New Delhi, August 16
One of India's shrewdest and most liked politicians, Atal Bihari Vajpayee was known for handling various contradictions with dexterity, particularly after the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992 and during the communal riots in Gujarat in 2002.
Often viewed as a statesman and the BJP's moderate face, Vajpayee managed to maintain a distance from the hardcore Hindutva ideology of the BJP and its ideological fountainhead Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, being part of both while speaking his mind.
In 2002, days after the communal riots in Gujarat, Prime Minister Vajpayee famously told then chief minister Narendra Modi he must follow his "raj dharma" of ensuring no discrimination on the basis of caste, creed or religion.
Vajpayee's comments at a press conference, with Modi by his side, had triggered speculation that the chief minister may be on his way out.
Ten years earlier, when he was opposition leader, he was the lone ranger in the BJP, unequivocally apologising for the demolition of the Babri Masjid.
Though no BJP leader expressed regret for the demolition of the mosque by hundreds of karsevaks, Vajpayee termed it "unfortunate" and said it "should not have happened".
"We tried to prevent it, but we could not succeed," he said.
It was because of his unique accommodative politics and his image of a moderate that many political observers called him the "right man in the wrong party".
On February 27, 2002, a group of people in Godhra set fire to a few coaches of the Sabarmati Express, carrying pilgrims from Ayodhya, triggering large-scale communal violence across Gujarat.
It was alleged that the state administration did not come down hard on rioters.
Many political observers believe the Gujarat riots were one of the reasons why Vajpayee could not retain power in the general elections two years later. - PTI
Defining moments
May 1996 Vajpayee becomes PM for first time but government lasts only 13 days
March 1998 BJP-led coalition government returns to power; Vajpayee stays in office for 13 months
May 1998 Conducts Pokhran-II nuclear bomb tests with five underground N-bomb explosions in Jaisalmer; invites global reproach, sanctions
Feb 1999 Inaugurates first Delhi-Lahore bus, travels in it to meet Pak counterpart Nawaz Sharif
June 1999 Pakistan begins hostilities in Kargil, takes both countries to brink of a full-scale war
Oct 1999 NDA returns to power; Vajpayee completes entire five-year term as PM, first non-Congress leader to do so
Dec 1999 Five terrorists hijack an Indian Airlines flight with 190 people on board; govt releases three terrorists to free hostages in Afghanistan
March 2000 Despite sanctions, US President Bill Clinton visits India, first since Jimmy Carter in 1978
July 2001 Historic summit in Agra with Gen Musharraf fails
Dec 2001 Pak-based terror outfits attack Parliament building, killing nine people
Feb 2002 Gujarat riots break out under Narendra Modi’s rule; Vajpayee talks of ‘raj dharma’ — TNS