"Though Kalam was reluctant, he signed the proclamation. He could have rejected it but would have had no option but to sign the same if it was sent to him for the second time," Khan said while addressing the students of Sikshya O Ansandhan University here yesterday.
When the Apex court quashed the proclamation, Kalam was penitent saying he should have rejected the Cabinet's decision and thought of resigning from his post, Khan said, adding "He even consulted his elder brother in Rameswaram.
In 2005, the then Bihar Governor Buta Singh had recommended the dissolution of the Assembly which the Union Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh approved and forwarded to the President. Kalam, who was on a visit to Moscow at that time, signed it there.
It was challenged in the Supreme Court whose five-judge Constitution Bench, headed by Justice Y.K. Sabharwal, in a majority verdict held on October 7, 2005 that "the proclamation of May 23 dissolving the Bihar Assembly is unconstitutional."
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Khan also recalled that the technology-savvy President once informed Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee that he intended to meet his cabinet members as he wanted to explain to them about his vision for a developed India by 2020, a pet theme for him till the last, through a power point presentation.
Though the Prime Minister was not convinced, he agreed to the proposal and a cabinet meeting was held at the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Kalam took the PM and other ministers through the presentation spread over two hours, Khan said.
"When President George Bush visited him in 2006, he made him sit through a presentation," said Khan who was present during the talk.
"After the presentation ended, Bush told him '0Sir, it needs to be a scientist to understand this. But we will work on this'," Khan recalled.
Khan said that when Kalam's tenure was coming to an end, there was intense media speculation as to whether he would be offered a second term in the high office.
Kalam had great interest in religion and spiritual matters too, Khan said adding that he (Kalam) would often say that 'all religions were beautiful islands but there was no connectivity between them'.