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Chief Guest

Dr. M Karunanidhi

Hon'ble Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu
5th Mahaveer Award - 1999
Chief Guest Flower

Muthuvel Karunanidhi, by name Kalaignar, original name Dakshinamurthy, (born June 3, 1924, Thirukkuvalai, near Thiruvarur, India), Indian politician and government official who was one of the founding members of the Dravidian Progressive Federation (Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam; DMK) political party in 1949 and for decades was the party’s president. He also served several terms as the chief minister (head of the government) of Tamil Nadu state in southeastern India.

Karunanidhi was born in a small village in what is now eastern Tamil Nadu and was the member of a caste of musicians. He left school early and began working as a screenwriter in the Tamil film industry. There he honed skills for promoting the Dravidian movement against Brahmans (the highest caste in the Hindu social order) that later contributed to his rise as a popular politician.

Karunanidhi became involved in politics in his early teens, beginning with public protests against the use of the Hindi language in the region. He formed organizations for the local youth and students and started a newspaper that eventually became the Murasoli, the DMK’s official newspaper. He became a close associate of DMK founder C.N. Annadurai and first received broader notice in Tamil politics when he led a 1953 protest in a town where its Tamil name had been replaced with one honouring an industrialist from northern India with a Hindi name.

Karunanidhi, running as an independent candidate, was first elected to the legislative assembly of Madras state (the name for Tamil Nadu until 1968) in 1957. Beginning with the 1962 assembly polls (which included the DMK), he was continually reelected to that body. He became the party’s treasurer in 1961 and deputy leader of opposition when the party entered the state assembly the following year. After the DMK won the 1967 assembly elections (with Karunanidhi soundly defeating his Indian National Congress [Congress Party] opponent), the party formed the government, and Annadurai became chief minister. Karunanidhi was named the minister for public works. Annadurai died in early 1969, and Karunanidhi succeeded him as the head of DMK and as chief minister. His first tenure lasted only until January 1971, but another DMK victory in assembly elections later that year returned him to the chief minister’s office.

In 1972, however, a new party, the All India Dravidian Progressive Federation (All India Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, AIADMK), split from the DMK. Thereafter, the two parties became bitter rivals and traded terms heading the state government. Both the DMK and the AIADMK used those tenures in power to settle scores with one another. In 1996 a Karunanidhi-led DMK government filed several charges of corruption against Jayalalitha Jayaram, leader of the AIADMK, who then spent a short time in jail. In 2001, after the AIADMK had returned to power following assembly elections that year, Karunanidhi was arrested and briefly detained on corruption charges related to highway-construction projects. The case was later dismissed.

In 2006, at the age of 82, Karunanidhi became chief minister of Tamil Nadu for the fifth time, after a DMK-Congress alliance had secured a majority of seats in assembly elections. The party had won on the promise that it would provide cheap rice to the citizenry and a free television for every household in the state. By 2011, however, such incentives were not enough to overcome allegations of corruption, and the party was thoroughly trounced by the AIADMK in assembly elections. Although Karunanidhi easily retained his seat, only 22 other DMK candidates could win in the polling. He was by then in poor health, but he remained the DMK’s supreme leader and continued to command immense popularity in Tamil Nadu politics.