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Lal Bahadur Shastri
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(Second Bharatian Prime Minister)
Lal Bahadur Shastri (born 1904) succeeded
Jawaharlal Nehru as Prime Minister of India in 1964. Though eclipsed by such
stalwarts of the Congress party as Kamaraj (the Kingmaker) and Morarji Desai,
Finance Minister in Nehru's government, Shastri emerged as the consensus
candidate in the midst of party warfare. He had not been in power long before he
had to attend to the difficult matter of Pakistani aggression, as represented by
India, along the Rann of Kutch; and though a cease-fire under the auspices of
the United Nations put a temporary halt to the fighting, the scene of conflict
soon shifted to the more troubled spot of Kashmir. While Pakistan claimed that a
spontaneous uprising against the Indian occupation of Kashmir had taken place,
India charged Pakistan with fomenting sedition inside its territory and sending
armed raiders into Jammu and Kashmir from Azad Kashmir. Shastri promised to meet
force with force, and by early September the second Indo-Pakistan war had
commenced.
Though
the Indian army reached the outskirts of Lahore, Shastri agreed to withdraw
Indian forces. He had always been identified with the interests of the working
class and peasants since the days of his involvement with the freedom struggle,
and now his popularity agree. But his triumph was short-lived: invited in
January 1966 by the Russian Premier, Aleksei Kosygin, to Tashkent for a summit
with General Muhammad Ayub Khan, President of Pakistan and commander of the
nation's armed forces, Shastri suffered a fatal heart attack hours after signing
a treaty where India and Pakistan agreed to not meddle in each other's internal
affairs and "not to have recourse to force and to settle their disputes through
peaceful means. Shastri's body was brought back to India, and a memorial, not
far from the national memorial to Mahatma Gandhi, was built to honor him. It
says, in fitting testimony to Shastri, "Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan"
("Honor the Soldier, Honor the Farmer"). He is, however, a largely forgotten
figure, another victim of the engineering of India's social memory by Indira
Gandhi and her clan.
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Biography Posted By Swapnil Sinha - Data Posted By Mrityunjay
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