Shürhozelie Liezietsu
Dr. Shürhozelie Liezietsu | |
---|---|
Chief Minister of Nagaland | |
In office 22 February 2017 – 19 July 2017 | |
Preceded by | T. R. Zeliang |
Succeeded by | T. R. Zeliang |
President of Nagaland People's Front | |
In office 21 October 2023 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Kohima Village, Naga Hills District, Assam Province, British India (Now in Kohima District, Nagaland, India) | 20 November 1936
Political party | Nagaland People's Front |
Shürhozelie Liezietsu (born 20 November 1936) is an Indian politician from Nagaland in Northeast India who served as the 11th Chief Minister of Nagaland from 22 February 2017 to 19 July 2017. He was the President of Naga People's Front[1][2] till October 2023.
Early life
Shürhozelie Liezietsu was born on 20 November 1936 in Kohima Village to an Angami Naga family.[3] He did his initial schooling in Mission Public School, Kohima and completed his matriculation in year 1956 from Kohima Government High School.[3] He completed his graduation from the prestigious St. Edmund's College, Shillong. He started his career as a clerk in state secretariat before switching to teaching.[3] He also has an interest in gardening apart from writing and politics.[3] He was also President of Ura Academy, the state's highest literary body and was conferred an honorary D.Litt. by the Nagaland University in year 2003.[3]
Political career
He entered politics in year 1969 and was one of the founding members of Nagaland's first regional party United Democratic Front (UDF) and later Naga National Democratic Party (NNDP).[3] In 2002 he was crucial in the formation of Nagaland's People Front (NPF).[3] In 2003 he was elected to the Nagaland Legislative Assembly as the Naga People's Front candidate in the constituency Northern Angami-I (ST).[3] After the election, he was appointed Minister for Urban Development.[4][5]
He retained his constituency in the 2008 election,[3] and was then appointed Minister for Urban Development for a second time with an additional portfolio of Higher and Technical Education.
He voluntarily did not contest the 2013 State Assembly election[3] and remained as Chairman of the Democratic Alliance of Nagaland with cabinet status and allowed his son Khriehu Liezietsu to successfully contest the election. Khriehu Liezietsu was later inducted as Advisor for Youth Resources and Sports and Music Task Force.
He is also one of the founding members of the first regional party in Nagaland (UDF, later NDP and presently Naga People's Front).[3] He has been Member of Legislative Assembly (MLA) eight times and held several important portfolios in a political career spanning nearly five decades.[3] On 22 February 2017 he was sworn in as 17th Chief Minister of Nagaland.[6] He is one of the most decorated educationists in Angami language literature and has authored more than 40 books on poetry, novels, history, drama, translations and several of his books are part of syllabus in Nagaland University.[3][7]
References
- ^ The Morung Express, breaking news - NPF declares list of 53 names
- ^ Shurhozelie elected leader, to be Nagaland CM
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Shurhozelie Liezietsu: Facts you need to know about Nagaland's next CM". Hindustan Times. 21 February 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
- ^ Election Commission of India: Statistical Report on General Election, 2003 to the Legislative Assembly of Nagaland Archived 2005-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Imkong replies to Shürhozelie's "ism" charges :: Kangla Online
- ^ "Dr. Shürhozelie Liezietsu sworn in as 17th Chief Minister of Nagaland". MorungExpress. 22 February 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- ^ Pressure on Rio to rethink portfolios
- Naga People's Front politicians
- Living people
- 1936 births
- People from Kohima district
- People from Kohima
- Chief ministers from Naga People's Front politicians
- Chief ministers of Nagaland
- Nagaland MLAs 2003–2008
- Nagaland MLAs 2008–2013
- Nagaland MLAs 1969–1974
- Nagaland MLAs 1974–1975
- Nagaland MLAs 1977–1982
- Nagaland MLAs 1982–1987
- Nagaland MLAs 1987–1988
- Nagaland MLAs 1993–1998