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George Gilbert Swell

Indian academic, politician and diplomat (1923–1999)


Indian academic, politician and diplomat (1923–1999)

FieldValue
nameGeorge Gilbert Swell
smallimage
order5th Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha
term_start9 December 1969
term_end18 January 1977
predecessorR.K.Khadilkar
successorGodey Murahari1blankname = Speaker
1namedataG. S. Dhillon & Bali Ram Bhagat
office1Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
term_start11962
term_end11977
predecessor1Bonily Khongmen
successor1Biren Singh Engti
constituency1Autonomous District, Assam
term_start21984
term_end21989
predecessor2Bajubon Kharlukhi
successor2Peter G. Marbaniang
term_start31996
term_end31998
predecessor3Peter G. Marbaniang
successor3Paty Ripple Kyndiah
constituency3Shillong, Meghalaya
office4Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
term_start41990
term_end41996
constituency4Meghalaya
birth_date5 August 1923
birth_placeLaitkynsew, Khasi Hills, Assam, British India
death_date
death_placeShillong, Meghalaya, India
nationalityIndian
otherparty
partner
alma_materScottish Church College
University of Calcutta
sourcehttp://164.100.47.194/loksabha/writereaddata/biodata_1_12/1672.htm

|honorific-prefix = |honorific-suffix = University of Calcutta

George Gilbert Swell (5 August 1923 – 25 January 1999) was an Indian college professor, politician and diplomat. He was deputy speaker of Lok Sabha and its member from Shillong in Meghalaya.

Early life

He was born at Laitkynsew village near Cherrapunji in the present-day state of Meghalaya. He completed his earlier years of schooling at the Ramakrishna Mission School at Cherrapunji. After passing the Bachelor of Arts examination from the Scottish Church College, Kolkata, he completed his Master of Arts degree in English from the University of Calcutta in 1946. Within months thereafter, he married Lajopthiaw Lyngdoh, second daughter of Phrolibon Lyngdoh and Wellington Kearney. Soon after, their first child, Lakyntiew, was born in 1947, followed by a son, Sanbor, in 1950. In 1952, they moved to Ethiopia, part of a cadre of instructors recruited to teach in Ethiopia in the early 1950s. Swell taught English at the high school level. They returned to Shillong in 1956, and Swell worked as a professor of English at several Shillong area colleges. Swell contributed to the formation of the state of Meghalaya, breaking away from the parent state of Assam. He, with his wife's uncle, Brington B Lyngdoh, and Stanley Nichols Roy, as well as other community leaders, conducted a campaign for the separate identity of their proposed state which would combine the peoples of the Khasi and Janintia Hills and other tribes from the Garo Hills and adjacent areas. Swell then moved into national politics.

Political career

Swell was elected to the Lok Sabha from the Autonomous Districts (Lok Sabha) constituency in 1962, 1967 and 1971 and from the Shillong (Lok Sabha) constituency in 1984 and 1996. He was the deputy speaker of the Lok Sabha from 9 December 1969 to 27 December 1970 in the 4th Lok Sabha and again 27 March 1971 to 18 January 1977.

Swell served as India's ambassador to Norway and Iceland from 1977 to 1980 (appointed by PM Moraji Desai), and Burma, 1980 to 1984 (appointed by PM Indira Gandhi). Subsequently, he was appointed as ambassador-designate to Canada, then Spain, but instead chose to return to national political life in India. In 1985, as a member of parliament, he served as the head of the Indian delegation to the United National General Assembly, New York. In 1992 he contested the Indian presidential election as a joint opposition candidate against Shankar Dayal Sharma but lost. He was member of the Rajya Sabha (upper house of Parliament) from Meghalaya during 1990-1996.

The worsening health of his wife, Lajopthiaw, who died in early 1998, was a factor in his withdrawal from political life.

Death

Swell died on 25 January 1999.{{cite web |url=http://www.rediff.com/news/1999/jan/25swell.htm

References

References

  1. "4th Lok Sabha".
  2. "5th Lok Sabha".
  3. "List of Rajya Sabha members Since 1952".
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