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Gandhi, Indira

Gandhi, Indira (indē'ru gän'dē) [key], 1917–84, Indian political leader; daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru. She served as an aide to her father, who was prime minister (1947–64), and as minister of information in the government of Shri Lal Bahadur Shastri (1964–66). On Shastri's death in 1966, she succeeded as prime minister. Her first administration, marked by her increasing personal control of the Indian National Congress party, led to a party split. Her faction, New Congress, won overwhelming electoral victories in 1971 and 1972. She triumphed in foreign affairs with India's 1971 defeat of Pakistan, which resulted in the establishment of the state of Bangladesh. Found guilty in June, 1975, of illegal practices during the 1971 campaign, she refused to resign, declaring a state of emergency. Her administration arrested opponents and imposed press censorship. In November the Supreme Court overruled her conviction. In 1977 her faction in the Congress party lost the parliamentary elections; she lost both her seat and her position as prime minister. In 1980, she again became prime minister, this time as leader of the Congress (Indira) party, and held the office until assassinated by her security guards in 1984. Her son Rajiv Gandhi succeeded her as prime minister.

See biographies by K. Bhatia (1974) and D. Moraes (1980); T. Ali, Nehru and the Gandhis, (1985); I. Gandhi, Letters to an American Friend, 1950–1984 (1985).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

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Indira, el shari de hierro: en el siglo de las mujeres, Indira Gandhi constituyó todo un símbolo. Fue uno de los líderes más carismáticos del Tercer Mundo, junto con Nasser y Suharto, pero impuso en la India una férrea dictadura y su personalidad estuvo marcada por traumas familiares como pone de relieve Katherine Frank en un libro que ha provocado la polémica. (historia).(The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi)(TT: Indira, iron-fisted woman: Indira Gandhi was a landmark in the international political scene. Alongside Nasser and Suharto, she was one of the most charismatic leaders of the Third World. She imposed a centralist government in India and her political life was marred by personal tragedies. Katherine Frank's biography has caused quite a stir. (History).)(TA: The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi) (Epoca)

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