A former video
cassette seller with close ties to Tamil Nadu's late leader will become
the next chief minister of the Indian
state, capping a remarkable rise for the political novice.
The ruling
party in the southern state announced Sunday that VK Sasikala would become the
next leader following the resignation of the acting chief minister.
Her rise to
the top office had been rumoured since December, when beloved leader
Jayalalithaa Jayaram died at the age of 68, plunging the state into political
uncertainty.
Sasikala --
a close confidante of Jayalalithaa but with no previous record of public office
-- was soon afterwards elevated to head the ruling All India Anna Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) party, paving the way to the top job.
"She is
the next chief minister of Tamil Nadu. Like Amma, we wanted a strong woman
leader to serve the people," party spokesperson C R Saraswathi told AFP,
referring to Jayalalithaa by her popular nickname.
"O
Panneerselvam has stepped down from the chief minister's post and he will
continue to work for the party."
Panneerselvam
had been filling in as chief minister since October when former film star
Jayalalithaa was hospitalised.
The date of
Sasikala's swearing-in and other formalities will be announced soon.
Although
Sasikala had never held any official position in the AIADMK or the state
government before her election, she has long been known as
"Chinnamma" (aunt) to the party because of her friendship with
Jayalalithaa.
The two met
in the 1980s when Sasikala was running a video parlour and Jayalalithaa was a
budding politician.
It marked
the beginning of a decades-long friendship dogged by corruption scandals and
intermittent spells of bad blood. In 2014 both were jailed for four years for
corruption but were later acquitted.
The death of
Jayalalithaa on December 5 sparked a mass outpouring of grief across Tamil
Nadu, with huge crowds lining the streets to pay tribute to her coffin.
Unlike
Jayalalithaa, a three-time chief minister who inspired a devotion that verged
on the religious, Sasikala lacks popular support in Tamil Nadu and critics say
she has yet to prove her mettle.
(Business
Insider)


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