News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 8 years ago
Home  » News » Why All India Radio couldn't announce Indira Gandhi's death till 6pm

Why All India Radio couldn't announce Indira Gandhi's death till 6pm

Source: ANI
October 31, 2016 18:34 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

'Vice President R Venkataraman himself announced in All India Radio's 6 pm bulletin that Rajiv Gandhi had been sworn in as the prime minister following the death of Indira Gandhi.' 

I Ramamohan Rao, former principal information officer of the Government of India, reminisces the day Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was shot dead by her bodyguards.

The events of October 31 1984 are still vivid in my memory. I was the head of the News Services Division of the All India Radio. As was my usual practice, I had just returned home after a visit to the newsroom to have a look at the morning 8am series of bulletins. I had just finished my breakfast, when the RAX telephone rang. At the other end was Sharada Prasad, the information advisor to the prime minister.

Sharada Prasad told me: "Ramamohan, the prime minister has been shot by her security guards. The injury is serious and she has been shifted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. For further information you will have to be in touch with the doctors."

I soon rushed to the newsroom of the All India Radio and deployed reporters at AIIMS and at the official residence of the Prime Minister at 1, Safdarjang Road.

In our bulletins, we stated that the prime minister has been shot at by security guards at her residence, the injury is serious and she has been shifted to the AIIMS.

Sharada Prasad updated me saying that the doctors are trying to save her.

In the newsroom, we were aware that the injuries suffered by Indira Gandhi were fatal and there was little chance of her survival.

Being a public broadcaster, the All India Radio had to get the information confirmed by the government.

Unfortunately, on that day, the President was out of the country, the home minister, the cabinet secretary and the home secretary were out of Delhi. The prime minister's son, Rajiv Gandhi, was away in Calcutta (now Kolkata).

In a parliamentary democracy, the government automatically stands dissolved with the death of a prime minister.

Looking back at the precedents, when the prime minister died, an interim prime minister was sworn in. Gulzarilal Nanda acted as prime minister on two occasions. There was speculation that someone may be sworn in till a regular prime minister was elected.

Very soon, foreign broadcasting stations like the BBC were announcing that Indira Gandhi had been shot dead by her security guards in her house, but we in the All India Radio had to wait.

I was told that in case of the death of the King of England, the news was not given out until the successor Prince, who was on a tour in South Africa, was informed.

Meanwhile, All India Radio cancelled all of its programmes and was broadcasting devotional music.

President Zail Singh went straight to the hospital after landing in Delhi, and so did Rajiv.

The All India Radio staff stationed at the AIIMS said that confabulations were going on and it was likely that there would not be an interim prime minister, and Rajiv Gandhi would be sworn in as the next prime minister of the country. But no one would confirm the information.

I went to Vice President R Venkataraman to seek his advice. I had known him closely when he was the defence minister and I was the spokesman for the ministry and the armed forces. He told me that he would cross-check the information. Soon, he told me that Rajiv would be sworn in at six in the evening.

He also decided to come to the newsroom himself. He himself announced in our 6 pm bulletin that Rajiv had been sworn in as the prime minister following the death of Indira Gandhi.

Following reports that some persons had distributed sweets near the AIIMS after hearing of the death of Indira Gandhi, violence broke out in the area. My house was in West Kidwai Nagar, next to the AIIMS Safdarjang Hospital complex, and I told my family not to move out.

Incidentally, in the All India Radio News Services Division we had a canteen. Following reports from our correspondents that there was tension in the city, I authorised the purchase of enough rations for nearly a week. Our canteen fed staff of the All India Radio for the next three days.

Among the unsung heroes of the critical days that followed, were the All India Radio and Doordarshan correspondents, news readers and staff car drivers.

They stayed in the office for three days to ensure uninterrupted service.

Two engineers of the All India Radio were pulled out of their vehicles and set on fire. I remember virtually quarantining the Station Director of the All India Radio, M S Batra, for a night.

For three days there was uncontrolled violence in parts of Delhi. The army had to be called to restore normalcy.

One of the first steps taken by Rajiv after he was sworn in as prime minister was to address the grievances of Sikhs, and he signed the Rajiv-Longowal Accord. But the controversy regarding the violence that followed the death of Indira Gandhi has not yet died down.

The Government of India soon promulgated rules regarding the announcement of the death of senior ministers. And I, as principal information officer of the government, had the misfortune to announce Rajiv's assassination in May 1991.

Image: A young Rahul Gandhi is seen next to the mortal remains of his grandmother, assassinated prime minister Indira Gandhi. Photograph: NPA Photo 

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Source: ANI
 
Jharkhand and Maharashtra go to polls

Two states election 2024