This Article is From Jun 10, 2013

LK Advani resigns for third time in eight years

LK Advani resigns for third time in eight years
New Delhi: It is for the third time in eight years that BJP leader L K Advani has resigned from top party posts including once over the huge controversy over his praise of Pakistan's founding father Mohammed Ali Jinnah.

85-year-old Mr Advani, a founder member of BJP, had first resigned as party president on June 7, 2005 following widespread criticism over his remarks praising Mr Jinnah during his six-day visit to Pakistan. Mr Advani had described Mr Jinnah as a "secular" leader.

Mr Advani, whose trip to Pakistan was seen as an attempt to reposition himself politically and to shed the hardline tag and recast himself as a moderate, palatable politician to a wider electorate, had spoken of Mr Jinnah's "forceful espousal of a secular state in which every citizen would be free to practice his own religion".

He had described Mr Jinnah as one of the "very few who actually create history".

Mr Advani, however, withdrew his resignation after intense parleys, ending a four-day long leadership crisis in the opposition party.

Despite the resolution of the crisis, ties remained strained between Mr Advani and the RSS, the party's fountainhead.

Less than seven months after he withdrew his resignation, Mr Advani stepped down as party president on December 31, 2005 bringing to an end the controversy triggered by his praise of Mr Jinnah. He was succeeded by the current party President Rajnath Singh.

The formal resolution of the crisis in June took place at a meeting of the BJP parliamentary board and central office-bearers to which the Chief Ministers of BJP-ruled states were also invited.

A one-page resolution adopted at the meeting to which Mr Advani was also a party blamed Mr Jinnah for the Partition and the violence that followed.

All the BJP leaders stood together on the issue of "no deviation from ideology" and went along with the RSS position that there could be no question of re-evaluating Mr Jinnah or his role in Partition.

The BJP veteran, who was appointed President in October 2004, stood by his comments while sending in his resignation letter. It was Mr Advani's third term as BJP chief.

"I have not said or done anything in Pakistan which I need to retract or review", Mr Advani wrote in a letter in which he requested the BJP to "relieve" him of his post.

Mr Advani had also drawn criticism from the ruling Congress.

"It is truly ironic and astounding that Mr Advani considers Mr Jinnah secular. Perhaps he would like to explain to the nation the new definition of secularism," Congress spokesman Abhishek Singhvi had said.

Mr Advani announced his resignation for the second time at a press conference, a day after the BJP's silver jubilee National Council session concluded in Mumbai.

He had denied that he was forced to resign under the pressure of RSS. He said he had acted on his declaration at the Chennai national executive session in September.

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