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This ‘workaholic’ prime minister does not take a holiday

By Liz Mathew, IANS

New Delhi : His countrymen get 52 official holidays a year, his predecessors brought some of India’s not-so-famous holiday spots on the world tourist map by vacationing there. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh does not seem to believe in holidays and is not known to take a single day off from his tight work schedule.

Since he took over as the prime minister of India on May 22, 2004, the economist-turned-prime minister has been working non-stop and constantly.

His aides say he crams in as much work even in his foreign trips and does not waste an extra minute during his official visits. Public holidays are when he meets people who have sought appointments. Government officials have 17 gazetted and 35 optional holidays in a year.

Unlike predecessor Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who used to vacation in the last week of December to celebrate the New Year, the 75-year-old Manmohan Singh prefers to catch up on his work instead at a time when most of his counterparts around the world are taking a well-needed break.

“He does not take a break. He is always looking for work. I think his mode of relaxation is to work,” said an aide, who did not wish to be named.

On his first New Year as prime minister in 2004, Manmohan Singh visited the tsunami-hit areas in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and southern states. In the first week of 2005 and 2006, he visited Hyderabad and Chennai respectively to inaugurate the Science Congress meets.

His aides describe him as a “workaholic”. One personal aide, who has worked with many prime ministers before, even said that no prime minister worked so late in the night as Manmohan Singh did.

Most of Manmohan Singh’s overseas visits are strictly business-like, with hardly a breather in between scheduled appointments for sightseeing or even having a restaurant meal.

His visit to Russia in November was originally meant to be for three days, but due to some last-minute changes the trip spanned barely 30 hours. The reason, as Prime Minister’s Media Adviser Sanjaya Baru explained, was that the Manmohan Singh wanted to be back in his office for work the next morning. “He didn’t want to waste an extra working day by staying in Russia overnight,” said Baru.

The prime minister’s recent trip to Singapore and Uganda was another example of Manmohan Singh’s business-like approach. Since he wanted to be in New Delhi to attend the parliament’s winter session, he returned to the capital after attending the day-long ASEAN summit in Singapore. After an overnight stay in New Delhi, during which he attended the parliament session, he left for Uganda.

“It looks as though this is his nature or way of life,” said an official who works with Manmohan Singh. “He prefers to work without a break.”

Though he is a religious person, Manmohan Singh keeps himself busy with official duties even on important religious days. Sources say his family is also “tuned” in to his style of functioning.

The only time he took off from his routine work was in September when he was admitted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) for undergoing a minor surgery of the prostate gland. “He was physically immobile, but was operating from his home office,” said the official.

Vajpayee used to personally choose where to spend his New Year holidays. Manali appeared to be his favourite holiday destination after his term was over, but while in power he spent his New Year in Kumarakom (Kerala), Goa and in the Andaman and Nicobar islands.

Kumarakom has become well known for Vajpayee’s “Kumarakom musings”, his New Year thoughts for the nation that he penned while vacationing there in 2000.

Former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi had made the Andaman and Nicobar islands and Lakshadweep islands popular by holidaying there with his family. Ladakh and Kashmir also were top on his favourite holiday destinations.