The Borneo Post

Former Indian finance minister dies, age 66

-

NEW DELHI: Arun Jaitley, the former Indian finance minister and one of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s closest associates, died in hospital yesterday, nearly two weeks after he was admitted following breathing difficulti­es, officials said.

Jaitley, 66, a senior leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), stepped down as finance minister in January due to ill health, just months before elections that returned Modi’s Hindu nationalis­ts to power.

“With the demise of Arun Jaitley Ji, I have lost a valued friend, whom I have had the honour of knowing for decades,” Modi said on Twitter.

“His insight on issues and nuanced understand­ing of matters had very few parallels.”

Jaitley was admitted to All India Institute Medical Sciences in New Delhi on Aug. 9.

A diabetic, his health had worsened after he underwent a kidney transplant in May last year.

He also had to skip the presentati­on of the interim budget in February when he was in hospital in the United

His insight on issues and nuanced understand­ing of matters had very few parallels.

— Narendra Modi, Indian Prime Minister

States for cancer treatment.

The lawyer-turned-politician also had triple heart bypass surgery when he was 52.

During his tenure as finance minister, Jaitley led the enactment of a bankruptcy code and a national goods and services tax law that had languished for almost 20 years.

The implementa­tion of the GST resulted in job losses for thousands of workers in small businesses, adding to his mixed record on economic management.

The Indian economy has been under a cloud for months, with latest government estimates showing it had slowed to a five-year low of 5.8 per cent in January-March as a result of sluggish domestic and global demand and little growth in private investment.

 ??  ?? File photo of Jaitley speaking at a news conference in New Delhi, India. — AFP photo
File photo of Jaitley speaking at a news conference in New Delhi, India. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia