The Asian Age

Her good friend Cho in same ICU

IN 2015 WHEN JAYALALITH­AA VISITED HIM AT APOLLO HOSPITAL, SHE TOLD HIM THAT HE MUST GET BACK ON HIS FEET. HE STAYED TRUE TO HIS WORD AND RECOVERED. BUT HER OLD FRIEND IS NOW BACK AT THE SAME HOSPITAL THAT JAYA BREATHED HER LAST IN...

- R. BHAGWAN SINGH

When she visited Cho Ramaswamy at the Apollo Hospital during August 2015, Jayalalith­aa told him in her own ebullient manner that he must soon get back on his feet as she always needed him as a friend, philosophe­r and guide, till the very last.

And good friend Cho kept his word; though, ironically, he is now back at the Apollo and is in the intensive care unit pretty close to where she was admitted.

The 82-year-old multifacet­ed genius, a fearless campaigner against injustice and corruption, has been perhaps the only man Jayalalith­aa admired unreserved­ly and sought counsel whenever she found herself in a difficult situation.

Like the time when the then chief minister M. Karunanidh­i’s intelligen­ce chief visited her and cautioned her about a plan to harm her.

He reportedly pleaded with her not to reveal his meeting to anyone as otherwise he would come to grief. Jayalalith­aa was in a panic, alarmed at the warning from this ‘well-meaning’ cop and wanting to get the hell out of Tamil Nadu and its dirty politics, rather than face some goon with an acid bottle.

She wanted to flee to her grape garden in Hyderabad. Cho told her not to be hasty and reasoned out that, being loyal to Karunanidh­i, the policeman could be bluffing only to scare her away from being a thorn in his boss’s flesh. She should remain in Chennai and fight it out, he reasoned.

But Jayalalith­aa would rather play safe. Being a pretty star and one who led a pampered life, she did not want to take the cop’s warning lightly.

She packed bags and left for Hyderabad, returning only after Karunanidh­i’s government got dismissed by the Chandrashe­khar regime on the charge of helping the LTTE. Suffice it to say here that Cho was a good friend of Chandrashe­khar and the latter took the Tamil strategist’s counsel seriously.

Cho was at the airport when Jayalalith­aa returned from Hyderabad after Karunanidh­i’s dismissal but the lady almost looked through him.

She was upset as some ‘friends’ told her Cho had become friends with Karunanidh­i. The truth was that a friendly film producer had invited Cho to participat­e in a felicitati­on for Karunanidh­i’s son Stalin for his impressive performanc­e as lead actor in a successful tele-serial called ‘Kurinji Malar’, and Cho agreed.

“That producer was an old friend and I could not say ‘no’; besides, why should I duck that function just because I opposed the politics of Stalin’s father?” Cho had told me at that time, referring to how touchy Jayalalith­aa could get when someone she considered close to her had chosen to ‘flirt’ with the enemy.

Studio friends recall that Cho had been such a close friend that Jayalalith­aa considered him to be the only intellectu­al and educated costar on the sets.

“If Cho sir was at the shoot, she would be talking to him. Otherwise, she would be busy with her script and once she is done with a take, she would pick up a book and withdraw to a corner”, said a source.

Interestin­gly, while Cho and Jayalalith­aa shared great affection and admiration for each other over long years, they were also uncompromi­sing when things went wrong.

Cho and his Thuglak magazine were the hardest critics of Karunanidh­i and the DMK- which hugely helped Jayalalith­aa with the middle-class and upper caste voters — yet both the editor and the magazine suffered at her hands earlier this year just because he had invited Pala Karupaiah, then a MLA in Jayalalith­aa’s AIADMK party, to the Thuglak annual conference (January 14) and the legislator lashed out at corruption in the state government.

The attack infuriated the lady chief minister who stopping speaking to Cho and her government stopped advertisem­ents to his Thuglak.

Also, the magazine’s reporters were shifted away from her sight in the seating arrangemen­ts inside the state legislatur­e! And Cho refused to buckle to such pressures.

Thus, sadly, before she breathed her last, the good friends couldn’t even share a smile while lying on beds in the same hospital.

 ??  ?? Jayalalith­aa with her mentor MGR.
Jayalalith­aa with her mentor MGR.

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