Advertisement
X

Emergency To Now: Coming Full Circle in Politics

Bans and arrests then, bans and arrests now. We have come full circle, say political experts

June 25, 1975. It was around 9 pm. Delhi바카라s Ramlila Maidan was flooded with people. The sweltering heat was not a bar. The capital city was yet to imagine a metro. People walked for miles, piled into DTC buses and rode cycles to reach the protest venue. Their demand was unequivocally clear바카라바카라Indira, step down바카라.

On the stage were Morarji Desai, who came out of retirement to fight the allegedly corrupt Congress government in Gujarat run by Chimanbhai Patel; Raj Narain, whose plea led to the controversial Allahabad High Court judgement that banned Indira Gandhi from fighting elections for six years; RSS pracharak Nanaji Deshmukh; Delhi Jan Sangh leader Madan Lal Khurana; and Jayaprakash Narayan (JP) who demanded a 바카라total revolution바카라. Addressing the cheering crowd, JP read out Ramdhari Singh Dinkar바카라s poem: 바카라Singhasan khaali karo/Janata aati hai바카라 (Leave your throne, people are coming)

A few km from the Ramlila Maidan, a different script of Indian democracy was being drafted. Around the afternoon, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, along with West Bengal Chief Minister Siddhartha Shankar Ray, met President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed and informed him about the decision to impose the national Emergency. Except for a few close aides of Indira Gandhi and her son Sanjay Gandhi, nobody in the Cabinet was aware of it.

Elsewhere, at Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, in the office of The Indian Express, things were heating up. Journalist Coomi Kapoor, who later wrote the book 바카라The Emergency: A Personal History바카라, was asked to check why there were frequent power cuts.

Nobody was prepared for what was going to hit them.

In the middle of the night, the police started knocking at the doors of 바카라listed바카라 Opposition leaders. The plan was to arrest all of them at once so that they don바카라t get a chance to escape or plan anything, reminisces Kapoor in her book.

Around 1:30 am, the police reached the Gandhi Peace Foundation where JP was staying. K S Radhakrishnan, who attended to the police, requested them to wait for a while, saying JP was not well and needed uninterrupted sleep. But his health was not a concern for Indira Gandhi바카라s police. At 3 am, he was taken to the Parliament Street Police Station. The news of JP바카라s arrest spread fast. A few press people and JP supporters reached the police station. Waving to a small gathering, JP thundered: 바카라Vinaash kale vipareeta buddhi (People lose their minds as they inch closer towards their end).바카라

Advertisement

While JP and Desai were arrested that night, two other tall leaders of the Opposition, Atal Behari Vajpayee and Lal Krishna Advani, were in Bangalore. The next day, around 7:30 am, when they got to know about the previous night바카라s arrests and found out that the police were approaching to arrest them as well, they issued a press release, which said that June 26, 1975, will be remembered in history as August 9, 1942, when MK Gandhi called for the Quit India movement against the British. Advani wrote in his diary: 바카라June 26, 1975, may well prove to be the last day in the history of Indian democracy as we understand it. Hope this fear will be proved unfounded.바카라

Soon after his arrest, Vajpayee바카라s health started deteriorating. He was sent to the AIIMS. No one except his foster family바카라the Kauls바카라were allowed to meet him, and even these meetings were held under surveillance.

Advertisement

After a few days, when Vajpayee was sent back home and kept in confinement, his foster family could hardly visit him. The fear of being seen with the Kauls was so profound that taxi drivers would deny them rides. In her book, Kapoor quotes Vajpayee바카라s foster daughter Nirmala Bhattacharya who later recalled: 바카라We were treated as untouchables.바카라

Notably, most of the arrests were made prior to the proclamation of the Emergency. The leaders were not even aware of the grounds of their arrests. The next morning, at 8 am, the strident voice of the prime minister pierced through the prevailing silence. The All India Radio news bulletin turned out to be the declaration of the Emergency: 바카라Brothers and sisters, the President has declared a national Emergency. However, there is nothing to fear. You must be aware of the conspiracy that has been hatched since I took some progressive steps for the people of India... They are not letting the elected government work,바카라 the voice said.

Advertisement
Notably, most of the arrests were made prior to the proclamation of the emergency. The leaders were not even aware of the grounds of their arrests.

This four-and-a-half-minute declaration was preceded by a gazette notification from the President of India that read: 바카라In exercise of the powers conferred by Clause 1 of Article 352 of the Constitution, I, Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, the President of India, by this Proclamation declare that a grave Emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by internal disturbances.바카라

It was also accompanied by a notification under Article 359 that suspended the fundamental rights of the citizens enshrined under Articles 14, 19, 21 and 22. The newspapers were subjected to pre-censorship. They took away the right to protest and precisely, the rights of the Opposition to voice their concerns against the government. The RSS and Jamaat-E-Islami Hind were banned for allegedly fomenting communal sentiments. It was followed by the arrests of journalists and Opposition leaders.

Advertisement

***

Forty-nine-years later, the government of India, on July 11, 2024, through a gazette notification, published another declaration. This time, it declared June 25 as 바카라Samvidhaan Hatya Diwas바카라 to 바카라pay tribute to all of those who suffered and fought against the gross abuse of power during the period of the Emergency and to recommit the people of India to not support in any manner such gross abuse of power, in future.바카라

While sharing the notification on his X handle, Union Home Minister Amit Shah wrote: 바카라On June 25, 1975, the then PM Indira Gandhi, in a brazen display of a dictatorial mindset, strangled the soul of our democracy by imposing the Emergency on the nation. Lakhs of people were thrown behind bars for no fault of their own, and the voice of the media was silenced.바카라 He also added that this day will 바카라commemorate the massive contributions of all those who endured the inhuman pains of the 1975 Emergency바카라.

Interestingly, the notification came a month after the election results in which the BJP lost the absolute majority in Parliament for the first time in its 10-year tenure. Political analysts have attributed the revival of the Congress that got 99 seats바카라formidable enough to legitimately gain the position of leader of the Opposition바카라to their evocation of the Constitution. The image of Rahul Gandhi holding the slim red coat pocket edition of the Constitution in all his public rallies became a centrepiece in the electoral discourse that seemingly restored the balance of power in Parliament.

On the other hand, the last 10 years of the Modi government have been criticised by the Opposition for its alleged role in the arrests of Opposition leaders, human rights activists and journalists with an intent to muzzle their voices. Mallikarjun Kharge, the Congress president, in reference to the government notification, wrote on X: 바카라Mr Modi, BJP-RSS wants to abolish the Constitution and implement Manusmriti. So that the rights of Dalits, tribals and backward classes can be attacked! That is why he is insulting Babasaheb Dr. Ambedkar by adding the word 바카라murder바카라 to the sacred word 바카라Constitution바카라.바카라

As the BJP continues evoking the Emergency, one can ponder on how this political event changed the trajectory of the party forever. Advani, in one of his speeches, said that it was the Emergency and the JP movement of the 1970s that helped the BJP overcome the persisting 바카라political untouchability바카라. It is seemingly true as after Indira Gandhi바카라s assassination and the consecutive ban on the RSS, the Hindu right wing couldn바카라t find much space in the Indian political scenario. According to Arvind Rajagopal, the New York University-based scholar of media and cultural studies, 바카라JP Narayan바카라s endorsement of the RSS as a democratic and nationalist organisation in 1977, i.e. after the national elections were announced, overturned a longstanding practice of excluding the RSS as an essentially antinational organisation.바카라

Pointing out how the RSS tried to complement its absence in the anti-colonial struggle through this movement, he says: 바카라The participation in the Janata government allowed the RSS and later the BJP (formed after the exit of the Jana Sangh that led to the collapse of the Janata Party government) to claim a role in the national struggle, which it had no record of doing until that time. This became a replacement for the RSS바카라s absence in the anticolonial movement and accordingly, the 바카라people바카라s struggle바카라 against the Emergency.바카라

However, research shows that the claims of the RSS as the major force have been much 바카라exaggerated바카라. Rajagopal says that they participated fully only after the elections of 1977 were announced. The contested past brings in different history/histories. After the Emergency was imposed and the RSS was banned, the RSS chief, Balasaheb Deoras, wrote a letter to Indira Gandhi from Yeravada Jail in Poona. In the letter, he promised that his organisation 바카라would be at the disposal of the government for 바카라national upliftment바카라 if the ban on the RSS were lifted and its members freed from jail바카라.

Though it is true that several RSS leaders were arrested, and their news bulletins바카라Lok Sangharsh and Jana Vani바카라played a role in spreading the words of the Opposition leaders, it was mostly the sterilisation campaigns of Gandhi that led to her fall in the North. Even in the 1977 elections, the Congress won four states in the South.

Criticising the anti-democratic nature of the Emergency, political scientist Ajay Gudavarthy says: 바카라The Emergency was a reminder of the violation of human rights. But does this mean that the BJP respects human rights? Home Minister Amit Shah issued a statement sometime back saying human rights are alien to Indian civilisation. Read this statement of Shah, it only looks like invoking the Emergency is only to normalise violation of rights and justifying the excesses under the Modi regime, which has often been referred to as an 바카라undeclared Emergency바카라.바카라 He emphasises the revisions in the Constitution sought by the BJP leaders in the past and says that it began under the Vajpayee regime with the Justice Venkatachaliah Committee that made its recommendations, but they did not move further.

***

Whatever the role of the RSS might be, the muzzling of the media exposed the intensity of the Emergency. Then Information and Broadcasting Minister I K Gujral, who later became the prime minister of the country, was immediately removed by Sanjay Gandhi for not toeing the line of the government. His offence was not live-telecasting the boat club rally of Indira Gandhi and showing bits and pieces of the JP rally of June 25. In place of Gujral, Indira Gandhi deployed her confidante V C Shukla, who immediately called up the 바카라Delhi editors for a meeting and informed them in no uncertain terms that the government would not tolerate 바카라any nonsense바카라바카라, writes Kapoor in the book.

By the end of 1975, 33 journalists lost their accreditation for mostly being 바카라anti-establishment바카라. K N Prasad, a police officer on special duty, who was chosen by Shukla to keep a watch on the media, later told the Shah Commission바카라appointed by the government in 1977 to inquire into all the excesses committed during the Emergency바카라that they used to pass the accreditation through IB that was tasked with checking the antecedents of these correspondents.

For two days after the declaration of the Emergency, there was no electricity in the offices of Delhi newspapers. While most of the newspapers already toed the government line, a few stood straight against the diktats. On June 28, when The Indian Express came out with its Delhi edition after two days, in protest, it kept the place of the first editorial blank. The Financial Express published the lines of Tagore from the poem 바카라where the mind is without fear, where the head is held high바카라. Though the National Herald, which was launched by Nehru, supported the Emergency throughout, it had to remove a phrase from its masthead바카라바카라Freedom is in peril, defend it with all your might바카라.

Foreign newspapers and agencies were asked to sign an agreement with the government to avoid what the government considered adverse reportage. When the BBC declined to sign it, its correspondent Mark Tully was given just 24 hours to leave the country. But there were several media houses that couldn바카라t show the tenacity to carry on with dissent. Referring to them, Advani said when the media was asked to bend, 바카라it chose to crawl바카라.

Decades later, the BBC was again in the line on fire. The Indian government, ironically run by the party that opposed the Emergency tooth and nail, banned a BBC documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Guardian published the story with a headline: 바카라India invokes Emergency Laws to ban BBC Modi Documentary바카라. Rajagopal says: 바카라In retrospect, and by comparison with BJP-led governments, the Emergency appears like a minor episode that was magnified by the freedom of the press (now a thing of the past in India) and by a lively Opposition (which is far more severely repressed now than before).바카라 

(This appeared in the print as 'An Irreversible Dent')

Show comments
KR