'India never bows to dictatorship'
NEW DELHI, June 25 -- Union home minister Amit Shah on Tuesday said the Emergency imposed 50 years ago shook the very foundations of democracy but India overcame that dark chapter because the nation never bows down to dictatorship.
Shah took potshots at the Opposition, particularly the Congress party for accusing the ruling dispensation of disregarding the sanctity of the Constitution, and said the party's leaders should answer whether they were rakshaks (protectors) of the Constitution or bhakshaks (destroyers) when Emergency was imposed.
"Remember the morning when Indira Gandhi announced the Emergency on All India Radio. Was Parliament consulted before this? Were the opposition leaders and citizens taken into confidence...Those who talk about protecting democracy today - were you rakshaks (protectors) of the Constitution back then, or its bhakshaks (destroyers)," Shah said.
Speaking at an event organised by the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Foundation to mark the 50th anniversary of Emergency that was imposed by the then Congress government led by Indira Gandhi, Shah said it cannot be defined in a single sentence. "...It was the biggest tragedy of independent India."
Slamming the Congress government for imposing Emergency to protect its power, Shah said it was claimed that the decision was taken to protect the nation. "The night that Emergency was imposed (on June 25, 1975) was the longest night and the shortest too. It was the longest night because morning dawned after 21 months when democracy was restored; and the shortest night because the rights and freedoms that had taken two years, 11 months and 18 days to frame were taken away in a flash," he said. Urging the youth to understand the genesis of Emergency and why it is still being remembered, he said it was imperative to recall an event which shook the very foundations of our democracy and is dangerous for the nation.
"Today is the 50th anniversary of Emergency. Today is the right day for this seminar. Because when 50 years of any national event, good or bad, are completed, its memory becomes blurred in social life and if the memory of an event like the Emergency, which shook the foundations of democracy, becomes blurred then it is a big danger for any democratic country," he said.
While the opposition parties, particularly the Congress accuse the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance government of sidestepping constitutional provisions, Shah recalled how members of the Jana Sangh, the RSS, and socialist parties were all jailed for seeking the restoration of democracy. "The world has witnessed the birth of democracy on this soil. India is the mother of democracy...I am sure that none of the citizens alive at that time would have liked this (Emergency), except the dictator and a small group of people who took advantage of it," he said.
He also recalled how the cabinet had not been taken into confidence when Emergency was declared.
Earlier in the day, Shah said the Central Zonal Council (CZC) is the only regional council where no issue or dispute exists between member states, calling it "a significant achievement". "All member states of the council should ensure the eradication of child malnutrition, bring the dropout ratio down to zero and strengthen the cooperative sector," Shah said while chairing the meeting of the CZC....
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