Bhutan's Queen Mother Ashi Dorji Wangmo praises Indira Gandhi as a 'female icon'

The queen was speaking at the launch of a book titled India's Indira: A Centennial Tribute compiled by the Indian National Congress. The book comprises of articles, essays, and photographs of the first woman prime minister of India.

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Bhutan's Queen Mother Ashi Dorji Wangmo praises Indira Gandhi as a 'female icon'

Bhutan's Queen Mother Ashi Dorji Wangmo praises Indira Gandhi as a 'female icon'. (Source: Twitter)

At a book launch in Thimpu, Bhutan's Queen Mother, Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck, applauded the late Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. She described her as a "female icon" who showed the world what women are capable of doing if they decide something.

The queen was speaking at the launch of a book titled "India's Indira: A Centennial Tribute" compiled by the Indian National Congress. The book comprises of articles, essays, and photographs of the first woman prime minister of India.

The queen recalled Indira Gandhi for being a powerful woman and a towering personality. "I still remember her photograph with the then American president Richard Nixon. She wasn't a tall woman, but she was a towering figure.

"Mrs Gandhi was a female icon and she showed it to the world what women are capable of doing if they decide something," the queen said. Remembering the time when Gandhi came "sitting on a yak along with her father," she said the Gandhi family had been on close friendly terms with the Royal Family of Bhutan.

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"I used to admire the white streak of hair she had.Although I was very young, I still wanted that streak of white hair," the queen said. The book, edited by senior Congress leader Anand Sharma, has several photographs of Indira Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru contributed by the royal family.

The book also has a chapter by former Indian president Pranab Mukherjee. Talking about Gandhi's leadership, Congress leader and politician-writer Shashi Tharoor said when she had become the first female prime minister of India, many had wondered if she was capable of the job.

"But as it turned out, she became a better leader than many who came after her could only hope to be," said Tharoor, who was here to attend the book launch at the ongoing Mountain Echoes Literary Festival.

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