Emergency, Gujarat riots, 1993 Mumbai and Kolkata blasts: BJP recalls India's dark days under Congress rule
New Delhi [India], March 26 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) shared a series of posts on social media recalling key historical events, strongly criticising past Congress governments while framing them as lessons for India's democracy.
In a detailed post marking March 21, 1977, the party described the end of the Emergency as "the darkest era in independent India's history," stating, "For 21 long months, Bharat had lived in fear... Voices were silenced, newspapers were mutilated by censorship, and the Constitution itself was bent to serve one family's hunger for power."
Referring to the defeat of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, the BJP wrote, "The fall of Indira Gandhi was not just an electoral loss -- it was a civilisational correction. Democracy, bruised and battered, stood back on its feet." The post further emphasised that the day should serve as a warning, adding, "Nations do not lose freedom in one day, they lose it when people forget the cost at which it was saved."
In another post under its "This Day, That Year" series, the BJP referred to the 1985 Gujarat riots during the tenure of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.
"What began as a daylong visit to project stability ultimately became a stark reminder of how fragile governance had become during one of Gujarat's most turbulent phases," the post further read.
Highlighting incidents from March 1993, the BJP recalled the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts and a subsequent explosion in Kolkata's Bowbazar area.
"In March 1993, India witnessed one of the darkest chapters in its history. A series of coordinated bomb blasts ripped through Mumbai, killing over 250 people and injuring hundreds more. The nation was still reeling from that devastating act of terror. Five days later, tragedy struck again. In Kolkata's crowded Bowbazar area, a powerful bomb exploded shortly after midnight. Most residents were asleep when the blast brought down two apartment buildings, trapping dozens under the rubble. At least 50 innocent lives were lost in a single moment of terror," the post read.
It further alleged that the Congress government at the time "failed to protect the nation."
In 1977, India was under the rule of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi (Congress) during the Emergency (1975-1977), and on 21 March 1977, the Emergency ended with the Janata Party coming to power following the general elections, marking a major democratic shift.
Later, in 1993, Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao (Congress) was in power when coordinated bomb blasts struck Mumbai and Kolkata. (ANI)