Ram Jethmalani, a doyen of legal profession who bid adieu to the world at the age of 95, leaves behind a rich legacy of his seven-decade-long career when he was in action in scores of sensitive court battles and had earned the reputation of a maverick politician for his bold and sometimes controversial stands.
Jethmalani breathed his last at 7.45 am at his official residence in New Delhi.
He began practising as a lawyer in Pakistan's Karachi in pre-Partition India after obtaining the degree of law from Shahani Law College, Karachi, at the age of 17.
A rebel by nature, he lived the life to the fullest, donning different hats -- lawyer, parliamentarian, minister -- but was not a quintessential politician constrained by party lines.
The advocate successfully petitioned the High Court in Karachi for lowering the minimum age for practising to 21 and later set up a law firm in Karachi with his friend and senior, AK Brohi.
He moved to Mumbai in 1948 after the partition and started practising in the commercial capital of the country where he won a legal battle opposing the the Bombay Refugees Act which allowed the State to relocate, sequester and question refugees anytime.
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Jethmalani earned the distinction of being the youngest member of the Bar -- and went on to become the oldest member. He was India's one of the highest paid advocates.
Jethmalani opposed the Emergency imposed by the Indira Gandhi government and the clamping of Maintenance of Internal Security Act, a controversial law allowing authorities to arbitrarily arrest those opposing the government decision.
His political career was no less interesting -- he reached parliament from the Janata Party, the BJP, the RJD, served under Atal Bihari Vajpayee and later contested against him, was expelled from the BJP and sued the party for that, and at the age of 64, in 1987, announced his candidacy for the post of President.
Jethmalani had the first brush with politics in 1971 when he contested as an Independent candidate from Ulhasnagar in Maharashtra supported both by the Shiv Sena and then-Bharatiya Jan Sangh. He could not win the election though.
The post-emergency years saw Jethmalani being elected from Mumbai as a member of parliament in the 6th (1977) and 7th (1980) Lok Sabha on Janata Party and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) tickets, respectively.
He did not get the cabinet berth until 1996 when he became Union Law Minister. In 1998, he served as the the Minister of Urban Development under Vajpayee.
He had to resign from the Cabinet over differences with the then Chief Justice of India Adarsh Sein Anand and Attorney General of India Soli Sorabjee.
In 2004, he contested the general elections against Vajpayee from the Lucknow constituency.
However, in 2010, he came back to the BJP and was elected to Rajya Sabha on its ticket from Rajasthan. But in 2013, he was expelled from the BJP for six years for "breach of discipline" for which he filed a suit against the party for expulsion and sought Rs 50 lakh in damages.
The matter was amicably settled after then BJP president Amit Shah expressed "regret" over the senior lawyer's expulsion from the party.
Jethmalani defended Shah when he was facing a probe in the Sohrabuddin Sheikh encounter case of Gujarat in which he was later discharged.
Jethmalani launched a political front called Bharat Mukti Morcha in 1988 and a political party -- 'Pavitra Hindustan Kazhagam' -- in 1995, with a motto to achieve "transparency" in Indian Democracy.
While critics described him as "maverick", rebel and a bold person, they were unanimous he was the best legal brain in the country and handled most sensitive cases especially criminal cases.
Attorney General K K Venugopal remembered his contribution. "He was handling cases across the board and he was a very outspoken person and didn't mince a word against the judiciary."