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50th Anniversary Of Emergency : PM Modi Attacks Congress, Says No Indian Will Forget How Spirit Of Constitution Violated

New Delhi : Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on the 50th year of the Emergency, said that no Indian would forget the manner in which the spirit of the Constitution was violated and the voice of Parliament muzzled. Slamming the then Congress government of Indira Gandhi for  placing democracy under arrest, the PM said: No Indian will ever forget the manner in which the spirit of our Constitution was violated, the voice of Parliament muzzled and attempts were made to control the courts.

The 42nd Amendment is a prime example of their shenanigans. The poor, marginalised and downtrodden were particularly targeted, including their dignity insulted. The Prime Minister also hailed the people who stood firm in the fight against the Emergency.  These were the people from all over India, from all walks of life, from diverse ideologies who worked closely with each other with one aim: to protect India’s democratic fabric and to preserve the ideals for which our freedom fighters devoted their lives.

Modi also reiterated his government’s commitment to strengthening the principles in our Constitution and working together to realise the vision of a Viksit Bharat. The Emergency was imposed exactly 50 years ago on June 25, 1975. Indira Gandhi had become the Prime Minister after a landslide victory in 1971, but her government was rocked by crisis after crisis, like the expenses incurred during the 1971 India-Pak war, droughts, and the 1973 oil crisis that buffeted the Indian economy, causing hardship for the people.

 Justice Jagmohanlal Sinha of Allahabad High Court convicted Indira of electoral malpractice and struck down her election to Lok Sabha from Rae Bareli. As demands for her resignation grew louder, President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed signed the Proclamation of Emergency late on the night of June 25.

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