Natwar Singh

K. Natwar Singh
Minister of External Affairs of India
In office
22 May 2004  6 December 2005
Preceded by Yashwant Sinha
Succeeded by Manmohan Singh
Personal details
Born (1931-05-16) 16 May 1931
Jaghina, Bharatpur, Bharatpur State, British Raj (present-day Rajasthan, India)
Nationality Indian
Political party Indian National Congress
Spouse(s) Heminder Kaur
Residence New Delhi
Alma mater Mayo College, Ajmer
St. Stephen's College, Delhi
Scindia School
Occupation Politician
Religion Hinduism
Awards Padma Bhushan
Signature

Kunwar Natwar Singh (born 16 May 1931) is an Indian politician, a former senior bureaucrat, a former Union cabinet minister, and a writer.

Singh was selected into the Indian Foreign Service, one of the most competitive and prestigious government services, in 1953. In 1984, he resigned from the service to contest elections as a member of the Indian National Congress party. He won the election and served as a union minister of state until 1989. Thereafter, he had a patchy political career until being made India's foreign minister in 2004. However, 18 months later, he had to resign under a cloud after the UN's Volcker committee named both him and the Congress party to which he belonged as beneficiaries of illegal pay-offs in the Iraqi oil scam.[1]

Early life and education

The fourth son of Thakur Govind Singh of Deeg and his wife Thakurani Prayag Kaur, Singh was born in the princely state of Bharatpur to an aristocratic Jat family related to the ruling dynasty of Bharatpur.[2][3] He attended Mayo College and Scindia School, Gwalior, both traditionally for Indian princely clans and nobles, and took an undergraduate degree at St. Stephen's College, Delhi. He subsequently studied at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University and was a visiting scholar for a period at Peking University in China.

Diplomatic career

Singh joined the Indian Foreign Service (IFS) in 1953 and served for 31 years. One of his earliest assignments was in Beijing, China(1956–58). He was then posted to New York City with the Permanent Mission of India(1961–66) and as India's representative to Executive Board of UNICEF(1962–66). He served on several important UN committees between 1963 and 1966. In 1966, he was posted to the Prime Minister's Secretariat under Mrs Indira Gandhi. He was part of the Indian delegation to the Heads of Commonwealth Meeting in Kingston, Jamaica in 1975. He was an Indian Delegate to the 30th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, New York, Heads of Commonwealth Meeting, Lusaka, Zambia in 1979 and the 35th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, New York. He also accompanied Mrs. Indira Gandhi on her State visit to the US in 1982. He served as an Executive Trustee, United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) appointed by the Secretary-General, United Nations for six years (1981–86). He also served on the Expert Group appointed by the Secretary General of the Commonwealth, London in 1982. He was appointed Secretary-General of the Seventh Non-aligned Summit in New Delhi held in 1983 and Chief Coordinator of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in New Delhi in the same year. He served as Secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs from March 1982 to November 1984.

He received the Padma Bhushan, a distinguished award from the Government of India, in 1984.[4]

Political career

In 1984, after resigning from the Indian Foreign Service, Singh joined the Congress party and was elected to the 8th Lok Sabha from Bharatpur constituency in Rajasthan. In 1985, he was sworn in as a minister of state (who is a minister, but one level below a cabinet minister) and allotted the portfolios of steel, coal and mines, and agriculture. In 1986, he became minister of state for external affairs. In that capacity, he was elected President of the UN Conference on Disarmament and Development held in New York in 1987, and also led the Indian delegation to the 42nd Session of the UN General Assembly.

Singh remained a minister of state for external affairs until the Congress party lost power after being defeated in the general elections of 1989. In those elections, he contested and lost the Mathura seat in Uttar Pradesh. The Congress party returned to power after the elections of 1991, with P.V. Narasimha Rao as Prime Minister since Rajiv Gandhi has lately been assassinated. At this time, Singh was not an MP and could not be a minister. His importance lay solely in perceived proximity to the नेहरू परिवार, of which he was a staunch and avowed loyalist. He duly developed differences with the Prime Minister and left the party along with N.D. Tiwari and Arjun Singh, to form a new political party, All India Indira Congress. In 1998, after P.V. Narasimha Rao had been shunted into oblivion and Sonia Gandhi had regained complete control of the party, the three family loyalists merged their new party into the Congress party and returned into the service of the Gandhis.

Singh was rewarded with a ticket to contest the general elections of 1998, and returned to parliament after a gap of nine years, when he was elected to the short-lived 12th Lok Sabha (1998–99) from Bharatpur. However, he had to sit in the opposition benches, and then he lost the elections of 1999. After a further hiatus of three years, he was elected (indirectly) to the Rajya Sabha from Rajasthan in 2002. The Congress party came back to power in 2004, and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appointed Natwar Singh as the Minister for External affairs.

Oil for Food scandal

Singh assumed office on 23 May 2004 as India's minister for external affairs. His tenure proved controversial.

On 27 October 2005, while Singh was abroad on an official visit, the Independent Inquiry Committee headed by Paul Volcker released the report on its investigation of corruption in the Oil-for-Food program. It stated inter alia that "India's Congress party" and Natwar Singh's family were non-contractual (corrupt) beneficiaries of the Oil for Food programme.[5] The report stated that Natwar Singh, his son Jagat Singh and Jagat's childhood friend Andaleeb Sehgal, were associated with a company called Hamdan Exports, which acted as an intermediary for illegal sales of oil to a Swiss firm named Masefield AG. In return for these illegal sales, Masefield paid kickbacks, (termed "surcharges") partly to Saddam Hussein's regime and partly to Natwar Singh and others. It was alleged that such kickbacks were Hussein's way of securing support from politicians around the world and that this benefit influenced Natwar Singh to lobby against US policies in Iraq (in particular, US sanctions on Saddam Hussein).

This scandal represented a serious crisis for the ruling coalition, because the implication was that the Congress party, which had been away from power for nearly a decade, had indulged in international corruption to replenish its coffers and fight elections. Natwar Singh's closeness to Sonia Gandhi was well-known, and it was generally surmised that he had acted as a front for that family and the party. A need was felt for the party (and ruling family) to distance itself from Natwar Singh, and also to find a scapegoat to whom the blame could be transferred, so that party and family alike could proclaim themselves clean. A convenient occasion was supplied by Anil Mathrani, then Indian Ambassador to Croatia and formerly a close aide to Natwar Singh, who alleged that Natwar Singh had used an official visit to Iraq to procure oil coupons for Jagat Singh from Saddam's regime.[6]

The long knives

When Mathrani made this allegation, Natwar Singh was on a flight returning from an official visit abroad. The Congress party struck before he landed in New Delhi. Party spokeswoman Ambika Soni, another close confidante of Sonia Gandhi, told a press gathering that the statement indicated the innocence of the Congress party, and that Natwar Singh would make his defence on the subject "as an individual," separately. He was given no chance to present a case, or even to speak to Sonia Gandhi, whom he had known personally for four decades and whose cause he had championed since the first day of her political career. On 6 December 2005, shortly after he landed in Delhi from his foreign visit, Singh was told that he had been relieved (for the time being, until his name could be cleared) of his portfolio and that he was no longer Minister for External Affairs. Interestingly, he was retained as a minister-without-portfolio.

On 26 March 2006, the Indian Enforcement Directorate (ED) announced that it had finally tracked a sum of eighty million rupees, transferred from London-based Non-resident Indian businessman Aditya Khanna's bank account to his own NRI account in a Delhi bank, and later withdrawn from this account to be allegedly distributed among Indian beneficiaries of the scam.[7] An old family connection between this businessman (Aditya Khanna) and Natwar Singh's family was dredged up. In August the same year, the Justice Pathak committee, which was investigating the case, released its judgment accepting this averment. The committee found that Andaleeb Sehgal, a friend of Jagat Singh, and Aditya Khanna, a relative of Natwar Singh, received financial payoffs by procuring oil coupons based on recommendations given by Natwar Singh. Importantly, the committee found that there was no evidence linking the Congress party with these dealings. Based on this credible report, Jagat Singh was expelled from the primary membership of the Congress party, Natwar Singh was dismissed from the Cabinet and his party membership was suspended.

Natwar Singh then resigned from the Congress party. He announced his resignation at a Bharatiya Janata Party-sponsored rally of Natwar Singh's own Jat community held at Jaipur in the presence of Vasundhara Raje, then Chief Minister of Rajasthan. On this occasion, Natwar Singh not only asserted his innocence but also launched a bitter attack on Sonia Gandhi for having failed to defend or support him.[8]

However, Natwar Singh did not join the BJP. Instead, in mid-2008, both Singh and his son Jagat joined Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party, only to be expelled by that party within four months (in November 2008) for alleged indiscipline, anti-party activities and "lack of faith" in the ideology of the Bahujan Samaj Movement. In fact, Singh had been demanding a Rajya Sabha seat (which had apparently been promised before he joined the party) and Mayawati had changed her mind on that matter. After this episode, Natwar Singh, now 77 years of age, and having suffered several personal tragedies in a short period, retired from public life.

Personal life

In August 1967, Singh married Maharajkumari Heminder Kaur (b. June 1939), the eldest daughter of the last Maharaja of Patiala State, Yadavindra Singh, and the sister of Amarinder Singh, the present titular Maharaja of Patiala and former chief minister of Punjab. Heminder's mother Mohinder Kaur was also active in public life.[3]

The couple had a son, Jagat Singh (b. August 1968) and a daughter, Ritu Kaur (b. November 1970). Jagat Singh was himself politically active as the general secretary of the Congress Party youth wing. In 1993, Jagat Singh married Natasha Masri, of Jordanian and South Indian origins, in an Arya Samaj rite. Jagat and his wife separated in July 2001 after a period of estrangement. The following March, Natasha Singh's body was discovered in a terraced garden at the Delhi Hyatt Regency Hotel; it was concluded she had committed suicide by jumping from the balcony of her room.[3] Jagat and his wife had two sons, Hanut (b. 1995) and Himmat (b. 1997). Ritu became a fashion designer, but suffered from chronic depression, for which she had been receiving treatment in London. On 9 May 2002, she hanged herself in her bedroom at her residence in Delhi.[3] [9]

Autobiography

In August 2014, Natwar Singh's autobiography, One Life is Not Enough, was released.[10][11] The book is no-holds-barred account of his political career, providing an insider view on the various machinations of Delhi's political circles. The book reveals many sensitive developments during Indira Gandhi's, Rajiv Gandhi's, Narasimha Rao's and Manmohan Singh's regimes. It also describes the changing contours of Natwar Singh's close but complex political relationship with Indian National Congress president Sonia Gandhi over the years.[12] The book presents Natwar Singh's account of the controversial Volcker report and the various political motions that took place in the background leading up to his resignation. There was immense speculation on whether Sonia Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi's visit to Natwar Singh days before the release was timed at reconciliation and to avoid a deeper embarrassment to themselves from revelations in the book.[13]

Sonia Gandhi has responded to the book by rubbishing its contents. She also expressed the intention to write her autobiography to reveal the truth.[14]

Some of the interesting details highlighted in the book are

  1. The book is the first account by a close confidant of Sonia Gandhi where there is a mention of her father fighting in World War II. He was captured by Soviet Union and held captive in one of the toughest prison in Russia, Vladimir.[15] The book quotes Sonia Gandhi visiting the town Vladimir in the summer of 2005 with Natwar Singh. She was quoted to have said "Natwar, my father, during the Second World War, was a prisoner of war in this room". It was intensely speculated in Orbassano that Stefano Maino had fascist sympathies. It was alleged that He had come from Asiago in the Veneto region where nationalism was strong. It was also speculated that he belonged to the Italian Social Republic that Benito Mussolini set up in 1943 after he was ousted by his son-in-law and He even gave his three daughters Russian names in honour of the campaign in which he fought.[16]
  2. The book quotes that during the cabinet formation of United Progressive Alliance government in 2004. Sonia Gandhi confessed to Natwar Singh that she was under immense pressure from the Americans to not to appoint Natwar Singh as the Minister of External Affairs (India).
  3. The book also speaks about what is widely speculated issue, Edwina Mountbatten and Jawaharlal Nehru's relationship. The book quotes Nehru on his return from China visit in October 1954, stopped in Calcutta and the first letter he wrote on his China experience was to Edwina Mountbatten. As the Prime minister of India, this was against the Oath of secrecy he had taken.[17]
  4. Indira Gandhi paying homage to Babur during her Afghanistan visit. The book quotes that She stood towards Babur's grave with her head slightly lowered and quoted to have said 'I have had my brush with history'.
  5. The book alleges that Sonia Gandhi wielded influence over the Media during the UPA reign. It alleges stories mysteriously appearing in TV channels, newspapers and magazines and quotes one Hindi newspaper refusing to publish Natwar Singh's article because the editor felt 'Soniaji would get angry'.[18][19]
  6. The book alleges that Sonia Gandhi spied on all the Cabinet ministers and there was a mole present in each of their office feeding information to 10 Janpath.
  7. The book quotes Manmohan Singh was not happy with the arrangement to have a dyarchy and was unsatisfactory. He quoted to have said that he was a very lonely person.
  8. The book alleges M G Ramachandran covertly supported and financed the LTTE and their cadres were being given military training in Tamil Nadu. The book states that M.G.R also considered Jaffna an extension of Tamil Nadu and had gifted 40 million rupees to the LTTE.
  9. The book alleges that M.O. Mathai, personal secretary of Nehru was a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) agent and received money for the same and that CIA had access to every paper passing through Nehru's cabinet.

Books published

  1. E.M.Forster : A Tribute,(On Forster's Eighty Fifth Birthday), editor, with Contributions by Ahmed Ali, Narayana Menon, Raja Rao & Santha Rama Rau, New York, 1964
  2. The Legacy of Nehru, New York, 1965
  3. Tales from Modern India, New York, 1966
  4. Stories from India, London, 1971
  5. Maharaja Suraj Mal (1707–63), London, 1981
  6. Curtain Raisers, Delhi,1984
  7. Profiles & Letters, Delhi, 1997
  8. The Magnificent Maharaja Bhupinder Singh of Patiala (1891–1938), Delhi, 1997
  9. Heart to Heart, Delhi, 2003.
  10. Walking with Lions: Tales from a Diplomatic Past, Released by Hamid Ansari, March 2013.
  11. One Life is Not Enough: An Autobiography[10][11], August 2014.

References

  1. "Volcker Report names Natwar Singh and Congress Party as "beneficiaries"". The Hindu.
  2. India Today
  3. 1 2 3 4 The Royal Ark-Patiala
  4. "Padma Awards" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2015. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  5. "Volcker Report names Natwar Singh and Congress Party as "beneficiaries"". The Hindu. 29 October 2005. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  6. Singh, Onkar (6 December 2005). "Natwar Singh resigns from Union Cabinet". rediff News. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  7. Thakur, Pradeep (26 March 2006). "Oil-for-food: ED traces Rs 8-cr to Delhi bank". Times of India. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  8. "Home " Nation Natwar Singh quits Congress". Zee News. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  9. "Natwar Singh's family says daughter committed suicide," 10 May 2002
  10. 1 2 “One Life is Not Enough”: Natwar Singh’s autobiography to rock the capital – The Hindu
  11. 1 2 One Life Is Not Enough: An Autobiography (English) – Buy One Life Is Not Enough: An Autobiography (English) Online at Best Prices in India – Flipkart.com
  12. Inside Track: Kissa kursi ka | The Indian Express | Page 99
  13. Exclusive: Congress President Sonia Gandhi and daughter Priyanka Vadra persuade former External Affairs Minister Natwar Singh to stall his tell-all book : North, News – India ...
  14. Sonia Gandhi reacts to Natwar Singh's claims; says will write a book to 'reveal the truth' – Economic Times
  15. The List: The World's Most Notorious Prisons
  16. Navigation News | Frontline
  17. How the wild promiscuity of Edwina Mountbatten – wife of Prince Charles' mentor – took a heartbreaking toll on her children | Mail Online
  18. Why this secrecy over Sonia Gandhi? – Firstpost
  19. Tavleen Singh
Preceded by
Yashwant Sinha
Minister for External Affairs of India
2004–2005
Succeeded by
Manmohan Singh
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