Indira showed commitment to people cant be killed: Pranab

National |  IANS  | Published :

New Delhi, Nov 19 : In her death, former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi left a message that "a commitment to the people can never be killed by any power, however strong it may be", former President Pranab Mukherjee said on Sunday.
Mukherjee was speaking at the inaugural function of a photo exhibition on Indira Gandhi on the centenary of her birth anniversary at her memorial here.
Several tough decisions taken by her during her premiership such as nationalisation of banks and not signing the non-proliferation treaty (NPT) have stood the test of time, he said.
"The bank nationalisation decision... was a bold step that resulted in rich dividends for the country.
"The impact of this decision was evident even in the last decade when the Indian banking system stood resilient, even as some of the major European and US banks suffered catastrophic meltdowns after the financial crisis in 2008," Mukherjee said.
Indira Gandhi nationalised 14 scheduled commercial banks on July 13, 1969 through an Ordinance despite resistance from a section of the Congress.
The move, Mukherjee said, was a step towards rebuilding people's confidence in the Congress' commitment to socialism.
The veteran Congressman said Indira Gandhi's contribution to world peace and disarmament was visible in her "steely protests against the flawed NPT".
"Though she was in agreement with the treaty's basic objective, she could not agree to two categories of states -- one privileged class that possessed nuclear weapons and unrestricted access to nuclear materials for whatever purpose they deemed fit, and a vast number of other countries who would be denied access to the peaceful use of nuclear materials to generate electricity.
"She did not agree to this discrimination and refused to sign the NPT, which is the policy of the nation to date.
"The first nuclear explosion at Pokhran in 1974 brought sanctions against India. Trade restrictions and stoppage of economic assistance did not deter her. The second test conducted by Atal Bihari Vajpayee as Prime Minister in 1998 vindicated her stand," Mukherjee said.
He also recalled how Indira Gandhi, despite knowing fully well that Sikhs would never forgive her for Operation Blue Star in their holiest shrine Golden Temple, turned down her advisers' suggestion to remove Sikh personnel from her security arrangement saying "it would send a wrong message".
"She told her advisors that she was aware of this feeling amongst the community... But for her, it was not a question of religion, but the fact that in the name of religion, misguided elements were causing great harm to national unity and integrity," he said.
Mukherjee also said that insertion of the words "Socialist" and "Secular" in the preamble of the Constitution to define the state through the 42nd Amendment "emanated out of her belief that insertion of these two words in the Preamble would define the characteristics of Indian state adequately".








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