Media said he had left a diary, which police were examining.
The former chief minister of a remote Indian region disputed with China
 was found dead and hanging from a ceiling fan on Tuesday, police and 
officials said, after a court ruled last month that his appointment had 
been illegal.
The Supreme Court ruling dealt a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
 ambitions of expanding in the northeast, where his Bharatiya Janata 
Party scored its first state election victory in the region with a win 
in Assam in May.
Kalikho Pul, 47, until July the 
chief minister of the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh, had 
suffered from depression and was upset over the judgment, his aides told
 media.
"He has committed suicide," Nabam
 Tuki, a senior lawmaker of the opposition Congress party said in the 
capital of the vast but sparsely populated region bordering China.
Pul's
 family discovered the body in his bedroom at the chief minister's 
residence. Media said he had left a diary, which police were examining.
A politician with Congress since 1995, Pul became chief minister in February after rebelling against the party.
He
 was put in charge by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's federal government,
 which had imposed direct rule in the state to end a political crisis.
But
 the Supreme Court held illegal the imposition of president's rule, as 
it is called in India, ordering that the dislodged Congress should 
return to power immediately, forcing Pul from office.
China
 claims more than 90,000 sq km (35,000 sq miles) of territory disputed 
by India in the eastern sector of the Himalayas. Much of that forms the 
Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China calls South Tibet.
India says China occupies 38,000 square km (14,600 sq miles) of its territory on the Aksai Chin plateau in the west.

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