Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

Kalam Was Worried About Gurdaspur Attack, Parliament Disruption

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Jul, 2015 11:56 AM
    Hours before he collapsed and died while delivering a lecture, former president A.P.J. Abdul Kalam had voiced concern over the terror attack in Punjab's Gurdaspur, and about the continuous disruptions paralysing parliament, which he felt was "not right".
     
    Kalam's advisor Srijan Pal Singh, who was with him throughout Monday till the end, in a touching post on Facebook, said he joined Kalam at noon on Monday for the flight to Guwahati.
     
    Kalam was wearing a dark coloured "Kalam suit", and Singh gave him a compliment: "Nice colour!"
     
    "Little did I know this was going to be the last colour I will see on him," he says.
     
    During the two and a half hours of flying time and the equally long car drive to IIM-Shillong, the two "talked, discussed and debated. These were amongst hundreds of the long flights and longer drives we have been together over the last six years".
     
    "First, Dr. Kalam was absolutely worried about the attacks in Punjab. The loss of innocent lives left him filled with sorrow. The topic of lecture at IIM-Shillong was 'Creating a Livable Planet Earth'. He related the incident to the topic and said, 'it seems the man-made forces are as big a threat to the livability of earth as pollution'," Singh recounts.
     
    "We discussed on how, if this trend of violence, pollution and reckless human action continues we will forced to leave earth. 'Thirty years, at this rate, maybe', he said. 'You guys must do something about it, it is going to be your future world'."
     
    Kalam was also worried about the continuing chaos in parliament.
     
    "He said, 'I have seen two different governments in my tenure. I have seen more after that. This disruption just keeps happening. It is not right. I really need to find out a way to ensure that the parliament works on developmental politics'.
     
    "He then asked me to prepare a surprise assignment question for the students at IIM Shillong, which he would give them only at the end of the lecture.
     
     
    "He wanted to them to suggest three innovative ways to make parliament more productive and vibrant. Then, after a while he returned on it.
     
    "But how can ask them to give solutions if I don't have any myself," Singh recalled Kalam as saying.
     
    The terror attack on Monday in Gurdaspur left seven people -- three civilians and four security personnel -- dead and ended after an 11-hour gunbattle. The three attackers, believed to have come from across the border, were killed by security forces.
     
    The monsoon session of parliament, which began on July 21, has seen continuous disruptions over the Opposition demand for the resignation of External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, and Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje over the Lalit Modi episode, as well as for the resignation of Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan over the Vyapam recruitment scam.
     
    Srijan Pal Singh describes himself on his Twitter handle as "Author, Entrepreneur. Advisor to Dr. Kalam. pragmatic spiritualist. IIMA All Rounder Gld Medlist. ex iima student president."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Kiran Bedi Is Not The Only Reason BJP Lost

    Kiran Bedi Is Not The Only Reason BJP Lost
    It will be too tempting to solely blame it all on Kiran Bedi, the BJP's chief ministerial candidate, for the party's humiliating rout in Delhi. Nothing can be farther from the truth.

    Kiran Bedi Is Not The Only Reason BJP Lost

    Aam Aadmi Party Celebrates Victory In Delhi; Decimates BJP And Congress

    Aam Aadmi Party Celebrates Victory In Delhi; Decimates BJP And Congress
    Frenzied victory celebrations erupted as Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) supporters burst crackers, beat drums and danced to commemorate the Arvind Kejriwal-led party heading for a landslide in the Delhi assembly polls.

    Aam Aadmi Party Celebrates Victory In Delhi; Decimates BJP And Congress

    Meet Nirmal Singh, The Man Who Actually Towed Indira Gandhi's Car

    Meet Nirmal Singh, The Man Who Actually Towed Indira Gandhi's Car
    Kiran Bedi, the first woman IPS officer of India who bagged praise for her tough demeanor and participation in the revolutionary movement of the Jan Lokpal bill under Anna Hazare’s vision, is receiving flak for an incident dating back to 1982. 

    Meet Nirmal Singh, The Man Who Actually Towed Indira Gandhi's Car

    Indian Black Money Abroad: 350 Accounts Assessed, 60 Cases Filed

    Indian Black Money Abroad: 350 Accounts Assessed, 60 Cases Filed
    The central government has completed assessment of 350 foreign accounts while tax-evasion proceedings have been initiated against 60 account holders as part of its crackdown on black money, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said Monday.

    Indian Black Money Abroad: 350 Accounts Assessed, 60 Cases Filed

    Expelled from JD-U, Manjhi seeks floor test; Nitish stakes claim

    Expelled from JD-U, Manjhi seeks floor test; Nitish stakes claim
    Battle lines were clearly drawn in Bihar Monday as Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi, expelled from the ruling JD-U, sought to prove his majority on the floor of the assembly even as his predecessor Nitish Kumar staked claim to form the government and accused Manjhi of "horse-trading".

    Expelled from JD-U, Manjhi seeks floor test; Nitish stakes claim

    Indian Catholic Priests Find Growing Role In The West

    Indian Catholic Priests Find Growing Role In The West
    The tide has turned so much so that today a growing number of Catholic priests from India travel to, stay on and settle in the United States to minister to the needs of the faithful there.

    Indian Catholic Priests Find Growing Role In The West