http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/18/world/asia/18basu.html?ref=asia


Jyoti Basu, 95, Leader of Communists in India, Dies 
By JIM YARDLEY
Published: January 17, 2010 
NEW DELHI - Jyoti Basu, a powerful leftist leader who dominated politics in the 
state of West Bengal for more than two decades and nearly became India's first 
Communist prime minister, died in Calcutta on Sunday. He was 95. 

Mr. Basu's stature in West Bengal was evident in a huge public outpouring of 
concern in recent days as his health steadily deteriorated. Anxious crowds 
gathered outside his Calcutta hospital, local newspapers carried front page 
updates on his condition and a litany of leading Indian politicians, including 
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, made calls to him. He died of multiple organ 
failure, according to Indian news reports. 

Mr. Basu was known as a savvy political survivor, skilled at building 
coalitions and forging consensus, whose biggest policy initiatives were 
sweeping land reforms in West Bengal. The initiatives distributed land to more 
than two million landless families and, in turn, established a leftist 
coalition known as the Left Front that dominated state politics for three 
decades until showing recent signs of weakening. 

Mr. Singh praised Mr. Basu as a pragmatic, visionary politician whose death 
"marks the end of an era in the annals of Indian politics." Citing his land 
initiatives as visionary, the prime minister also described Mr. Basu as "one of 
the most able administrators and politicians of independent India." 

Born July 8, 1914, in Calcutta, Mr. Basu was raised as a doctor's son in an 
aristocratic family. He later studied law in London, where he embraced Marxism 
before returning to Calcutta in 1940. He then joined the Communist Party of 
India and began organizing railroad workers in the last years of the British 
raj. 

After India's independence in 1947, Mr. Basu was elected several times to the 
local assembly. When the Communist Party of India split in 1964, he was among 
the founders of the more radical Communist Party of India (Marxist). He became 
chief minister in 1977 as the leader of a Left Front coalition and held that 
position, the most powerful in the state, until 2000. 

He nearly became India's prime minister in 1996 as the head of a national 
coalition. But hard-liners in his own party rejected his selection, arguing 
that leading a coalition government would betray Marxist principles and would 
not allow him to carry out Marxist policies. Mr. Basu would later call this 
decision a "historic blunder." 

His land initiatives won national praise, but West Bengal's industrial policies 
were criticized during his tenure. Today, the popularity of his CPI-Marxist 
party has suffered severely amid concerns about corruption and bad governance. 

Hari Kumar contributed reporting.

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