Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
India

Parkash Singh Badal, 88: India's Oldest Chief Minister Is Active As Ever

Jaideep Sarin IANS, 07 Dec, 2015 01:28 PM
    Parkash Singh Badal, India's oldest chief minister, turns 88 on Tuesday but shows no sign of tiredness or any intention of retiring any time soon.
     
     
    Starting his day early, "Badal Saab", as he is referred to by most people around him, actively goes through his daily routine of meetings with officers, ministers, delegations and others who come to meet him.
     
    Badal's 'Sangat Darshan' (meeting with people) programme takes him to several villages and towns across Punjab every week.
     
    The programme is basically to take the government to the doorstep of the people. Hundreds throng every place where he stops and listens to problems and suggestions.
     
    "Badal Saab is always active despite his age. He is alert too and his memory is far better than most of the much younger people around him. He is a real leader of the masses," a close aide of the chief minister, who accompanies him to most places, told IANS.
     
     
    Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal, of which Badal is the chief patron and the strongest leader, depends a lot on the charisma of the leader, especially during trying times.
     
    Badal is also a long-time ally of the Bharatiya Janata Party and enjoys warm personal relations with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
     
    When he turned 87 years old last year, Badal celebrated his birthday with school students in Gidderbaha town in southwest Punjab. He cut over half a dozen birthday cakes that day.
     
    Starting from a simple agricultural background, Badal forayed into politics by getting elected as 'sarpanch' (village headman) in 1947, the same year when the country got independence.
     
    He was first elected to the Punjab assembly in 1957 on the Congress ticket.
     
    After leaving the Congress soon after, Badal ended up opposing the Congress policies and governments. He and the Akali Dal continue to oppose the Congress.
     
     
    Well-known for his witty one-liners and memory of people and events, Badal has always remained centre stage in Punjab's politics in the past over six decades.
     
    Born December 8, 1927, in an agriculturist family in Abul Khurana village near Malout in southwest Punjab, Badal has been chief minister of Punjab five times - 1970-71, 1977-80, 1997-2002, 2007-12 and 2012 onwards. 
     
    He has been in power in Punjab continuously since March 2007. He briefly remained a union minister in 1977 in the Morarji Desai government.
     
    Badal's wife, Surinder Kaur, died in 2011 from cancer. The Badal couple had two children, son Sukhbir and daughter Preneet.
     
    Badal's close family members are all in the government. 
     
    His son Sukhbir Singh Badal is the Akali Dal president and deputy chief minister and dominates the party and government affairs now.
     
     
    Badal's daughter-in-law Harsimrat Badal is the union minister for food processing. His son-in-law Adaish Pratap Singh Kairon is a cabinet minister in his government as is Harsimrat's younger brother Bikram Singh Majithia.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Man Stabbed To Death For Demanding Unnatural Sex

    Man Stabbed To Death For Demanding Unnatural Sex
    A 40-year-old man was stabbed to death here by a youth for allegedly demanding unnatural sex, police said on Monday.

    Man Stabbed To Death For Demanding Unnatural Sex

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles
    Delhi Transport Minister Gopal Rai on Monday said the Delhi transport department in collaboration with the transport departments of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana will conduct a drive against overloaded vehicles from April 15.

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good
    I have always found it tedious to answer the question: "Which is your hometown?" Not because I am a daughter of an army officer or belong to a family of travellers, but because "I was born in Srinagar and was brought up in Jammu." 

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?
    In early 2000, Ratan Tata, now the Tata Group's chairman emeritus, told journalists that he wanted to create an affordable four-wheeler for two-wheeler users who couldn't afford a car. That vision was developed into the Tata Nano.

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation
    Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi's long "leave of absence" appears to have accentuated the debate in the Congress on his possible elevation with clear differences among party leaders on the issue. 

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena
    Voting rights of Muslims should be revoked to stop vote-bank politics, Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut has said in an article slamming AIMIM leaders Asaduddin and Akbaruddin Owaisi for polarising the community.

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena