Veteran Congress leader Anand Sharma resigned as the chairman of the party’s foreign affairs department on Sunday to help in its reconstitution and enable bringing in younger leaders.
The former Union minister led the department for around a decade as the National Committee of Department of Foreign Affairs was last constituted in 2018.
“As I have conveyed earlier both to CP and Chairperson CPP, in my considered view, the committee needs to be reconstituted to bring in younger leaders of potential and promise. That will ensure continuity in its functioning.
“Expressing my gratitude to the party leadership for having entrusted me with this responsibility, I am submitting my resignation as Chairman DFA (Department of Foreign Affairs) to facilitate its reconstitution,” Sharma said in his resignation letter addressed to Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge.
Sharma, a member of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), the highest decision-making body in the party, has been the Congress’s leading face on international affairs for almost four decades.
Sharma, however, continues to be a member of the Congress.
He has earlier played a crucial role in the negotiations of the Indo-US nuclear deal, pitched for India-specific waivers at the Nuclear Suppliers Group and is also credited with institutionalising the India-Africa partnership in a structured manner and convening the first India-Africa summit.
He was also a member of the recent all-party parliamentary delegations that were sent abroad to put forth India’s stance in the aftermath of Operation Sindoor. Sharma also articulated India’s position to the world after the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
During his tenure as the commerce minister, the first-ever WTO Agreement and comprehensive trade agreements were signed.
In his letter, Sharma said the DFA has, over the last few decades, been actively engaged in building and strengthening the Congress’s relations with like-minded political parties across the world, which share the values of democracy, equality and human rights.
He said the Congress has built strong relations with major political parties in Asia, Africa, Middle East, Europe and Latin America. The foreign affairs department of the party has established an institutional mechanism for the exchange of leadership delegations with fraternal political parties and international organisations.
“I have had the privilege to have been proactively associated with all major international initiatives of the Congress since mid-1980s as IYC president. These included: NAM youth conference 1985 and the historic ‘Anti Apartheid Conference’ in 1987. These were universally acclaimed,” Sharma said.
He also said the Congress successfully convened the historic Satyagraha centenary conference in January 2007 and an international conference on the 125th birth anniversary of Jawaharlal Nehru in November 2014, which were attended by eminent world leaders. These conferences, chaired by then Congress president Sonia Gandhi, received worldwide acclaim.
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