Inder Kumar Gujral (born December 4, 1919, Jhelum, India [now in Pakistan]—died November 30, 2012, Gurgaon [now Gurugram], India) was an Indian politician who served briefly as prime minister of India from April 21, 1997, to March 19, 1998, and who is remembered for the Gujral Doctrine, a policy grounded on India’s unilaterally reaching out diplomatically to its neighbours without the expectation of reciprocity.
Gujral was born into a well-connected family that played a prominent role in the struggle for independence from British rule. He attended DAV College (now Government Islamia College, Civil Lines), the Hailey College of Commerce, and Forman Christian College, all in Lahore. There, during his student days, he was initiated into politics and served as president of the Lahore Students’ Union as well as the general secretary of the Punjab Students’ Federation.
In 1964, as a member of the Congress Party, he entered the Rajya Sabha (Council of States, the upper house of India’s parliament), where he continued to serve until 1976. During this period he held a number of cabinet-level ministerial positions in the Congress (I) government headed by Indira Gandhi. In 1975 when Gandhi declared a state of emergency, Gujral, who was then the minister of information and broadcasting, rejected the government’s demand to censor news bulletins and editorials. As a result, he had to resign from his post and was made ambassador to the Soviet Union (1976–80).
In 1989 Gujral was elected to the Lok Sabha (House of the People, the lower house of the parliament) and became the minister of external affairs (1989–90) in the government of Prime Minister V.P. Singh. In 1992, Gujral again entered the Rajya Sabha. When the Janata Dal-led United Front government came to power in 1996, he was again appointed the minister of external affairs (1996–97). In April 1997, Deve Gowda, the incumbent prime minister, lost a vote of confidence in the Lok Sabha by 292 votes to 158. In his place the United Front elected Gujral as leader. With the Congress (I) backing him, Gujral was sworn in as prime minister on April 21. However, in November the Congress (I) party withdrew its support, and Gujral resigned (remaining in a caretaker capacity until a new government could be formed in March 1998). Despite his brief tenure, he made his mark by introducing the Gujral Doctrine, which set the stage for countless negotiations in subsequent years. In 1998 he was elected again to the Lok Sabha.