Ajit Prasad Jain
Ajit Prasad Jain | |
---|---|
Born |
October 1902 Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India |
Died | 31 December 1977 |
Organization | Indian National Congress |
Movement | Indian Independence movement |
Ajit Prasad Jain (1902–1977) was a former President of the U. P. Congress Committee,[1] member of the Constituent Assembly,[2] Union minister and Governor of Kerala from Saharanpur, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India.[3]
He was born in Meerut in 1902 in a middle-class family.
He graduated with Honours at the Lucknow University and also took his LL.B. He started his legal practice in 1926.He was an alumnus of the SM College, Chandausi[4]
Soon after A.P. Jain was drawn to politics and joined the Indian National Congress. He took part in the Civil Disobedience Movement (1930) and all later Congress movements. He soon became prominent in U.P. politics. He became a member of the U.P. Congress working committee and also the Secretary of Provincial Congress Committee.
He was elected to the Constituent Assembly from the United Provinces.[5] He was appointed a Parliamentary Secretary in the U.P. Government 1937 and remained in office till the resignation of the Ministry in 1939. He was a member of the All India Congress Committee for a long time.
He was a minister with cabinet rank in charge of the Ministry of Rehabilitation under Nehru following the constitution of the First Lok Sabha in 1952.
He subsequently held the portfolio of Union Minister for Food and Agriculture in Mr Nehru's cabinet from December 1954 to August 1959. He became President of the U.P. Congress Committee in May 1961.
When Rafi Ahmed Kidwai formed the All India Kisan Mazdoor Praja Party owing to ideological differences with the then Congress president Purushottam Das Tandon, Jain handed in his resignation to Nehru in solidarity with Kidwai. Nehru however turned it down.[6]
He succeeded V V Giri as the third governor of Kerala serving from 2 April 1965 to 6 February 1966 during which time the state remained under President's rule.[7] He resigned from the post of Governor to canvass support for Mrs Indira Gandhi for position of Prime Minister following the untimely death of Lal Bahadur Shastri. He belonged to the leftist section of the Congress and wanted to strengthen this section by opposing Morarji Desai.
Later he was elected to the Rajya Sabha in 1967 and remained a member till 1975
He accepted the Chairmanship of the Irrigation Commission and the report of this commission remains a monumental work.
He was a member of the Zamidari Abolition Committee in UP and was instrumental in the drafting of Zamidari Abolition bill and in the plan to link the rivers of India. His far-slightness in this project and in the establishment of green revolution led to the self-sufficiency of food in India.[8]
He established Seva Nidhi Trust in Saharanpur & in Fatehpur in UP, India, which till date is running a house for destitutes, TB clinic & free eye camps. Additionally it gives out scholarship's to poor and needy students. These establishments are being by his son Dr K P Jain, a renowned doctor in Delhi (Ex chairman Ganga Ram Hospital)
[9] Ajit Prasad Jain won the 1952 and 1957 Lok Sabha election as the Congress Party candidate from Saharanpur (Uttar Pradesh) and from Tumkur (Karnataka) where he won in 1962.[10]
He chaired the Uttar Pradesh Police Commission, looking into police reforms in the state, from 1960 and it submitted its report in 1961.[11] His Shadow of the bear: The Indo-Soviet treaty was published in 1971[12] and Kashmir: what really happened, based on his recollection of events that led to the arrest of Sheikh Abdullah in 1953, in 1972.[13]
Ajit Prasad Jain died on 31 December 1977 at the age of 75.[14]
References
- ↑ "Vijai Pratap Singh vs Ajit Prasad And Ors. on 20 September, 1965".
- ↑ "LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY".
- ↑ Progressive Jains of India Satish Kumar Jain ,Shraman Sahitya Sansthan, 1975 -
- ↑ "SM College Alumni".
- ↑ "LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY".
- ↑ Remembering Our Leaders: Bipin Chandra Pal by Anita Mahajan
- ↑ KERALA LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
- ↑ Commissions and Omissions by Indian Prime Ministers: 1947–1980 By Janak Raj Jai
- ↑ "IBN Politics". IBN India.
- ↑ "Two outsiders sent to Rajya Sabha from State". The Hindu.
- ↑ "State Police Commissions". Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative.
- ↑ "Shadow of the bear: The Indo-Soviet treaty".
- ↑ "The legacy of 1953". Frontline.
- ↑ Data India Press Institute of India, 1977, Page 32
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