1975 Emergency: How Indira Gandhi’s Election Set the Stage for India’s Darkest Chapter


The darkest chapter in the history of independent India was written on the midnight of June 25, 1975 with the proclamation of Emergency but the foreword was penned when the Allahabad High Court declared then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s election from Rae Bareli null and void on June 12 that year.

The election petition against Gandhi was filed by Raj Narain, the Socialist Party candidate, who lost the election from Rae Bareli.

Narain had alleged that Gandhi’s election agent Yashpal Kapoor was a government servant and that she deployed government officials for her election-related work.

The high court verdict that found Gandhi guilty of electoral malpractice had intensified public unrest against the government due to high inflation, shortage of essential commodities and the stagnant economy, which was reeling under the impact of the war of 1971 against Pakistan that led to the creation of Bangladesh.

Voices of dissent rose from Gujarat in the west, where the Navnirman Andolan against Chief Minister Chimanbhai Patel was gaining momentum and Bihar in the east, where the youth had mobilised under the leadership of Jayprakash Narayan.

Gandhi had appealed against the high court verdict and had received conditional reprieve from the Supreme Court on June 24, 1975 that allowed her to continue as the prime minister, but without voting rights in Parliament.

The next day, June 25, opposition leaders held a massive rally at the Ramlila Maidan in Delhi which ended with a call for a “total revolution” by Jayprakash Narayan, including an appeal to the police and armed forces to disregard orders that their conscience told them were improper.

“If she did not have a dictatorial attitude and did not have a feeling of insecurity, then she would have taken this decision of the court democratically, but she chose another path,” veteran journalist Ram Bahadur Rai said recalling the days of the Emergency.

Rattled by the Supreme Court verdict, Gandhi, after consulting her close aides such as Siddharth Shankar Ray, the then chief minister of West Bengal, recommended to President Fakruddin Ali Ahmed to impose Emergency citing existence of threat to the internal security of the nation.

The declaration suspended the constitutional rights of free speech and assembly, imposed censorship on the press, limited the power of the judiciary to review the actions of the executive and ordered the arrest of opposition leaders.

Among those arrested were Jayprakash Narayan, the Gandhian socialist leader who had given the call for ‘Sampoorna Kranti’ (Total Revolution) and addressed mass rallies in the months preceding the Emergency, L K Advani, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Madhu Dandavate, Nanaji Deshmukh, Parkash Singh Badal, Prakash Karat, Sitaram Yechury, M Karunanidhi, M K Stalin and scores of political leaders.

Gandhi became the prime minister for the first term in January 1966, after the death of incumbent Lal Bahadur Shastri in Tashkent. Considered as a ‘goongi gudiya’ by a section of the Congress, Gandhi demonstrated an independent streak that led to the split in the Congress in 1969.

In the 1971 elections, Gandhi won a landslide victory for her Congress-R party. Her popularity surged in the aftermath of the 1971 war against Pakistan, but it was short-lived as political unrest and demonstrations soon became the order of the day in 1973-74.

Amid this unrest came the verdict of the Allahabad High Court on June 12, 1975 that found Gandhi guilty over discrepancies in the electoral campaign, which led to the Emergency on the night of June 25.

“The prime minister’s cabinet met at 6 am. on June 26. None of her senior ministers knew of the proclamation in advance, but the cabinet quickly and dutifully approved the decision,” recalls author Gyan Prakash in his book ‘Emergency Chronicles: Indira Gandhi and Democracy’s Turning Point’.

Gandhi addressed the nation on June 26 on All India Radio and justified the Emergency by citing a “deep and widespread conspiracy” against her government.

“The President has proclaimed Emergency. There is nothing to panic about. I am sure you are all aware of the deep and widespread conspiracy, which has been brewing ever since I began to introduce certain progressive measures of benefit for the common man,” Gandhi said in her radio address.

The 21-month period was marked by the suspension of fundamental rights, the government’s use of preventive detention laws for arbitrary arrests of thousands of individuals without trial.

The infamous sterilisation campaign led by Sanjay Gandhi resulted in the forced sterilisation of millions of men and women, particularly from poor and marginalised communities, under the guise of population control.

However, the Emergency that was imposed all of a sudden, also came to an end almost in the same manner with Gandhi calling for elections and release of political prisoners on January 18, 1977. 

(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)

Please follow and like us:

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error

Enjoy this blog? Please spread the word :)

Scroll to Top