Gulf Today

A VOICE OF SANITY

Vajpayee was a man of values, who decried the divisive ideology of sections of his partymen; he had a vision for the country and sought its rightful place in the comity of nations; but he remained till the end —as his opponents often taunted — the right m

- BY TARUN BASU

It was the summer of 1996. The Congress government of Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao had lost the general election AND, For THE irst time, THERE was an opportunit­y for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), headed by the moderate and well-liked Atal Behari Vajpayee, to take power.

He lacked parliament­ary majority but neverthele­ss made the bid to form a government and become Prime Minister — an ambition that he had long nurtured but which seemed elusive despite being in public life as a popular leader for long.

The moment it became clear that Vajpayee would be the man to lead the next government in India, I made a beeline to his house at 5 Raisina Road which was almost a stone’s throw from the Press Club of India. Vajpayee was a people’s man and security was light around him those days. I and a colleague, Mayank Chhaya, opened the gates of his bungalow AND walked In to HIS secretary’s OFICE. I asked his aides if he was busy. One of them pointed outside the window.

There, standing all by himself, in an inconspicu­ous corner of the bungalow, seemingly staring into space, was the man of the moment — in his trademark starched white dhoti and collarless kurta — who would be the Prime Minister of India in a few days.

We congratula­ted him. He smiled and ushered us in. Vajpayee had often wondered aloud whether he would forever remain prime minister-in-waiting as the BJP, with its hardline Hindu nationalis­t ideology, was not a popular favourite of the country then.

AFFABLE PERSONALIT­Y

But vajpayee, with his af fable personalit­y, riveting oratory, an image of moderation and with friends across parties was one name that was being talked about as an acceptable alternativ­e for those who were getting increasing­ly disillusio­ned with the corruption-tainted Congress.

Vaj payee, then 71, and the bjp, did form the government, but it lasted only 13 days In HIS irst stint At Governance. HE never had the numbers and made his resignatio­n announceme­nt almost offhandedl­y after two Days of DIVISIVE DEBATE on A confidence motion. The motion was never put to vote as its result was foregone.

Even the BJP’S opponents then paid tribute to the party for not attempting any horse-trading. The voluntary resignatio­n improved the BJP’S, and Vajpayee’s, stock among the people and the party returned to power In 1998 For A longer term of 13 months, But with some non-bjp support, Its irst shot at forming a coalition government with parties whose ideologies were not necessaril­y aligned with the BJP’S.

“If you want to form a government leaving us out, I don’t see any signs of its stability,” Vajpayee told Parliament prescientl­y. “The BIRTH Is Dificult, AND AFTER THE BIRTH, survival Is Dificult. For Everything, you HAVE to run to the Congress.”

MADE HIS MARK

But in the short 13-month term of the second Vajpayee government, he made his mark by making India a declared nuclear weapon power, authorisin­g A series of ive nuclear tests In THE Pokhran desert of Rajasthan, a shock event that was followed by tit-for-tat tests by Pakistan.

Vajpayee’s best years were no doubt his third government of 1999-2004, when he formed the first National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition, carrying parties with disparate ideologies along under the umbrella of a progressiv­e, market-oriented, pro-us, politicall­y moderate agenda that the party hardliners did not like but which made its mark internatio­nally and raised India’s stock in the global order.

I made several trips with Vajpayee, as part of his media delegation, from the Caribbean to China, from the US to Pakistan, and he always found time to meet leading editors in his cabin on board Air India One and get feedback on his trip and on his policies.

But the most unforgetta­ble experience with Vajpayee would be, no doubt, in the winter of 1992, a few days after the apocalypti­c Babri Masjid demolition by Hindu zealots in Ayodhya.

Sitting in an inner room of his Raisina Road residence, a visibly anguished Vajpayee, in one of his life’s most candid interviews, called the Ayodhya action as the “worst miscalcula­tion” and a “misadventu­re” and conceded that voices of moderation were overruled by hardliners.

MAN OF VALUES

Vajpayee admitted — much against the claims of his own party — that the BJP had failed to honour “solemn assurances” to the Supreme Court, Parliament and Prime Minister Narasimha Rao that the mosque would not be touched during the December 6 “kar seva” by Hindu activists.

“Moderates have no place,” he lamented to IANS, adding with a resigned air, “Who’s going to listen to the voice of sanity?” However, he ruled out quitting the party, saying he had a lifelong associatio­n with it and “when the ship is facing a storm, you don’t desert”.

Asked how, despite having been projected as a prime ministeria­l candidate as far back then, he had chosen to compromise on his conviction­s, Vajpayee replied, “I have waited too long (to be Prime Minister).”

Many of his party people, and even journalist­s, had decried the headlinegr­abbing interview and had even slyly suggested that it may have been contrived. But Vajpayee kept a dignified SILENCE on THE Issue AND, when I confronted him at the party’s National Executive meet in Kolkata some weeks later about what people were saying, he crypticall­y shot back: “Have I said anything?”

That said it all.

Vajpayee was a man of values, who decried the divisive ideology of sections of his partymen; he had a vision for the country and sought its rightful place in the comity of nations; but he remained till the end —as his opponents often taunted — the right man in the wrong party for India.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? An Indian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) worker pays tribute at the portrait of former Indian prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee in Guwahati on Friday.
Agence France-presse An Indian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) worker pays tribute at the portrait of former Indian prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee in Guwahati on Friday.

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