It was a stressful night at the Express Building at Delhi’s Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg. There was a massive power failure just minutes before the newspaper was supposed to go for printing and some final touches were still left to be done. I, then with the 'Financial Express' (FE) in Delhi (1997), was nervous. In comes Sunil Jain, then the business editor of Indian Express, a sister publication. “Don’t lose hope, yaar. Have you ever seen any newspaper not hitting the stands due to a power failure in office?” he said with a big smile on his face. The tension just melted away, and we had a good laugh.
I was lucky to have got many opportunities to learn from his wisdom and sharp intellect, as he kept coming to the FE newsroom in the evenings just to debate and discuss the important business events of the day. Those discussions and the subsequent ones over many years were lively as Sunil was certainly not a man of few words--either at the professional or personal level.
Just when everyone was saying that Sunil was recovering as he had been taken off the ventilator at the AIIMS emergency room, I was relieved but something in me rankled. Reason: His last tweet on May 3 this year that said, “Breathing but just that close to letting go. Can’t take it anymore. Docs have no solution either…”
When a man as optimistic and as full of life as Sunil writes this, your heart skips a beat. But as subsequent messages from some of his well-wishers kept saying that his situation was steadily improving, and he replied promptly with a namaste sign when I enquired about his health just a few days ago, that initial concern of mine seemed an over-reaction -- until Saturday evening when his close ones tweeted that he was no more.
I got an opportunity to work together with Sunil in the same organisation when he joined 'Business Standard' (BS) as the Opinion Page Editor in 2002. That Sunil was an outstanding journalist and one of the finest economic writers was evident from his weekly 'Rational Expectations' columns in BS and then in the 'Financial Express' where he was the Managing Editor. His write-ups on telecom, for example, didn’t endear him or BS to some influential people in the government and the industry at that time but they were masterpieces and helped demystify the scam.