Business Standard

FORMER LOK SABHA SPEAKER SOMNATH CHATTERJEE DEAD

- ARCHIS MOHAN More on business-standard.com

Former Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee passed away in Kolkata on Monday, following a multiple organ failure. He was 89. The 10-time Lok Sabha member is survived by his wife, Renu, a son and two daughters. He died after his condition deteriorat­ed following a heart attack on Sunday, a hospital official said.

Former Lok Sabha Speaker Somnath Chatterjee passed away on Monday morning. Chatterjee was a member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) for 40 years, representi­ng it in Parliament for 10 terms. It took nearly five hours for his party to issue a statement expressing sorrow. But there was not a single mention that Chatterjee was a member of the party.

It was less of a reflection on Chatterjee, and more the small-mindedness of the leadership of what was once a great party built by the likes of Jyoti Basu, Harkishan Singh Surjeet and Chatterjee himself. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Congress President Rahul Gandhi were among those who paid Chatterjee rich tributes. CPI (M)’s Lok Sabha member Mohammad Salim was a rare senior party leader to find the courage to pay a public tribute to Chatterjee within hours of the leader’s death, and much before his party. “I lost a father figure. My tribute to Somnath Chatterjee, whom I owe a lot. Salute to a great parliament­arian,” Salim tweeted.

One of the more heartfelt tributes came from former President Pranab Mukherjee. “An outstandin­g parliament­arian and constituti­onalist. He remained committed to the cause of the people, with a firm belief in pragmatic consensus. In his demise I have lost a personal friend, and the nation has lost a great son,” the former President said.

After some commentary in the media, including this article, the CPI (M) issued a press statement, which was sent to the media at 1.46 pm. Chatterjee passed away at a Kolkata hospital at 8.15 am.

In its long-awaited statement, the CPI (M) politburo expressed its “grief and sorrow” at the death of the “former Speaker and 10-time Lok Sabha member”. It noted that Chatterjee, a veteran parliament­arian, “played an important role in defending the foundation­s of the Indian Constituti­on, particular­ly its secular democratic foundation­s and federalism.”

The CPI (M) politburo statement also mentioned how Chatterjee, “an eminent lawyer by profession” , “also took up the cause of the working class and the deprived to ensure justice is delivered to them”. But the CPI (M) statement did not have a single mention of Chatterjee’s 40-year associatio­n with the party and its various affiliated organisati­ons, or his working with the various trade unions of the party.

In August 2003, Chatterjee had played a key role in bringing non-BJP Opposition leaders to have a meeting with the then Congress president Sonia Gandhi at his residence. That meeting eventually gave birth to the United Progressiv­e Alliance. Five years later, the CPI (M), under Prakash Karat, withdrew its support to the Manmohan Singh-led UPA government in its first term over the question of the India-US nuclear deal in 2008. It also wanted Chatterjee to quit as the Speaker of the Lok Sabha, but he refused and was, therefore, expelled from the party.

 ?? PHOTO:PTI ?? In this file photo dated May 31, 2004, veteran communist Somnath Chatterjee is seen reading a newspaper at the Bolpur railway station in West Bengal. He died at a hospital in Kolkata following multiple organ failure
PHOTO:PTI In this file photo dated May 31, 2004, veteran communist Somnath Chatterjee is seen reading a newspaper at the Bolpur railway station in West Bengal. He died at a hospital in Kolkata following multiple organ failure

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