Facebook Pixel India's 21-Month Nightmare of Democratic Asphyxiation | The Sunday Guardian - newspaper - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com

Essayer OR - Gratuit

India's 21-Month Nightmare of Democratic Asphyxiation

The Sunday Guardian

|

July 06, 2025

The Emergency was an authoritarian crackdown, censoring press, jailing opposition, violating rights.

- SAVIO RODRIGUES

India's 21-Month Nightmare of Democratic Asphyxiation

You can shut the press, jail the opposition, gag the courts, and turn India into a dictatorship in disguise. But there's one thing you can't suppress—India's memory.

It was past midnight on June 25, 1975, when India, the world's largest democracy, slipped into a deep coma called The Emergency. Without warning, without consultation, without conscience. It wasn't declared by the people, nor their elected Parliament. It was declared by a Prime Minister who mistook herself for a monarch—Indira Gandhi. The Constitution was twisted into a tool of tyranny. The ink of democracy ran dry, and for 21 long months, the soul of India gasped for breath.

Let's rewind. In June 1975, the Allahabad High Court found Indira Gandhi guilty of electoral malpractices and invalidated her 1971 Lok Sabha win. Instead of resigning with grace and facing the people again, she chose to face them with batons, censorship, and coercion. She blamed a "threat to national security." But the only real threat was to her own throne. What followed was not emergency governance—it was emergency paranoia.

She sought advice not from statesmen but from her son, Sanjay Gandhi, who turned into a miniature dictator with delusions of grandeur. An unelected, unaccountable young man wielding raw power with reckless arrogance.

The Constitution's Article 352 became a loaded gun. The first bullet hit the press—newspapers were censored, editors harassed, printing presses raided. Even cartoons weren't spared. The Indian Express famously left its editorial column blank—an act of resistance louder than a thousand words.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

ILLEGAL MIGRATION A RESULT OF CENTRE'S FAILURE: TMC'S BABAR

In an exclusive interview with The Sunday Guardian, Babar Ali, the TMC candidate from Jalangi constituency in Murshidabad, said the opposition has been raising the issue of illegal migration but has overlooked that controlling it is primarily the responsibility of the central government, as border security falls under the Ministry of Home Affairs.

time to read

2 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

FUEL CRISIS PUSHES DELHI’S MIGRANT WORKERS TO HEAD HOME

A deepening fuel crisis triggered by the ongoing West Asia conflict is beginning to reshape life in India's capital, with sections of migrant labourers leaving Delhi as rising cooking gas costs and job uncertainties strain already fragile livelihoods.

time to read

1 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The electoral campaign of a desperate leader

When Pakistan's defence minister Khawaja Asif warned that Islamabad would respond to any Indian attack on his country by striking as far as Kolkata, it ignited the national pride in West Bengal's chief minister Mamata Banerjee.

time to read

4 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

Nikhil Gupta hires top US lawyers for sentencing phase

Court filings show that Isabelle A. Kirshner entered an appearance on 6th April, followed by Brian David Linder on 7th April, both as retained counsel.

time to read

2 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

Delhi HC flags Kejriwal's refusal to fulfil promise made to tenants in Delhi

An official assurance made by then CM Kejriwal was later treated by his government as a non-binding political statement.

time to read

4 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

INDIA‘S NUCLEAR DAWN: KALPAKKAM AND THE ROAD TO ENERGY SOVEREIGNTY

Nuclear energy currently contributes roughly to 3% of India’s electricity. With the 1OO GW target, that share could rise to 15-20% by mid-century, providing the firm base-load power that renewables, by their intermittent nature, simply cannot.

time to read

5 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

Women’s reservation set for parliamentary debate

Cabinet approval sets stage for debate before key 2026 elections.

time to read

2 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

Temple tourism in UP is about pride, modernization and development

Temple tourism in Uttar Pradesh is a powerful facilitator of economic transformation in the state, bringing in significant revenue.

time to read

4 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Friday chicken

There was a small town in France, and as with all small towns, it had people who practised some old traditional beliefs.

time to read

1 mins

April 12, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

Questions galore as Rahul, Stalin yet to campaign together

With the polling for 234 Assembly seats in Tamil Nadu scheduled on 23 April, DMK chief, M.K. Stalin and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi not sharing the stage together for campaigning in the southern state has raised eyebrows, with many questioning if all is well in the alliance.

time to read

2 mins

April 12, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size