Singh in office but 'not in power', book claims

Published April 12, 2014
Indian premier Manmohan Singh. — File photo
Indian premier Manmohan Singh. — File photo

NEW DELHI: A tell-all book by an ex-aide to India's Premier Manmohan Singh depicting him as a powerless political puppet hit bookstores this weekend, stirring new controversy in the midst of a bitterly fought election.

The book, giving ammunition to opposition critics during the marathon polling which winds up May 12, paints a damning portrait of a premier who was in office — but “not in power” — while ruling Congress party president Sonia Gandhi called the shots.

Entitled “The Accidental Prime Minister — The Making and Unmaking of Manmohan Singh,” the book is by academic and journalist Sanjaya Baru, a former media advisor to the current prime minister, who left his post in 2008.

Traditionally, the president of India's ruling party is also premier. But Gandhi, who led Congress to power in 2004 and 2009, turned down the job, fearing her Italian birth would become an explosive political issue as Hindu nationalists said her foreign origin made her unfit to rule India.

She handpicked Singh for the job but Baru said Gandhi's much hailed “renunciation of power” was more a “political tactic than a response to a higher calling”.

Baru said Singh decided early on to “surrender” to Gandhi and quotes the premier as saying he had “to accept the party president (Gandhi) is the centre of power”.

Critics have long charged Gandhi held the reins of power in the Singh administration but Baru's book is the first by a close advisor to the prime minister to make that claim.

In a strong criticism of the soft-spoken premier, he said Singh “averted his eyes from corruption” to ensure his scandal-tainted government's “longevity”.

While Singh, 81, who retires after this election, maintained the “highest standards of probity in public life”, he “turned a blind eye to the misdeeds of his ministers”.

Singh thought he could choose cabinet ministers but “he was defanged” as “Sonia nipped that hope in the bud”.

Baru said Singh had little authority over his cabinet and a senior bureaucrat would seek Gandhi's “instructions on the important files to be cleared by the PM”.

Singh's spokesman Pankaj Pachauri told AFP the book “smacks of fiction” and alleged Baru misused a “privileged position” for “commercial gain”.

The book's release comes as India's multi-phase election is well underway, with the opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party tipped to win.

Results are due May 16.

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