LinkedIN Icon

Yogi Adityanath, BJP leaders honour JP on his 122nd birthday anniversary | Politics News

Yogi Adityanath, Yogi, UP CM

He passed away in Patna on October 8, 1979. (Photo: PTI)

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath on Friday paid tributes to socialist stalwart Jayaprakash Narayan on his 122nd birth anniversary, calling the anti-Emergency movement icon a “Lok Nayak” (people’s leader) in the true sense of the term.

“Tributes to the great freedom fighter, great worshipper of democracy, ‘Bharat Ratna’ ‘Loknayak’ Jayaprakash Narayan on his birth anniversary!” Adityanath posted on X in Hindi.

Click here to connect with us on WhatsApp

“During Emergency, he made an unforgettable contribution in restoring democracy by awakening the democratic consciousness of the nation. He was a ‘people’s leader’ in the true sense of the word,” he added.

 

Uttar Pradesh Assembly Speaker Satish Mahana, Deputy Chief Ministers Brajesh Pathak and Keshav Prasad Maurya, and Social Welfare Minister Asim Arun, among others, also took to social media to pay tributes to Narayan, fondly called ‘JP’.

Born in 1902 in Bihar’s Saran district, Narayan was a fierce socialist and freedom fighter who led a popular movement against the Indira Gandhi government’s alleged corruption and repressive politics in the 70s before she imposed an Emergency.

He then united opposition parties and rallied the masses against the Congress in the first elections after the Emergency in 1977, scripting a crushing defeat for the ruling party.

He passed away in Patna on October 8, 1979.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Oct 11 2024 | 12:51 PM IST

Source link

LinkedIN Icon

Rupee breaches 84 mark against US dollar as FPIs pull out of equities | Finance News

Jewish organization blasts colleges in billboard ad near San Diego State University to combat antisemitism

Jewish organization blasts colleges in billboard ad near San Diego State University to combat antisemitism