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The Emergency (India)

The Emergency in India was a 21-month period from 1975 to 1977 when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had a state of emergency declared across the country.

On the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed proclaimed a state of national emergency on 25 June 1975.

Officially issued by President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed under Article 352 of the Constitution because of prevailing "internal disturbance", the Emergency was in effect from 25 June 1975 and ended on 21 March 1977. The order bestowed upon the prime minister the authority to rule by decree, allowing elections to be cancelled and civil liberties to be suspended. For much of the Emergency, most of Gandhi's political opponents were imprisoned and the press were censored. Several other human rights violations were reported from the time, including a mass campaign for vasectomy spearheaded by her son Sanjay Gandhi. The Emergency is one of the most controversial periods of Indian history since its independence. The final decision to impose an emergency was proposed by Indira Gandhi, agreed upon by the President of India, and ratified by the Cabinet and the Parliament from July to August 1975. It was based on the rationale that there were imminent internal and external threats to the Indian state.[1][2]

Prelude edit

Rise of Indira Gandhi edit

Between 1967 and 1971, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi came to obtain near-absolute control over the government and the Indian National Congress party, as well as a huge majority in Parliament. The first was achieved by concentrating the central government's power within the Prime Minister's Secretariat, rather than the Cabinet, whose elected members she saw as a threat and distrusted. For this, she relied on her principal secretary, P. N. Haksar, a central figure in Indira's inner circle of advisors. Further, Haksar promoted the idea of a "committed bureaucracy" that required hitherto-impartial government officials to be "committed" to the ideology of the Congress.

Within the Congress, Indira outmaneuvered her rivals, forcing the party to split in 1969—into the Congress (O) (comprising the old-guard known as the "Syndicate") and her Congress (R). A majority of the All-India Congress Committee and Congress MPs sided with the prime minister. Indira's party was of a different breed from the Congress of old, which had been a robust institution with traditions of internal democracy. In the Congress (R), on the other hand, members quickly realized that their progress within the ranks depended solely on their loyalty to Indira Gandhi and her family, and ostentatious displays of sycophancy became routine. In the coming years, Indira's influence was such that she could install hand-picked loyalists as chief ministers of states, rather than their being elected by the Congress legislative party.

Indira's ascent was backed by her charismatic appeal among the masses that was aided by her government's near-radical leftward turns. These included the July 1969 nationalization of several major banks and the September 1970 abolition of the privy purse; these changes were often done suddenly, via ordinance, to the shock of her opponents. She had strong support in the disadvantaged sections—the poor, Dalits, women and minorities. Indira was seen as "standing for socialism in economics and secularism in matters of religion, as being pro-poor and for the development of the nation as a whole."[3]

In the 1971 general elections, the people rallied behind Indira's populist slogan of Garibi Hatao! (Abolish poverty!) to award her a huge majority (352 seats out of 518). "By the margin of its victory," historian Ramachandra Guha later wrote, Congress (R) came to be known as the real Congress, "requiring no qualifying suffix."[3] In December 1971, under her proactive war leadership, India routed arch-enemy Pakistan in a war that led to the independence of Bangladesh, formerly East Pakistan. Awarded the Bharat Ratna the next month, she was at her greatest peak; for her biographer Inder Malhotra, "The Economist's description of her as the 'Empress of India' seemed apt." Even opposition leaders, who routinely accused her of being a dictator and of fostering a personality cult, referred to her as Durga, a Hindu goddess.[4][5][6]

Increasing government control of the judiciary edit

 
Jayaprakash Narayan on a 2001 stamp of India. He is remembered for leading the mid-1970s opposition against Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and the Indian Emergency, for whose overthrow he had called for a "total revolution".

In 1967's Golaknath case,[7] the Supreme Court said that the Constitution could not be amended by Parliament if the changes affect basic issues such as fundamental rights. To nullify this judgement, Parliament, dominated by the Gandhi-led Congress, passed the 24th Amendment in 1971. Similarly, after the government lost a Supreme Court case for withdrawing the privy purse given to erstwhile princes, Parliament passed the 26th Amendment. This gave constitutional validity to the government's abolition of the privy purse and nullified the Supreme Court's order.

This judiciary–executive battle would continue in the landmark Kesavananda Bharati Case, where the 24th Amendment was called into question. With a wafer-thin majority of 7 to 6, the bench of the Supreme Court restricted Parliament's amendment power by stating it could not be used to alter the "basic structure" of the Constitution. Subsequently, Prime Minister Gandhi made A. N. Ray—the senior-most judge amongst those in the minority in Kesavananda BharatiChief Justice of India. Ray superseded three judges more senior to him—J. M. Shelat, K. S. Hegde and Grover—all members of the majority in Kesavananda Bharati. Indira Gandhi's tendency to control the judiciary met with severe criticism, both from the press and political opponents such as Jayaprakash Narayan ("JP").

Political unrest edit

This led some Congress party leaders to demand a move towards a presidential system emergency declaration with a more powerful directly elected executive. The most significant of the initial such movement was the Nav Nirman movement in Gujarat, between December 1973 and March 1974. Student unrest against the state's education minister ultimately forced the central government to dissolve the state legislature, leading to the resignation of the chief minister, Chimanbhai Patel, and the imposition of President's rule. Meanwhile, there were assassination attempts on public leaders as well as the assassination of the railway minister Lalit Narayan Mishra by a bomb. All of these indicated a growing law and order problem in the entire country, which Mrs. Gandhi's advisors warned her of for months.

In March–April 1974, a student agitation by the Bihar Chatra Sangharsh Samiti received the support of Gandhian socialist Jayaprakash Narayan, referred to as JP, against the Bihar government. In April 1974, in Patna, JP called for "total revolution," asking students, peasants, and labor unions to non-violently transform Indian society. He also demanded the dissolution of the state government, but this was not accepted by the center. A month later, the railway-employees union, the largest union in the country, went on a nationwide railways strike. This strike was led by the firebrand trade union leader George Fernandes who was the President of the All India Railwaymen's Federation. He was also the President of the Socialist Party. The strike was brutally suppressed by the Indira Gandhi government, which arrested thousands of employees and drove their families out of their quarters.[8]

Raj Narain verdict edit

Raj Narain, who had been defeated in the 1971 parliamentary election by Indira Gandhi, lodged cases of election fraud and use of state machinery for election purposes against her in the Allahabad High Court. Shanti Bhushan fought the case for Narain (Nani Palkhivala fought the case for Indira). Indira Gandhi was also cross-examined in the High Court which was the first such instance for an Indian Prime Minister (Indira Gandhi had to present herself for 5 hours in front of judge).[9]

On 12 June 1975, Justice Jagmohanlal Sinha of the Allahabad High Court found the prime minister guilty on the charge of misuse of government machinery for her election campaign. The court declared her election null and void and unseated her from her seat in the Lok Sabha. The court also banned her from contesting any election for an additional six years. Serious charges such as bribing voters and election malpractices were dropped and she was held responsible for misusing government machinery and found guilty on charges such as using the state police to build a dais, availing herself of the services of a government officer, Yashpal Kapoor, during the elections before he had resigned from his position, and use of electricity from the state electricity department.[10]

Her supporters organised mass pro-Indira demonstrations in the streets of Delhi close to the Prime Minister's residence.[11] The persistent efforts of Narain were praised worldwide as it took over four years for Justice Sinha to pass judgement against the prime minister.[citation needed]

Indira Gandhi challenged the High Court's decision in the Supreme Court. Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer, on 24 June 1975, upheld the High Court judgement and ordered all privileges Gandhi received as an MP be stopped, and that she be debarred from voting. However, she was allowed to continue as Prime Minister pending the resolution of her appeal. Jayaprakash Narayan and Morarji Desai called for daily anti-government protests. The next day, Jayaprakash Narayan organised a large rally in Delhi, where he said that a police officer must reject the orders of government if the order is immoral and unethical as this was Mahatma Gandhi's motto during the freedom struggle. Such a statement was taken as a sign of inciting rebellion in the country. Later that day, Indira Gandhi requested a compliant President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed to proclaim a state of emergency. Within three hours, the electricity to all major newspapers was cut and the political opposition arrested. The proposal was sent without discussion with the Union Cabinet, who only learnt of it and ratified it the next morning.[12][13]

Preventive detention laws edit

Before the emergency, the Indira Gandhi government passed draconian laws which would be used to arrest political opponents before and during emergency. One of these was the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA), 1971, which was passed in May 1971 despite criticism from prominent opposition figures across partisan lines such as CPI(M)'s Jyotirmoy Basu, Jana Sangh's Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and the Anglo-Indian nominated MP Frank Anthony.[14] The Indira government also renewed the Defence of India rules, which was withdrawn in 1967,[15] Defence of India rules were given an expanded mandate 5 days into the emergency and renamed as Defence and Internal Security of India Rules. Another law, Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act passed in December 1974, was also frequently used to target political opponents.[14]

Proclamation of the Emergency edit

The Government cited threats to national security, as a war with Pakistan had recently been concluded. Due to the war and additional challenges of drought and the 1973 oil crisis, the economy was in poor condition. The Government claimed that the strikes and protests had paralysed the government and hurt the economy of the country greatly. In the face of massive political opposition, desertion and disorder across the country and the party, Gandhi stuck to the advice of a few loyalists and her younger son Sanjay Gandhi, whose own power had grown considerably over the last few years to become an "extra-constitutional authority". Siddhartha Shankar Ray, the Chief Minister of West Bengal, proposed to the prime minister to impose an "internal emergency". He drafted a letter for the President to issue the proclamation based on information Indira had received that "there is an imminent danger to the security of India being threatened by internal disturbances". He showed how democratic freedom could be suspended while remaining within the ambit of the Constitution.[16][17]

After resolving a procedural matter, President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed declared a state of internal emergency upon the prime minister's advice on the night of 25 June 1975, just a few minutes before the clock struck midnight.[18]

As the constitution requires, Mrs. Gandhi advised and President Ahmed approved the continuation of Emergency over every six months until she decided to hold elections in 1977. In 1976, Parliament voted to delay elections, something it could only do with the Constitution suspended by the Emergency.[19][20]

Administration edit

Indira Gandhi devised a '20-point' economic programme to increase agricultural and industrial production, improve public services and fight poverty and illiteracy, through "the discipline of the graveyard".[21] In addition to the official twenty points, Sanjay Gandhi declared his five-point programme promoting literacy, family planning, tree planting, the eradication of casteism and the abolition of dowry. Later during the Emergency, the two projects merged into a twenty-five-point programme.[22]

Arrests edit

Invoking articles 352 and 356 of the Indian Constitution, Indira Gandhi granted herself extraordinary powers and launched a massive crackdown on civil rights and political opposition. The Government used police forces across the country to place thousands of protestors and strike leaders under preventive detention. Vijayaraje Scindia, Jayaprakash Narayan, Mulayam Singh Yadav, Raj Narain, Morarji Desai, Charan Singh, Jivatram Kripalani, George Fernandes, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Lal Krishna Advani, Arun Jaitley, Jai Kishan Gupta [23] Satyendra Narayan Sinha, Gayatri Devi, the dowager queen of Jaipur,[24] and other protest leaders were immediately arrested. Organisations like the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and Jamaat-e-Islami, along with some political parties, were banned. CPI(M) leaders V.S. Achuthanandan and Jyotirmoy Basu were arrested along with many others involved with their party. Congress leaders who dissented against the Emergency declaration and amendment to the constitution, such as Mohan Dharia and Chandra Shekhar, resigned their government and party positions and were thereafter arrested and placed under detention.[25][26] Members of regional opposition parties such as DMK also found themselves arrested.

Most of these arrests happened under laws such as MISA, DISIR, and COFEPOSA. During the emergency 34,988 people were arrested under MISA, and 75,818 people were arrested under DISIR. This included both political prisoners and ordinary criminals.[27] Most states classified those arrested under MISA into multiple categories. For instance in Andhra Pradesh they were classified into three categories- Class A, Class B, and Class C. Class A prisoners included prominent political leaders, members of parliament, and members of the legislative assembly. Class B prisoners included less prominent political prisoners. Class C included those detained for "economic offences" and other offences. Class A and B prisoners were treated better and received better amenities in prison than other categories of prisoners. Those arrested under COFEPOSA and DISR, depending on the state, found themselves detained with ordinary criminals, as Class C prisoners, or their own separate category.[28]

Cases like the Baroda dynamite case and the Rajan case became exceptional examples of atrocities committed against civilians in independent India.

Laws, human rights and elections edit

Elections for the Parliament and state governments were postponed. Gandhi and her parliamentary majorities could rewrite the nation's laws since her Congress party had the required mandate to do so – a two-thirds majority in the Parliament. And when she felt the existing laws were 'too slow', she got the President to issue 'Ordinances' – a law-making power in times of urgency, invoked sparingly – completely bypassing the Parliament, allowing her to rule by decree. Also, she had little trouble amending the Constitution that exonerated her from any culpability in her election-fraud case, imposing President's Rule in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu, where anti-Indira parties ruled (state legislatures were thereby dissolved and suspended indefinitely), and jailing thousands of opponents. The 42nd Amendment, which brought about extensive changes to the letter and spirit of the Constitution, is one of the lasting legacies of the Emergency. In the conclusion of his Making of India's Constitution, Justice Khanna writes:

If the Indian constitution is our heritage bequeathed to us by our founding fathers, no less are we, the people of India, the trustees, and custodians of the values which pulsate within its provisions! A constitution is not a parchment of paper, it is a way of life and has to be lived up to. Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty and in the final analysis, its only keepers are the people. The imbecility of men, history teaches us, always invites the impudence of power.[29]

A fallout of the Emergency era was the Supreme Court laid down that, although the Constitution is amenable to amendments (as abused by Indira Gandhi), changes that tinker with its basic structure[30] cannot be made by the Parliament. (see Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala)[31]

In the Rajan case, P. Rajan of the Regional Engineering College, Calicut, was arrested by the police in Kerala on 1 March 1976,[32] tortured in custody until he died and then his body was disposed of and was never recovered. The facts of this incident came out owing to a habeas corpus suit filed in the Kerala High Court.[33][34]

Many cases where teens were arrested and imprisoned have come to light, one such example is of Dilip Sharma who aged 16 was arrested and imprisoned for over 11 months. He was released based on Patna High Court's judgment on 29 July 1976.[35]

Economics edit

Christophe Jaffrelot considers the economic policy of the emergency regime to be corporatist, five programs in the 20 point program were aimed at benefiting the middle classes and industrialists, these included- liberalizing investment procedures, introducing new schemes for workers' associations in the industry, implementing a national permit scheme for road transport, tax breaks to the middle class by exempting anyone earning under Rs. 8,000 from income taxes, and an austerity program to reduce public spending.[14]

Trade unions and worker's rights edit

The emergency regime cracked down on trade unionism, banned strikes, imposed wage freezes, and phased out wage bonuses.[36] The largest trade unions in the country at the time such as the Congress' INTUC, CPI's AITUC, and Socialist affiliated HMS were made to comply with the new regime, while the CPI(M)'s CITU continued its opposition for which it had 20 of its leaders arrested. State governments were asked to form bipartite councils composed of representatives of the workers and the management for firms having more than 500 employees, similar apex bipartite committees were formed by the centre for major public sector industries, while a National Apex Board was set up for the private industries. These were meant to give a veneer of worker participation in decision making but were in reality stacked in favor of the management, and tasked with increasing "productivity" by cutting holidays (including Sundays), bonuses, agreeing to wage freeze, and allowing layoffs.[14][36]

Worker demonstrations during the emergency were subject to heavy state repression, such as when the AITUC organized a one-day strike to protest the slashing of bonuses in January 1976, to which the state responded by arresting 30,000-40,000 workers. In another such instance, the 8,000 workers of the Indian Telephone Industries (a Bangalore-based state-owned company) took part in a peaceful sit-in protest in response to the management reneging its promise of a 20% bonus to just 8%, they found themselves lathi-charged by the police who also arrested a few hundred of them.[14]

Coal miners were forced to work in abysmal conditions with irregular pay, collieries were made to run for all seven days a week, and complaints of workers and unions about the abysmal and dangerous working conditions were ignored and met with state repression. These terrible workplace conditions led to the deadliest mining disaster in Indian history on 27 December 1975, at Chasnala coal mine near Dhanbad which claimed the lives of 375 miners due to more than 100 million gallons of water flooding the mine. This was the 222nd such accident that year, the previous incidents having claimed 288 lives.[14]

Inflation and price control edit

The emergency government enjoyed a degree of popular support due to lower prices of goods and services at least during 1975. This was due to many reasons such as RBI's policy of putting in place a 6 percent ceiling on annual money supply growth months before the emergency, record monsoon in the year of 1975 leading to record harvest of foodgrains which led to food prices declining, increased import of grains, and reduced demand due to cutting of worker's wages and bonuses. In addition to this half of the dearness allowance of workers was withheld as part of the Wage Freeze act as compulsory deposits to combat inflation. However, these reduced prices only lasted till March 1976 when the prices of commodities started to go up again, on account of foodgrain production declining by 7.9%. Between 1 April and 6 October 1976 the wholesale price index rose by 10%, in which the price of rice rose by 8.3%, groundnut oil rose by 48%, while the prices of industrial raw materials as a group rose by 29.3%.[14][37]

Tax policy edit

The emergency regime exempted those earning between Rs 6,000-8,000 from taxation, provided tax breaks for those earning between Rs 8,000-15,000 in the range of Rs 45-264. There were only 3.8 million (38 lakh) taxpayers in the country at the time. Wealth taxes were also cut from 8% to 2.5% while the income taxes on those earning more than Rs 100,000 were reduced from 77% to 66%. This was expected to lower the government's revenue by Rs 3.08-3.25 billion. To compensate for this indirect taxes grew, the ratio of indirect taxes to direct taxes was at 5.31 in 1976. Despite this there was a loss in revenue of Rs 400 million (40 crores), to compensate for this the Indira Gandhi government decided to cut spending in education and social welfare.[14]

Forced sterilisation edit

In September 1976, Sanjay Gandhi initiated a widespread compulsory sterilization program to limit population growth. The exact extent of Sanjay Gandhi's role in the implementation of the program is disputed, with some writers[38][39][40][41] holding Gandhi directly responsible for his authoritarianism, and other writers[42] blaming the officials who implemented the programme rather than Gandhi himself. It is clear that international pressure from the United States, United Nations, and World Bank played a role in the implementation of these population control measures.[43] Rukhsana Sultana was a socialite known for being one of Sanjay Gandhi's close associates[44] and she gained a lot of notoriety in leading Sanjay Gandhi's sterilization campaign in Muslim areas of old Delhi.[45][46][47] The campaign primarily involved getting males to undergo vasectomy. Quotas were set up that enthusiastic supporters and government officials worked hard to achieve. There were allegations of coercion of unwilling candidates too.[48] In 1976–1977, the program led to 8.3 million sterilizations, most of them forced, up from 2.7 million the previous year. The bad publicity led many 1977 governments to stress that family planning is entirely voluntary.[49]

  • Kartar, a cobbler, was taken to a block development office by six policemen, where he was asked how many children he had. He was forcefully taken for sterilization in a jeep. En route, the police forced a man on a bicycle into the jeep because he was not sterilized. Kartar had an infection and pain because of the procedure and could not work for months.[50]
  • Shahu Ghalake, a peasant from Barsi in Maharashtra, was taken for sterilization. After mentioning that he was already sterilized, he was beaten. A sterilization procedure was undertaken on him for a second time.[50]
  • Hawa Singh, a young widower, from Pipli was taken from the bus against his will and sterilized. The ensuing infection took his life.[50]
  • Harijan, a 70-year-old with no teeth and bad eyesight, was sterilized forcefully.[50]
  • Ottawa, a village 80 kilometers south of Delhi, woke up to the police loudspeakers at 03:00. Police gathered 400 men at the bus stop. In the process of finding more villagers, police broke into homes and looted. A total of 800 forced sterilizations were done.[50]
  • In Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh, on 18 October 1976, police picked up 17 people, of which two were over 75 and two under 18. Hundreds of people surrounded the police station demanding they free captives. The police refused to release them and used tear gas shells. The crowd retaliated by throwing stones and to control the situation, the police fired on the crowd. 30 people died as a result.[50]

Demolitions edit

Demolitions in Delhi edit

Delhi served as the epicenter of Sanjay Gandhi's "urban renewal" program, aided in large part by DDA vice president Jagmohan Malhotra who himself had a desire to "beautify" the city. During the emergency Jagmohan emerged as the single most powerful person in the DDA, and went to extraordinary lengths to do the bidding of Sanjay Gandhi, as the Shah commission notes

Shri Jagmohan during the emergency, became a law unto himself and went about doing the biddings of Shri Sanjay Gandhi without care or concern for the miseries of the people affected thereby[51]

In total, 700,000 people in Delhi were displaced due to the demolitions carried out in Delhi.

Demolitions carried out in Delhi[52]
Period Structures Demolished by
Pre-Emergency DDA MCD NDMC Total
1973 50 320 5 375
1974 680 354 25 1,059
1975 (up to June) 190 149 27 366
Total 920 823 57 1,800
Emergency
1975 35,767 4,589 796 41,252
1976 94,652 4,013 408 99,073
1977 (up to 23 March) 7,545 96 7,641
Year unspecified but
during the emergency
1,962 177 2,139
Total 137,964 10,760 1,381 150,105

Demolitions outside Delhi edit

During the Emergency, various state governments also carried out demolitions to clear "encroachments", undertaken to please Sanjay Gandhi. In many of these cases, residents were given very short notices, state governments like those of Bihar and Haryana avoided giving official notices to the residents of "encroachments" to avoid a case in a civil court, instead, they notified them through public channels, or in the case of Haryana through drum beats, and in some cases gave no prior information. States passed various laws to aid them in this process such as Maharashtra Vacant Land Act 1975, Bihar Public Encroachment Act 1975, and Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code (Amendment) Act. These demolitions were often accompanied by the police to threaten the residents with arrest under MISA or DIR. In Maharashtra, Mumbai alone saw demolitions of 12,000 huts, while Pune saw demolitions of 1285 huts and 29 shops.[53]

Criticism edit

Criticism and accusations from the Emergency era may be grouped as:

  1. Detention of people by police without charge or notification of families.
  2. Abuse and torture of detainees and political prisoners.
  3. Use of public and private media institutions, like the national television network Doordarshan, for government propaganda.
  4. During the Emergency, Sanjay Gandhi asked the popular singer Kishore Kumar to sing for a Congress party rally in Bombay, but he refused.[54] As a result, Information and broadcasting minister Vidya Charan Shukla put an unofficial ban on playing Kishore Kumar songs on state broadcasters All India Radio and Doordarshan from 4 May 1976 till the end of Emergency.[55][56]
  5. Forced sterilization.
  6. Destruction of the slum and low-income housing in the Turkmen Gate and Jama Masjid area of Old Delhi.
  7. Large-scale and illegal enactment of new laws (including modifications to the Constitution).

Resistance movements edit

Democracy Bachao Morcha edit

Shortly after the declaration of the Emergency, the Sikh leadership convened meetings in Amritsar where they resolved to oppose the "fascist tendency of the Congress".[57] The "Democracy Bachao Morcha" (translates to 'Campaign to Save Democracy') was organised by the Akali Dal, led by Harchand Singh Longowal, and launched in Amritsar, 9 July. The Akali Dal was the most successful regional party that opposed the morcha. Over 40,000 Akalis and other Sikhs courted arrest during the morcha.[58] A statement to the press recalled the historic Sikh struggle for independence under the Mughals, then under the British, and voiced concern that what had been fought for and achieved was being lost. The police were out in force for the demonstration and arrested the protestors, including the Shiromani Akali Dal and Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) leaders.[citation needed]

The question before us is not whether Indira Gandhi should continue to be prime minister or not. The point is whether democracy in this country is to survive or not.[59]

Damdami Taksal and its head at the time, Sant Kartar Singh Bhindranwale, held many protests and marches against the emergency He also held 37 processions which defied the rules of the emergency.[60][61]

They protested for two years fighting against policemen and curfew was declared in the entire Malwa region. During Emergency SGPC offices used to be flooded with Anti-Emergency activists from RSS and BJP who had taken shelter to escape the government.[62] According to Amnesty International, 140,000 people had been arrested without trial during the twenty months of Gandhi's Emergency. Jasjit Singh Grewal estimates that 43,000 of them came from India's two per cent Sikh minority.[63][64]

RSS Resistance edit

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which was seen close to opposition leaders, was also banned.[65] Police clamped down on the organisation and thousands of its workers were imprisoned.[66] The RSS defied the ban and thousands participated in Satyagraha (peaceful protests) against the ban and the curtailment of fundamental rights. Literature that was censored in the media was clandestinely published and distributed on a large scale and funds were collected for the movement. Networks were established between leaders of different political parties in the jail and outside for the coordination of the movement.[67]

The attitude of senior RSS leaders about the Emergency was divided: several opposed it staunchly, others apologised and were released, and several senior leaders, notably Balasaheb Deoras sought an accommodation with Sanjay and Indira Gandhi.[68][69] Nanaji Deshmukh and Madan Lal Khurana managed to escape the police and led the RSS resistance to the Emergency, as did Subramanian Swamy and the current Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi.[70][71]

Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who was in poor health, quickly reached an agreement with Indira Gandhi, and spent most of the Emergency under parole at his residence.[70] Zonal RSS leaders also authorized Eknath Ramakrishna Ranade to quietly enter into a dialogue with Indira Gandhi.[70]

Indira Gandhi had helped Ranade, who had been second to Golwalkar in the RSS hierarchy, in numerous projects to commemorate Vivekananda. She had nominated Ranade to the governing council of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, and the two used ICCR as a facade to conduct secret one-on-one negotiations.[70] Arun Jaitley, Student leader and head of the RSS affiliated ABVP (Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad) in Delhi, was among the first to be arrested, and he spent the entire Emergency in jail. However, other ABVP leaders such as Balbir Punj and Prabhu Chawla pledged allegiance to Indira Gandhi's Twenty Point Programme and Sanjay Gandhi's Five Point Programme, in return for staying out of jail.[70]

On 10 August 1976, Subramanian Swamy walked into the parliament and when obituary references were concluding, Swamy raised a point of order that Democracy had also died and Rajya Sabha Chairman had not included it in recent list of deaths.[72][73][74] As a result, Swamy was expelled from parliament.[72] In November 1976, over 30 leaders of the RSS, led by Madhavrao Muley, Dattopant Thengadi, and Moropant Pingle, wrote to Indira Gandhi, promising support to the Emergency if all RSS workers were released from prison. Their "Document of Surrender", to take effect from January 1977, was processed by H. Y. Sharada Prasad.[70]

On his return from his meeting with Om Mehta, Vajpayee ordered the cadres of the ABVP to apologise unconditionally to Indira Gandhi. The ABVP students refused.[70][75] The RSS "Document of Surrender" was also confirmed by Subramanian Swamy in his article: "I must add that not all in the RSS were in a surrender mode ... But a tearful Muley told me in early November 1976 and I had better escape abroad again since the RSS had finalized the Document of Surrender to be signed in end of January 1977, and that on Mr. Vajpayee's insistence I would be sacrificed to appease an irate Indira and a fulminating Sanjay."[70]

Role of CPI(M) edit

Members of Communist Party of India (Marxist) were identified and arrested all over India. Raids were conducted in houses suspected to be sympathetic to the CPI(M) or the opposition to the emergency.

Those jailed during the Emergency include the current general secretary of the CPI(M), Sitaram Yechury, and his predecessor, Prakash Karat. Both were then leaders of the Students Federation of India, the party's student wing.

Other CPI(M) members to be jailed included the current Chief Minister of Kerala, Pinarayi Vijayan, then a young MLA. He was taken into custody during the Emergency and subjected to third-degree methods. On his release, Pinarayi reached the Assembly and made an impassionate speech holding up the blood-stained shirt he wore when in police custody, causing serious embarrassment to the then C. Achutha Menon government.[76]

Hundreds of Communists, whether from the CPI(M), other Marxist parties, or the Naxalites, were arrested during the Emergency.[77] Some were tortured or, as in the case of the Kerala student P. Rajan, killed.

Elections of 1977 edit

On 18 January 1977, Gandhi called fresh elections for March and released several opposition leaders; however, many others remained in prison even after she left office, despite the Emergency officially ending on 21 March 1977.[78][79] The opposition Janata movement's campaign warned Indians that the elections might be their last chance to choose between "democracy and dictatorship".[80]

The Indian general election of 1977 was held from 16 to 20 March, and resulted in a landslide victory for the Janata Party and the CFD, securing 298 seats in the Lok Sabha, whereas the ruling Indian National Congress only managed to win 154—a decrease of 198 as compared to the previous election.[81]: 22  Indira Gandhi herself was voted out of office in the Rae Bareli constituency, losing to electoral rival Raj Narain by a margin of over 55,000 votes.[82] INC candidates failed to win a single seat in the constituencies of several northern states, such as Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.[81]: 23 [83] The Janata Party's 298 seats were further augmented by an additional 47 seats won by its various political allies, thereby giving them a two-thirds supermajority. Morarji Desai became the first non-Congress Prime Minister of India.

Voters in the electorally largest state of Uttar Pradesh, historically a Congress stronghold, turned against Gandhi and her party failed to win a single seat in the state. Dhanagare says the structural reasons behind the discontent against the Government included the emergence of the strong and united opposition, disunity and weariness inside Congress, an effective underground opposition, and the ineffectiveness of Gandhi's control of the mass media, which had lost much credibility. The structural factors allowed voters to express their grievances, notably their resentment of the emergency and its authoritarian and repressive policies. One grievance often mentioned was the 'nasbandi' (vasectomy) campaign in rural areas. The middle classes also emphasized the curbing of freedom throughout the state and India.[84] Meanwhile, Congress hit an all-time low in West Bengal because of the poor discipline and factionalism among Congress activists as well as the numerous defections that weakened the party.[85] Opponents emphasized the issues of corruption in Congress and appealed to a deep desire by the voters for fresh leadership.[86]

The tribunal edit

The efforts of the Janata administration to get government officials and Congress politicians tried for Emergency-era abuses and crimes were largely unsuccessful due to a disorganized, over-complex, and politically motivated process of litigation. The Thirty-eighth Amendment of the Constitution of India, put in place shortly after the outset of the Emergency and which among other things prohibited judicial reviews of states of emergencies and actions taken during them, also likely played a role in this lack of success. Although special tribunals were organized and scores of senior Congress Party and government officials arrested and charged, including Mrs. Gandhi and Sanjay Gandhi, police were unable to submit sufficient evidence for most cases, and only a few low-level officials were convicted of any abuses.

Legacy edit

The Emergency lasted 21 months, and its legacy remains intensely controversial. A few days after the Emergency was imposed, the Bombay edition of The Times of India carried an obituary that read

Democracy, beloved husband of Truth, loving father of Liberty, brother of Faith, Hope and Justice, expired on June 26.[87][88]

A few days later censorship was imposed on newspapers. The Delhi edition of the Indian Express on 28 June, carried a blank editorial,[89] while the Financial Express reproduced in large type Rabindranath Tagore's poem "Where the mind is without fear".[90]

However, the Emergency also received support from several sections.[citation needed] It was endorsed by social reformer Vinoba Bhave (who called it Anushasan Parva, a time for discipline), industrialist J. R. D. Tata, writer Khushwant Singh, and Indira Gandhi's close friend and Odisha Chief Minister Nandini Satpathy. However, Tata and Satpathy later regretted that they spoke in favour of the Emergency.[91][92][full citation needed]

In the book JP Movement and the Emergency, historian, Bipan Chandra wrote, "Sanjay Gandhi and his cronies like Bansi Lal, Minister of Defence at the time, were keen on postponing elections and prolonging the emergency by several years. In October–November 1976, an effort was made to change the basic civil libertarian structure of the Indian Constitution through the 42nd amendment to it. ... The most important changes were designed to strengthen the executive at the cost of the judiciary, and thus disturb the carefully crafted system of Constitutional checks and balance between the three organs of the government."[93]

Culture edit

Literature edit

  • Writer Rahi Masoom Raza criticized the Emergency through his novel Qatar bi Aarzoo.[94]
  • Shashi Tharoor portrays the Emergency allegorically in his The Great Indian Novel (1989), describing it as "The Siege". He also authored a satirical play on the Emergency, Twenty-Two Months in the Life of a Dog, that was published in his The Five Dollar Smile and Other Stories.
  • A Fine Balance and Such a Long Journey by Rohinton Mistry take place during the Emergency and highlight many of the abuses that occurred during that period, largely through the lens of India's small but culturally influential Parsi minority.
  • Rich Like Us by Nayantara Sahgal is partly set during the Emergency and deals with themes such as political corruption and oppression in the context of the event.[95]
  • Booker Prize-winner Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie has the protagonist, Saleem Sinai, in India during the Emergency. His home in a low-income area, called the "magician's ghetto", is destroyed as part of the national beautification program. He is forcibly sterilized as part of the vasectomy program. The principal antagonist of the book is "the Widow" (a likeness that Indira Gandhi successfully sued Rushdie for). There was one line in the book that repeated an old Indian rumor that Indira Gandhi's son disliked his mother because he suspected her of causing the death of his father. As this was a rumor, there was no substantiation to be found.[96]
  • India: A Wounded Civilization, a book by V. S. Naipaul, is also oriented around The Emergency.[97]
  • The Plunge, an English-language novel by Sanjeev Tare, is the story told by four youths studying at Kalidas College in Nagpur. They tell the reader what they went through during those politically turbulent times.
  • The Malayalam-language novel Delhi Gadhakal (Tales from Delhi) by M. Mukundan highlights many waves of abuse that occurred during the Emergency including forced sterilization of men and the destruction of houses and shops owned by Muslims in Turkmen Gate.
  • Brutus, You!, a book by Chanakya Sen, is based on the internal politics of Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi during the period of Emergency.
  • Vasansi Jirnani, a play by Torit Mitra, is inspired by Ariel Dorfman's Death and the Maiden and effects of the Emergency.
  • The Tamil-language novel Marukkozhunthu Mangai (Girl with Fragrant Chinese Mugwort) by Ra. Su. Nallaperumal is based on the history of the Pallavas dynasty and a popular uprising in Kanchi in 725 A.D. It explains how the widowed Queen and the Princess kill the freedom of the people. Most of the incidents described in the novel resemble the Emergency period. Even the name of the characters in the novel is similar to Mrs. Gandhi and her family.
  • The Malayalam-language autobiographical diary by political activist R. C. Unnithan, penned while the author was imprisoned as a political prisoner during the Emergency under MISA for sixteen months at Poojappura state prison in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, gives a personal account of his travails during the dark days of Indian democracy.
  • The Tamil-language novel Karisal (Black Soil) by Ponneelan deals with the socio-political changes during the period.
  • The Tamil-language novel Ashwamedam by Ramachandra Vaidyanath deals with the political movements during the period.
  • In the 2001 book Life of Pi by Canadian author Yann Martel, Pi's father decides to sell his zoo and move his family to Canada around the time of the Emergency.
  • The graphic novel Delhi Calm,[98][full citation needed] by Vishwajyoti Ghosh, was published in 2010, that narrates the events of the Emergency.

Film edit

  • Gulzar's Aandhi (1975) was banned, because the film was supposedly based on Indira Gandhi.[99]
  • Amrit Nahata's film Kissa Kursi Ka (1977), a bold spoof on the Emergency, where Shabana Azmi plays Janata ("the public"), a mute protagonist, was subsequently banned and reportedly, all its prints were burned by Sanjay Gandhi and his associates at his Maruti factory in Gurgaon.[100]
  • Yamagola, a 1977 Telugu film (Hindi re-make Lok Parlok), spoofs the emergency issues.
  • I. S. Johar's 1978 Bollywood film Nasbandi is a satire on the sterilisation drive of the Government of India, where each one of the characters is trying to find sterilization cases. The film was banned after its release due to its portrayal of the Indira Gandhi government.
  • Although Satyajit Ray's 1980 film Hirak Rajar Deshe is a children's comedy, it is also a satire on the Emergency where the ruler forcefully mind washes the poor people.
  • The 1985 Malayalam film Yathra directed by Balu Mahendra has the human rights violations by the police during the Emergency as its main plotline.
  • 1988 Malayalam film Piravi is about a father searching for his son Rajan, who had been arrested by the police (and allegedly killed in custody).
  • The 2005 Hindi film Hazaaron Khwaishein Aisi is set against the backdrop of the Emergency. The film, directed by Sudhir Mishra, also tries to portray the growth of the Naxalite movement during the Emergency era. The film tells the story of three youngsters in the 1970s when India was undergoing massive social and political changes.
  • The 2012 Marathi film Shala discusses the issues related to the Emergency.
  • Midnight's Children, a 2012 adaptation of Rushdie's novel, created widespread controversy due to the negative portrayal of Indira Gandhi and other leaders. The film was not shown at the International Film Festival of India and was banned from further screening at the International Film Festival of Kerala where it was premiered in India.
  • Indu Sarkar is a 2017 Hindi political thriller film about the emergency, directed by Madhur Bhandarkar.
  • 21 Months of Hell is a documentary film about the torture methods performed by the police.
  • Sarpatta Parambarai is a 2021 Tamil language sports film which is set in the backdrop of the Emergency and shows the arrest of DMK political members.

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Advani, L. K. (2002). A prisoner's scrapbook. New Delhi: Ocean Books.
  • Anderson, Edward, and Patrick Clibbens. "'Smugglers of Truth': The Indian diaspora, Hindu nationalism, and the Emergency (1975–77)." Modern Asian Studies 52.5 (2018): 1729–1773.
  • Kuldip Nayar. The Judgement: Inside Story of the Emergency in India. 1977. Vikas Publishing House. ISBN 0-7069-0557-1.
  • Chandra, Bipan. In the name of Democracy: JP movement and the Emergency (Penguin UK, 2017).
  • P. N. Dhar. Indira Gandhi, the "Emergency", and Indian Democracy (2000), 424pp
  • Jinks, Derek P. "The Anatomy of an Institutionalized Emergency: Preventive Detention and Personal Liberty in India." Michigan Journal of International Law 22 (2000): 311+ online free
  • Klieman, Aaron S. "Indira's India: Democracy and Crisis Government", Political Science Quarterly (1981) 96#2 pp. 241–259 in JSTOR
  • Malkani, K. R. (1978). The midnight knock. New Delhi: Vikas Pub. House.
  • Mathur, Om Prakash. Indira Gandhi and the emergency as viewed in the Indian novel (Sarup & Sons, 2004).
  • Paul, Subin. "When India Was Indira Indian Express's Coverage of the Emergency (1975–77)." Journalism History 42.4 (2017): 201–211.
  • Plys, Kristin. Brewing Resistance: Indian Coffee House and the Emergency in Postcolonial India (Cambridge UP, 2020). ISBN 9781108490528
  • Prakash, Gyan. Emergency Chronicles: Indira Gandhi and Democracy's Turning Point (Princeton UP, 2019). ISBN 9780691186726 online review.
  • Ramashray Roy and D. L. Sheth. "The 1977 Lok Sabha Election Outcome: The Salience of Changing Voter Alignments Since 1969," Political Science Review (1978), Vol. 17 Issue 3/4, pp. 51–63
  • Coomi Kapoor. (2015) The Emergency: A Personal History. Viking Books.
  • Shourie, Arun (1984). Mrs Gandhi's second reign. New Delhi: Vikas.
  • Shourie, Arun (1978). Symptoms of fascism. New Delhi: Vikas.
  • Sahasrabuddhe, P. G., & Vājapeyī, M. (1991). The people versus emergency: A saga of struggle. New Delhi : Suruchi Prakashan.

External links edit

  • Telegram 8557 from the United States Embassy in India to the Department of State, 27 June 1975 (PDF)
  • A. Z. Huq, Democratic Norms, Human Rights and the States of Emergency: Lessons from the Experience of Four Countries (PDF)
  • Memories of a Father, a book by Eachara Varier, father of a student killed in police custody during the emergency 27 May 2005 at the Wayback Machine

emergency, india, emergency, india, month, period, from, 1975, 1977, when, prime, minister, indira, gandhi, state, emergency, declared, across, country, advice, prime, minister, indira, gandhi, president, fakhruddin, ahmed, proclaimed, state, national, emergen. The Emergency in India was a 21 month period from 1975 to 1977 when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had a state of emergency declared across the country On the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed proclaimed a state of national emergency on 25 June 1975 Officially issued by President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed under Article 352 of the Constitution because of prevailing internal disturbance the Emergency was in effect from 25 June 1975 and ended on 21 March 1977 The order bestowed upon the prime minister the authority to rule by decree allowing elections to be cancelled and civil liberties to be suspended For much of the Emergency most of Gandhi s political opponents were imprisoned and the press were censored Several other human rights violations were reported from the time including a mass campaign for vasectomy spearheaded by her son Sanjay Gandhi The Emergency is one of the most controversial periods of Indian history since its independence The final decision to impose an emergency was proposed by Indira Gandhi agreed upon by the President of India and ratified by the Cabinet and the Parliament from July to August 1975 It was based on the rationale that there were imminent internal and external threats to the Indian state 1 2 Contents 1 Prelude 1 1 Rise of Indira Gandhi 1 2 Increasing government control of the judiciary 1 3 Political unrest 1 4 Raj Narain verdict 1 5 Preventive detention laws 2 Proclamation of the Emergency 3 Administration 3 1 Arrests 3 2 Laws human rights and elections 3 3 Economics 3 3 1 Trade unions and worker s rights 3 3 2 Inflation and price control 3 3 3 Tax policy 3 4 Forced sterilisation 3 5 Demolitions 3 5 1 Demolitions in Delhi 3 5 2 Demolitions outside Delhi 4 Criticism 5 Resistance movements 5 1 Democracy Bachao Morcha 5 2 RSS Resistance 5 3 Role of CPI M 6 Elections of 1977 7 The tribunal 8 Legacy 9 Culture 9 1 Literature 9 2 Film 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksPrelude editRise of Indira Gandhi edit Between 1967 and 1971 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi came to obtain near absolute control over the government and the Indian National Congress party as well as a huge majority in Parliament The first was achieved by concentrating the central government s power within the Prime Minister s Secretariat rather than the Cabinet whose elected members she saw as a threat and distrusted For this she relied on her principal secretary P N Haksar a central figure in Indira s inner circle of advisors Further Haksar promoted the idea of a committed bureaucracy that required hitherto impartial government officials to be committed to the ideology of the Congress Within the Congress Indira outmaneuvered her rivals forcing the party to split in 1969 into the Congress O comprising the old guard known as the Syndicate and her Congress R A majority of the All India Congress Committee and Congress MPs sided with the prime minister Indira s party was of a different breed from the Congress of old which had been a robust institution with traditions of internal democracy In the Congress R on the other hand members quickly realized that their progress within the ranks depended solely on their loyalty to Indira Gandhi and her family and ostentatious displays of sycophancy became routine In the coming years Indira s influence was such that she could install hand picked loyalists as chief ministers of states rather than their being elected by the Congress legislative party Indira s ascent was backed by her charismatic appeal among the masses that was aided by her government s near radical leftward turns These included the July 1969 nationalization of several major banks and the September 1970 abolition of the privy purse these changes were often done suddenly via ordinance to the shock of her opponents She had strong support in the disadvantaged sections the poor Dalits women and minorities Indira was seen as standing for socialism in economics and secularism in matters of religion as being pro poor and for the development of the nation as a whole 3 In the 1971 general elections the people rallied behind Indira s populist slogan of Garibi Hatao Abolish poverty to award her a huge majority 352 seats out of 518 By the margin of its victory historian Ramachandra Guha later wrote Congress R came to be known as the real Congress requiring no qualifying suffix 3 In December 1971 under her proactive war leadership India routed arch enemy Pakistan in a war that led to the independence of Bangladesh formerly East Pakistan Awarded the Bharat Ratna the next month she was at her greatest peak for her biographer Inder Malhotra The Economist s description of her as the Empress of India seemed apt Even opposition leaders who routinely accused her of being a dictator and of fostering a personality cult referred to her as Durga a Hindu goddess 4 5 6 Increasing government control of the judiciary edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Jayaprakash Narayan on a 2001 stamp of India He is remembered for leading the mid 1970s opposition against Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and the Indian Emergency for whose overthrow he had called for a total revolution In 1967 sGolaknath case 7 the Supreme Court said that the Constitution could not be amended by Parliament if the changes affect basic issues such as fundamental rights To nullify this judgement Parliament dominated by the Gandhi led Congress passed the 24th Amendment in 1971 Similarly after the government lost a Supreme Court case for withdrawing the privy purse given to erstwhile princes Parliament passed the 26th Amendment This gave constitutional validity to the government s abolition of the privy purse and nullified the Supreme Court s order This judiciary executive battle would continue in the landmark Kesavananda Bharati Case where the 24th Amendment was called into question With a wafer thin majority of 7 to 6 the bench of the Supreme Court restricted Parliament s amendment power by stating it could not be used to alter the basic structure of the Constitution Subsequently Prime Minister Gandhi made A N Ray the senior most judge amongst those in the minority in Kesavananda Bharati Chief Justice of India Ray superseded three judges more senior to him J M Shelat K S Hegde and Grover all members of the majority in Kesavananda Bharati Indira Gandhi s tendency to control the judiciary met with severe criticism both from the press and political opponents such as Jayaprakash Narayan JP Political unrest edit This led some Congress party leaders to demand a move towards a presidential system emergency declaration with a more powerful directly elected executive The most significant of the initial such movement was the Nav Nirman movement in Gujarat between December 1973 and March 1974 Student unrest against the state s education minister ultimately forced the central government to dissolve the state legislature leading to the resignation of the chief minister Chimanbhai Patel and the imposition of President s rule Meanwhile there were assassination attempts on public leaders as well as the assassination of the railway minister Lalit Narayan Mishra by a bomb All of these indicated a growing law and order problem in the entire country which Mrs Gandhi s advisors warned her of for months In March April 1974 a student agitation by the Bihar Chatra Sangharsh Samiti received the support of Gandhian socialist Jayaprakash Narayan referred to as JP against the Bihar government In April 1974 in Patna JP called for total revolution asking students peasants and labor unions to non violently transform Indian society He also demanded the dissolution of the state government but this was not accepted by the center A month later the railway employees union the largest union in the country went on a nationwide railways strike This strike was led by the firebrand trade union leader George Fernandes who was the President of the All India Railwaymen s Federation He was also the President of the Socialist Party The strike was brutally suppressed by the Indira Gandhi government which arrested thousands of employees and drove their families out of their quarters 8 Raj Narain verdict edit See also State of Uttar Pradesh v Raj Narain Raj Narain who had been defeated in the 1971 parliamentary election by Indira Gandhi lodged cases of election fraud and use of state machinery for election purposes against her in the Allahabad High Court Shanti Bhushan fought the case for Narain Nani Palkhivala fought the case for Indira Indira Gandhi was also cross examined in the High Court which was the first such instance for an Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had to present herself for 5 hours in front of judge 9 On 12 June 1975 Justice Jagmohanlal Sinha of the Allahabad High Court found the prime minister guilty on the charge of misuse of government machinery for her election campaign The court declared her election null and void and unseated her from her seat in the Lok Sabha The court also banned her from contesting any election for an additional six years Serious charges such as bribing voters and election malpractices were dropped and she was held responsible for misusing government machinery and found guilty on charges such as using the state police to build a dais availing herself of the services of a government officer Yashpal Kapoor during the elections before he had resigned from his position and use of electricity from the state electricity department 10 Her supporters organised mass pro Indira demonstrations in the streets of Delhi close to the Prime Minister s residence 11 The persistent efforts of Narain were praised worldwide as it took over four years for Justice Sinha to pass judgement against the prime minister citation needed Indira Gandhi challenged the High Court s decision in the Supreme Court Justice V R Krishna Iyer on 24 June 1975 upheld the High Court judgement and ordered all privileges Gandhi received as an MP be stopped and that she be debarred from voting However she was allowed to continue as Prime Minister pending the resolution of her appeal Jayaprakash Narayan and Morarji Desai called for daily anti government protests The next day Jayaprakash Narayan organised a large rally in Delhi where he said that a police officer must reject the orders of government if the order is immoral and unethical as this was Mahatma Gandhi s motto during the freedom struggle Such a statement was taken as a sign of inciting rebellion in the country Later that day Indira Gandhi requested a compliant President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed to proclaim a state of emergency Within three hours the electricity to all major newspapers was cut and the political opposition arrested The proposal was sent without discussion with the Union Cabinet who only learnt of it and ratified it the next morning 12 13 Preventive detention laws edit Before the emergency the Indira Gandhi government passed draconian laws which would be used to arrest political opponents before and during emergency One of these was the Maintenance of Internal Security Act MISA 1971 which was passed in May 1971 despite criticism from prominent opposition figures across partisan lines such as CPI M s Jyotirmoy Basu Jana Sangh s Atal Bihari Vajpayee and the Anglo Indian nominated MP Frank Anthony 14 The Indira government also renewed the Defence of India rules which was withdrawn in 1967 15 Defence of India rules were given an expanded mandate 5 days into the emergency and renamed as Defence and Internal Security of India Rules Another law Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act passed in December 1974 was also frequently used to target political opponents 14 Proclamation of the Emergency editThe Government cited threats to national security as a war with Pakistan had recently been concluded Due to the war and additional challenges of drought and the 1973 oil crisis the economy was in poor condition The Government claimed that the strikes and protests had paralysed the government and hurt the economy of the country greatly In the face of massive political opposition desertion and disorder across the country and the party Gandhi stuck to the advice of a few loyalists and her younger son Sanjay Gandhi whose own power had grown considerably over the last few years to become an extra constitutional authority Siddhartha Shankar Ray the Chief Minister of West Bengal proposed to the prime minister to impose an internal emergency He drafted a letter for the President to issue the proclamation based on information Indira had received that there is an imminent danger to the security of India being threatened by internal disturbances He showed how democratic freedom could be suspended while remaining within the ambit of the Constitution 16 17 After resolving a procedural matter President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed declared a state of internal emergency upon the prime minister s advice on the night of 25 June 1975 just a few minutes before the clock struck midnight 18 As the constitution requires Mrs Gandhi advised and President Ahmed approved the continuation of Emergency over every six months until she decided to hold elections in 1977 In 1976 Parliament voted to delay elections something it could only do with the Constitution suspended by the Emergency 19 20 Administration editIndira Gandhi devised a 20 point economic programme to increase agricultural and industrial production improve public services and fight poverty and illiteracy through the discipline of the graveyard 21 In addition to the official twenty points Sanjay Gandhi declared his five point programme promoting literacy family planning tree planting the eradication of casteism and the abolition of dowry Later during the Emergency the two projects merged into a twenty five point programme 22 Arrests edit Invoking articles 352 and 356 of the Indian Constitution Indira Gandhi granted herself extraordinary powers and launched a massive crackdown on civil rights and political opposition The Government used police forces across the country to place thousands of protestors and strike leaders under preventive detention Vijayaraje Scindia Jayaprakash Narayan Mulayam Singh Yadav Raj Narain Morarji Desai Charan Singh Jivatram Kripalani George Fernandes Atal Bihari Vajpayee Lal Krishna Advani Arun Jaitley Jai Kishan Gupta 23 Satyendra Narayan Sinha Gayatri Devi the dowager queen of Jaipur 24 and other protest leaders were immediately arrested Organisations like the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh RSS and Jamaat e Islami along with some political parties were banned CPI M leaders V S Achuthanandan and Jyotirmoy Basu were arrested along with many others involved with their party Congress leaders who dissented against the Emergency declaration and amendment to the constitution such as Mohan Dharia and Chandra Shekhar resigned their government and party positions and were thereafter arrested and placed under detention 25 26 Members of regional opposition parties such as DMK also found themselves arrested Most of these arrests happened under laws such as MISA DISIR and COFEPOSA During the emergency 34 988 people were arrested under MISA and 75 818 people were arrested under DISIR This included both political prisoners and ordinary criminals 27 Most states classified those arrested under MISA into multiple categories For instance in Andhra Pradesh they were classified into three categories Class A Class B and Class C Class A prisoners included prominent political leaders members of parliament and members of the legislative assembly Class B prisoners included less prominent political prisoners Class C included those detained for economic offences and other offences Class A and B prisoners were treated better and received better amenities in prison than other categories of prisoners Those arrested under COFEPOSA and DISR depending on the state found themselves detained with ordinary criminals as Class C prisoners or their own separate category 28 Cases like the Baroda dynamite case and the Rajan case became exceptional examples of atrocities committed against civilians in independent India Laws human rights and elections edit Elections for the Parliament and state governments were postponed Gandhi and her parliamentary majorities could rewrite the nation s laws since her Congress party had the required mandate to do so a two thirds majority in the Parliament And when she felt the existing laws were too slow she got the President to issue Ordinances a law making power in times of urgency invoked sparingly completely bypassing the Parliament allowing her to rule by decree Also she had little trouble amending the Constitution that exonerated her from any culpability in her election fraud case imposing President s Rule in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu where anti Indira parties ruled state legislatures were thereby dissolved and suspended indefinitely and jailing thousands of opponents The 42nd Amendment which brought about extensive changes to the letter and spirit of the Constitution is one of the lasting legacies of the Emergency In the conclusion of his Making of India s Constitution Justice Khanna writes If the Indian constitution is our heritage bequeathed to us by our founding fathers no less are we the people of India the trustees and custodians of the values which pulsate within its provisions A constitution is not a parchment of paper it is a way of life and has to be lived up to Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty and in the final analysis its only keepers are the people The imbecility of men history teaches us always invites the impudence of power 29 A fallout of the Emergency era was the Supreme Court laid down that although the Constitution is amenable to amendments as abused by Indira Gandhi changes that tinker with its basic structure 30 cannot be made by the Parliament see Kesavananda Bharati v State of Kerala 31 In the Rajan case P Rajan of the Regional Engineering College Calicut was arrested by the police in Kerala on 1 March 1976 32 tortured in custody until he died and then his body was disposed of and was never recovered The facts of this incident came out owing to a habeas corpus suit filed in the Kerala High Court 33 34 Many cases where teens were arrested and imprisoned have come to light one such example is of Dilip Sharma who aged 16 was arrested and imprisoned for over 11 months He was released based on Patna High Court s judgment on 29 July 1976 35 Economics edit Christophe Jaffrelot considers the economic policy of the emergency regime to be corporatist five programs in the 20 point program were aimed at benefiting the middle classes and industrialists these included liberalizing investment procedures introducing new schemes for workers associations in the industry implementing a national permit scheme for road transport tax breaks to the middle class by exempting anyone earning under Rs 8 000 from income taxes and an austerity program to reduce public spending 14 Trade unions and worker s rights edit The emergency regime cracked down on trade unionism banned strikes imposed wage freezes and phased out wage bonuses 36 The largest trade unions in the country at the time such as the Congress INTUC CPI s AITUC and Socialist affiliated HMS were made to comply with the new regime while the CPI M s CITU continued its opposition for which it had 20 of its leaders arrested State governments were asked to form bipartite councils composed of representatives of the workers and the management for firms having more than 500 employees similar apex bipartite committees were formed by the centre for major public sector industries while a National Apex Board was set up for the private industries These were meant to give a veneer of worker participation in decision making but were in reality stacked in favor of the management and tasked with increasing productivity by cutting holidays including Sundays bonuses agreeing to wage freeze and allowing layoffs 14 36 Worker demonstrations during the emergency were subject to heavy state repression such as when the AITUC organized a one day strike to protest the slashing of bonuses in January 1976 to which the state responded by arresting 30 000 40 000 workers In another such instance the 8 000 workers of the Indian Telephone Industries a Bangalore based state owned company took part in a peaceful sit in protest in response to the management reneging its promise of a 20 bonus to just 8 they found themselves lathi charged by the police who also arrested a few hundred of them 14 Coal miners were forced to work in abysmal conditions with irregular pay collieries were made to run for all seven days a week and complaints of workers and unions about the abysmal and dangerous working conditions were ignored and met with state repression These terrible workplace conditions led to the deadliest mining disaster in Indian history on 27 December 1975 at Chasnala coal mine near Dhanbad which claimed the lives of 375 miners due to more than 100 million gallons of water flooding the mine This was the 222nd such accident that year the previous incidents having claimed 288 lives 14 Inflation and price control edit The emergency government enjoyed a degree of popular support due to lower prices of goods and services at least during 1975 This was due to many reasons such as RBI s policy of putting in place a 6 percent ceiling on annual money supply growth months before the emergency record monsoon in the year of 1975 leading to record harvest of foodgrains which led to food prices declining increased import of grains and reduced demand due to cutting of worker s wages and bonuses In addition to this half of the dearness allowance of workers was withheld as part of the Wage Freeze act as compulsory deposits to combat inflation However these reduced prices only lasted till March 1976 when the prices of commodities started to go up again on account of foodgrain production declining by 7 9 Between 1 April and 6 October 1976 the wholesale price index rose by 10 in which the price of rice rose by 8 3 groundnut oil rose by 48 while the prices of industrial raw materials as a group rose by 29 3 14 37 Tax policy edit The emergency regime exempted those earning between Rs 6 000 8 000 from taxation provided tax breaks for those earning between Rs 8 000 15 000 in the range of Rs 45 264 There were only 3 8 million 38 lakh taxpayers in the country at the time Wealth taxes were also cut from 8 to 2 5 while the income taxes on those earning more than Rs 100 000 were reduced from 77 to 66 This was expected to lower the government s revenue by Rs 3 08 3 25 billion To compensate for this indirect taxes grew the ratio of indirect taxes to direct taxes was at 5 31 in 1976 Despite this there was a loss in revenue of Rs 400 million 40 crores to compensate for this the Indira Gandhi government decided to cut spending in education and social welfare 14 Forced sterilisation edit Main article Compulsory sterilization India In September 1976 Sanjay Gandhi initiated a widespread compulsory sterilization program to limit population growth The exact extent of Sanjay Gandhi s role in the implementation of the program is disputed with some writers 38 39 40 41 holding Gandhi directly responsible for his authoritarianism and other writers 42 blaming the officials who implemented the programme rather than Gandhi himself It is clear that international pressure from the United States United Nations and World Bank played a role in the implementation of these population control measures 43 Rukhsana Sultana was a socialite known for being one of Sanjay Gandhi s close associates 44 and she gained a lot of notoriety in leading Sanjay Gandhi s sterilization campaign in Muslim areas of old Delhi 45 46 47 The campaign primarily involved getting males to undergo vasectomy Quotas were set up that enthusiastic supporters and government officials worked hard to achieve There were allegations of coercion of unwilling candidates too 48 In 1976 1977 the program led to 8 3 million sterilizations most of them forced up from 2 7 million the previous year The bad publicity led many 1977 governments to stress that family planning is entirely voluntary 49 Kartar a cobbler was taken to a block development office by six policemen where he was asked how many children he had He was forcefully taken for sterilization in a jeep En route the police forced a man on a bicycle into the jeep because he was not sterilized Kartar had an infection and pain because of the procedure and could not work for months 50 Shahu Ghalake a peasant from Barsi in Maharashtra was taken for sterilization After mentioning that he was already sterilized he was beaten A sterilization procedure was undertaken on him for a second time 50 Hawa Singh a young widower from Pipli was taken from the bus against his will and sterilized The ensuing infection took his life 50 Harijan a 70 year old with no teeth and bad eyesight was sterilized forcefully 50 Ottawa a village 80 kilometers south of Delhi woke up to the police loudspeakers at 03 00 Police gathered 400 men at the bus stop In the process of finding more villagers police broke into homes and looted A total of 800 forced sterilizations were done 50 In Muzaffarnagar Uttar Pradesh on 18 October 1976 police picked up 17 people of which two were over 75 and two under 18 Hundreds of people surrounded the police station demanding they free captives The police refused to release them and used tear gas shells The crowd retaliated by throwing stones and to control the situation the police fired on the crowd 30 people died as a result 50 Demolitions edit Demolitions in Delhi edit Delhi served as the epicenter of Sanjay Gandhi s urban renewal program aided in large part by DDA vice president Jagmohan Malhotra who himself had a desire to beautify the city During the emergency Jagmohan emerged as the single most powerful person in the DDA and went to extraordinary lengths to do the bidding of Sanjay Gandhi as the Shah commission notes Shri Jagmohan during the emergency became a law unto himself and went about doing the biddings of Shri Sanjay Gandhi without care or concern for the miseries of the people affected thereby 51 In total 700 000 people in Delhi were displaced due to the demolitions carried out in Delhi Demolitions carried out in Delhi 52 Period Structures Demolished byPre Emergency DDA MCD NDMC Total1973 50 320 5 3751974 680 354 25 1 0591975 up to June 190 149 27 366Total 920 823 57 1 800Emergency1975 35 767 4 589 796 41 2521976 94 652 4 013 408 99 0731977 up to 23 March 7 545 96 7 641Year unspecified butduring the emergency 1 962 177 2 139Total 137 964 10 760 1 381 150 105Demolitions outside Delhi edit During the Emergency various state governments also carried out demolitions to clear encroachments undertaken to please Sanjay Gandhi In many of these cases residents were given very short notices state governments like those of Bihar and Haryana avoided giving official notices to the residents of encroachments to avoid a case in a civil court instead they notified them through public channels or in the case of Haryana through drum beats and in some cases gave no prior information States passed various laws to aid them in this process such as Maharashtra Vacant Land Act 1975 Bihar Public Encroachment Act 1975 and Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code Amendment Act These demolitions were often accompanied by the police to threaten the residents with arrest under MISA or DIR In Maharashtra Mumbai alone saw demolitions of 12 000 huts while Pune saw demolitions of 1285 huts and 29 shops 53 Criticism editCriticism and accusations from the Emergency era may be grouped as Detention of people by police without charge or notification of families Abuse and torture of detainees and political prisoners Use of public and private media institutions like the national television network Doordarshan for government propaganda During the Emergency Sanjay Gandhi asked the popular singer Kishore Kumar to sing for a Congress party rally in Bombay but he refused 54 As a result Information and broadcasting minister Vidya Charan Shukla put an unofficial ban on playing Kishore Kumar songs on state broadcasters All India Radio and Doordarshan from 4 May 1976 till the end of Emergency 55 56 Forced sterilization Destruction of the slum and low income housing in the Turkmen Gate and Jama Masjid area of Old Delhi Large scale and illegal enactment of new laws including modifications to the Constitution Resistance movements editDemocracy Bachao Morcha edit Shortly after the declaration of the Emergency the Sikh leadership convened meetings in Amritsar where they resolved to oppose the fascist tendency of the Congress 57 The Democracy Bachao Morcha translates to Campaign to Save Democracy was organised by the Akali Dal led by Harchand Singh Longowal and launched in Amritsar 9 July The Akali Dal was the most successful regional party that opposed the morcha Over 40 000 Akalis and other Sikhs courted arrest during the morcha 58 A statement to the press recalled the historic Sikh struggle for independence under the Mughals then under the British and voiced concern that what had been fought for and achieved was being lost The police were out in force for the demonstration and arrested the protestors including the Shiromani Akali Dal and Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee SGPC leaders citation needed The question before us is not whether Indira Gandhi should continue to be prime minister or not The point is whether democracy in this country is to survive or not 59 Damdami Taksal and its head at the time Sant Kartar Singh Bhindranwale held many protests and marches against the emergency He also held 37 processions which defied the rules of the emergency 60 61 They protested for two years fighting against policemen and curfew was declared in the entire Malwa region During Emergency SGPC offices used to be flooded with Anti Emergency activists from RSS and BJP who had taken shelter to escape the government 62 According to Amnesty International 140 000 people had been arrested without trial during the twenty months of Gandhi s Emergency Jasjit Singh Grewal estimates that 43 000 of them came from India s two per cent Sikh minority 63 64 RSS Resistance edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Emergency India news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh which was seen close to opposition leaders was also banned 65 Police clamped down on the organisation and thousands of its workers were imprisoned 66 The RSS defied the ban and thousands participated in Satyagraha peaceful protests against the ban and the curtailment of fundamental rights Literature that was censored in the media was clandestinely published and distributed on a large scale and funds were collected for the movement Networks were established between leaders of different political parties in the jail and outside for the coordination of the movement 67 The attitude of senior RSS leaders about the Emergency was divided several opposed it staunchly others apologised and were released and several senior leaders notably Balasaheb Deoras sought an accommodation with Sanjay and Indira Gandhi 68 69 Nanaji Deshmukh and Madan Lal Khurana managed to escape the police and led the RSS resistance to the Emergency as did Subramanian Swamy and the current Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi 70 71 Atal Bihari Vajpayee who was in poor health quickly reached an agreement with Indira Gandhi and spent most of the Emergency under parole at his residence 70 Zonal RSS leaders also authorized Eknath Ramakrishna Ranade to quietly enter into a dialogue with Indira Gandhi 70 Indira Gandhi had helped Ranade who had been second to Golwalkar in the RSS hierarchy in numerous projects to commemorate Vivekananda She had nominated Ranade to the governing council of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations and the two used ICCR as a facade to conduct secret one on one negotiations 70 Arun Jaitley Student leader and head of the RSS affiliated ABVP Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad in Delhi was among the first to be arrested and he spent the entire Emergency in jail However other ABVP leaders such as Balbir Punj and Prabhu Chawla pledged allegiance to Indira Gandhi s Twenty Point Programme and Sanjay Gandhi s Five Point Programme in return for staying out of jail 70 On 10 August 1976 Subramanian Swamy walked into the parliament and when obituary references were concluding Swamy raised a point of order that Democracy had also died and Rajya Sabha Chairman had not included it in recent list of deaths 72 73 74 As a result Swamy was expelled from parliament 72 In November 1976 over 30 leaders of the RSS led by Madhavrao Muley Dattopant Thengadi and Moropant Pingle wrote to Indira Gandhi promising support to the Emergency if all RSS workers were released from prison Their Document of Surrender to take effect from January 1977 was processed by H Y Sharada Prasad 70 On his return from his meeting with Om Mehta Vajpayee ordered the cadres of the ABVP to apologise unconditionally to Indira Gandhi The ABVP students refused 70 75 The RSS Document of Surrender was also confirmed by Subramanian Swamy in his article I must add that not all in the RSS were in a surrender mode But a tearful Muley told me in early November 1976 and I had better escape abroad again since the RSS had finalized the Document of Surrender to be signed in end of January 1977 and that on Mr Vajpayee s insistence I would be sacrificed to appease an irate Indira and a fulminating Sanjay 70 Role of CPI M edit Members of Communist Party of India Marxist were identified and arrested all over India Raids were conducted in houses suspected to be sympathetic to the CPI M or the opposition to the emergency Those jailed during the Emergency include the current general secretary of the CPI M Sitaram Yechury and his predecessor Prakash Karat Both were then leaders of the Students Federation of India the party s student wing Other CPI M members to be jailed included the current Chief Minister of Kerala Pinarayi Vijayan then a young MLA He was taken into custody during the Emergency and subjected to third degree methods On his release Pinarayi reached the Assembly and made an impassionate speech holding up the blood stained shirt he wore when in police custody causing serious embarrassment to the then C Achutha Menon government 76 Hundreds of Communists whether from the CPI M other Marxist parties or the Naxalites were arrested during the Emergency 77 Some were tortured or as in the case of the Kerala student P Rajan killed Elections of 1977 editMain article 1977 Indian general election On 18 January 1977 Gandhi called fresh elections for March and released several opposition leaders however many others remained in prison even after she left office despite the Emergency officially ending on 21 March 1977 78 79 The opposition Janata movement s campaign warned Indians that the elections might be their last chance to choose between democracy and dictatorship 80 The Indian general election of 1977 was held from 16 to 20 March and resulted in a landslide victory for the Janata Party and the CFD securing 298 seats in the Lok Sabha whereas the ruling Indian National Congress only managed to win 154 a decrease of 198 as compared to the previous election 81 22 Indira Gandhi herself was voted out of office in the Rae Bareli constituency losing to electoral rival Raj Narain by a margin of over 55 000 votes 82 INC candidates failed to win a single seat in the constituencies of several northern states such as Bihar and Uttar Pradesh 81 23 83 The Janata Party s 298 seats were further augmented by an additional 47 seats won by its various political allies thereby giving them a two thirds supermajority Morarji Desai became the first non Congress Prime Minister of India Voters in the electorally largest state of Uttar Pradesh historically a Congress stronghold turned against Gandhi and her party failed to win a single seat in the state Dhanagare says the structural reasons behind the discontent against the Government included the emergence of the strong and united opposition disunity and weariness inside Congress an effective underground opposition and the ineffectiveness of Gandhi s control of the mass media which had lost much credibility The structural factors allowed voters to express their grievances notably their resentment of the emergency and its authoritarian and repressive policies One grievance often mentioned was the nasbandi vasectomy campaign in rural areas The middle classes also emphasized the curbing of freedom throughout the state and India 84 Meanwhile Congress hit an all time low in West Bengal because of the poor discipline and factionalism among Congress activists as well as the numerous defections that weakened the party 85 Opponents emphasized the issues of corruption in Congress and appealed to a deep desire by the voters for fresh leadership 86 The tribunal editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The efforts of the Janata administration to get government officials and Congress politicians tried for Emergency era abuses and crimes were largely unsuccessful due to a disorganized over complex and politically motivated process of litigation The Thirty eighth Amendment of the Constitution of India put in place shortly after the outset of the Emergency and which among other things prohibited judicial reviews of states of emergencies and actions taken during them also likely played a role in this lack of success Although special tribunals were organized and scores of senior Congress Party and government officials arrested and charged including Mrs Gandhi and Sanjay Gandhi police were unable to submit sufficient evidence for most cases and only a few low level officials were convicted of any abuses Legacy editThe Emergency lasted 21 months and its legacy remains intensely controversial A few days after the Emergency was imposed the Bombay edition of The Times of India carried an obituary that read Democracy beloved husband of Truth loving father of Liberty brother of Faith Hope and Justice expired on June 26 87 88 A few days later censorship was imposed on newspapers The Delhi edition of the Indian Express on 28 June carried a blank editorial 89 while the Financial Express reproduced in large type Rabindranath Tagore s poem Where the mind is without fear 90 However the Emergency also received support from several sections citation needed It was endorsed by social reformer Vinoba Bhave who called it Anushasan Parva a time for discipline industrialist J R D Tata writer Khushwant Singh and Indira Gandhi s close friend and Odisha Chief Minister Nandini Satpathy However Tata and Satpathy later regretted that they spoke in favour of the Emergency 91 92 full citation needed In the book JP Movement and the Emergency historian Bipan Chandra wrote Sanjay Gandhi and his cronies like Bansi Lal Minister of Defence at the time were keen on postponing elections and prolonging the emergency by several years In October November 1976 an effort was made to change the basic civil libertarian structure of the Indian Constitution through the 42nd amendment to it The most important changes were designed to strengthen the executive at the cost of the judiciary and thus disturb the carefully crafted system of Constitutional checks and balance between the three organs of the government 93 Culture editLiterature edit Writer Rahi Masoom Raza criticized the Emergency through his novel Qatar bi Aarzoo 94 Shashi Tharoor portrays the Emergency allegorically in his The Great Indian Novel 1989 describing it as The Siege He also authored a satirical play on the Emergency Twenty Two Months in the Life of a Dog that was published in his The Five Dollar Smile and Other Stories A Fine Balance and Such a Long Journey by Rohinton Mistry take place during the Emergency and highlight many of the abuses that occurred during that period largely through the lens of India s small but culturally influential Parsi minority Rich Like Us by Nayantara Sahgal is partly set during the Emergency and deals with themes such as political corruption and oppression in the context of the event 95 Booker Prize winner Midnight s Children by Salman Rushdie has the protagonist Saleem Sinai in India during the Emergency His home in a low income area called the magician s ghetto is destroyed as part of the national beautification program He is forcibly sterilized as part of the vasectomy program The principal antagonist of the book is the Widow a likeness that Indira Gandhi successfully sued Rushdie for There was one line in the book that repeated an old Indian rumor that Indira Gandhi s son disliked his mother because he suspected her of causing the death of his father As this was a rumor there was no substantiation to be found 96 India A Wounded Civilization a book by V S Naipaul is also oriented around The Emergency 97 The Plunge an English language novel by Sanjeev Tare is the story told by four youths studying at Kalidas College in Nagpur They tell the reader what they went through during those politically turbulent times The Malayalam language novel Delhi Gadhakal Tales from Delhi by M Mukundan highlights many waves of abuse that occurred during the Emergency including forced sterilization of men and the destruction of houses and shops owned by Muslims in Turkmen Gate Brutus You a book by Chanakya Sen is based on the internal politics of Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi during the period of Emergency Vasansi Jirnani a play by Torit Mitra is inspired by Ariel Dorfman s Death and the Maiden and effects of the Emergency The Tamil language novel Marukkozhunthu Mangai Girl with Fragrant Chinese Mugwort by Ra Su Nallaperumal is based on the history of the Pallavas dynasty and a popular uprising in Kanchi in 725 A D It explains how the widowed Queen and the Princess kill the freedom of the people Most of the incidents described in the novel resemble the Emergency period Even the name of the characters in the novel is similar to Mrs Gandhi and her family The Malayalam language autobiographical diary by political activist R C Unnithan penned while the author was imprisoned as a political prisoner during the Emergency under MISA for sixteen months at Poojappura state prison in Thiruvananthapuram Kerala gives a personal account of his travails during the dark days of Indian democracy The Tamil language novel Karisal Black Soil by Ponneelan deals with the socio political changes during the period The Tamil language novel Ashwamedam by Ramachandra Vaidyanath deals with the political movements during the period In the 2001 book Life of Pi by Canadian author Yann Martel Pi s father decides to sell his zoo and move his family to Canada around the time of the Emergency The graphic novel Delhi Calm 98 full citation needed by Vishwajyoti Ghosh was published in 2010 that narrates the events of the Emergency Film edit Gulzar s Aandhi 1975 was banned because the film was supposedly based on Indira Gandhi 99 Amrit Nahata s film Kissa Kursi Ka 1977 a bold spoof on the Emergency where Shabana Azmi plays Janata the public a mute protagonist was subsequently banned and reportedly all its prints were burned by Sanjay Gandhi and his associates at his Maruti factory in Gurgaon 100 Yamagola a 1977 Telugu film Hindi re make Lok Parlok spoofs the emergency issues I S Johar s 1978 Bollywood film Nasbandi is a satire on the sterilisation drive of the Government of India where each one of the characters is trying to find sterilization cases The film was banned after its release due to its portrayal of the Indira Gandhi government Although Satyajit Ray s 1980 film Hirak Rajar Deshe is a children s comedy it is also a satire on the Emergency where the ruler forcefully mind washes the poor people The 1985 Malayalam film Yathra directed by Balu Mahendra has the human rights violations by the police during the Emergency as its main plotline 1988 Malayalam film Piravi is about a father searching for his son Rajan who had been arrested by the police and allegedly killed in custody The 2005 Hindi film Hazaaron Khwaishein Aisi is set against the backdrop of the Emergency The film directed by Sudhir Mishra also tries to portray the growth of the Naxalite movement during the Emergency era The film tells the story of three youngsters in the 1970s when India was undergoing massive social and political changes The 2012 Marathi film Shala discusses the issues related to the Emergency Midnight s Children a 2012 adaptation of Rushdie s novel created widespread controversy due to the negative portrayal of Indira Gandhi and other leaders The film was not shown at the International Film Festival of India and was banned from further screening at the International Film Festival of Kerala where it was premiered in India Indu Sarkar is a 2017 Hindi political thriller film about the emergency directed by Madhur Bhandarkar 21 Months of Hell is a documentary film about the torture methods performed by the police Sarpatta Parambarai is a 2021 Tamil language sports film which is set in the backdrop of the Emergency and shows the arrest of DMK political members See also editBaroda dynamite case Rajan case The Case That Shook IndiaReferences edit Interview with Indira Gandhi Interview relecast through India times TV Eye 18 December 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2018 Recalling the Emergency years The Indian Express 29 June 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2018 a b Guha p 439 Malhotra p 141 Hellmann Rajanayagam Dagmar 2013 The Pioneers Durga Amma The Only Man in the Cabinet In Derichs Claudia Thompson Mark R eds Dynasties and Female Political Leaders in Asia Gender Power and Pedigree LIT Verlag Munster ISBN 978 3 643 90320 4 Retrieved 20 October 2015 Puri Balraj 1993 Indian Muslims since Partition Economic and Political Weekly 28 40 2141 2149 JSTOR 4400229 I C Golaknath amp Ors vs State Of Punjab amp Anrs 27 February 1967 Indiankanoon org Retrieved 5 March 2022 Doshi Vidhi 9 March 2017 Indira Jaising In India you can t even dream of equal justice Not at all The Guardian Retrieved 7 May 2017 Justice Sinha who set aside Indira Gandhi s election dies at 87 The Indian Express 22 March 2008 Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 5 July 2009 Kuldip Singh 11 April 1995 OBITUARY Morarji Desai The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2009 Katherine Frank 2001 Indira The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi HarperCollins pp 372 373 ISBN 0 00 255646 4 Indian Emergency of 1975 77 Mount Holyoke College Archived from the original on 19 May 2017 Retrieved 5 July 2009 The Rise of Indira Gandhi Library of Congress Country Studies Retrieved 27 June 2009 a b c d e f g h Christophe Jaffrelot Pratinav Anil 2021 India s first dictatorship the emergency 1975 1977 Noida ISBN 978 93 90351 60 2 OCLC 1242023968 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mussells Premila Menon 1980 Democracy and Emergency rule in India Thesis thesis NAYAR KULDIP 25 June 2000 Yes Prime Minister Archived 11 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Indian Express Explained Why Did Indira Gandhi Impose Emergency In 1975 thehansindia Proclamation of Emergency Emergency Proclamation of Emergency in the Country by the President of India on the 25th June 1975 and Extension of Emergency to J amp K New Delhi Ministry of Home Affairs 1975 p 11 Retrieved 13 September 2022 via National Archives of India Malhotra Inder 4 August 2014 The abrupt end of Emergency The Indian Express Retrieved 12 June 2021 Times William Borders Special to The New York 5 February 1976 DELAY IN ELECTION IS VOTED IN INDIA The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 12 June 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jaitely Arun 5 November 2007 A tale of three Emergencies real reason always different The Indian Express Tarlo Emma 2001 Unsettling memories narratives of the emergency in Delhi University of California Press pp 27 28 ISBN 0 520 23122 8 Retrieved 28 June 2016 Today India Arun Jaitley From Prison to Parliament Malgonkar Manohar 1987 The Last Maharani of Gwalior An Autobiography By Manohar Malgonkar SUNY Press pp 233 242 244 ISBN 9780887066597 Austin Granville 1999 Working a Democratic Constitution A History of the Indian Experience New Delhi Oxford University Press p 320 ISBN 019565610 5 Narasimha Rao the Best Prime Minister by Janak Raj Jai 1996 Page 101 Shah Commission Of Inquiry 3rd Final Report p 134 Shah Commission Of Inquiry 3rd Final Report pp 135 152 H R Khanna 2008 Making of India s Constitution Eastern Book Co Lucknow 1981 ISBN 978 81 7012 108 4 V Venkatesan Revisiting a verdict Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Frontline vol 29 Issue 01 14 27 Jan 2012 The case that saved Indian democracy The Hindu 24 April 2013 Retrieved 4 September 2013 PUCL Archives Oct 1981 Rajan Pucl org Archived from the original on 28 December 2011 Retrieved 5 March 2022 rediff com Emergency Rajan s mother died asking for him News rediff com Retrieved 5 March 2022 Fresh probe in Rajan case sought The Hindu 25 January 2011 PALPAL INDIA January 2017 Issuu com 14 January 2017 a b Rudolph Lloyd I Rudolph Susanne Hoeber 1 April 1978 To the Brink and Back Representation and the State in India Asian Survey 18 4 379 400 doi 10 2307 2643401 ISSN 0004 4687 JSTOR 2643401 Toye J F J 1 April 1977 Economic trends and policies in India during the Emergency World Development 5 4 303 316 doi 10 1016 0305 750X 77 90036 5 ISSN 0305 750X Vinay Lal Indira Gandhi Archived from the original on 4 July 2013 Retrieved 1 August 2013 Sanjay Gandhi started to run the country as though it were his fiefdom and earned the fierce hatred of many whom his policies had victimized He ordered the removal of slum dwellings and in an attempt to curb India s growing population initiated a highly resented program of forced sterilization Subodh Ghildiyal 29 December 2010 Cong blames Sanjay Gandhi for Emergency excesses The Times of India Archived from the original on 28 August 2011 Retrieved 1 August 2013 Sanjay Gandhi s rash promotion of sterilization and forcible clearance of slums sparked popular anger Kumkum Chadha 4 January 2011 Sanjay s men and women Archived from the original on 4 February 2011 Retrieved 1 August 2013 The Congress on the other hand charges Sanjay Gandhi of over enthusiasm in dealing with certain programmes and I quote yet again Unfortunately in certain spheres over enthusiasm led to compulsion in the enforcement of certain programmes like compulsory sterilisation and clearance of slums Sanjay Gandhi had by then emerged as a leader of great significance Sanjay Gandhi worked in an authoritarian manner Congress book 28 December 2010 Retrieved 1 August 2013 India The Years of Indira Gandhi Brill Academic Pub 1988 ISBN 9788131734650 Green Hannah Harris 6 October 2018 The legacy of India s quest to sterilize millions of men Quartz India Retrieved 9 July 2020 Tragedy at Turkman Gate Witnesses recount horror of Emergency 28 June 2015 Rukhsana Sultana The chief glamour girl of the Emergency India Today Retrieved 5 March 2022 Rukhsana Sultana diehearted follower of Sanjay Gandhi India Today Retrieved 5 March 2022 THE NIGHT OF THE LONG KNIVES Telegraphindia com Archived from the original on 2 July 2015 Retrieved 5 March 2022 Gwatkin Davidson R Political Will and Family Planning The Implications of India s Emergency Experience in Population and Development Review 5 1 29 59 Carl Haub and O P Sharma India s Population Reality Reconciling Change and Tradition Population Bulletin 2006 61 3 pp 3 online a b c d e f Mehta Vinod 1978 The Sanjay Story Harper Collins Publishers India Shah Commission of Inquiry Interim Report II p 118 Shah Commission of Inquiry Interim Report II p 78 Shah Commission Of Inquiry 3rd Final Report pp 208 217 Vinay Kumar 19 August 2005 The spark that he was The Hindu Archived from the original on 7 January 2007 Retrieved 13 July 2007 A Star s Real Stripes The Times of India 25 March 2012 Archived from the original on 6 September 2012 Retrieved 25 March 2012 Sharma Dhirendra 1997 The Janata people s Struggle Philosophy and Social Action p 76 J S Grewal The Sikhs of Punjab Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1990 213 Amore Roy C 17 September 2019 Religion and Politics New Developments Worldwide MDPI p 32 ISBN 978 3 03921 429 7 Gurmit Singh A History of Sikh Struggles New Delhi Atlantic Publishers and Distributors 1991 2 39 Mahmood Cynthia Keppley 3 August 2010 Fighting for Faith and Nation Dialogues with Sikh Militants University of Pennsylvania Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 8122 0017 1 Singh Harjinder Publishers Akaal 2014 Reflections on 1984 Akaal Publishers pp 51 52 ISBN 978 0 9554587 3 6 Narendra Modi Sardar Narendra Singh Modi When PM disguised himself as a Sikh to escape arrest m economictimes com Retrieved 25 September 2022 J S Grewal 1990 The Sikhs of Punjab Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 214 Inder Malhotra 1989 Indira Gandhi A Personal and Political Biography London Toronto Hodder and Stoughton p 178 Jaffrelot Christophe 1987 Hindu Nationalism p 297 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 13098 1 ISBN 978 0 691 13098 9 Chitkara M G 1997 Hindutva APH ISBN 81 7024 798 5 ISBN 978 81 7024 798 2 Post Independence India Encyclopedia of Political Parties 2002 Anmol ISBN 81 7488 865 9 ISBN 978 81 7488 865 5 Abdul Gafoor Abdul Majeed Noorani 2000 The RSS and the BJP A Division of Labour LeftWord Books pp 31 32 ISBN 978 81 87496 13 7 Christophe Jaffrelot 1999 The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics 1925 to the 1990s Strategies of Identity building Implantation and Mobilisation with Special Reference to Central India Penguin Books India pp 273 274 ISBN 978 0 14 024602 5 a b c d e f g h The story of how RSS leaders deserted Jayaprakash and the resistance during Indira s Emergency ThePrint 25 June 2020 Sardar Narendra Singh Modi When PM disguised as a Sikh to escape arrest The Economic Times a b The Emergency A Personal History Penguin Books Limited 2015 ISBN 978 0143426134 Swamy Subramanian 22 June 2015 Between sessions democracy has also died mint Retrieved 29 December 2021 Virk Aviral 25 June 2015 The Masters of Disguise During Emergency TheQuint Retrieved 29 December 2021 Did Vajpayee ask ABVP to apologise for arson attacks during Emergency in return for democracy The News Minute 6 January 2017 Retrieved 29 December 2021 പ ണറ യ യ ട 1977 മ ര ച ച 30 ല ന യമസഭ പ രസ ഗ Nair C Gouridasan 21 May 2016 Pinarayi Vijayan Steeled by a life of relentless adversities The Hindu Mrs Gandhi Easing Crisis Rule Decides on March Election The New York Times 19 January 1977 Retrieved 26 February 2022 Proclamation Emergency Revocation of Emergency Proclaimed on 25 6 1975 Connected matters New Delhi Ministry of Home Affairs 1977 p 14 Retrieved 13 September 2022 via National Archives of India Borders William 24 January 1977 Opposition Accuses Mrs Gandhi Of Murdering India s Democracy The New York Times Retrieved 27 February 2022 a b Lodhi Maliha Second Quarter 1977 India Votes For Democracy The Sixth Parliamentary Elections In India March 1977 Pakistan Horizon 30 2 13 34 JSTOR 41403886 Retrieved 27 February 2022 March 21 1977 Forty Years Ago Mrs Gandhi Loses The Indian Express 21 March 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2022 Icanevi Henry 22 March 1977 Mrs Gandhi s Party Is Defeated After 30 Year Rule The New York Times Retrieved 27 February 2022 D N Dhanagare Sixth Lok Sabha Election in Uttar Pradesh 1977 The End of the Congress Hegemony Political Science Review 1979 18 1 pp 28 51 Mira Ganguly and Bangendu Ganguly Lok Sabha Election 1977 The West Bengal Scene Political Science Review 1979 18 3 pp 28 53 M R Masani India s Second Revolution Asian Affairs 1977 5 1 pp 19 38 Joseph Manu 20 May 2007 How Indians Protest The Times of India Retrieved 10 November 2018 Austin Granville 1999 Working a Democratic Constitution The Indian Experience Oxford University Press p 295 ISBN 0 19 564888 9 This Is How Express Stood up to The Emergency Declared by Indira Gandhi in 1975 Indian Express 25 June 2021 25 June 2018 Retrieved 13 July 2023 Arputham Avneesh 27 June 2009 Emergency The Darkest Period in Indian Democracy The Viewspaper Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2020 R M Lala Beyond the Last Blue Mountain A Life of J R D Tata Ashish Ranjan Mohapatra Nandini Satpathy in Oriya New book flays Indira Gandhi s decision to impose Emergency IBN Live News 30 May 2011 Archived from the original on 23 November 2013 Retrieved 23 November 2013 O P Mathur Indira Gandhi and the emergency as viewed in the Indian novel Sarup amp Sons 2004 ISBN 978 81 7625 461 8 Hassan Nigeenah Sharma Mukesh 2017 India Under Emergency Rich Like us Nayantara Sahgal PDF International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology 2 6 Joseph Bendana Rushdie Talk Recasts Role of Public and Private in Politics and Literature permanent dead link Watson Institute Brown University 17 February 2010 Nixon Rob 1992 London calling V S Naipaul Postcolonial Mandarin New York Oxford Univ Press p 73 ISBN 9780195067170 Delhi Calm Gulzar Nihalani Govind Chatterjee Saibal 2003 Encyclopaedia of Hindi Cinema New Delhi Mumbai Encyclopaedia Britannica India Popular Prakashan p 425 ISBN 81 7991 066 0 Farzand Ahmed 24 December 2009 1978 Kissa Kursi Ka Celluloid chutzpah India Today Sources editAtul Kohli Democracy and Discontent India s Growing Crisis of Governability Cambridge University Press 1991 ISBN 0 521 39161 X Atul Kohli ed The Success of India s Democracy Cambridge University Press 2001 2004 ISBN 81 7596 107 4 Ayesha Jalal Democracy and Authoritarianism in South Asia a Comparative and Historical Perspective Cambridge University Press 1995 1996 ISBN 81 85618 75 5 B G Verghese Warrior of the Fourth Estate Ramnath Goenka of the Express Viking Penguin India 2005 ISBN 978 0 67005 842 6 Bipan Chandra et al India Since Independence Penguin India 2008 2011 digital edition e ISBN 978 81 8475 053 9 Durga Das Basu Introduction to the Constitution of India LexisNexis Butterworths 1960 20th edition 2011 reprint ISBN 978 81 8038 559 9 Inder Malhotra Indira Gandhi A Personal and Political Biography Hodder and Stoughton 1989 ISBN 0 340 40540 6 Mary C Carras Indira Gandhi In the Crucible of Leadership Jaico Publishing House 1979 1980 Partha Chatterjee Lineages of Political Society Permanent Black 2011 ISBN 81 7824 317 2 Partha Chatterjee Empire and Nation Essential Writings 1985 2005 Permanent Black 2010 ISBN 81 7824 267 2 Ramachandra Guha India After Gandhi The History of the World s Largest Democracy HarperCollins 2008 ISBN 978 0 330 50554 3 S S Gill The Dynasty A Political Biography of the Premier Ruling Family of Modern India HarperCollins 1996 ISBN 81 7223 245 4 Subhash C Kashyap Indian Constitution Conflicts and Controversies Vitasta Publishing 2010 ISBN 978 81 89766 41 2 Mithi Mukherjee New Delhi Oxford University Press 2010 Print ISBN 9780198062509 T V Sathyamurthy State and Nation in the Context of Social 00 Change Oxford University Press 1994 ISBN 0 19 563136 6 Further reading editAdvani L K 2002 A prisoner s scrapbook New Delhi Ocean Books Anderson Edward and Patrick Clibbens Smugglers of Truth The Indian diaspora Hindu nationalism and the Emergency 1975 77 Modern Asian Studies 52 5 2018 1729 1773 Kuldip Nayar The Judgement Inside Story of the Emergency in India 1977 Vikas Publishing House ISBN 0 7069 0557 1 Chandra Bipan In the name of Democracy JP movement and the Emergency Penguin UK 2017 P N Dhar Indira Gandhi the Emergency and Indian Democracy 2000 424pp Jinks Derek P The Anatomy of an Institutionalized Emergency Preventive Detention and Personal Liberty in India Michigan Journal of International Law 22 2000 311 online free Klieman Aaron S Indira s India Democracy and Crisis Government Political Science Quarterly 1981 96 2 pp 241 259 in JSTOR Malkani K R 1978 The midnight knock New Delhi Vikas Pub House Mathur Om Prakash Indira Gandhi and the emergency as viewed in the Indian novel Sarup amp Sons 2004 Paul Subin When India Was Indira Indian Express s Coverage of the Emergency 1975 77 Journalism History 42 4 2017 201 211 Plys Kristin Brewing Resistance Indian Coffee House and the Emergency in Postcolonial India Cambridge UP 2020 ISBN 9781108490528 Prakash Gyan Emergency Chronicles Indira Gandhi and Democracy s Turning Point Princeton UP 2019 ISBN 9780691186726 online review Ramashray Roy and D L Sheth The 1977 Lok Sabha Election Outcome The Salience of Changing Voter Alignments Since 1969 Political Science Review 1978 Vol 17 Issue 3 4 pp 51 63 Coomi Kapoor 2015 The Emergency A Personal History Viking Books Shourie Arun 1984 Mrs Gandhi s second reign New Delhi Vikas Shourie Arun 1978 Symptoms of fascism New Delhi Vikas Sahasrabuddhe P G amp Vajapeyi M 1991 The people versus emergency A saga of struggle New Delhi Suruchi Prakashan External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Emergency India Telegram 8557 from the United States Embassy in India to the Department of State 27 June 1975 PDF A Z Huq Democratic Norms Human Rights and the States of Emergency Lessons from the Experience of Four Countries PDF Memories of a Father a book by Eachara Varier father of a student killed in police custody during the emergency Archived 27 May 2005 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Emergency India amp oldid 1207217177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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