"Emergency Then and State Repressions Today" Public-cum-Press Meet by the CIP on June 25 on the Occasion of 35th Year of Declaration of Emergency Invite
*At the dead of night on June 25/26 1975, when the nation was deep asleep, the Emergency had been declared by the then Congress-led Union Government under the premiership of Mrs. Indira Gandhi on the ground of internal disturbances through a Presidential proclamation.* The next morning, the country woke up to this shocking event accompanied by arrests of a large of number of people, including top oppositional political leaders including J.P. Narayan, Morarji Desai, Charan Singh, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Raj Narain *et al *without any advance notice or* *charge for indefinite periods and confined mostly in undisclosed locations; clamping of press pre-censorship; banning of a number of organisations etc. The whole nation was stunned and found itself gagged. The press by and large submitted to this reign of terror. The *Doordarshan*, the government run TV channel, the only channel at that time would be ceaselessly blaring out blatant government propaganda. Those few who did not had to either shut shop or would come up with blank spaces from time to time. Nikhil Chakravartty of the *Mainstream*, Ramnath Goenka of *The Indian Express* and C R Irani of *The Statesman and Sadhana, *a Marathi periodical*, *were* *among those very few who showed exceptional courage. ** All fundamental rights stood suspended. No court cases against the government. No elections to public bodies. The life of the Parliament and State Assemblies stood extended. Mrs. Indira Gandhi was projected as the supreme national leader. The then Congress President Dev Kant Baruah, who'd incidentally soon fall out of favour of his mistress, loftily pronounced, without any trace shame of irony or shame: Indira is India and India is Indira! All political opposition was driven underground. The Baroda Dynamite case, involving George Fernandes and his associates, being its most high profile manifestation. Soon we'd see the emergence of Sanjay Gandhi as the uncrowned Prince of India and the horror stories of brutal repressions at the Turkman Gate and Jama Masjid areas in Delhi in the name city beautification and mass (forced) vasectomy drive in the name of population control would start seeping out. It may be recalled that the proclamation of the Emergency had been triggered by the indictment of Mrs Gandhi on the ground of electoral corruption and malpractice by Justice Jagmohan Lal Sinha of the Allahabad High Court in a case filed by her main electoral opponent Raj Narain in the 1971 Lok Sabha election from the Rae Bareilly constituency. However, the Sampoorna Kranti, or Total Revolution, campaign led by the redoubtable veteran Jayaprakash Narayan, or JP, had formed the broader backdrop and the 1974 railway strike was one of the most distinctive moments of those turbulent days. JP's clarion call to the police and military to act according to their conscience in the context of their use for carrying out state repression was later used to justify the much reviled proclamation. Only after long 21 months of brutal repressions, on March 21 1977, the Emergency was withdrawn to pave way for the next Lok Sabha election which Mrs Gandhi was, by all indications, too confident to win hands down with all visible political opposition mercilessly pulverised. Things would, however, turn out very differently. And the following election created a history by unseating the Congress from the seat of Union Government for the first time in Independent India by delivering a crushing defeat. While the horrific memory of the Emergency worked as a strong antidote to the prospects of its recurrence, today, after long 35 years, with the juggernaut of neo-liberal economic "development" mightily rolling on intoxicated with the overpowering objective of achieving a double digit GDP growth rate regardless of social and ecological costs and consequences. While the Great Indian Middle Class has no doubt prospered and proliferated, as per the latest official statistics, 37.2% of the Indian population live below the Poverty Line - an euphemism for bare subsistence level. The "development" paradigm being pursued has caused intensification of oppressions of the poor, the marginalised, the minorities. The repressions in the *adivasi *areas, in the mad hunt for mineral resources, have peaked in the recent years. A million mutinies are now on. So are state repressions. A veritable war is going on in large areas of central and eastern India in the name counter-insurgency. Draconian laws like the UAPA Act 2008, and its various state-level variants, are now again in force, on top of the much older repressive laws like the AFSPA, forcing us to recall the Emergency days. *It is against this backdrop, the Citizens Initiative for Peace (CIP), Mumbai has organised a pubic-cum-press meet to recount the experiences of horror and their grim relevance today. Also to build up stronger mass resistance by raising the levels of public awareness.* *Speakers*: Sri Kuldip Nayar, veteran journalist and a prominent fighter against the Emergency Raj Com. Ashok Dhawale, State Secretary, Communist Party of India (Marxist) Prof. Pushpa Bhave, a prominent social and peace activist, also a fighter against the Emergency Raj *Venue*: The Press Club *Date & Time*: June 25, 4-6 pm. *All are invited to join.* *Asad Bin Saif, Avinash Kadam, Bhagwan Keshbhat, Dolphy D'souza, Dr. Arif, Jatin Desai, K V Thomas, Kamayani Bali Mahabal, Madhav Menon, Manmeet, Meena Menon, Nandita Shah, R K Salil, Ramesh Pimple, Soheb Lokhandwala, Sukla Sen * * * Sukla -- Peace Is Doable -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Green Youth Movement" group. To post to this group, send an email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB.
