Pramod Mahajan

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Pramod Venkatesh Mahajan

Pramod Mahajan
Born October 30, 1949
Mahbubnagar, Andhra Pradesh
Residence Mumbai
Died May 03, 2006
Mumbai
Office Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha)
Political party BJP
Spouse Smt. Rekha Pramod Mahajan (née Hamine)
Children One son (Rahul Mahajan) and one daughter (Poonam)

As of May 5, 2006
Source: [1]

Pramod Venkatesh Mahajan (प्रमोद वेंकटेश महाजन in Devanagari) (30 October 19493 May 2006) [1] was a prominent Indian politician. He was one of the second generation leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and, at the time of his death, was locked in a power struggle over who will take over the reins of the BJP when the current aging leadership retires. He belonged to a group of relatively young "technocrat" leaders who lack a grassroots political base, although he was fairly popular in his home state of Maharashtra in western India. [2]

He was a member of the Rajya Sabha and a General Secretary of his party. He had been credited with being an architect of numerous poll victories for his party, though he rarely contested direct elections himself. However, the BJP's defeat in the 2004 General elections was widely considered to be in part due to his arrogance and overconfidence, and this affected his political career adversely.

He was blamed by many in the old guard of the BJP and the RSS for moving his party away from the culture of austerity to a "five-star" culture. His proximity to industrialists was also a cause for comment. As a minister in charge of telecommunications between 2001 and 2003, he played a major role in India's cellular revolution, but was also accused of improperly favouring Reliance Infocomm. He was widely seen as a successful Parliamentary Affairs minister due to his good relations with political parties across the ideological spectrum.

On 22 April 2006, he was shot at and fatally injured by his brother Pravin Mahajan over a family dispute. He succumbed to his wounds 13 days later.

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[edit] Early life

Mahajan was born to Venkatesh Devidas and Prabhavati Mahajan in Mahbubnagar, Andhra Pradesh, India in a Deshastha Brahmin family. The Mahajan family had migrated from their home in Mahajan gully in Osmanabad to Ambajogai and was staying in a rented house in Mangalwar Peth. Mahajan spent his childhood in Ambejogai. He was the second child of his parents, with two brothers Prakash and Pravin, and two sisters Pratibha and Pradnya. His father died when he was 21. He attended Yogeshwari Vidyalaya and Mahavidyalaya in Beed district of Maharashtra and studied at the Ranade Institute for Journalism, Pune. He obtained bachelor's degrees in Physics and Journalism and a post graduate degree in Political Science. [3]

His love for theatre brought him close to Rekha Hamine, whom he courted and married on 11 March 1972. They have two children, daughter Poonam and son Rahul. Both his children are trained pilots. His daughter is married to Anand Rao Vajendla, an industrialist from Hyderabad.

He worked as an English teacher at the Kholeshwar college in Ambejogai between 1971 and 1974 before joining active politics during the emergency.

[edit] Early political career

Mahajan was a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) since childhood, but he actively got involved when he worked as a sub-editor of its Marathi magazine, Tarun Bharat in 1970 and 71. He took part in the agitation against the state of emergency imposed by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and was incarcerated in the Nashik central jail till it was lifted. He was one of the select batch of RSS workers co-opted into the BJP and was the general secretary of the party's state unit till 1985. Between 1983 and 1985, he was also the All India Secretary of his party. After unsuccessfully contesting the 1984 Lok Sabha elections, he became the president of the All India Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha in 1986, a position he held again between 1990 and 1992. By virtue of his organizational skills and hard work, he rose to a prominent position, first in the Maharashtra state BJP and then at the national level.

[edit] State politics

Mahajan's aspirations were always national, but he also did a significant amount of work in building up his party's fortunes in his home state of Maharashtra. In this, he was partnered with his childhood friend-turned brother-in-law Gopinath Munde (who is married to his sister Pradnya). Mahajan was responsible for his party's alliance with the Shiv Sena. [4] He had to overcome the reluctance of seniors, both in the BJP and the RSS, who considered the Shiv Sena to be a party of the lumpen. However, all indications are that the alliance for him was entirely pragmatic, and he did not share the extremist beliefs of the Shiv Sena. The alliance went on to win the state assembly elections in 1995 and ruled till 1999. Munde was the deputy chief minister in that government.

Though in recent years the alliance has come under strain because the Sena's fortunes have been in a decline, Mahajan was reportedly one of the few who advised caution before breaking off, primarily because he wanted the BJP to gain more strength before taking such a step.

[edit] National politics

Mahajan came to play a vital role during the coalition era of the late 1980s. He rose to national prominence when he helped organize BJP President Lal Krishna Advani's Rath Yatra in 1990.

Despite being credited with responsibility for his party's numerous election victories, Mahajan rarely contested or won popular elections himself. He had been elected to Parliament many times, but mostly through the Rajya Sabha, the indirectly elected upper house. He served on the Rajya Sabha in 1986-87, 1992-96, 1998-99 and for the last time in 2004. He was elected to the Lok Sabha once in 1996, but lost in 1998.

[edit] Government

The Lok Sabha elections of 1996 brought the BJP to power and Mahajan was appointed Defence Minister in Vajpayee's 13 day ministry. When the BJP returned to power in 1998, he was first appointed as advisor to the Prime Minister. He resigned from that post and stood for Rajya Sabha elections in July 1998. He won and in December 1998, he was appointed the Minister for Information and Broadcasting, and Food Processing. A year later, in October 1999, he was moved to Parliamentary Affairs and Water Resources. He relinquished Water Resources a month later in November and took charge of Information Technology (in addition to Parliamentary Affairs).

In 2001, he was appointed [5] to the Communications ministry under controversial circumstances. The earlier telecom policy of the government, formulated in 1994, [6] had allowed private participation in cellular telephony after open bidding, on payment of a license fee determined through the bidding. However, after winning the contracts the telecom companies found themselves unable to pay the fixed license fees, supposedly because the victors fell victim to the Winner's curse. [7] The then Minister for Communications, Jagmohan attempted tough action [8] against the defaulting companies, but was sacked. [9] After this, Prime Minister Vajpayee himself took over the cabinet portfolio (with Ram Vilas Paswan as minister of state) and oversaw the formulation of the New Telecom Policy of 1999. [10] The policy replaced fixed license fees with a revenue sharing agreement, a move that was widely criticized [11] for changing rules midway and causing loss of revenue to the government. Mahajan, who succeeded to the post in August 2001, after a cabinet reshuffle (that also merged the department of Information technology with the Telecommunications portfolio) had the task of implementing this policy.

During his tenure, the number of new telephone connections enjoyed unprecedented growth and rentals fell by a large amount. However, he was also accused of favouring Reliance Infocomm by allowing it to offer full nationwide mobility through WLL without payment of the required license fees. [12]

He was also involved in a dispute [13] with the then Disinvestment minister Arun Shourie over the privatization of VSNL. These controversies may have been the reason why he was dropped from the cabinet in the reshuffle of 2003. There was also speculation that he was a casualty of the silent intra-party battle between Vajpayee and Advani[citation needed]. Shourie succeeded him to the Communications portfolio. [14] Mahajan was appointed the General Secretary of the BJP . He contested media speculation that this was a demotion, saying that there were no differences between him and the party and that he had just changed positions from chariot rider to charioteer[citation needed].

[edit] The Shivani Bhatnagar affair

Mahajan was accused of orchestrating the murder of former Indian Express journalist Shivani Bhatnagar by Madhu Sharma, the wife of IPS officer Ravi Kant Sharma who was an accused in the murder and in police custody. [15]

Bhatnagar had been murdered on January 23, 1999. The investigation had gone on for three years and was out of the media spotlight till Sharma's arrest. [16] His motive for the murder, according to the Delhi Police, was that he had fathered Bhatnagar's child and was under pressure from her to marry him. Madhu made statements in the press claiming that it was in fact Mahajan who had the affair and was the actual father. She challenged him for a DNA test. Mahajan agreed to take the test but eventually did not as the Delhi Police dismissed Sharma's claim as an emotional outburst as she was unable to provide any concrete evidence in support of her charges.

[edit] 2003 and 2004 elections

Assembly elections were held in four Indian states in December 2003 - Delhi, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. Mahajan was put in charge of Rajasthan. [17] The BJP consciously chose to play down the Hindutva platform. [18] Nonetheless, the elections turned out to be a resounding victory for the BJP, which won in all four states[19]. Emboldened by this success, Vajpayee called early elections in 2004 and Mahajan was given charge of the campaign. However, the BJP performed unexpectedly poorly in them, losing power to the Indian National Congress. Mahajan personally accepted responsibility for this defeat. [20]

[edit] Death

Pramod Mahajan & Pravin
Pramod Mahajan & Pravin

On the morning of 22 April 2006, Mahajan's estranged younger brother, Pravin shot him four times with his licensed .32 Browning pistol inside the former's apartment in Mumbai following a dispute. Four bullets were fired. The first missed Mahajan, but the other three were lodged in his liver and pancreas, damaging several internal organs. Mahajan was taken to the Hinduja hospital where he was operated upon. One of the world's foremost liver specialists, Dr. Mohamed Rela flew in from London to treat him [21]. After struggling for his life for 13 days, Mahajan suffered from a cardiac arrest and died on 3 May 2006 at 4:10 pm IST. [22] He was given a state funeral [23] at the Shivaji Park crematorium in Dadar, Mumbai on May 4, 2006.

Pravin surrendered at the Worli Police Station in Mumbai after the shooting. The police claimed that it was a premeditated attack born out of resentment built up over a long time. Pravin accused his brother of "ignoring and humiliating him, and not giving him his due". He also felt neglected and suffered from an inferiority complex because he was the poorer younger brother of a much famous elder brother. [24] Pravin was charged with murder under Sec. 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) [25] A Hindi movie is being planned to depict the life of Pramod Mahajan; "Hum Mahajan Bol Rahe Hai" (I am Mahajan Speaking) with Ashutosh Rana playing lead role.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mahajan, Shri Pramod. Biographical sketch. Rajya Sabha. Retrieved on September 2, 2006.
  2. ^ Biswas, Soutik. "What next for the BJP?", BBC News, 30 December 2005. Retrieved on September 2, 2005. (in English)
  3. ^ "He is BJP's tomorrow man", Daily News and Analysis, April 23 2006. Retrieved on September 2, 2006.
  4. ^ Firdaus, Ashraf. "How Mahajan kept the BJP-Sena together", Rediff, May 4, 2006. Retrieved on September 7, 2006.
  5. ^ 'Our telecom services don't match world standards yet'. Rediff.com (2002). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  6. ^ National Telecom Policy, 1994. Telecom regulatory authority of India (1994). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  7. ^ How telecom wires got so tangled. The Hindu Business Line (2003). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  8. ^ Jagmohan wags a warning finger at telecom companies. Rediff.com (1999). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  9. ^ A man slighted. Rediff.com (1999). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  10. ^ National Telecom Policy, 1999. Telecom regulatory authority of India (1999). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  11. ^ The telecom tangle. Hindu on the net (1999). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  12. ^ Seeking accountability. Frontline on the net (2006). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  13. ^ Arun Shourie hits back at Mahajan. Tribune India (2002). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  14. ^ Shourie warns telecom players. Tribune India (2003). Retrieved on April 26, 2006.
  15. ^ Shivani Bhatnagar Case. Rediff India (2003). Retrieved on May 3, 2006.
  16. ^ A sordid affair. Frontline (2002). Retrieved on May 3, 2006.
  17. ^ We'll have a 4-0 lead. Rediff.com (2003). Retrieved on May 1, 2006.
  18. ^ Hindutva not to be poll issue: BJP. Rediff.com (2003). Retrieved on May 1, 2006.
  19. ^ The Assembly elections 2003 homepage. Rediff.com (2003). Retrieved on May 1, 2006.
  20. ^ Mahajan accepts blame for BJP debacle. Rediff.com (2004). Retrieved on May 1, 2006.
  21. ^ The specialist who will treat Mahajan - Rediff News 23 April 2006
  22. ^ Pramod Mahajan passes away. Rediff.com (2006). Retrieved on May 3, 2006.
  23. ^ State funeral given to Pramod Mahajan
  24. ^ Attack on Pramod premeditated: Police. NDTV. Retrieved on April 24, 2006.
  25. ^ Chargesheet changed from Attempt to Murder to Murder
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