
The former main minister Oommen Chanda was a rare kind of leader, a man who was willing to do anything, even eliminate bureaucratic bureaucracy to ensure public well -being, said Sreekandan, a deputy. On Friday he delivered the address of the main lecture to a commemorative event, which on Friday at the headquarters of the District Congress Committee (DCC) meant the second anniversary of the death of Congress.
Sreekandan describes Chandy’s term as a historical milestone in the development of the state and emphasized the transformative impact on the state and educational sectors of the state. “No one in the future will be able to embody the type of humane, leading on the people that Chanddy cost,” he said. “He had an unrivaled ability to connect deeply with the masses, a feature that remains unrivaled.”
He added that Chanddy was helpful in closer to people to the congress side. “If our workers keep narrow bonds with the public, as it did, the congress party can rise again with the strength,” he said.
The commemorative observance began with former speaker Theambil Ramakrishnan, who illuminated the lamp in front of the portrait of Chanda. President DCC Joseph Tanet chaired a meeting that represented a memorial address of older journalist George Pulikkan.
Published – 18 July 2025 20:45