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Former India Cricketer & UP Cabinet Minister Chetan Chauhan, 73, Loses Battle to Covid-19

File photo of Chetan Chauhan

File photo of Chetan Chauhan

Chauhan, who was a minister in the Uttar Pradesh cabinet, was initially admitted at SGPGI in Lucknow, and later moved to Medanta Hospital in Gurugram after his health deteriorated.

  • News18.com
  • Last Updated: August 16, 2020, 6:31 PM IST
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Former cricketer-turned-politician Chetan Chauhan passed away on Sunday due to COVID-19 related complications after being put on life support for nearly 36 hours.

Chauhan, who was a minister in the Uttar Pradesh cabinet, was initially admitted at SGPGI in Lucknow, and later moved to Medanta Hospital in Gurugram.

Chauhan, who played 40 Tests for India, was 73 and is survived by his wife and son Vinayak, who is scheduled to arrive from Melbourne later in the day.

Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath expressed his grief at the passing away of a cabinet colleague. Chouhan is the second minister from Uttar Pradesh to have succumbed to the virus, the first being technical education minister Kamla Rani Varun. Varun passed away on August 2 after suffering from the virus for a few days.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Chauhan had distinguished himself as a wonderful cricketer and later as a diligent political leader.

Condoling Chouhan's death, BJP leader and former Union minister Shahnawaz Hussain said he was saddened by the loss of a good cricketer, a good politician and a good friend, while regretting the BJP's loss of a fine leader.

Due to kidney related ailments, his health deteriorated and he was shifted to Medanta hospital in Gurugram. On Friday night, he had a multi-organ failure and was put on ventilator support.

Chauhan had served the Delhi and Districts Cricket Association (DDCA) in various capacities — president, vice-president, secretary and chief selector — apart from being manager of the Indian Team during their tour of Australia.

Chauhan was twice elected to the Lok Sabha from Amroha in Uttar Pradesh, in 1991 and 1998 and was honoured with the Arjuna Award in 1981. During his 12-year-long cricket career, Chauhan played 40 Tests scoring 2084 runs with 16 half-centuries and two wickets. With Sunil Gavaskar, Chauhan formed a potent opening partnership for India with the duo scoring over 3000 runs, including 12 century stands.

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