News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 13 years ago
Home  » News » Scam-tainted Amar Singh's fall from power and fame

Scam-tainted Amar Singh's fall from power and fame

By Renu Mittal
September 07, 2011 00:00 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

For decades, Amar Singh, member of the Rajya Sabha, strode like a colossus on the Indian political stage. He was the man everyone loved to hate, but at the same time, most people would push and maneuver to be part of his well-attended parties and be seen with the man who became best friends with the likes of Amitabh Bachchan and Anil Ambani, two icons of modern India.

However, on Tuesday he was seen pushed and jostled on television screens as the court sentenced him to a spell in Tihar Jail, found to be involved in the cash-for-votes scam. A scam that saved the government of Dr Manmohan Singh in July 2008 after the left parties pulled the plug on the United Progressive Alliance government putting the Congress-led government in a minority.

The irony of the entire episode is that, on the face of it, Amar Singh got little or nothing out of the entire exercise. He was in the United States when the government was tottering. Before the confidence vote in the house, Amar Singh returned to the country and drove straight from the airport to the 7 Race Course Road of the prime minister where he met Dr Singh. Coming out of the meeting he pledged Samajwadi Party's support to the UPA government as well as to the Indo-US nuclear deal.

The speculation at that time was intense. Had Amar Singh been approached by the US establishment to ensure that Manmohan Singh's government did not fall? Had Amar Singh and Mulayam Singh Yadav been promised plum posts in the government in exchange for their vote and their support? Or was there something more which had not been spelled out. The buzz was strong and Amar Singh's backing of the government even stronger.

As luck and a lot of behind the scenes action would have it, the Manmohan Singh government survived the explosion triggered by the Left, but Amar Singh and Mulayam Singh's desire to join the UPA government could not materialise.

The Congress leadership strung him along and finally the move to bring them into the government fizzled out mainly because Sonia Gandhi was not inclined even though the prime minister was pushing for it, having established more than a working relationship with Amar Singh.

The question now doing the rounds is whether Amar Singh would sing or has he come to some understanding with the Congress party? It is no secret that Amar Singh worked hard to save the congress-led government of Manmohan Singh and the end beneficiary was the PM, the Congress and the UPA. It should be mentioned here that Singh and Dr Singh share a personal rapport.

Not a single Congress leader or worker has been implicated in the cash-for-vote scam. The others who have been arrested along with Singh are ex-Bharatiya Janata Party MPs who were found taking the bribe and who have since been expelled from the party.

Amar Singh's former secretary is already in jail while the BJP ideologue Sudhendra Kulkarni, who was then the political advisor to BJP leader L K Advani and the man who supposedly organised the entire sting operation is also in trouble on the same issue. He is in USA at the moment and has not answered the summons, but the day he does, he could also be joining Amar Singh in Tihar. There is, however, speculation that Kulkarni has taken anticipatory bail from a court in Tripura even though he is also an accused.

After Amar Singh parted ways with Mulayam Singh Yadav and later lost the friendship of his two best friends Amitabh Bachchan and Anil Ambani, the bad spell continued as he needed to be operated to have a kidney replacement in Singapore after both his kidneys failed.

He then turned towards the Congress once again, hoping to find a place in their midst but the mother-son duo of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi found no reason to strike up a friendship with him. Digvijaya Singh tried to arrange a meeting between Rahul and Amar Singh at Bhatta Parsaul but Rahul turned his back and wanted no deal with Amar Singh.

On Septmebr 8, Amar Singh's hearing for a medical bail would come up. He needs extreme care in medicine, food and lifestyle otherwise health wise he could be in trouble. The judge has so far refused his bail application and he would be spending the next couple of days in Tihar Jail with A-listers like Raja, Kalmadi, Kanimozhi, corporate honchos and senior employees of Anil Ambani's reliance company, whom he goes to meet to tell them all is well and that their families are being looked after.

Apart from Jaya Prada, film actress and politician, how many of Amar Singh's well heeled industrialist, cine stars, political big wigs and others go to meet him in jail will be watched with avid curiosity. Having started his career with the Birlas and as a director in Shobhna Bhartia's Hindustan Times, Amar Singh became close to Madhavrao Scindia, but left the Congress after he failed to get an appointment to meet Sonia Gandhi. He tried four times but was met with rejection every time, despite Scindia putting in a word for him.

Having joined Mulayam Singh Yadav he became an MP and from there began his meteoric rise when he tried to put Mulayam Singh on the national political stage. At that time he befriended industrialist Parmeshwar Godrej and actress Jaya Bachchan, had a bedroom in the house of Amitabh Bachchan and became chief mentor and guide to Subrata Sahara Roy, managing worker and chairman of Sahara India Pariwar.

He was the advisor to the Communist Party of India (Marxist)'s Harkishan Singh Surjeet and gate crashed a dinner at 10 Janpath with Surjeet even though he was not invited. It was something he could not live down for a long time to come.

Today Amar Singh stands at the crossroads of his political career, having seen the dizzying heights of power and fame, not to mention unlimited money power and access to the corridors of power and pelf. Known to have the gift of the gab and a sharp rhetoric, Amar Singh has been lying low for some time both inside and outside Parliament.

His arrest is unlikely to help him win back old friends but much will depend on how he handles this case and whether he decides to keep mum or speak and sing as was characteristic of the old Amar Singh.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Renu Mittal in New Delhi
 
Battle for two states 2024

Battle for two states