Kamla Beniwal | |
Order: | 10th |
Office: | Governor of Mizoram |
Term Start: | 9 July 2014 |
Term End: | 6 August 2014[1] |
1Blankname: | Chief Minister |
1Namedata: | Lal Thanhawla |
Predecessor: | Vakkom Purushothaman |
Successor: | Vinod Kumar Duggal |
Order1: | 18th |
Office1: | Governor of Gujarat |
Term Start1: | 27 November 2009 |
Term End1: | 6 July 2014 |
1Blankname1: | Chief Minister |
1Namedata1: | Narendra Modi Anandiben Patel |
Predecessor1: | S.C. Jamir (additional charge) |
Successor1: | Margaret Alva (additional charge) |
Order2: | 11th |
Office2: | Governor of Tripura |
Term Start2: | 15 October 2009 |
Term End2: | 26 November 2009 |
1Blankname2: | Chief Minister |
1Namedata2: | Manik Sarkar |
Predecessor2: | Dinesh Nandan Sahay |
Successor2: | Dnyandeo Yashwantrao Patil |
Office3: | Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan |
Term Start3: | 25 January 2003 |
Term End3: | 8 December 2003 |
Successor3: | Sachin Pilot |
Birth Date: | 1927 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Gorir, Rajputana Agency, British India |
Death Place: | Jaipur, Rajasthan, India |
Nationality: | Indian |
Party: | Indian National Congress |
Spouse: | Ramchandra Beniwal |
Children: | 5 |
Alma Mater: | Maharani College |
Kamla Beniwal (12 January 1927 – 15 May 2024) was an Indian independence activist and politician.[2] She was a senior member of Indian National Congress party.[3] She served as a minister in different posts and Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan in 2003.[4] Later she served as Governor of different Indian states between 2009 and 2014. She became the first woman minister in Rajasthan in 1954 at the age of 27. She was the first ever woman Governor of any northeastern state. She was a recipient of Tamra Patra Award from former prime minister Indira Gandhi in recognition of her contribution in the freedom struggle.[5]
Beniwal was born in a Jat[6] family on 12 January 1927 in Gorir, Rajputana Agency, British India.[7] According to Navbharat Times Beniwal joined the Indian National Congress and became involved in Quit India Movement when she was only an adolescent child aged 15.
In 1954, at the age of 27, she won the Legislative Assembly election and became a minister in the Rajasthan state government. Beniwal was a minister in successive Congress governments in Rajasthan from 1954 onwards, holding various important portfolios including home, medical and health, education and agriculture. She was the revenue minister in the Ashok Gehlot government.
For a decade, from 1980 to 1990, she was a cabinet minister in the Rajasthan government. During this time she held a sheer diversity of portfolios such as Agriculture, Animal husbandry, Irrigation, Labour and Employment, Education, Art and Culture, Tourism and Integrated Rural development.
In 1993 she was no longer a minister but still was elected to the Legislative Assembly from Bairath (now Viratnagar), Jaipur. She became a cabinet minister again in 1998, and was the Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan from 2003.
In her long career she was closely associated with the functioning of the state Congress party and was a member of the All India Congress Committee. Among the party posts she held as the joint secretary of the Pradesh Congress Committee during the 1977 elections were member of the Rajasthan Congress Executive Committee, President of the Rajasthan Mahila Congress, member of the Rajasthan Pradesh Election Committee, and then the Chairman of the Election Campaign Committee.
Beniwal was a minister in the State Government of Rajasthan for an extended period of time, holding different cabinet posts. As a minister, she served the Rajasthan Government for nearly 50 years.
She was appointed Governor of Tripura in October 2009. She was the first female governor of any state of Northeast India.[8] A month later, she was appointed the Governor of Gujarat on 27 November 2009 where she served for more than four years. On 6 July 2014, she was transferred to the post of Governor of Mizoram.[9] With just two months before her tenure was due to end, she was removed from her position.[10]
Beniwal died after a brief illness at a private hospital in Jaipur, on 15 May 2024, at the age of 97.[11] [12]
Other than being a quite senior member of the Indian National Congress, Beniwal was famous as a minister of good quality, honesty, and excellent performance. She managed all the operations of her departments with comprehensive learning and diligence. She had lucid ideas about her task and was quite energetic to muster her officials to keep high standards of operation. As Agriculture Minister of the state, she was a key functionary in the setting up of Rajasthan Agriculture University in Bikaner.
As an Irrigation Minister of Rajasthan, she completed the task of making district programmes of approximately 48,000 water harvesting plants in Rajasthan.
She had a key role in setting up the National Institute of Ayurved, at Jaipur. With her firm endeavour, she has also set up a Sanskrit University at Jaipur.
Beniwal was one of the most committed and senior co-operators in India. She served as the representative of the Rajasthan unit in the National Co-operative Union of India in different ranks for nearly 20 years. As one of the limited and leading co-operators in India, Beniwal was linked with the primary association of the All India Co-operative Union, Jorbagh, New Delhi, which is currently named as the National Co-operative Union of India (NCUI). From the very start of the Co-operative Union, Beniwal was dynamically involved in the campaign to turn it into a real spokesperson establishment of the countrywide co-operative campaign. She received the Best Co-operator of India Award conferred by IFFCO in 1994–95.
The Lokayukta is a state-level body for monitoring the government, particularly for corruption. In August 2011, Beniwal appointed Justice R A Mehta as the Lokayukta. She did this under Section 3 of the Gujarat Lokayukta Act,1986, which gives the governor the right to appoint Lokayukta without consulting thegovernment,[13] when there has been a long delay in making the appointment. In so doing, Beniwal bypassed the Narendra Modi government of Gujarat, which had been sitting on the matter since 2004.
Justice Mehta had been recommended by the Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court in June 2011,[14] but the government did not act on the suggestion. In August, the father of murdered RTI activist Amit Jethwa filed Public Interest Litigation in the High Court, which then served a show cause notice on the government for the delay in the appointment of the Lokayukta. In response, the Gujarat state cabinet set up a committee of five ministers to look into the matter.[15]
The unilateral action of the governor was challenged in the Gujarat High Court by the government of Gujarat. On 18 January 2012, the Lokyukta appointment was upheld by the court.[16] The next day, the government of Gujarat further appealed to the Supreme Court by filing a special leave petition.[17] On 2 January 2013, the Supreme Court too upheld the appointment,[18] while noting that the Lokayukta post lying vacant for nine years reflected a "very sorry state of affairs".[19] The bench said "the process of consultation by the Governor with the then Chief Justice stood complete, and in such a situation, the appointment of Justice Mehta cannot be held illegal". It noted that the Governor is bound to act under the advice of the Council of Ministers, but the appointment of Justice Mehta is right as it was done in consultation with the Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court. It also observed that the Governor "has misjudged her role and has insisted that under the Lokayukta Act, the Council of Ministers has no role to play in the appointment of the Lokayukta".[20]