New Delhi: Controversial godman Chandraswami, a trusted aide of former Prime Minister Narasimha Rao, died on May 23, after suffering a stroke.

Doctors at the Apollo Hospital where he was undergoing treatment for prolonged illness said his condition deteriorated despite their best efforts. “Spiritual leader Jagadacharya Chandraswami ji, 66 years old, had been ailing for some time. He recently suffered a stroke and later developed multi-organ failure. He succumbed to the illness today at 2:56 pm,” a statement released by the hospital said.

The godman was a political broker and astrologer to the powerful, rich and influential, dominated news headlines for almost three decades.

Then, in the mid-1990s, mired in a series of cases involving financial irregularities, violations of the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, and allegations of being involved in Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination, he faded into oblivion, media reports say.

Chandraswami shot to fame for his purported skills in astrology. His association with former prime minister Rao shot him into the limelight. He was widely known as Rao’s spiritual adviser. After Rao was made prime minister, Chandraswami built the Vishwa Dharmayatan Sanathan ashram in Delhi. The land was reportedly allotted to Chandraswami by former prime minister Indira Gandhi.

Chandraswami reportedly advised many top global personalities of the political, royal and crime world. The disciples included Sultan of Brunei, Sheikh Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa of Bahrain, actress Elizabeth Taylor, British PM Margaret Thatcher, arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, crime Lord Dawood Ibrahim and ‘Tiny’ Rowland.

The godman had been at the center of a number of legal controversies, including financial irregularities. He was arrested in 1996 for allegedly defrauding a businessman in London. He has faced multiple charges of Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA) from the Enforcement Directorate (ED).

A raid by the income tax department on one of his ashrams reportedly recovered original payment drafts to Khashoggi amounting to US$11 million. The Jain Commission, in its comprehensive report, alleged that Chandraswami was involved in the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

The Enforcement Directorate was still investigating the case against Chandraswami for his alleged involvement in Gandhi’s killing as a financier. In 2009, his travel ban was lifted by the Supreme Court and he was allowed to travel abroad. In June 2011, the ED had imposed a fine 90 million rupees on Chandraswami for FERA violations.

Born into a middle class family in Rajasthan’s Behror in Rajasthan. Starting out as a tantric and astrologer, he gradually came into contact with powerful Indian politicians.

In 1994, an account in India Today describes him sitting “resplendent on a stage smothered with bouquets, his eight rings aglow.” rating his 46th birthday “at his sprawling new ashram in New Delhi.