[He spoke yesterday in Mumbai at a meeting under the caption - "Emergency
Then and State Repressions Now", organised by the Citizens Initiative for
Peace (CIP) at the Press Club.
Prof. Pushpa Bhave, a noted social activist and also a fighter against the
Emergency, and Com. Ashok Dhawale, the State Secy. of the CPI(M), also
spoke. Sukla Sen of the CIP chaired.]


http://sify.com/news/emergency-a-sad-period-in-indian-history-kuldip-nayar-news-national-kgzo4bfiaaj.html

<http://sify.com/news/emergency-a-sad-period-in-indian-history-kuldip-nayar-news-national-kgzo4bfiaaj.html>Emergency
a sad period in Indian history: Kuldip Nayar2010-06-26 05:30:00

New Delhi: Calling the Emergency a 'sad period in India's history when we
nearly lost independence', noted journalist and civil rights activist Kuldip
Nayar says 'the Emergency still exists informally in the country in
different forms as the rulers, with the full support of the bureaucracy,
police and other sections, indulge in authoritarian and anti-democratic
acts'.

'The greatest damage Mrs Indira Gandhi had done through (imposition of)
Emergency was the erosion of moral values in politics and other democratic
institutions. That trend has not been reversed so far,' Nayar said in an
interview toIANS on the 35th anniversary of the proclamation of Emergency
rule.

*Phone tapping: Is Emergency back? asks
Advani*<http://sify.com/news/phone-tapping-is-emergency-back-asks-advani-news-national-kezs4cbfegf.html?tag=emergency>

Nayar, 86, who was imprisoned for three months during the emergency when
civil liberties were suspended, political opponents jailed and the press
muzzled, said: 'Informal emergency is imposed in several states and
institutions by authoritarian rulers. The ways of Emergency are witnessed in
several states, as the chief ministers, with the unquestioned backing of the
bureaucracy and police, indulge in high-handed acts.

'Seven years after the emergency, we saw an official (police superintendent)
in Bhopal, who had arrested a prime accused (Warren Anderson) in the gas
leak tragedy, himself letting off the culprit and leading him to a VIP
aircraft. This may be on the direction of the higher-ups.'

Nayar, who has also served as Indian high commissioner to the United
Kingdom, says the voice of the public was loudly heard during the
anti-corruption movement prior to the Emergency. 'That forced the
authorities to arrest lakhs of activists, both political and non-political,
during the Emergency. However, the spirit of democracy survived.'

Recalling June 25, 1975, Nayar said: 'That was a dark night, when we nearly
lost our hard-earned freedom. Mrs Gandhi became a law unto herself. The
press was gagged. One lakh people - from top political leaders to ordinary
people - were detained without trial. A chapter of authoritarian and
extra-constitutional rule began with Mrs Gandhi and her son (Sanjay Gandhi)
calling the shots.'

Many people who form the major pillars of democracy - politicians,
bureaucrats, mediapersons and even the judges - did not question the
authoritarian and illegal moves of the then government, Nayar said. 'This
was shocking. The proclamation created an atmosphere of fear, which gripped
individuals and institutions,' he said. 'Many caved in to the authoritarian
system.'

He recalled that most of the civil servants blindly executed the
'undemocratic orders from Mrs Gandhi and her son'.

'These officials were expected to have some ethical considerations and
traditional values. All those fell flat. Magistrates readily issued black
warrants. Police was at the beck and call of the authorities and ignored the
basic rights of the citizens.

'Even the judiciary belied hopes. In the famous case regarding habeas corpus
rights, then attorney general Niren De had said the dependents will have no
right to question if one was shot or missing. In the judgment, only a single
judge - Justice H.R. Khanna - upheld the civil rights. Five other judges,
which included top names of the Indian judiciary, did not back the civil
rights plea'.

Mediapersons could not sustain their stand against the Emergency, he said.
One hundred and three journalists had attended a meeting on June 28 at the
Press Club of India in New Delhi to condemn the press censorship.

'I was arrested a couple of days later as I wrote a letter to the President
of India and other authorities conveying the sentiments of the media. But,
when I returned home from Tihar Jail after three months, I found the mood in
the media entirely changed,' Nayar recalled.

He said the mediapersons had 'imaginary fear of losing jobs and demotions'.

'Terror was unleashed on media organisations too. In Delhi, newspapers could
not come out for a few days because of a government-engineered power
failure. Censorship was imposed. The managements of newspapers who did not
blindly support the government, like The Indian Express, were handed over to
pliable persons. Still, Express owner Ramnath Goenka took a courageous stand
and tried to reflect the sentiments of the people in the paper,' Nayar, then
a senior journalist with The Indian Express, said.

Nayar said the Shah Commission, which inquired into the Emergency after the
Janata Party government came to power following the elections, had found
there was no breakdown of law and order or danger to the country from
foreign powers, the reasons given by Mrs Gandhi for imposing draconian
Emergency laws.

'The only reason was that she had lost her election case in Allahabad High
Court. She wanted to continue in power illegally.'

*Egypt extends emergency law despite
protests*<http://sify.com/news/egypt-extends-emergency-law-despite-protests-news-international-kflr4lfhfab.html?tag=emergency>

According to Nayar, much more public voice has to be articulated to 'check
emergency-type trends'.

'People have to raise their voice and act against corruption in government
and public institutions, human rights violations and forceful acquisition of
farmers' land in the name of SEZs and industrial units. Otherwise, some kind
of informal emergency will continue to suppress people,' Nayar said.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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