Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister and Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) Chief Ajit ‘Dada’ Pawar died on Wednesday in a plane crash at Baramati airport, leaving behind a long career of ups and downs in politics.
According to DGCA, five people, including the crew, on board the chartered plane flying from Mumbai, Maharashtra, to Baramati died after a crash-landing at 8.45 am this morning. The crash landing of the Mumbai-Baramati charter plane occurred at the runway threshold in Baramati. Pawar was onboard along with 2 more personnel (1 PSO and 1 attendent) and 2 crew members.
Pawar was headed to Baramati to attend a public rally for the Zilla Parishad Elections.Ajit Pawar was born on 22nd July 1959 at Deolali Pravara in Rahuri taluka of Ahmednagar district.
He was known among the people as “Ajit Dada” because of his tireless striving for the people of Maharashtra and his ability to stay connected to the people and the soil.Apart from making significant contributions to government administration, Pawar headed the management of various cooperative organisations such as Milk Unions and Federations, as well as Sugar factories.
The journey of Ajit Dada’s leadership began and continued with different institutions such as milk unions, various cooperative societies, sugar factories, and banks took a new direction in 1991 when he was elected to the Lok Sabha.
He was elected to the Lok Sabha for the first time in 1991 from the Baramati Parliamentary constituency and later vacated the seat for his uncle, Sharad Pawar. He was elected to the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly seven times from the Baramati Assembly constituency. He first won in a 1991 by-election and subsequently in 1995, 1999, 2004, 2009, and 2014. .In November 2019, he engineered a split in the NCP and joined a government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party and became the Deputy Chief Minister. In February 2024, the Election Commission awarded the party name and symbol to the faction headed by Ajit Pawar.
Ajit Pawar was famed for his straightforward approach and frankness. He is survived by his wife, Sunetra Pawar and two sons, Jay and Parth Pawar.