VK Malhotra, politician who forged BJP in Delhi, died aged 94
Malhotra was the president also of the Indian Olympic Association, the Archery Association of India, and the All India Sports Council.
PTI
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A heavyweight in Delhi politics, he was one of the last surviving Jana Sangh-era politicians. (PTI)
New Delhi, 30 Sept
Veteran BJP leader Vijay Kumar Malhotra, the party's first
president in Delhi and a five-time MP from the city, passed away here on
Tuesday morning. He was 94. Malhotra was undergoing treatment at AIIMS for the
last few days.
A heavyweight in Delhi politics and one of the last
surviving Jana Sangh-era politicians, Vijay Kumar Malhotra's interests bled
into several spheres, and sports and journalism were only two of them.
His death at 94 on Tuesday drew homilies from top leaders of
the BJP, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who hailed him as a people's
man who kept his ear to the ground.
A beeline formed outside his house in the national capital
shortly after his death was announced at 6 am.
With his demise, the Kedar Nath Sahni-Madan Lal Khurana-VK
Malhotra era in Delhi also came to a close, a party leader said.
The three wielded a clout in an era when the BJP had little
influence in the city, as they helped it stay afloat against a formidable
Congress.
Malhotra was born in Lahore, Pakistan, on 3 December, 1931.
His family settled in Delhi after the Partition.
He was an early stalwart of the Delhi BJP, serving as the
Leader of Opposition in the Assembly, and was projected as the party's chief
ministerial face in 2008 in an election that went to Sheila Dikshit, adding to
her winning streak.
A five-time MP and two-time MLA from Delhi, Malhotra
defeated Congress candidate Manmohan Singh from South Delhi in the 1999 Lok
Sabha polls. Singh went on to become prime minister in 2004.
Malhotra was the only BJP winner from Delhi in the 2004
general election that resulted in the exit of the BJP-led NDA government headed
by Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
He was the president of Bhartiya Jan Sangh in Delhi from 1972
to 1975, as well as the first chief of Delhi BJP after the party's inception in
1980.
Malhotra had a doctorate in Hindi literature and
administered chess and archery clubs in Delhi.
Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva paid homage to the man
who, he said, groomed him into the politician he became, along with several
more.
He called Malhotra the first "Vikas Purush" of
Delhi for having overseen the construction of the city's first flyover,
connecting Patel Nagar to Moti Nagar, a feat achieved when he helmed the
Metropolitan Council during 1967-71.
Between 1950 and 1952, Malhotra worked as a deputy editor at
Hindi daily Veer Arjun, which was published from Delhi, with Atal Bihari
Vajpayee as the broadsheet's editor, another Delhi leader, Praveen Shankar
Kapoor, said.
Malhotra was the president also of the Indian Olympic
Association, the Archery Association of India, and the All India Sports
Council.
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