Download One Life Is Not Enough: An Autobiography AudioBook Free
Former Minister responsible for Exterior Affairs Kunwar Natwar Singh's autobiography, One Life ISN'T Enough, can be an honest, searing bank account of the veteran's life as a bureaucrat, politician, and pantry minister. Natwar Singh discusses his experiences in Delhi's politics corridors and models the record straight on several events, including the Volcker controversy. Natwar Singh became a member of the Indian Foreign Service and served as a bureaucrat for 31 years. He became a member of the Congress Party in 1984 and became a Minister of Status in the then Best Minister Rajiv Gandhi's council, with the portfolios of metallic, agriculture, and coal and mines in 1985. In such a much-awaited autobiography, the previous cabinet minister talks justly about his experiences and services in various ministries. Singh has played a substantial role in Indian politics for more than 20 years and has been a part of some of the most epochal events of 3rd party India, including Indo-China talks and the formation of Bangladesh. In 2002, when the Congress party returned to ability, Natwar Singh was appointed as the Minister for Exterior Affairs. But his eventful profession noticed its end with the Volcker Article in the year 2005. His name appearing in the Iraqi food-for-oil rip-off pressured him to resign from the pantry and eventually from the Congress party. Singh discusses all these events and the fluctuations of the Congress party in One Life ISN'T Enough, an account of insider. His association with the party allowed him to see some of the historical events closely, and he discusses Pakistan in the 1980s under the guideline of Chief executive Zia-ul-Haq, Indo-Chinese and Indo-USSR relations, and other very sensitive developments.