined the Congress party after Bharat won independence in 1947. A loyal Congressman his entire life, PVNR held important cabinet portfolios like Home, Defence, Foreign Affairs in the Governments of Indira and Rajiv Gandhi. After the assassination of Congress President Rajiv Gandhi in 1991, PVNR rose to head the minority Congress Government as Bharat’s first Prime Minister from South Bharat, and was the first person outside the Nehru-Gandhi family to serve as PM for five continuous years.

Nation above party interests
PV Narasimha Rao was a path-breaking leader in more ways than one. A scholar par excellence (he was fluent in 17 languages), he openly opposed the dynasty sycophants who have dominated the Congress since Independence. After Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination in 1991, when durbaris like Arjun Singh & Vincent George proposed that Rajiv’s wife Sonia be made the Congress chief, the meritocratic PVNR shot back sayingWhy should the Congress party be hitched to the Nehru-Gandhi family like train compartments to the engine?“ PVNR went on to become PM after Congress MPs voted for him in an internal party election.

Even though he was leading a minority Government, PVNR appointed deserving people to key positions, even crossing party-lines when required. His first choice for Finance Minister was ex-RBI Governor I.G. Patel, but when Patel declined, PVNR chose a non-political economist & bureaucrat Manmohan Singh for the job. He also appointed Subramanian Swamy, an Opposition party member as the Chairman of the Commission on Labour Standards and International Trade and sent another Opposition leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee, to represent Bharat in a UN meeting at Geneva.

PVNR’s Historic Legacy Whitewashed by Vindictive Sonia
After Congress lost the 1996 elections under PVNR’s leadership, the Congress swiftly reverted to type with the next in line of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, Sonia Gandhi, regaining control of the party through faithful family loyalists like Arjun Singh, MS Aiyar etc. This 2004 rediff piece by MD Nalapat informs us, “Despite being a former AICC (All India Congress Committee) president and a prime minister, PVNR was not just excluded from the Congress Working Commitee since Sonia Gandhi took charge of the party in 1998, he was not even allowed to become one of the numerous ‘special invitees’, most of whom get selected for their cheerleader skills rather than any other contribution.”

When PVNR died in 2004 in Delhi after suffering a heart attack, his body was not allowed inside the AICC (All India Congress Committee) building. He was denied a state funeral in New Delhi which an outstanding ex-PM like him deserved – he was finally cremated in Hyderabad. Under Sonia, Congress has consistently refused to recognize PVNR’s role in steering the country in difficult times, and he has been removed from history books while even absolute non-achievers like Rahul Gandhi get a mention!

In a speech to mark the 125th anniversary of the Congress, the party president Sonia Gandhi made it a point to ignore PVNR, while crediting her husband Rajiv Gandhi for scripting the economic policies that were implemented by the PVNR Government.

Even today, dynasty loyalists like the controversial Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar, spout nothing but venom for a man who dragged Bharat out of an economic mire and put it on the path to become the fastest growing economy today.


When the present day Congress led by Sonia Gandhi cannot even honor one of its own, what hope can we have that this party will show a bipartisan approach in passing important economic legislation like GST. Sonia and her corrupt coterie would do well to borrow a leaf from the PM’s book who paid tributes to PVNR on his 95th birth anniversary.

PVNR deserves the Bharat Ratna (our highest civilian honor) for his outstanding service to the nation. While members of the Nehru Gandhi dynasty like Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi were quick to award themselves with the honor, Sonia Gandhi ensured that PVNR was denied this recognition during the UPA 1 & 2 terms. It is time that the current NDA Government corrects this anomaly and recognizes the scholarly ex-PM from Hyderabad who was consigned to the sidelines of history by the very political party he served with such distinction.

https://www.hindupost.in/history/how-sonia-led-congress-tried-to-destroy-pv-narasimha-raos-legacy/



Congress honours Rao amid fears BJP may commandeer former PM's legacy
By Amit Agnihotri

Published: 16:35 EST, 28 June 2015 | Updated: 18:19 EST, 28 June 2015
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahom...P-commandeer-former-PM-s-legacy.html#comments

Concerned that the BJP may hijack the legacy of yet another party leader as it did with those of Mahatma Gandhi and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the Congress on Sunday remembered former Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao on his 94th birth anniversary.

Rao, who headed a Congress government between 1991 and 1996, and passed away in 2004, was disowned by the Grand Old Party during the 10-year-rule of the previous UPA government.

Sources said Rao never had an easy relationship with the Gandhi family, and hence could never find favour with the grand old party.

2A10450D00000578-3142474-Congress_leader_Digvijaya_Singh_pays_tributes_to_late_prime_mini-a-29_1435533258642.jpg

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Congress leader Digvijaya Singh pays tributes to late prime minister PV Narasimha Rao on his birth anniversary in Hyderabad

Since the NDA government came to power last year, Congress managers have been concerned over its attempts to hijack the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi through the Clean India campaign, that of Sardar Patel through the National Unity Day celebrations, and that of Rao by planning a memorial in his honour in the national Capital.


“Our humble tribute to Former Prime Minister, PV Narasimha Rao on his birth anniversary today,” the Congress tweeted.

The Grand Old Party’s remembrance of Rao was also driven by the fact that the Congress failed to capture the public imagination even after the previous UPA created Telangana out of Andhra Pradesh in its last leg.

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PV Narasimha Rao headed a Congress government between 1991 and 1996 and passed away in 2004

As a result, the Congress lost badly in both the general and Assembly elections last year in both Telangana, where the local player TRS took the cake, and in Andhra Pradesh, where the TDP came to power.

The TDP government had moved a resolution last October urging the Centre to build a memorial for Rao, who hailed from Telangana.

In May 2013, the UPA government blocked demands for separate memorials, with the Cabinet deciding to set up a common memorial ground — Rashtriya Smriti — in view of paucity of space in the national Capital.

The Centre too remembered Rao, especially for ushering in economic reforms in the country in 1991.

“At last, could erect a memorial, 'Rastriya Smriti' at Delhi for Sri PV Narasimha Rao, who ushered in economic reforms in India. I pay tributes on his 94th Jayanti,” Union Urban Development and Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu, who belongs to Andhra Pradesh, tweeted.

Interestingly, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who headed the UPA government from 2004 to 2014, was Rao’s finance minister and pushed the economic reforms.

However, there was little mention of Rao during the UPA decade.

The TRS government had also made arrangements to claim the legacy of Rao. In an attempt to regain lost ground, the Congress organised an event at Hyderabad to pay tributes to the former prime minister.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahom...-fears-BJP-commandeer-former-PM-s-legacy.html



‘Sonia no Indira, Nehru legacy has reached a dead end’
By PANKAJ VOHRA | | 25 October, 2015

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Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi’s political advisor Makhan Lal Fotedar sees a very bleak future for the Congress as “it has no one to provide direction”. The party refuses to learn and “there is nothing right which the party has done or is doing. It saddens me that the Nehru-Gandhi legacy has reached a cul-de-sac”.
In the concluding pages of his book, The Chinar Leaves, (published by Harper Collins) he has observed that “Sonia Gandhi will go down in history as the longest serving Congress president even if not the most distinguished. When she took over as the chief in 1998, the party was on the verge of disintegration. In fact she helped to rebuild it from a position where its seats had come down to about 116. The supreme irony is that 17 and half years later, the party is again on the verge of a collapse. However, this time there is no saviour. Rahul Gandhi’s leadership is unacceptable to the people of this country and Sonia Gandhi has her best years behind her.”
While acknowledging that Sonia Gandhi was still the unchallenged leader of the party, he has noted that it is, therefore, her responsibility to reinvent the Congress. Blaming Rahul is in a way shifting the blame from the Congress president to someone who has yet to display his leadership skills. “History is threatening to repeat itself. It is a matter of time before Sonia and Rahul’s leadership is challenged from within the party. I will be observing closely how they stand up to this looming challenge, because Sonia is not Indira and Rahul is not Sanjay.”
The astute politician has held sycophants responsible for the party’s current state. He has recalled that during the 2009 general elections, Sonia Gandhi was of the opinion that the Congress would get between 145 and 155 seats but he had categorically told her that the number would be between190 to 210. The party got 206 seats. The reason for the 60 extra seats was that Dr Manmohan Singh enjoyed a very clean image and his persona as a middle class icon led the UPA to victory. However, the sycophants around the Congress president tried to create a perception that the increase in the seats was on account of the active participation of Rahul Gandhi in campaigning and his appeal as a youth icon. Sonia allowed this perception to gain ground, thereby denying the credit to Dr Singh. “It was abundantly clear that Sonia had made up her mind to foist Rahul Gandhi on the party and the country was waiting for the right time.”
Fotedar further notes that Rahul had not been groomed for the job properly and was therefore reluctant to take over the responsibility. The situation was different when Rajiv Gandhi, who too was at one time reluctant, was initiated into politics. Rajiv had the benefit of learning some fundamental things from his mother who understood the intricacies and nuances of Indian politics. Indira was also a great teacher and made Rajiv understand the issues step by step with the assistance of her aides, who were all too willing to help him out. It is another thing that Rajiv too did not follow many of Indira’s suggestions and consequently suffered.
He has written, “in the case of Rahul there was nobody to tutor or mentor him. Sonia Gandhi is not Indira Gandhi and was herself dependent on so many people on what she should do. And many of those who advised her were as ignorant as her on many issues on which they were asked to give advice. Rahul had a certain stubbornness and his motivation to become a leader was not very strong. People around Sonia secretly did not wish him to succeed because they realised that if Rahul grew as a leader they would themselves become irrelevant. The dilemma before Sonia was that on one hand she could not do without her coterie while on the other hand she had an overriding desire to see her son succeed in politics. There were too many vested interests around and Sonia was reluctant to accept her responsibility for the decline of the Congress in the war of perceptions.”
Fotedar admits that the Congress and the UPA government were being seen to be both corrupt and inefficient. There was a growing feeling that the Congress was drifting from its secular ideology towards minorityism. “There were occasions when the party while finalising seats for legislatures or Parliament would nominate either a Muslim or a Christian even if there were better qualified candidates available. The party from 2004 was moving into the hands of those who had come from other parties, since Sonia’s coterie found it convenient to deal with outsiders rather than insiders, who were aware of their capacity as well as devious ways. This had led to a huge disconnect as the cadres were greatly disillusioned with the leadership. Leaders and general secretaries who had nothing to do with grassroots politics were foisted from above. A case in point was that of Maharashtra where Prithviraj Chavan was sent as the Chief Minister and Mohan Prakash as the general secretary in charge. Both were ignorant of state politics and many MLAs complained that these two gentlemen did not know them nor did they know these two leaders. Those who represented the party in TV discussions too were people who had come from other parties like Rashid Alvi, Renuka Chowdhury, Sanjay Nirupam and Rajiv Shukla.”
Fotedar has also attached as an annexure a letter written by him to Sonia Gandhi in June 2006, wherein he cautioned her against trivialising the office of the Prime Minister. He expressed his concern over several challenges being faced by the UPA government, which included demands being made by Left parties, controversy over the Office of Profit Bill and the overbearing role of the National Advisory Council (NAC). His letter also mentioned reports pouring in about how various ministries and state governments of the Congress were being run and the manner in which Cabinet ministers were repeatedly challenging the authority of the Prime Minister. “I suggested to her either to take over as the Prime Minister of the country or allow the office of the Prime Minister to function with full authority and dignity. No government where the position of the Prime Minister stood compromised could acquit itself creditably. However, the muted response from the Congress president indicated that my sincere advice and valuable suggestions had fallen on deaf ears and the drift thus continued.”
He has also made mention to the fact that distancing had taken place between him and the Congress president and therefore their interaction had become increasingly infrequent. However, whenever they did meet, he could not refrain from presenting the true picture to her. “I was pained to watch the Congress being taken over by people who had nothing to do with the party’s ideology and traditions. Middlemen, power brokers against whom even Rajiv had spoken during his tenure as the Prime Minister were calling the shots and the grassroots workers and elected representatives were being slowly marginalised. The party leadership had no time for organisational matters and an extra constitutional authority had been created to navigate the task of governance.”

http://www.sundayguardianlive.com/news/1674-sonia-no-indira-nehru-legacy-has-reached-dead-end
 
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Reasons why I feel congress and its lutyen's cycle would never give PVN his due share are:

1. He wasn't from the dynasty and was vehemently against the unwritten hierarchy rule of First family leading INC and the nation.

2. He was from south India.


these are not the reasons

is it so hard for people to understand that the only second pro Hindu non 'atheist/agnostic leader Congress has ever produced was sidelined by the party leadership ?
 
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There is only one bunch of sycophants that disgraced his legacy when his legacy needed the most remembering:

http://www.rediff.com/news/2004/dec/28monu.htm

QUOTE:

But this fresh dawn never took place. Sometime after noon on December 23, 13 days after he had been brought to the hospital early in the morning following a cardiac incident, PV decided to call it quits. It was more than an hour before the doctors finally did.

Strangely -- or perhaps entirely expectedly -- despite a special Union Cabinet meeting at 3 pm on the subject of his funeral, at his 9 Motilal Nehru Marg home there were no arrangements made to receive the body and place it on a platform, nor flowers, nor any laying out of carpets by the administration for the mourning crowds to sit down on, nor even a shamiana on the lawns.

Finally, Kishore, a friend of PV's, made arrangements for both. The shamiana could get erected only by 8.15 pm. Carpets and flowers too were provided by family and friends and not by what seemed to be a totally bankrupt Government of India. As if to atone for his visible helplessness, the prime minister, Sardar Manmohan Singh, looked visibly moved as he quietly remained by the side of the body, which had been brought in from the hospital a little before 5 pm. As a gesture of supreme graciousness, Sonia Gandhi turned up and even stayed for a few minutes.

While some of those present then may be made to deny this later, the fact is that the family members -- as well as the crowd of mourners -- would have been happy to see the father of economic reform and the first prime minister from the south in the history of Free India be given the same honours as Sanjay Gandhi and Charan Singh, a State funeral in New Delhi and an appropriate memorial
. Home Minister Shivraj Patil was clearly the emissary of some Unseen Power, for he came several times to the Rao home from some other place where he had apparently gone for consultations, to insist in his own courteous way on a funeral in Hyderabad.

It was clear to observers that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was not being consulted on this matter, there was not even a pretence of that on the part of the emissaries of the Unseen Power. A few such as Ahmed Patel could be observed giving regular updates via cellphone to Somebody about the situation in 9 Motilal Nehru Marg. A very useful man, Ahmed Patel.

It was decided Somewhere that PV's body would be sent back to his home state. Ironically, PV had spent the previous 30 years in New Delhi, as a Cabinet minister, as an AICC general secretary and as prime minister. Even when he had been the prime minister, no member of his family lived with him, they would come on (infrequent) visits.

In his last years to, he lived alone. Thus the attempt to justify a shift to Hyderabad on the grounds that "he was not a Delhi resident" was somewhat of a stretch. Another argument used to justify the move to Hyderabad for the final obsequies was that the Vajpayee Cabinet had passed a resolution against any more samadhis. Again, for a regime that has been talking of 'detoxifying' the country from the misdeeds of the Vajpayee Parivar era, this was somewhat ingenious.

The family behaved with quiet dignity throughout. They said that as their father had been a Congressman, a freedom fighter, a prime minister, they would leave it to the Congress party and the government as to what was to be done.

The only moment of friction came when a high official suggested that if the sentiment was so overwhelming within the circle of those who loved PV that the cremation take place in the national capital, then very well, it would take place, but in the Delhi cantonment, as though PV were some bacillus that the refined gentry living in the Lutyens Zone did not want to see contaminate their environment.

The response to this suggestion on the part of those close to PV was that they would then cremate him at the Nigambodh Ghat, along with the other common men, which after all was all that he seemed to be to the powers-that-be.

It was at this stage that a Heavy Hitter arrived, in the person of Y S Rajshekhar Reddy, chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, who 'cajoled' those close to PV into 'agreeing' that it would be best to cremate him in Hyderabad. Around this time, those who looked like Intelligence Bureau sleuths began nosing around the rooms. It had been known that PV had kept voluminous records, including the draft of a book on the Emergency. It is unlikely that any of this will ever emerge into the daylight, except in a very sanitised way.

The next day, December 24, the body of the former Congress prime minister was brought to the gates of the AICC office at 24, Akbar Road and kept there for 20 minutes, 'to pay homage.' Apparently, the body was so heavy that it would not have been possible to lift what was left of PV from the gun carriage into the Congress headquarters, which would have been the civilised thing to do.

After this final humiliation, P V Narasimha Rao left New Delhi for Hyderabad, this time for good.

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So don't you dare talk about legacy of PVN Rao if you are a congress supporter and especially if you are some big hoohahh fan of italian waitress and her sardarji mute.

PVN Rao is now pretty much a posthumous honorary member of BJP and Bhakt ideology. If congress wants it back, they are welcome to apologise multi-fold for how they treated him in last few corporeal moments on Earth....replace that first family that treated him this shabbily (on account of his independence from them) and genuinely change their own political strategy and attitude. But then they will become a Bhakt party as well if they do that right?

I mean backstabbing someone when they are dead, that is the ultimate low. But what to expect from first-family dependent scamgress?

Lol I told you about low IQ posts. Narasimha rao went out because towards the end of his tenure Congress image had taken such a bad beating because of urea scam and st Kitts that he LOST the elections. Sonia rose because she rallied and won the election and that's what ultimately counts. As for backstabbing modi backstabbed both atal and advanced. Bhakti talk lot no IQ
 
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Lol I told you about low IQ posts. Narasimha rao went out because towards the end of his tenure Congress image had taken such a bad beating because of urea scam and st Kitts that he LOST the elections. Sonia rose because she rallied and won the election and that's what ultimately counts. As for backstabbing modi backstabbed both atal and advanced. Bhakti talk lot no IQ

By the same logic what should happen to SG & co now that Congress's strength has been reduced to 44 members and could not even get the Leader of Opposition.
 
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Narasimha rao went out because towards the end of his tenure Congress image had taken such a bad beating because of urea scam and st Kitts that he LOST the elections. Sonia rose because she rallied and won the election and that's what ultimately counts.

So in response you treat him like dirt at his own funeral? Because he lost an election? In that case Congress should now treat that Rahul Pappu (and his mother too) as absolute dirt too given how badly they just lost the last elections since thats what "ultimately counts". Lets use your logic and apply it evenly and with no prejudice.

Do you really want to compare what kind of image beating Scamgress has taken in the last few years to what happened under PVN Rao? Compare the seat numbers for a start. But lets see if Congress ever disowns the legacy of Pappu (and Gandhi nepotism scamgress family) because of this terrible debacle they are in now (and will probably stay in forever).

Lets talk outside federal rule too....how many states is congress in sole/controlling power now? Does it even fill up one hand? Does it represent even 10% of India population?

Is the legacy going to be cherished and PVN Rao ignored....just because his name does not have Gandhi in it?....because in this front of election victory/defeat....the scores seem to all be pretty even (win some/ lose some)....heck its the case even for Indira Gandhi even....and you are definitely never going to see a leader come from Gandhi family like that ever again.

As for backstabbing modi backstabbed both atal and advanced. Bhakti talk lot no IQ

Im not talking political maneuvering, congress is absolutely champ at that in comparison. I'm talking about totally dishonouring a previous national leader from your party by mocking him at his own funeral in front of his own family....because he "damaged" the image of congress by losing an election.....but somehow current gandhi family gets a clean chit when they do the same on the back of much larger scams?

The name "Gandhi" means so much to congress that it will justify (a big tree has fallen blah blah) its goons and leaders targeting, raping and killing a whole Sikh community just because 2 of them assassinated their immortal beloved at the time....so of course it makes complete sense a non-Gandhi in comparison is so easily made a scapegoat.

I mean you have to be a good house-Sardarji that speaks only when spoken to...to get the proper "legacy" from the holiest of holies in Congress dynasty.....independent mind or proper leadership? Nope. Whats needed is complete subservience and servility to the first family....if you do well somehow, they can take credit....if you dont....it can hopefully make Pappu look good (given his sheer incompetence). Win win in theory for Gandhi family....too bad (for them) Indian public has now gotten tired of their antics.

Whatever the differences and betrayals within the Modi-Vajpayee-Advani triangle (and there are quite a few)....not one of them will disrepute the other in such a way at a funeral and completely balk at mentioning their positive elements from time to time when the occasion calls for it.

I mean lets see Scamgress party today at least meet the minimum standard of treating PVN Rao legacy like Modi does for Vajpayee. I mean Vajpayee lost an election too right? BJP image took a beating too right? So why the difference between the way they are treated by the two parties they were from today?
 
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So in response you treat him like dirt at his own funeral? Because he lost an election? In that case Congress should now treat that Rahul Pappu (and his mother too) as absolute dirt too given how badly they just lost the last elections since thats what "ultimately counts". Lets use your logic and apply it evenly and with no prejudice.

Do you really want to compare what kind of image beating Scamgress has taken in the last few years to what happened under PVN Rao? Compare the seat numbers for a start. But lets see if Congress ever disowns the legacy of Pappu (and Gandhi nepotism scamgress family) because of this terrible debacle they are in now (and will probably stay in forever).

Lets talk outside federal rule too....how many states is congress in sole/controlling power now? Does it even fill up one hand? Does it represent even 10% of India population?

Is the legacy going to be cherished and PVN Rao ignored....just because his name does not have Gandhi in it?....because in this front of election victory/defeat....the scores seem to all be pretty even (win some/ lose some)....heck its the case even for Indira Gandhi even....and you are definitely never going to see a leader come from Gandhi family like that ever again.



Im not talking political maneuvering, congress is absolutely champ at that in comparison. I'm talking about totally dishonouring a previous national leader from your party by mocking him at his own funeral in front of his own family....because he "damaged" the image of congress by losing an election.....but somehow current gandhi family gets a clean chit when they do the same on the back of much larger scams?

The name "Gandhi" means so much to congress that it will justify (a big tree has fallen blah blah) its goons and leaders targeting, raping and killing a whole Sikh community just because 2 of them assassinated their immortal beloved at the time....so of course it makes complete sense a non-Gandhi in comparison is so easily made a scapegoat.

I mean you have to be a good house-Sardarji that speaks only when spoken to...to get the proper "legacy" from the holiest of holies in Congress dynasty.....independent mind or proper leadership? Nope. Whats needed is complete subservience and servility to the first family....if you do well somehow, they can take credit....if you dont....it can hopefully make Pappu look good (given his sheer incompetence). Win win in theory for Gandhi family....too bad (for them) Indian public has now gotten tired of their antics.

Whatever the differences and betrayals within the Modi-Vajpayee-Advani triangle (and there are quite a few)....not one of them will disrepute the other in such a way at a funeral and completely balk at mentioning their positive elements from time to time when the occasion calls for it.

I mean lets see Scamgress party today at least meet the minimum standard of treating PVN Rao legacy like Modi does for Vajpayee. I mean Vajpayee lost an election too right? BJP image took a beating too right? So why the difference between the way they are treated by the two parties they were from today?

Man you talk sssooooo much BS. Rao was not some kid. He had renough reasons to hate the Gandhis and they had enough reasons to hate him too. Most notably because he unambiguously tried to link Rajiv to Bofors in an effort to curb the Gandhis once and for all. And when Sonia got back into the saddle she dished it back They're not kids. They knew what they were playing at. You're talking about Modi who let loose riots and had Hren Pandya killed and comparing it with some bitching and insults between Rao and Sonia? Get your brain working.
 
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Man you talk sssooooo much BS. Rao was not some kid. He had renough reasons to hate the Gandhis and they had enough reasons to hate him too. Most notably because he unambiguously tried to link Rajiv to Bofors in an effort to curb the Gandhis once and for all. And when Sonia got back into the saddle she dished it back They're not kids. They knew what they were playing at. You're talking about Modi who let loose riots and had Hren Pandya killed and comparing it with some bitching and insults between Rao and Sonia? Get your brain working.

Your sycophancy is refreshing.
Carry on :)
 
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Man you talk sssooooo much BS. Rao was not some kid. He had renough reasons to hate the Gandhis and they had enough reasons to hate him too. Most notably because he unambiguously tried to link Rajiv to Bofors in an effort to curb the Gandhis once and for all. And when Sonia got back into the saddle she dished it back They're not kids. They knew what they were playing at. You're talking about Modi who let loose riots and had Hren Pandya killed and comparing it with some bitching and insults between Rao and Sonia? Get your brain working.

OK so lets accept everything as 100% true here for arguments sake, you are totally fine with Maino Waitress and her thumb sucking pappu as being the core of congress and that congress thus is totally correct in cutting PVN Rao legacy loose and whitewashing everything he did just because he was the last resistance to First Family? At least you will be 100% consistent with Pappuji and his waitress firangi mommy, but please explain and justify to @fsayed that PVN Rao deserves nothing but humiliation, wrath and degradation because of current Congress leadership outright decision....that his treatment at his funeral was thus completely justified....and that the ongoing ignoring of legacy is a completely valid and justified approach by Pappu Maino.

I am glad you will live the rest of your life seeing congress winning fewer and fewer seats, becoming more and more irrelevant to political discourse till it effectively becomes a 3rd rate regional party....capable of only lending support to other alliances like in jungle raj 2.0. Congress image sinking is a glorious thing to behold....with the likes of you holding as hard as possible to the directionless and sinking Pappu ship, INS Nepotism. Lets see if you eventually throw yourself off it like others are increasingly doing, or you will go down to the depths to the bitter end. :lol: i.e are you a hardcore family loyalist to the end, or someone that is finally capable of seeing the situation for what it is.
 
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Narasimha Rao's final humiliation

December 27, 2004

Appropriately for the capital of a country that has witnessed the death of hope so often, Delhi is a city of tombs. To the many built to encase the remains of numerous emperors of the Mughal era and their successors has been added those from post-1947: Mohandas Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Sanjay Gandhi, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, Charan Singh and Jagjivan Ram.


Neither Mohandas Gandhi nor Sanjay Gandhi was ever the holder of any public office, although some may claim that the contribution to Indian history of the second son of Indira Priyadarshini may not entirely be on the same scale as that of the Mahatma. However, Sanjay too was granted the same privilege of a samadhi in New Delhi.


Both Rajiv Gandhi and Charan Singh died while they were out of office, while Jagjivan Ram -- who never made it to the prime ministership -- was cremated outside of New Delhi, but had his ashes brought back and re-interred in New Delhi


Four of the eight post-1947 tombs have been created to honour members of the Nehru family, whose names are etched on airports, ports, roads, townships, public conveniences and much else in a country that is presumably grateful that such a brood chose to be born in their midst.


As some are aware, Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao was not a member of the Nehru family. He was, however, the first prime minister from south of the Vindhyas, lasted a full term in office, and began the transformation of India through the economic reforms initiated by him.


Most would say that Rao's remains had at least the same right to a slice of prime New Delhi land as did Charan Singh's or Sanjay Gandhi's. The newspapers, who are extremely deferential to the actual powers-that-be, have been told and have reported that Rao was cremated in Hyderabad 'as per the wishes of his family members.'


This statement contains the same measure of truth as the comment that the former prime minister was 'regularly consulted on all important matters' by the current Congress president, Sonia Gandhi.


In fact, despite being a former AICC president and a prime minister, Narasimha Rao was not just excluded from the Congress Working Commitee since the current heir to the Nehru dynasty took charge of the party in 1998, he was not even allowed to become one of the numerous 'special invitees', most of whom get selected for their cheerleader skills rather than any other contribution.


Given that former prime ministers Rajiv Gandhi, Charan Singh and the non-prime minister Sanjay Gandhi were given state funerals and a final resting place in what may be termed the National Capital's 'Zone of the Dead,' the reasons why such a privilege was denied to Narasimha Rao are obscure.


They, however, are depressingly in line with a pattern that dogged Rao since 1992, when he refused to accept that he was not a public servant, but a Nehru Family retainer. In what follows, an account is given of the circumstances behind the final humiliation of Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao.


A short while before he got hospitalised, Narasimha Rao -- whose antennae were always active in picking up signals, especially from the many former and current officials who were admirers of his policies -- was informed of a plan by senior politicians in his own party to implicate him and another former prime minister, Chandra Shekhar, in the assasination of Rajiv Gandhi.


For eight years, Rao had been the only former prime minister to have endured the torture of a series of cases filed against him. These had been masterminded -- and the legwork for them funded -- by the very same individuals who, he was now credibly told, were plotting to implicate him in one of the most heinous crimes of the century. The motive presented for Chandra Shekhar would be revenge -- Rajiv made his life a misery and finally made it impossible for him to remain dependent on Congress support with dignity. That for Narasimha Rao would be the job that he stepped into after the 1991 Lok Sabha election.


To those scripting such Stalin-style show trials, it did not matter that Narasimha Rao had himself asked Rajiv Gandhi in 1991 for permission to retire, and was looking forward during and after the election that year only to writing and to music, and to the company of friends. Or that Rao was the sort of individual who was incapable of violence or vengeance, even against those who were his enemies, which was why -- for example -- the CBI permitted Ottavio Quatrocchi to leave the country.


In Narasimha Rao, forbearance grew to the level of a vice. It was as absurd to imagine him plotting to see Rajiv Gandhi dead as it was to believe that Rajinder Kumar Dhawan planned the demise of the only person he worshipped, Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi.


However, to the Stalinist scriptwriters within the Congress party who hated Rao for his perceived lese majeste, truth and logic were never allowed to remain in the way of a slur.


Shortly before he fell so ill that he had to be taken to hospital for the first time before the final crisis, Narasimha Rao told the writer that it had been a very ugly past few years, thanks to the constant threat of imprisonment hanging over his head. He saw these legal entanglements as a way of paralysing him, removing his capacity to emerge as a player once again, and said that because of their fear of what he could do -- whether justified or not -- they would keep immobilising him through more such stratagems.


PV was calm, he was cynical in his humorous way, but far from resigned. The old fox, whom his father had hoped would become the patwari of his village, felt he had another innings left at the crease, one in which he would once again score a double century. Indeed, he had begun the process of re-entry into active politics by giving me a lengthy interview during the 2004 Lok Sabha election on just why it was wrong to place the destruction of the Babri Masjid at his door, that was carried across a page by The Asian Age.


This was to be followed up by another interview, in which he would explain the conditions in which he and an individual he loved and respected, Manmohan Singh, rescued the Indian economy from collapse, in the process setting it almost free. I would remind him off and on about this second interview, till almost the final days.


Was it the knowledge that yet another conspiracy against him was on the way towards execution that pushed his body beyond the borderline of viable capability? For years, Narasimha Rao had been tended by Sreenath Reddy, one of the finest heart specialists in the world, the son of a close friend -- Raghunatha Reddy -- who was himself as idealistic as his boy. Ever watchful, this surrogate son had monitored PV's health and made sure that the body worked well enough to keep that superb mind working at Concorde speed.


What goes on in the human mind, what short-circuit in the synapses causes a sudden collapse, is impossible to tell. Perhaps it was not this terrible information that pushed him across the red line. Perhaps it was something else. Perhaps it was nothing except perhaps a sudden onset of the common cold.


Even in hospital, even in his final days, PV exuded confidence. The doctors -- and they included many who had grown to love PV the man, if not P V Narasimha Rao the prime minister -- were grim-faced, as were the others clustered outside his room in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. Not so PV.


Strangely, his physical collapse had led to a toughening of his will. The voice was low, one did not have the will to respond and thus force him to expend energy by replying to the reply, but PV was determined to keep on talking about what would be.


This time, he would not make the mistake of not reacting to the torment, he would resist his inbuilt aversion towards his friends fighting back on his behalf and allow them to. There had been something aloof and patrician about the man from Vangara village, that made any effort at self-defense seem a contemptible display of weakness. But he was aloof no more. The eyes were tired but fierce, the voice was often unable to reach the level of becoming audible, but there was a hardening in the timbre that had not always been present during the years in office.


But this fresh dawn never took place. Sometime after noon on December 23, 13 days after he had been brought to the hospital early in the morning following a cardiac incident, PV decided to call it quits. It was more than an hour before the doctors finally did.


Strangely -- or perhaps entirely expectedly -- despite a special Union Cabinet meeting at 3 pm on the subject of his funeral, at his 9 Motilal Nehru Marg home there were no arrangements made to receive the body and place it on a platform, nor flowers, nor any laying out of carpets by the administration for the mourning crowds to sit down on, nor even a shamiana on the lawns.


Finally, Kishore, a friend of PV's, made arrangements for both. The shamiana could get erected only by 8.15 pm. Carpets and flowers too were provided by family and friends and not by what seemed to be a totally bankrupt Government of India. As if to atone for his visible helplessness, the prime minister, Sardar Manmohan Singh, looked visibly moved as he quietly remained by the side of the body, which had been brought in from the hospital a little before 5 pm. As a gesture of supreme graciousness, Sonia Gandhi turned up and even stayed for a few minutes.


While some of those present then may be made to deny this later, the fact is that the family members -- as well as the crowd of mourners -- would have been happy to see the father of economic reform and the first prime minister from the south in the history of Free India be given the same honours as Sanjay Gandhi and Charan Singh, a State funeral in New Delhi and an appropriate memorial. Home Minister Shivraj Patil was clearly the emissary of some Unseen Power, for he came several times to the Rao home from some other place where he had apparently gone for consultations, to insist in his own courteous way on a funeral in Hyderabad.


It was clear to observers that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was not being consulted on this matter, there was not even a pretence of that on the part of the emissaries of the Unseen Power. A few such as Ahmed Patel could be observed giving regular updates via cellphone to Somebody about the situation in 9 Motilal Nehru Marg. A very useful man, Ahmed Patel.


It was decided Somewhere that PV's body would be sent back to his home state. Ironically, PV had spent the previous 30 years in New Delhi, as a Cabinet minister, as an AICC general secretary and as prime minister. Even when he had been the prime minister, no member of his family lived with him, they would come on (infrequent) visits.


In his last years to, he lived alone. Thus the attempt to justify a shift to Hyderabad on the grounds that "he was not a Delhi resident" was somewhat of a stretch. Another argument used to justify the move to Hyderabad for the final obsequies was that the Vajpayee Cabinet had passed a resolution against any more samadhis. Again, for a regime that has been talking of 'detoxifying' the country from the misdeeds of the Vajpayee Parivar era, this was somewhat ingenious.


The family behaved with quiet dignity throughout. They said that as their father had been a Congressman, a freedom fighter, a prime minister, they would leave it to the Congress party and the government as to what was to be done.


The only moment of friction came when a high official suggested that if the sentiment was so overwhelming within the circle of those who loved PV that the cremation take place in the national capital, then very well, it would take place, but in the Delhi cantonment, as though PV were some bacillus that the refined gentry living in the Lutyens Zone did not want to see contaminate their environment.


The response to this suggestion on the part of those close to PV was that they would then cremate him at the Nigambodh Ghat, along with the other common men, which after all was all that he seemed to be to the powers-that-be.


It was at this stage that a Heavy Hitter arrived, in the person of Y S Rajshekhar Reddy, chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, who 'cajoled' those close to PV into 'agreeing' that it would be best to cremate him in Hyderabad. Around this time, those who looked like Intelligence Bureau sleuths began nosing around the rooms. It had been known that PV had kept voluminous records, including the draft of a book on the Emergency. It is unlikely that any of this will ever emerge into the daylight, except in a very sanitised way.


The next day, December 24, the body of the former Congress prime minister was brought to the gates of the AICC office at 24, Akbar Road and kept there for 20 minutes, 'to pay homage.' Apparently, the body was so heavy that it would not have been possible to lift what was left of PV from the gun carriage into the Congress headquarters, which would have been the civilised thing to do.


After this final humiliation, P V Narasimha Rao left New Delhi for Hyderabad, this time for good.


http://www.rediff.com/news/2004/dec/28monu.htm



How Sonia Led Congress Tried to Destroy PV Narasimha Rao’s Legacy


Posted By: HinduPost Staff June 28, 2016

Today is the 95th birth anniversary of Pamulaparthy Venkata Narasimha Rao (PVNR), arguably the best Prime Minister that Bharat has had till date. PVNR served as the 9th Prime Minister of Bharat from 1991-96 at an extraordinarily difficult time when the country was on the verge of bankruptcy and economic collapse. He is considered the architect of economic reforms & liberalization that ushered in an era of growth and rescued us from the crisis created by decades of the statist economic model (license-permit raj) enforced by Nehru and Indira.

Born in 1921 in Hyderabad State, PVNR was a freedom fighter (he fought against the Nizam of Hyderabad’s Razakar Army) who joined the Congress party after Bharat won independence in 1947. A loyal Congressman his entire life, PVNR held important cabinet portfolios like Home, Defence, Foreign Affairs in the Governments of Indira and Rajiv Gandhi. After the assassination of Congress President Rajiv Gandhi in 1991, PVNR rose to head the minority Congress Government as Bharat’s first Prime Minister from South Bharat, and was the first person outside the Nehru-Gandhi family to serve as PM for five continuous years.

Nation above party interests
PV Narasimha Rao was a path-breaking leader in more ways than one. A scholar par excellence (he was fluent in 17 languages), he openly opposed the dynasty sycophants who have dominated the Congress since Independence. After Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination in 1991, when durbaris like Arjun Singh & Vincent George proposed that Rajiv’s wife Sonia be made the Congress chief, the meritocratic PVNR shot back sayingWhy should the Congress party be hitched to the Nehru-Gandhi family like train compartments to the engine?“ PVNR went on to become PM after Congress MPs voted for him in an internal party election.

Even though he was leading a minority Government, PVNR appointed deserving people to key positions, even crossing party-lines when required. His first choice for Finance Minister was ex-RBI Governor I.G. Patel, but when Patel declined, PVNR chose a non-political economist & bureaucrat Manmohan Singh for the job. He also appointed Subramanian Swamy, an Opposition party member as the Chairman of the Commission on Labour Standards and International Trade and sent another Opposition leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee, to represent Bharat in a UN meeting at Geneva.

PVNR’s Historic Legacy Whitewashed by Vindictive Sonia
After Congress lost the 1996 elections under PVNR’s leadership, the Congress swiftly reverted to type with the next in line of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, Sonia Gandhi, regaining control of the party through faithful family loyalists like Arjun Singh, MS Aiyar etc. This 2004 rediff piece by MD Nalapat informs us, “Despite being a former AICC (All India Congress Committee) president and a prime minister, PVNR was not just excluded from the Congress Working Commitee since Sonia Gandhi took charge of the party in 1998, he was not even allowed to become one of the numerous ‘special invitees’, most of whom get selected for their cheerleader skills rather than any other contribution.”

When PVNR died in 2004 in Delhi after suffering a heart attack, his body was not allowed inside the AICC (All India Congress Committee) building. He was denied a state funeral in New Delhi which an outstanding ex-PM like him deserved – he was finally cremated in Hyderabad. Under Sonia, Congress has consistently refused to recognize PVNR’s role in steering the country in difficult times, and he has been removed from history books while even absolute non-achievers like Rahul Gandhi get a mention!

In a speech to mark the 125th anniversary of the Congress, the party president Sonia Gandhi made it a point to ignore PVNR, while crediting her husband Rajiv Gandhi for scripting the economic policies that were implemented by the PVNR Government.

Even today, dynasty loyalists like the controversial Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar, spout nothing but venom for a man who dragged Bharat out of an economic mire and put it on the path to become the fastest growing economy today.


When the present day Congress led by Sonia Gandhi cannot even honor one of its own, what hope can we have that this party will show a bipartisan approach in passing important economic legislation like GST. Sonia and her corrupt coterie would do well to borrow a leaf from the PM’s book who paid tributes to PVNR on his 95th birth anniversary.

PVNR deserves the Bharat Ratna (our highest civilian honor) for his outstanding service to the nation. While members of the Nehru Gandhi dynasty like Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi were quick to award themselves with the honor, Sonia Gandhi ensured that PVNR was denied this recognition during the UPA 1 & 2 terms. It is time that the current NDA Government corrects this anomaly and recognizes the scholarly ex-PM from Hyderabad who was consigned to the sidelines of history by the very political party he served with such distinction.

https://www.hindupost.in/history/how-sonia-led-congress-tried-to-destroy-pv-narasimha-raos-legacy/



Congress honours Rao amid fears BJP may commandeer former PM's legacy
By Amit Agnihotri

Published: 16:35 EST, 28 June 2015 | Updated: 18:19 EST, 28 June 2015

Concerned that the BJP may hijack the legacy of yet another party leader as it did with those of Mahatma Gandhi and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the Congress on Sunday remembered former Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao on his 94th birth anniversary.

Rao, who headed a Congress government between 1991 and 1996, and passed away in 2004, was disowned by the Grand Old Party during the 10-year-rule of the previous UPA government.

Sources said Rao never had an easy relationship with the Gandhi family, and hence could never find favour with the grand old party.

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Congress leader Digvijaya Singh pays tributes to late prime minister PV Narasimha Rao on his birth anniversary in Hyderabad

Since the NDA government came to power last year, Congress managers have been concerned over its attempts to hijack the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi through the Clean India campaign, that of Sardar Patel through the National Unity Day celebrations, and that of Rao by planning a memorial in his honour in the national Capital.


“Our humble tribute to Former Prime Minister, PV Narasimha Rao on his birth anniversary today,” the Congress tweeted.

The Grand Old Party’s remembrance of Rao was also driven by the fact that the Congress failed to capture the public imagination even after the previous UPA created Telangana out of Andhra Pradesh in its last leg.

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PV Narasimha Rao headed a Congress government between 1991 and 1996 and passed away in 2004

As a result, the Congress lost badly in both the general and Assembly elections last year in both Telangana, where the local player TRS took the cake, and in Andhra Pradesh, where the TDP came to power.

The TDP government had moved a resolution last October urging the Centre to build a memorial for Rao, who hailed from Telangana.

In May 2013, the UPA government blocked demands for separate memorials, with the Cabinet deciding to set up a common memorial ground — Rashtriya Smriti — in view of paucity of space in the national Capital.

The Centre too remembered Rao, especially for ushering in economic reforms in the country in 1991.

“At last, could erect a memorial, 'Rastriya Smriti' at Delhi for Sri PV Narasimha Rao, who ushered in economic reforms in India. I pay tributes on his 94th Jayanti,” Union Urban Development and Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu, who belongs to Andhra Pradesh, tweeted.

Interestingly, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who headed the UPA government from 2004 to 2014, was Rao’s finance minister and pushed the economic reforms.

However, there was little mention of Rao during the UPA decade.

The TRS government had also made arrangements to claim the legacy of Rao. In an attempt to regain lost ground, the Congress organised an event at Hyderabad to pay tributes to the former prime minister.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahom...-fears-BJP-commandeer-former-PM-s-legacy.html



‘Sonia no Indira, Nehru legacy has reached a dead end’
By PANKAJ VOHRA | | 25 October, 2015

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Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi’s political advisor Makhan Lal Fotedar sees a very bleak future for the Congress as “it has no one to provide direction”. The party refuses to learn and “there is nothing right which the party has done or is doing. It saddens me that the Nehru-Gandhi legacy has reached a cul-de-sac”.
In the concluding pages of his book, The Chinar Leaves, (published by Harper Collins) he has observed that “Sonia Gandhi will go down in history as the longest serving Congress president even if not the most distinguished. When she took over as the chief in 1998, the party was on the verge of disintegration. In fact she helped to rebuild it from a position where its seats had come down to about 116. The supreme irony is that 17 and half years later, the party is again on the verge of a collapse. However, this time there is no saviour. Rahul Gandhi’s leadership is unacceptable to the people of this country and Sonia Gandhi has her best years behind her.”
While acknowledging that Sonia Gandhi was still the unchallenged leader of the party, he has noted that it is, therefore, her responsibility to reinvent the Congress. Blaming Rahul is in a way shifting the blame from the Congress president to someone who has yet to display his leadership skills. “History is threatening to repeat itself. It is a matter of time before Sonia and Rahul’s leadership is challenged from within the party. I will be observing closely how they stand up to this looming challenge, because Sonia is not Indira and Rahul is not Sanjay.”
The astute politician has held sycophants responsible for the party’s current state. He has recalled that during the 2009 general elections, Sonia Gandhi was of the opinion that the Congress would get between 145 and 155 seats but he had categorically told her that the number would be between190 to 210. The party got 206 seats. The reason for the 60 extra seats was that Dr Manmohan Singh enjoyed a very clean image and his persona as a middle class icon led the UPA to victory. However, the sycophants around the Congress president tried to create a perception that the increase in the seats was on account of the active participation of Rahul Gandhi in campaigning and his appeal as a youth icon. Sonia allowed this perception to gain ground, thereby denying the credit to Dr Singh. “It was abundantly clear that Sonia had made up her mind to foist Rahul Gandhi on the party and the country was waiting for the right time.”
Fotedar further notes that Rahul had not been groomed for the job properly and was therefore reluctant to take over the responsibility. The situation was different when Rajiv Gandhi, who too was at one time reluctant, was initiated into politics. Rajiv had the benefit of learning some fundamental things from his mother who understood the intricacies and nuances of Indian politics. Indira was also a great teacher and made Rajiv understand the issues step by step with the assistance of her aides, who were all too willing to help him out. It is another thing that Rajiv too did not follow many of Indira’s suggestions and consequently suffered.
He has written, “in the case of Rahul there was nobody to tutor or mentor him. Sonia Gandhi is not Indira Gandhi and was herself dependent on so many people on what she should do. And many of those who advised her were as ignorant as her on many issues on which they were asked to give advice. Rahul had a certain stubbornness and his motivation to become a leader was not very strong. People around Sonia secretly did not wish him to succeed because they realised that if Rahul grew as a leader they would themselves become irrelevant. The dilemma before Sonia was that on one hand she could not do without her coterie while on the other hand she had an overriding desire to see her son succeed in politics. There were too many vested interests around and Sonia was reluctant to accept her responsibility for the decline of the Congress in the war of perceptions.”
Fotedar admits that the Congress and the UPA government were being seen to be both corrupt and inefficient. There was a growing feeling that the Congress was drifting from its secular ideology towards minorityism. “There were occasions when the party while finalising seats for legislatures or Parliament would nominate either a Muslim or a Christian even if there were better qualified candidates available. The party from 2004 was moving into the hands of those who had come from other parties, since Sonia’s coterie found it convenient to deal with outsiders rather than insiders, who were aware of their capacity as well as devious ways. This had led to a huge disconnect as the cadres were greatly disillusioned with the leadership. Leaders and general secretaries who had nothing to do with grassroots politics were foisted from above. A case in point was that of Maharashtra where Prithviraj Chavan was sent as the Chief Minister and Mohan Prakash as the general secretary in charge. Both were ignorant of state politics and many MLAs complained that these two gentlemen did not know them nor did they know these two leaders. Those who represented the party in TV discussions too were people who had come from other parties like Rashid Alvi, Renuka Chowdhury, Sanjay Nirupam and Rajiv Shukla.”
Fotedar has also attached as an annexure a letter written by him to Sonia Gandhi in June 2006, wherein he cautioned her against trivialising the office of the Prime Minister. He expressed his concern over several challenges being faced by the UPA government, which included demands being made by Left parties, controversy over the Office of Profit Bill and the overbearing role of the National Advisory Council (NAC). His letter also mentioned reports pouring in about how various ministries and state governments of the Congress were being run and the manner in which Cabinet ministers were repeatedly challenging the authority of the Prime Minister. “I suggested to her either to take over as the Prime Minister of the country or allow the office of the Prime Minister to function with full authority and dignity. No government where the position of the Prime Minister stood compromised could acquit itself creditably. However, the muted response from the Congress president indicated that my sincere advice and valuable suggestions had fallen on deaf ears and the drift thus continued.”
He has also made mention to the fact that distancing had taken place between him and the Congress president and therefore their interaction had become increasingly infrequent. However, whenever they did meet, he could not refrain from presenting the true picture to her. “I was pained to watch the Congress being taken over by people who had nothing to do with the party’s ideology and traditions. Middlemen, power brokers against whom even Rajiv had spoken during his tenure as the Prime Minister were calling the shots and the grassroots workers and elected representatives were being slowly marginalised. The party leadership had no time for organisational matters and an extra constitutional authority had been created to navigate the task of governance.”

http://www.sundayguardianlive.com/news/1674-sonia-no-indira-nehru-legacy-has-reached-dead-end
There is a problem with your thinking.
You assume that those who support BJP hate other parties and all it's leaders. That is not even remotely true.

There a lot of leaders from other parties who I like and there are leaders from BJP whom I hate.

This is not a zero sum issue mate :)

Coming to ABV, the day BJP insults his work, memory and legacy is the day BJP will loose ABV legacy as well. This is what happened with PVN Rao and Congress.

And no, BJP is not appropriating Rao's legacy. They are correcting historical wrong done on stalwarts of non-Family leaders by the family. If people think that BJP is appropriating their legacy, then Congress should look within to see why they let something like this happen.
@Nilgiri

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