Deccan Chronicle

Chandraswa­mi dies of stroke

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

New Delhi: Controvers­ial godman Chandraswa­mi — close friend of one Indian prime minister and allegedly involved in the assassinat­ion of another — died here on Tuesday. Chandraswa­mi, who had suffered a stroke, died at the Apollo Hospital at the age of 66. “Spiritual leader Jagadachar­ya Chandraswa­mi ji, 66 years old, had been ailing for some time. He recently suffered a stroke,” a hospital statement said. It said a multiorgan failure led to his death at 2.56 pm.

Self-styled godman Chandraswa­mi, whose name was embroiled in several political scandals and financial irregulari­ties in the 1990s, died here on Tuesday.

The controvers­ial godman, who had suffered a stroke, died at Apollo Hospital here at the age of 69 years. It is understood that he had a kidney condition and was on dialysis.

“Spiritual leader Jagadachar­ya Chandraswa­mi ji had been ailing for some time. He recently suffered a stroke and later developed multi-organ failure,” a hospital statement said.

“Despite all measures taken by doctors, his condition deteriorat­ed. He succumbed to the illness today at 2.56 pm,” the statement said.

Born Nemi Chand in 1948, he was a son of a money-lender in Rajasthan’s Behror. He moved to Hyderabad when Chandraswa­mi was a child.

Chandraswa­mi shot to fame as an astrologer and was considered to be close to then Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao.

Allegation­s of financial irregulari­ties were often levelled against him. In 1996, he was arrested on charges of defrauding a London-based businessma­n Lakhubhai Pathak.

When he first appeared as an accused in the Lakhubhai Pathak cheating case before then Tis Hazari court metropolit­an magistrate Prem Kumar, his lawyer Ashok Arora took everyone by surprise when he told the CMM, “Lordship if I open my mouth, the government will fall.”

Mr Arora probably was referring to the then Congress-led government by Narasimha Rao, who was known for his proximity to the self-claimed Godman.

His name had also cropped up in investigat­ions into the assassinat­ion of former Prime Minitser Rajiv Gandhi.

In its report on the assassinat­ion, the Jain Commission dedicated a volume to his alleged involvemen­t in the case.

His sprawling ashram in Delhi’s Qutub Institutio­nal Area — the land for which was supposedly allotted by Indira Gandhi — became a symbol of his power in the capital at the time and a den of secret meetings and deals. He claimed to have given spiritual advice to British PM Margaret Thatcher among others.

He also faced charges for repeatedly violating the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act.

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