Nar Bahadur Bhandari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nar Bahadur Bhandari
2nd and 4th Chief Minister of Sikkim
In office
8 March 1985  17 June 1994
GovernorKona Prabhakara Rao
Bhishma Narain Singh (Additional Charge)
T. V. Rajeswar
S. K. Bhatnagar
R. H. Tahiliani
Preceded byB. B. Gurung
Succeeded bySanchaman Limboo
In office
18 October 1979  11 May 1984
GovernorB. B. Lal
Homi J. H. Taleyarkhan
Preceded byKazi Lhendup Dorjee
Succeeded byB. B. Gurung
Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
In office
1984–1985
ConstituencySikkim
Personal details
Born(1940-10-05)5 October 1940
Died16 July 2017(2017-07-16) (aged 76)
PartySikkim Sangram Parishad
Other political
affiliations
INC (2004-2009)& SKM (2014-2017)
SpouseDil Kumari Bhandari

Nar Bahadur Bhandari (5 October 1940 – 16 July 2017) was an Indian politician who served as the chief minister of the state of Sikkim from 1979 to 1994. He briefly served as Member of Parliament representing Sikkim Lok Sabha constituency from 1984 to 1985. He was the founding leader of the Sikkim Sangram Parishad. He was popularly remembered for his efforts to include the Nepali language in 8th Schedule of the Constitution of India. He was awarded with prestigious Jagadamba Shree Purasakar for his contribution for Nepali language.[1] He was the first Indian chief minister of Gorkha origin. He also served as the president of Bharatiya Nepali Bhasha Parisangh until his death. He is popularly known as the architect of modern Sikkim.

Nar Bahadur Bhandari was born on 5 October 1940[2] in Malbasay village, near Soreng, West Sikkim[3] He earned his BA degree from Darjeeling Government College and worked as a school teacher for some years before entering politics. His wife, Dil Kumari Bhandari, is a former member of parliament (Lok Sabha) from Sikkim. He has three daughters and son.[4]

Politics

Bhandari founded the Sikkim Janata Parishad in 1977. This party won the state assembly election in 1979, and he became the chief minister for the first time on 18 October 1979.[3][citation needed] In 1984, he also served briefly as member of parliament from the Sikkim constituency in the 8th Lok Sabha as an independent candidate. In 1984, Bhandari dissolved Sikkim Janata Parishad and formed a new party called Sikkim Sangram Parishad (SSP). This party ran in the assembly elections in 1985 and won, and Bhandari became the chief minister for the second time.[3]

In 1989, SSP returned to power by winning the assembly elections.[3] In a rare instance in Indian national politics, the SSP became the singular party in the Sikkim Legislative Assembly, winning all 32 seats in the house. In 1994, Bhandari lost a vote of confidence in the state assembly, and he resigned as chief minister. Later, he served as a member of the legislative assembly from 1994 to 2004.

In 1994, SSP lost the assembly elections to the Sikkim Democratic Front led by Pawan Kumar Chamling. SSP also lost the 1999 assembly election. In the 2004 state assembly elections, Bhandari ran under the Indian National Congress, which managed to win only one seat in the assembly.[5] In May 2007, he was sentenced to prison for one month in a corruption case.[6] Again in the 2009 assembly elections, the Congress party under Bhandari failed to win any seat in the state assembly.

Bhandari became the president of the Sikkim Pradesh Congress Committee (SPCC) after he had merged SSP with the Indian National Congress in 2003. In May 2013, he was reinstated as the president of SSP. In 2014, he was convicted in a CBI corruption case.[7][citation needed]

His notable political accomplishments are free education from elementary to graduate school, establishing nearby schools—within a radius of 3 to 4 km—for all residents, providing drinking water to every household in Sikkim, building a network of roads to all major villages in Sikkim, bringing all rural areas onto the electric grid, and the setup of vast healthcare centers.[citation needed]

Later life and death

Electoral records

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI