SHILLONG: Former president of India, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam died on Monday after collapsing collapsing while delivering a lecture in Shillong, northeastern India.
Kalam, 83, collapsed while addressing the students of the Indian Institute of Management in the Meghalaya in Shillong and was rushed to the nearby Bethany hospital where doctors gave him emergency treatment while trying to revive him.
"He was brought into the hospital without a pulse or blood pressure, there was no sign of life," said John Sailo Ryntathiang, director of Bethany Hospital.
Kalam died from cardiac arrest in Bethany Hospital, according to hospital chief executive officer John L. Sailo.
B. Warjri, chief secretary of Meghalaya state, confirmed that Kalam died on Monday evening at a hospital. He was 83.
Kalam served as president of India for five years from 2002, and enjoyed support of both the ruling BJP and the opposition Congress at the time. He was known as the father of the country's military missile programme.
Popularly known as “Missile Man,” Kalam led the scientific team that developed missiles able to carry India's nuclear warheads. He became a national folk hero after helping oversee nuclear tests in 1998 that solidified India's status as a nuclear weapons state. India's first atomic test was in 1974.
Former Indian president A.P.J. Abdul Kalam won his spurs as the country’s missile man. He played a pivotal role in India's Pokhran-II nuclear tests in 1998.
Kalam, who wrote a book called “Ignited Minds,” became best known as a tireless campaigner for unleashing India's technological muscle and discouraging expensive imports from the West.
Born on October 15, 1931, in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, Kalam graduated from the prestigious Madras Institute of Technology in aeronautical engineering.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley expressed his condolences on Twitter: “We have lost an ideal citizen. May his soul rest in peace.”
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