Kovind takes oath as India's 14th president

India's new president Ram Nath Kovind, smiles as he receives greetings from well wishers after being elected in New Delhi. File picture: Manish Swarup/AP

India's new president Ram Nath Kovind, smiles as he receives greetings from well wishers after being elected in New Delhi. File picture: Manish Swarup/AP

Published Jul 25, 2017

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New Delhi - Ram Nath Kovind, a former member of the ruling

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), took his oath as India's 14th president

in the central hall of parliament on Tuesday.

In his inaugural speech, the 70-year-old lawyer said he was proud of

India's unity in diversity and pledged to protect and uphold the

Constitution and the values of justice, independence and equality.

"I will represent each of the country's 1.25 billion people," Kovind

said.

The Indian president is head of state and is chief commander of the

army, but the position is largely ceremonial with all executive

powers vested in the prime minister.

The president plays an important role when elections produce hung

parliaments, when state governments are dissolved and during other

political crises.

India's Chief Justice JS Khehar administered the oath of office to

Kovind, who spoke of his humble origins from a Dalit farmer's family.

"We are a country of great diversity, yet have shown that unity is

the way forward," Kovind said.

Dalits, formerly untouchables, are the lowest rung of India's ancient

caste system and despite decades of affirmative action many of them

are still confined to jobs like manual scavenging or burning the

dead.

Once an activist of the Hindu right wing Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh

(RSS), the ideological mentor of the BJP, Kovind took over from

Pranab Mukherjee, a former leader of the opposition Indian National

Congress.

dpa

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