Dark days of Emergency can never be forgotten: PM Modi

“The period from 1975 to 1977 witnessed a systematic destruction of institutions. Let us pledge to do everything possible to strengthen India’s democratic spirit...” Mr. Modi tweeted.

June 25, 2021 11:32 am | Updated 11:33 am IST - New Delhi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi. File

Prime Minister Narendra Modi. File

On the 46th anniversary of the imposition of Emergency, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on June 25 said those “dark days” can never be forgotten and called for taking a pledge to strengthen India’s democratic spirit and live up to the values enshrined in the Constitution.

“This is how Congress trampled over our democratic ethos. We remember all those greats who resisted the Emergency and protected Indian democracy,” he tweeted, along with a link to an Instagram post about what was banned during the period by the then Congress government.

“The dark days of Emergency can never be forgotten. The period from 1975 to 1977 witnessed a systematic destruction of institutions. Let us pledge to do everything possible to strengthen India’s democratic spirit, and live up to the values enshrined in our Constitution.” he said.

Other senior BJP leaders also hit out at the Congress with Home Minister Amit Shah saying the Congress “murdered” democracy on this day in 1975 for its lust and arrogance of power. “Emergency was imposed to trample on voices that were raised against a family,” he said, calling it a dark chapter in India’s democracy. BJP president J.P. Nadda paid tributes to those who fought against the Emergency.

The Emergency was imposed by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi for a period of 21 months between 1975 and 1977, when curbs were imposed on fundamental rights of people.

Gandhi lifted the Emergency in 1977 and called for Lok Sabha elections in which the Congress was handed a crushing defeat, its first ever since the country’s independence in 1947, by the combined Opposition of the Janata Party.

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