This article is about the Pre - 1947 & After history of the Indian subcontinent.
This article is about the Pre - 1947 & after history of the Indian subcontinent.
For post - 1947 history, see below detail –
The history
of independent India began when the country became an
independent nation within the British Commonwealth on 15 August 1947. Direct administration by the
British, which began in 1858, effected a political and economic unification of
the subcontinent. When British rule came to an end in 1947, the subcontinent
was partitioned along religious lines into two separate countries - India, with
a majority of Hindus, and Pakistan, with a majority of Muslims; the eastern
portion of Pakistan later split off to form Bangladesh. Concurrently the
Muslim-majority northwest and east of British India was
separated into the Dominion of Pakistan, by the partition of India.
The partition led to a population transfer of
more than 10 million people between India and Pakistan and the death of about
one million people. Indian
National Congress leader Jawaharlal Nehru became
the first Prime Minister of India, but
the leader most associated with the independence
struggle, Mahatma Gandhi,
accepted no office. The Constitution adopted in
1950 made India a democratic country, and this
democracy has been sustained since then. India's sustained democratic freedoms
are unique among the world's newly independent states.
The
nation has faced religious
violence, casteism, naxalism, terrorism and
regional separatist insurgencies.
India has unresolved territorial disputes with China which in 1962 escalated into
the Sino-Indian War, and
with Pakistan which
resulted in wars in 1947, 1965, 1971 and 1999. India
was neutral in the Cold War, and a
leader in the Non-Aligned Movement. It
had a brief era of alliance with
former Soviet Union, when
Pakistan was closely allied to the United States and People's
Republic of China.
India
is a nuclear-weapon state, having conducted its
first nuclear test in
1974, followed by another five tests in
1998. From the 1950s to the 1980s, India followed socialist-inspired
policies. The economy was influenced by extensive regulation, protectionism and
public ownership, leading to pervasive corruption and
slow economic growth. Beginning in 1991, neoliberal economic reforms have transformed India
into the third largest and one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. From being
a relatively destitute country in its formative years, Indian Republic has
emerged as a fast growing G20 major economy with high military spending, and is seeking a permanent seat in
the United Nations Security Council.
India
has sometimes been referred to as a great power and
a potential super power given
its large and growing economy, military and population.
1947–1950:
Dominion of India
Main
article: Dominion of India -
Independent India's first years were marked with turbulent events – a massive
exchange of population with Pakistan, the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947 and the integration of over 500 princely states to form a united nation. Credit for the political integration of India is largely attributed to Vallabhbhai
Patel (deputy Prime Minister of India at the time), who
post-independence and before the death of Mahatma Gandhi teamed up with Jawaharlal Nehru and the Mahatma to ensure that the constitution of independent
India would be secular.
Partition of India
An
estimated 3.5 million Hindus and Sikhs living in West Punjab, North-West Frontier
Province, Baluchistan, East Bengal and Sind migrated
to India in fear of domination and suppression in Muslim Pakistan. Communal
violence killed an estimated one million Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, and
gravely destabilised both dominions along their Punjab and Bengal boundaries,
and the cities of Calcutta, Delhi and Lahore. The
violence was stopped by early September owing to the co-operative efforts of
both Indian and Pakistani leaders, and especially due to the efforts of Mohandas Gandhi, the
leader of the Indian freedom struggle, who undertook a fast-unto-death in Calcutta and later in
Delhi to calm people and emphasise peace despite the threat to his life. Both
governments constructed large relief camps for incoming and leaving refugees,
and the Indian Army was
mobilised to provide humanitarian assistance on a massive scale.
The assassination of Mohandas Gandhi on 30 January 1948 was
carried out by Nathuram Vinayak Godse, a
nationalist, who held him responsible for partition and charged that Mohandas
Gandhi was appeasing Muslims. More than one million people flooded the streets
of Delhi to follow the procession to cremation grounds and pay their last
respects.
In
1949, India recorded almost 1 million Hindu refugees into West Bengal and
other states from East Pakistan, owing
to communal violence, intimidation, and repression from Muslim authorities. The
plight of the refugees outraged Hindus and Indian nationalists, and the refugee
population drained the resources of Indian states, who were unable to absorb
them. While not ruling out war, Prime Minister Nehru and Sardar Patel
invited Liaquat Ali Khan for talks in Delhi.
Although many Indians termed this appeasement, Nehru
signed a pact with Liaquat Ali Khan that pledged both nations to the protection
of minorities and creation of minority commissions. Although opposed to the
principle, Patel decided to back this pact for the sake of peace, and played a
critical role in garnering support from West Bengal and across India, and
enforcing the provisions of the pact. Khan and Nehru also signed a trade agreement,
and committed to resolving bilateral disputes through peaceful means. Steadily,
hundreds of thousands of Hindus returned to East Pakistan, but the thaw in
relations did not last long, primarily owing to the Kashmir dispute.
Integration of princely states
British India consisted
of 17 provinces and 562 princely states. The
provinces were given to India or Pakistan, in some cases in particular -Punjab and Bengal -
after being partitioned. The princes of the princely states, however, were
given the right to either remain independent or join either dominion. Thus
India's leaders were faced with the prospect of inheriting a fragmented nation
with independent provinces and kingdoms dispersed across the mainland. Under
the leadership of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the new
Government of India employed political negotiations backed with the option
(and, on several occasions, the use) of the military action to ensure the
primacy of the central government and of the Constitution then being drafted.
Sardar Patel and V. P. Menon convinced
the rulers of princely states contiguous to India to accede to India. Many
rights and privileges of the rulers of the princely states, especially their
personal estates and privy purses, were guaranteed to convince them to accede.
Some of them were made Rajpramukh (governor) and Uprajpramukh (deputy governor)
of the merged states. Many small princely states were merged to form viable
administrative states such as Saurashra, PEPSU, Vindhya Pradesh and Madhya Bharat. Some
princely states such as Tripura and Manipur acceded
later in 1949.
There
were three states that proved more difficult to integrate than others:
1.
Junagadh (Hindu-majority state with a Muslim Nawab) - a December
1947 plebiscite resulted in a 99% vote to merge with India, annulling
the controversial accession to Pakistan, which was made by the Nawab against the
wishes of the people of the state who were overwhelmingly Hindu and despite Junagadh not being
contiguous with Pakistan.
2.
Hyderabad (Hindu-majority state with a Muslim nizam)
- Patel ordered the Indian army to depose the government of the Nizam, code-named Operation
Polo, after the failure of
negotiations, which was done between 13–17 September 1948. It was incorporated
as a state of India the next year.
3.
The area of Kashmir (Muslim-majority state with a Hindu
king) in the far north of the subcontinent quickly became a source of
controversy that erupted into the First Indo-Pakistani War which lasted from 1947 to 1949. Eventually,
a United Nations-overseen ceasefire was agreed that left India in control of
two-thirds of the contested region. Jawaharlal
Nehru initially agreed
to Mountbatten's proposal that a plebiscite be held in
the entire state as soon as hostilities ceased, and a UN-sponsored cease-fire
was agreed to by both parties on 1 Jan. 1949. No statewide plebiscite was held,
however, for in 1954, after Pakistan began to receive arms from the
United States, Nehru withdrew his support. The Indian Constitution came into
force in Kashmir on 26 January 1950 with special clauses for the state.
Constitution
Main
article: Constitution of India
The Constituent Assembly adopted
the Constitution of India, drafted by a committee headed by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, on 26 November 1949. India became a sovereign democratic republic
after its constitution came into effect on 26 January 1950. Dr. Rajendra Prasad became
the first President
of India. The three words 'socialist', 'secular' and
'integrity' were added later with the 42nd Constitution Amendment 1976.
Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948
The
Indo-Pakistani War of 1947–1948 was fought between India and Pakistan over
the princely state of Kashmir and Jammu from 1947 to 1948. It was the first
of four Indo-Pakistan Wars fought
between the two newly independent
nations. Pakistan precipitated the war a few weeks after independence
by launching tribal lashkar (militia) from Waziristan, in
an effort to secure Kashmir, the future of which hung in the balance. The
inconclusive result of the war still affects the geopolitics of both countries.
1950s and 1960s
India held its first national elections under
the Constitution in 1952, where a turnout of over 60% was recorded. The National
Congress Party won an overwhelming majority, and Jawaharlal Nehru began a second term as Prime Minister. President Prasad
was also elected to a second term by the electoral college of the first Parliament of India.
Nehru administration (1952–1964)
Prime
Minister Nehru led the Congress to major election victories in 1957 and 1962.
The Parliament passed extensive reforms that increased the legal rights of
women in Hindu society, and further legislated against caste
discrimination and untouchability. Nehru
advocated a strong initiative to enroll India's children to complete primary
education, and thousands of schools, colleges and institutions of advanced
learning, such as the Indian Institutes of Technology, were founded across the
nation. Nehru advocated a socialist model for the economy of India - Five
- Year Plans were shaped by the Soviet model based
on centralised and integrated national economic programs - no taxation for Indian farmers, minimum wage and
benefits for blue-collar workers, and the nationalisation of
heavy industries such as steel, aviation, shipping, electricity, and mining.
Village common lands were
seized, and an extensive public works and industrialisation campaign resulted
in the construction of major dams, irrigation canals, roads, thermal and
hydroelectric power stations, and many more.
States reorganisation
Potti Sreeramulu's fast-unto-death,
and consequent death for the demand of an Andhra State in
1952 sparked a major re-shaping of the Indian Union. Nehru appointed the States
Re-organisation Commission, upon whose recommendations the States
Reorganisation Act was passed in 1956. Old states were dissolved and new states
created on the lines of shared linguistic and ethnic demographics. The
separation of Kerala and
the Telugu-speaking
regions of Madras State enabled
the creation of an exclusively Tamil-speaking
state of Tamil Nadu. On 1
May 1960, the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat were
created out of the bilingual Bombay State, and
on 1 November 1966, the larger Punjab state
was divided into the smaller, Punjabi-speaking Punjab and Haryanvi speaking Haryana states.
C. Rajagopalachari and formation of Swatantra Party
Main
articles: C. Rajagopalachari and Swatantra Party
On 4 June 1959, shortly after the Nagpur session of the Indian National
Congress, C.
Rajagopalachari, along with Murari Vaidya of the newly established
Forum of Free Enterprise (FFE) and Minoo Masani,
a classical liberal and critic of socialist Nehru, announced the formation of the
new Swatantra Party at a meeting in
Madras. Conceived by disgruntled heads of former princely states such as
the Raja of Ramgarh, the Maharaja of Kalahandi and the Maharajadhiraja of
Darbhanga, the party was conservative in character. Later, N. G. Ranga, K. M.
Munshi, Field Marshal K. M.
Cariappa and the Maharaja of Patiala joined the
effort. Rajagopalachari, Masani and Ranga also tried but failed to
involve Jayaprakash Narayan in the initiative.
In his short essay "Our Democracy", Rajagopalachari explained
the necessity for a right-wing alternative to the Congress by saying:
since... the Congress Party has swung to the Left, what is wanted is
not an ultra or outer-Left [viz. the CPI or the Praja Socialist Party, PSP], but
a strong and articulate Right.
Rajagopalachari also insisted that the opposition must: operate not
privately and behind the closed doors of the party meeting, but openly and
periodically through the electorate.
He outlined the goals of the Swatantra Party through twenty one
"fundamental principles" in the foundation document. The party
stood for equality and opposed government control over the private
sector. Rajagopalachari sharply criticised the bureaucracy and coined the
term "licence-permit Raj" to describe Nehru's elaborate system
of permissions and licences required for an individual to set up a private
enterprise. Rajagopalachari's personality became a rallying point for the
party.
Rajagopalachari's efforts to build an anti-Congress front led to a
patch up with his former adversary C. N. Annadurai of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. During the
late 1950s and early 1960s, Annadurai grew close to Rajagopalachari and sought
an alliance with the Swatantra Party for the 1962 Madras legislative assembly
elections. Although there were occasional electoral pacts
between the Swatantra Party and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK),
Rajagopalachari remained non-committal on a formal tie-up with the DMK due to
its existing alliance with Communists whom he dreaded. The Swatantra Party
contested 94 seats in the Madras state assembly elections and won six as well
as won 18 parliamentary seats in the 1962 Lok Sabha elections.
Foreign policy and military conflicts
See
also: Role of India in Non-Aligned Movement, List
of conflicts in Asia § Republic of India,
and Indo-Pakistani
War of 1965.
Nehru's foreign policy was the inspiration of the Non-Aligned
Movement, of which India was a co-founder. Nehru maintained
friendly relations with both the United States and the Soviet Union, and encouraged the People's Republic of China to join the global
community of nations. In 1956, when the Suez Canal
Company was seized by the Egyptian government, an international conference voted 18–4 to take action
against Egypt. India was one of the four backers of Egypt, along with Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and the USSR. India had opposed the partition
of Palestine and the 1956 invasion of the Sinai by Israel, the United Kingdom and France, but did not oppose the Chinese direct control
over Tibet, and the suppression of a pro-democracy movement in Hungary by the Soviet Union. Although Nehru disavowed nuclear ambitions
for India, Canada and France aided India in the development of nuclear power
stations for electricity. India also negotiated an agreement in 1960 with
Pakistan on the just use of the waters of seven rivers shared by the countries.
Nehru had visited Pakistan in 1953, but owing to political turmoil in Pakistan,
no headway was made on the Kashmir dispute.
India
has fought a total of four wars/military conflicts with its rival nation
Pakistan, two in this period. In the Indo-Pakistani
War of 1947, fought over the disputed territory of Kashmir,
Pakistan captured one-third of Kashmir (which India claims as its territory),
and India captured three-fifths (which Pakistan claims as its territory). In
the Indo-Pakistani
War of 1965, India attacked Pakistan on all fronts by crossing the
international border after attempts by Pakistani troops to infiltrate
Indian-controlled Kashmir by crossing the de facto border between India and
Pakistan in Kashmir.
In
1961, after continual petitions for a peaceful handover, India invaded and annexed the
Portuguese colony of Goa on
the west coast of India. In 1962 China and India engaged in the brief Sino-Indian War over
the border in the Himalayas. The
war was a complete rout for the Indians and led to a refocusing on arms
build-up and an improvement in relations with the United States. China withdrew
from disputed territory in the contested Chinese South Tibet and
Indian North-East Frontier Agency that
it crossed during the war. India disputes China's sovereignty over the
smaller Aksai Chin territory
that it controls on the western part of the Sino-Indian border.
Post-Nehru India
Jawaharlal
Nehru died on 27 May 1964, and Lal Bahadur Shastri succeeded him as Prime
Minister. In 1965, India and Pakistan again went to war over
Kashmir, but without any definitive outcome or alteration of the
Kashmir boundary. The Tashkent Agreement was
signed under the mediation of the Soviet government, but Shastri died on the
night after the signing ceremony. A leadership election resulted in the
elevation of Indira Gandhi, Nehru's daughter who had been
serving as Minister for Information and Broadcasting, as the third Prime
Minister. She defeated right-wing leader Morarji Desai.
The Congress Party won a reduced majority in the 1967 elections owing to
widespread disenchantment over rising prices of commodities, unemployment,
economic stagnation, and food crisis. Indira Gandhi had started on a rocky note
after agreeing to a devaluation of
the rupee, which
created much hardship for Indian businesses and consumers, and the import of
wheat from the United States fell through due to political disputes.
Morarji
Desai entered Gandhi's government as Deputy Prime Minister and Finance
Minister, and with senior Congress politicians attempted to constrain Gandhi's
authority. But following the counsel of her political advisor P. N. Haksar,
Gandhi resuscitated her popular appeal by a major shift towards socialist
policies. She successfully ended the Privy Purse guarantee
for former Indian royalty, and waged a major offensive against party hierarchy
over the nationalisation of India's banks. Although resisted by Desai and
India's business community, the policy was popular with the masses. When
Congress politicians attempted to oust Gandhi by suspending her Congress
membership, Gandhi was empowered with a large exodus of Members of Parliament
to her own Congress (R). The bastion of the Indian freedom struggle, the Indian
National Congress, had split in 1969. Gandhi continued to govern with a slim
majority.
1970s
In 1971, Indira Gandhi and her Congress (R)
were returned to power with a massively increased majority. The nationalisation
of banks was carried out, and many other socialist economic and industrial
policies enacted. India intervened in the Bangladesh
War of Independence, a civil war taking place in Pakistan's Bengali half, after millions of refugees had fled the
persecution of the Pakistani army. The clash resulted in the independence of
East Pakistan, which became known as Bangladesh, and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's elevation to immense
popularity. Relations with the United States grew strained, and India signed a
20-year treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union – breaking explicitly for
the first time from non-alignment. In 1974, India tested its first nuclear weapon in the
desert of Rajasthan, near Pokhran.
Annexation of Sikkim
In
1973, anti-royalist riots took place in the Kingdom of Sikkim. In
1975, the Prime Minister of Sikkim appealed
to the Indian Parliament for
Sikkim to become a state of India. In April of that year, the Indian Army took
over the city of Gangtok and disarmed the Chogyal's palace guards.
Thereafter, a referendum was held in which 97.5 percent of voters supported
abolishing the monarchy, effectively approving union with India.
India
is said to have stationed 20,000–40,000 troops in a country of only 200,000
during the referendum. On 16 May 1975, Sikkim became the 22nd state of the
Indian Union, and the monarchy was abolished. To enable the incorporation
of the new state, the Indian Parliament amended
the Indian Constitution.
First, the 35th Amendment laid down a set of
conditions that made Sikkim an "Associate State", a special
designation not used by any other state. A month later, the 36th Amendment repealed the 35th
Amendment, and made Sikkim a full state, adding its name to the First Schedule of
the Constitution.
Formation of Northeastern states
In
the Northeast India, the
state of Assam was
divided into several states beginning in 1970 within the borders of what was
then Assam. In 1963, the Naga Hills district became the 16th state of India
under the name of Nagaland. Part
of Tuensang was
added to Nagaland. In 1970, in response to the demands of the Khasi, Jaintia and Garo people of
the Meghalaya Plateau, the
districts embracing the Khasi Hills, Jaintia Hills,
and Garo Hills were
formed into an autonomous state within Assam; in 1972 this became a separate
state under the name of Meghalaya. In
1972, Arunachal Pradesh (the North
East Frontier Agency) and Mizoram (from
the Mizo Hills in
the south) were separated from Assam as union territories; both became states
in 1986.
Green revolution and Operation Flood
India's
population passed the 500 million mark in the early 1970s, but its
long-standing food crisis was resolved with greatly improved agricultural
productivity due to the Green
Revolution. The government sponsored modern agricultural implements, new
varieties of generic seeds, and increased financial assistance to farmers that
increased the yield of food crops such as wheat, rice and corn, as well as
commercial crops like cotton, tea, tobacco and coffee. Increased agricultural
productivity expanded across the states of the Indo-Gangetic Plain and
the Punjab.
Under Operation Flood, the
government encouraged the production of milk, which increased greatly, and
improved rearing of livestock across India. This enabled India to become
self-sufficient in feeding its own population, ending two decades of food
imports.
Indo-Pakistan War of 1971
The Indo-Pakistani
War of 1971 was the third in four wars fought between the two nations.
In this war, fought over the issue of self-rule
in East Pakistan, India decisively defeated Pakistan,
resulting in the creation of Bangladesh.
Indian Emergency
Main
article: Indian Emergency
Economic and social problems, as well as allegations of corruption,
caused increasing political unrest across India, culminating in the Bihar Movement. In 1974, the Allahabad High Court found Indira Gandhi guilty of misusing government
machinery for election purposes. Opposition parties conducted nationwide
strikes and protests demanding her immediate resignation. Various political
parties united under Jaya
Prakash Narayan to resist what he termed Gandhi's
dictatorship. Leading strikes across India that paralysed its economy and
administration, Narayan even called for the Army to oust Gandhi. In 1975,
Gandhi advised President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed to declare a state of
emergency under the constitution, which allowed the
central government to assume sweeping powers to defend law and order in the
nation. Explaining the breakdown of law and order and threat to national
security as her primary reasons, Gandhi suspended many civil liberties and postponed elections at national and state levels.
Non-Congress governments in Indian states were dismissed, and nearly 1,000
opposition political leaders and activists were imprisoned and a programme of
compulsory birth control introduced.[52] Strikes and public protests were outlawed in all forms.
India's economy benefited from an end to paralysing strikes and
political disorder. India announced a 20-point programme which enhanced
agricultural and industrial production, increasing national growth,
productivity, and job growth. But many organs of government and many Congress
politicians were accused of corruption and authoritarian conduct. Police officers were accused of arresting and torturing
innocent people. Indira's son and political advisor, Sanjay Gandhi, was accused of committing gross excesses – Sanjay was blamed for the
Health Ministry carrying out forced vasectomies of men and sterilisation of women as a part of
the initiative to control population growth, and for the demolition of slums
in Delhi near the Turkmen Gate, which left thousands of
people dead and many more displaced.
Janata interlude
Indira
Gandhi's Congress Party called for general elections in 1977, only to suffer a
humiliating electoral defeat at the hands of the Janata Party,
an amalgamation of
opposition parties. Morarji Desai became the first
non-Congress Prime Minister of India. The Desai administration established
tribunals to investigate Emergency-era abuses, and Indira and Sanjay Gandhi
were arrested after a report from the Shah Commission.
In
1979, the coalition crumbled and Charan Singh formed
an interim government. The Janata Party had become intensely unpopular due to
its internecine warfare, and a perceived lack of leadership on solving India's
serious economic and social problems.
1980s
Indira
Gandhi and her Congress Party splinter group, the Indian
National Congress or simply "Congress", were swept back into power
with a large majority in January 1980.
But the
rise of an insurgency in Punjab would jeopardise India's security. In Assam, there were many incidents of communal
violence between native villagers and refugees from Bangladesh, as well as
settlers from other parts of India. When Indian forces, undertaking Operation Blue Star,
raided the hideout of self-rule pressing Khalistan militants
in the Golden Temple —
Sikhs’ most holy shrine - in Amritsar, the
inadvertent deaths of civilians and damage to the temple building inflamed
tensions in the Sikh community across India. The Government used intensive
police operations to crush militant operations, but it resulted in many claims
of abuse of civil liberties. Northeast India was paralysed owing to the ULFA's clash with Government forces.
On 31
October 1984, the Prime Minister's own Sikh bodyguards assassinated her,
and 1984 anti-Sikh riots erupted
in Delhi and parts of Punjab, causing the deaths of thousands of Sikhs along
with terrible pillage, arson, and rape. Senior members of the Congress Party
have been implicated in stirring the violence against Sikhs. Government
investigation has failed to date to discover the causes and punish the
perpetrators, but public opinion blamed Congress leaders for directing attacks
on Sikhs in Delhi.
Rajiv Gandhi administration
The
Congress party chose Rajiv Gandhi,
Indira's older son, as the next Prime Minister. Rajiv had been elected to
Parliament only in 1982, and at 40, was the youngest national political leader
and Prime Minister ever. But his youth and inexperience were an asset in the
eyes of citizens tired of the inefficacy and corruption of career politicians,
and looking for newer policies and a fresh start to resolve the country's
long-standing problems.
The
Parliament was dissolved, and Rajiv led the Congress party to its largest
majority in history (over 415 seats out of 545 possible), reaping a sympathy
vote over his mother's assassination.
Rajiv
Gandhi initiated a series of reforms: the Licence Raj was
loosened, and government restrictions on foreign currency, travel, foreign
investment, and imports decreased considerably. This allowed private businesses
to use resources and produce commercial goods without government bureaucracy
interfering, and the influx of foreign investment increased India's national
reserves. As Prime Minister, Rajiv broke from his mother's precedent to improve
relations with the United States, which increased economic aid and scientific
co-operation. Rajiv's encouragement of science and technology resulted in a
major expansion of the telecommunications industry and India's space programme, and gave birth to the software industry and
information technology sector.
In
December 1984, gas leaked out at
the Union Carbide pesticides
plant in the central Indian city of Bhopal.
Thousands were killed immediately, while many more subsequently died or were
left disabled.
India
in 1987 brokered an agreement with the Government of Sri Lanka and
agreed to deploy troops for peacekeeping operation in Sri Lanka's ethnic
conflict led by the LTTE. Rajiv
sent Indian troops to enforce the agreement and disarm the Tamil rebels,
but the Indian Peace Keeping Force, as it was known, became entangled in
outbreaks of violence, ultimately ending up fighting the Tamil rebels itself,
and becoming a target of attack from Sri Lankan nationalists. V. P. Singh withdrew
the IPKF in 1990, but thousands of Indian soldiers had died. Rajiv's departure
from Socialist policies did not sit well with the masses, who did not benefit
from the innovations. Unemployment was
a serious problem, and India's burgeoning population added ever-increasing
needs for diminishing resources.
Rajiv
Gandhi's image as an honest politician (he was nicknamed "Mr. Clean"
by the press) was shattered when the Bofors scandal broke,
revealing that senior government officials had taken bribes over defence
contracts by a Swedish guns producer.
Janata Dal
General
elections in 1989 gave Rajiv's Congress a plurality, a far
cry from the majority which propelled him to power.
Power
came instead to his former finance and defence minister, VP Singh of Janata Dal.
Singh had been moved from the Finance ministry to the Defence ministry after he
unearthed some scandals which made the Congress leadership uncomfortable. Singh
then unearthed the Bofors scandal, and was sacked from the party
and office. Becoming a popular crusader for reform and clean government,
Singh led the Janata Dal coalition to a majority. He was supported by BJP and
the leftist parties from outside. Becoming Prime Minister, Singh made an
important visit to the Golden Temple shrine, to heal the wounds of the past. He
implemented the Mandal Commission report, to increase the
quota in reservation for low-caste Hindus. His government fell after Singh,
along with Bihar's Chief Minister Lalu Prasad
Yadav's government, had Advani arrested
in Samastipur and
stopped his Ram Rath Yatra, which
was going to the Babri Masjid site in Ayodhya on 23 October 1990. Bharatiya Janata Party withdrew their
support to Singh government, causing them to lose parliamentary vote of
confidence on 7 November 1990. Chandra Shekhar split
to form the Janata Dal (Socialist), supported by Rajiv's Congress. This new
government also collapsed in a matter of months, when Congress withdrew its support.
1990s
The
then-Chief Minister of Jammu
and Kashmir Farooq Abdullah (son of former Chief
Minister Sheikh Abdullah)
announced an alliance with the ruling Congress party for the elections of 1987.
But, the elections were allegedly rigged in favour of him. This led to the rise
of the armed extremist insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir composed, in part, of
those who unfairly lost elections. India has constantly maintained the position
of blaming Pakistan for supplying these groups with logistical support, arms,
recruits and training.
Militants
in Kashmir reportedly
tortured and killed local Kashmiri Pandits,
forcing them to leave Kashmir in large numbers. Around 90% of the Kashmiri
Pandits left Kashmir during the 1990s, resulting in the ethnic cleansing of Kashmiri Hindus.
On 21
May 1991, while former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi campaigned in Tamil Nadu on
behalf of Congress (Indira), a Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) female suicide bomber assassinated
him and many others by setting off the bomb in her belt by leaning forward
while garlanding him. In the elections, Congress (Indira) won 244 parliamentary
seats and put together a coalition, returning to power under the leadership
of P.V. Narasimha Rao. This
Congress-led government, which served a full five-year term, initiated a
gradual process of economic liberalisation and reform, which has opened
the Indian economy to
global trade and investment. India's domestic politics also took new shape, as
traditional alignments by caste, creed, and ethnicity gave way to a
plethora of small, regionally-based political parties.
But
India was rocked by communal violence (see Bombay riots)
between Hindus and Muslims that killed over 10,000 people, following the Babri Mosque demolition
by Hindu extremists in the course of the Ram Janmabhoomi dispute
in Ayodhya in
1992. The final months of the Rao-led government in the spring of 1996
suffered the effects of several major political corruption scandals, which
contributed to the worst electoral performance by the Congress Party in its
history as the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party emerged as the
largest single party.
Economic reforms
Under
the policies initiated
by late Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao and
his then-Finance Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh,
India's economy expanded rapidly. The economic reforms were a reaction to
an impending
balance of payment crisis. The Rao administration initiated
the privatisation of large, inefficient, and loss-inducing
government corporations. The UF government had attempted a progressive budget
that encouraged reforms, but the 1997
Asian financial crisis and political instability created
economic stagnation. The Vajpayee administration continued with privatisation,
reduction of taxes, a sound fiscal policy aimed
at reducing deficits and debts, and increased initiatives for public works.
Cities like Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, and Ahmedabad have
risen in prominence and economic importance, becoming centres of rising
industries and destinations for foreign investment and firms. Strategies like
forming Special Economic Zones – tax amenities, good communications
infrastructure, low regulation – to encourage industries has paid off in many
parts of the country.
A
rising generation of well-educated and skilled professionals in scientific
sectors of the industry began propelling the Indian economy, as the information
technology industry took hold across India with the proliferation of computers.
The new technologies increased the efficiency of activity in almost every type of
industry, which also benefitted from the availability of skilled labor. Foreign
investment and outsourcing of jobs to India's labor markets further enhanced
India's economic growth. A large middle class has arisen across India, which
has increased the demand, and thus the production of a wide array of consumer goods.
Unemployment is steadily declining, and poverty has
fallen to approximately 22%. Gross Domestic Product growth increased to beyond
7%. While serious challenges remain, India is enjoying a period of economic
expansion that has propelled it to the forefront of the world economy, and has
correspondingly increased its influence in political and diplomatic terms
Era of coalitions
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) emerged from
the May 1996 national elections as the single-largest party in the Lok Sabha but
without enough strength to prove a majority on the floor of that Parliament.
Under Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the BJP coalition lasted
in power 13 days. With all political parties wishing to avoid another round of
elections, a 14-party coalition led by the Janata Dal emerged
to form a government known as the United Front. A United Front government under
former Chief
Minister of Karnataka H.D. Deve Gowda lasted
less than a year. The leader of the Congress Party withdrew support in March
1997. Inder Kumar Gujral replaced Deve Gowda as
the consensus choice for Prime Minister of a 16-party United Front coalition.
In
November 1997, the Congress Party again withdrew support for the United Front.
New elections in February 1998 brought the BJP the largest number of seats in
Parliament (182), but this fell far short of a majority. On 20 March 1998, the
President inaugurated a BJP-led coalition government, with Vajpayee again
serving as Prime Minister. On 11 and 13 May 1998, this government conducted a
series of five underground nuclear weapons tests, known collectively as Pokhran-II —
which caused Pakistan to conduct its own tests that same year. India's
nuclear tests prompted President of the United States Bill Clinton and
Japan to impose economic sanctions on
India pursuant to the 1994 Nuclear Proliferation Prevention Act and led to
widespread international condemnation.
In the
early months of 1999, Prime Minister Vajpayee made a historic bus trip to
Pakistan and met with Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif,
signing the bilateral Lahore peace
declaration.
In
April 1999, the coalition government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) fell apart,
leading to fresh elections in September. In May and June 1999, India discovered
an elaborate campaign of terrorist infiltration that resulted in the Kargil War in
Kashmir, derailing a promising peace process that had begun only three months
earlier when Prime Minister Vajpayee visited Pakistan, inaugurating the
Delhi-Lahore bus service. Indian forces killed Pakistan-backed infiltrators and
reclaimed important border posts in high-altitude warfare.
Soaring
on popularity earned following the successful conclusion of the Kargil
conflict, the National Democratic Alliance – a new coalition led by
the BJP – gained a majority to form a government with Vajpayee as Prime
Minister in October 1999. The end of the millennium was devastating to India,
as a cyclone hit Orissa, killing
at least 10,000.
2000s
Under Bharatiya Janata Party
In May
2000, India's population exceeded 1 billion. President of the United
States Bill Clinton made
a groundbreaking visit to India to improve ties between the two nations. In
January, massive earthquakes hit Gujarat
state, killing at least 30,000.
Prime
Minister Vajpayee met with Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf in
the first summit between Pakistan and India in more than two years in the
middle of 2001. But the meeting failed without a breakthrough or even a joint
statement because of differences over Kashmir region.
Three
new states — Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttarakhand (originally
Uttaranchal) — were formed in November 2000.
The
National Democratic Alliance government's credibility was adversely affected by
a number of political scandals (such as allegations that the Defence
Minister George Fernandes took
bribes) as well as reports of intelligence failures that led to the Kargil
incursions going undetected, and the apparent failure of his talks with the
Pakistani President. Following the 11 September attacks, the
United States lifted sanctions which it had imposed against India and Pakistan
in 1998. The move was seen as a reward for their support for the War on Terror. The
tensions of an imminent war between India and Pakistan again rose by the heavy
Indian firing on Pakistani military posts along the Line of Control and
the subsequent deadly Indian
Parliament attack and the 2001–02 India–Pakistan standoff.
In
2002, 59 Hindu pilgrims returning from Ayodhya were killed in a train fire
in Godhra,
Gujarat. This sparked off the 2002 Gujarat violence,
leading to the deaths of 790 Muslims and 254 Hindus and with 223 people
reported missing.
Throughout
2003, India's speedy economic progress, political stability, and a rejuvenated
peace initiative with Pakistan increased the government's popularity. India and
Pakistan agreed to resume direct air links and to allow overflights, and a
groundbreaking meeting was held between the Indian government and moderate
Kashmir separatists. The Golden Quadrilateral project
aimed to link India's corners with a network of modern highways.
Congress rule returns
In
January 2004 Prime Minister Vajpayee recommended early dissolution of the Lok Sabha and
general elections. The Congress
Party-led alliance won a surprise victory in elections held
in May 2004. Manmohan Singh became the Prime Minister,
after the Congress President Sonia Gandhi, the
widow of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi,
declined to take the office, in order to defuse the controversy about whether
her foreign birth should be considered a disqualification for the Prime
Minister's post. The Congress formed a coalition called the United Progressive
Alliance with Socialist and regional parties, and enjoyed the outside support
of India's Communist
parties. Manmohan Singh became the first Sikh and non-Hindu to hold India's most powerful office.
Singh continued economic liberalisation, although the need for support from
Indian Socialists and Communists forestalled further privatisation for some
time.
By the
end of 2004, India began to withdraw some of its troops from Kashmir. By the
middle of the next year, the Srinagar–Muzaffarabad
Bus service was inaugurated, the first in 60 years to operate
between Indian-administered and Pakistani-administered Kashmirs. However, in
May 2006, suspected Islamic extremist militants killed 35 Hindus in the worst
attacks in Indian-administered Kashmir for several months.
The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami devastated
Indian coastlines and islands, killing an estimated 18,000 and displacing
around 650,000. The tsunami was caused by a powerful undersea earthquake off
the Indonesian coast.
Natural disasters such as the Mumbai
floods (killing more than 1,000) and Kashmir earthquake (killing
79,000) hit the subcontinent in the next year. In February 2006, the United
Progressive Alliance government launched India's largest-ever rural jobs
scheme, aimed at lifting around 60 million families out of poverty.
The
United States and India signed a major nuclear co-operation agreement during
a visit by United States President George W. Bush in
March 2006. According to the nuclear deal, the United States was to give India
access to civilian nuclear technology while India agreed to greater scrutiny
for its nuclear programme. Later, United States approved a controversial law
allowing India to buy their nuclear reactors and fuel for the first time in 30
years. In July 2008, the United Progressive Alliance survived a vote of confidence brought after left-wing parties
withdrew their support over the nuclear deal. After the vote, several left-wing
and regional parties formed a new alliance to oppose the government, saying it
had been tainted by corruption. Within three months, following approval by
the U.S. Congress,
George W. Bush signed into law a nuclear deal with India, which ended a
three-decade ban on American nuclear trade with Delhi.
In
2007, India got its first female President as Pratibha Patil was
sworn in. Long associated with the Nehru–Gandhi family, Pratibha
Patil was a low-profile governor of the state of Rajasthan before
emerging as the favoured presidential candidate of Sonia Gandhi.[76] In
February, the infamous Samjhauta Express bombings took
place, killing Pakistani civilians in Panipat,
Haryana. As of 2011, nobody had been charged for the crime, though it has been
linked to Abhinav Bharat, a shadowy Hindu fundamentalist
group headed by a former Indian army officer.
In 2008
October, India successfully launched its first mission to the Moon, the
unmanned lunar probe called Chandrayaan-1. In the previous year, India had launched its first
commercial space rocket,
carrying an Italian satellite.
In
November 2008, Mumbai attacks took
place. India blamed militants from Pakistan for the attacks and announced a
"pause" in the ongoing peace process.
In July
2009, the Delhi High Court decriminalised
consensual homosexual sex,
declaring the British Raj-era law, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, as unconstitutional.
In
the Indian
general election in 2009, the United
Progressive Alliance won a convincing and resounding 262 seats, with Congress
alone winning 206 seats. However, the Congress-led government faced many
allegations of corruption. Inflation rose
to an all-time high, and the ever-increasing prices of food commodities caused
widespread agitation.
In 8
November 2009, in spite of strong protests by China, which claims the whole
of Arunachal Pradesh as
its own, the 14th Dalai Lama visited Tawang Monastery in
Arunachal Pradesh, which was a monumental event to the people of the region,
and the abbot of the monastery greeted him with much fanfare and adulation.
21st-century
India is facing the Naxalite-Maoist rebels, in the words of
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, India's "greatest internal security
challenge", and other terrorist tensions (such as Islamist terrorist
campaigns in and out of Jammu & Kashmir and terrorism
in India's Northeast). Terrorism has increased in India, with bomb blasts in
leading cities like Mumbai, New
Delhi, Jaipur, Bangalore,
and Hyderabad. In
the new millennium, India improved relations with many countries and foreign
unions including the United States, the European Union, Israel, and
the People's Republic of China. The economy of India has
grown at a very rapid pace. India was now being looked at as a potential superpower.
2010s
Congress rule continues
The concerns and controversies over the
2010 Commonwealth Games rocked the country in 2010, raising
questions about the credibility of the government followed by the 2G spectrum case and Adarsh Housing Society scam. In
mid-2011, Anna Hazare, a
prominent social activist, staged a 12-day hunger strike in Delhi in protest at
state corruption, after government proposals to tighten up anti-graft legislation fell
short of his demands.
Despite
all this, India showed great promise with a higher growth rate in gross
domestic product. In January 2011, India assumed a nonpermanent seat in
the United Nations Security Council for the 2011–12 term. In
2004, India had launched an application for a permanent seat on the UN Security
Council, along with Brazil, Germany and Japan. In March, India overtook China to become
the world's largest importer of arms.
The Telangana movement reached its peak in
2011–12, leading to formation of India's 29th state, Telangana, in
June 2014.
The 2012 Delhi gang rape case
and subsequent protest by civil society resulted in changes in the laws related to rape and offences against women. In April
2013, the Saradha Group financial scandal was
unearthed, caused by the collapse of a Ponzi scheme run
by Saradha Group, a consortium of over 200 private companies in Eastern India,
causing an estimated loss of INR 200–300 billion (US$4–6 billion) to
over 1.7 million depositors. In December 2013, the Supreme Court of India overturned
the Delhi High Court ruling on Sec 377, criminalising homosexual sex between
consenting adults once again in the country.
In
August 2010, cloudbursts and the ensuing flooding in
the Ladakh region
of North India resulted in the deaths of around 255 people, while affecting
9,000 people directly. In June 2013, a multi-day cloudburst in Uttarakhand and
other north Indian states caused devastating floods and landslides, with more
than 5,700 people "presumed dead." In September 2014, floods in
the state of Jammu
and Kashmir, following heavy rains due to monsoon season,
killed around 277 people and brought extensive damage to property.[94] A
further 280 people died in the neighbouring Pakistani regions, particularly
in Pakistani Punjab.
In
August – September 2013, clashes
between Hindus and Muslims in Muzaffarnagar,
Uttar Pradesh, resulted in at least 62 deaths, injured 93, and left more
than 50,000 displaced.
In
November 2013, India launched its first interplanetary mission, the Mars Orbiter Mission, popularly
known as Mangalyaan, to Mars and, was successful, so ISRO on 24 September 2014, became the fourth space agency to
reach Mars, after the Soviet space program, NASA, and the European Space Agency. ISRO
also became the first space agency and India the first country to reach Mars on
its maiden attempt.
2014 – Return of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Government
The Hindutva movement
advocating Hindu nationalism originated
in the 1920s and has remained a strong political force in India. The major
party of the religious right, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), since its
foundation in 1980 won elections, and after a defeat
in 2004 remained one of the leading forces against the coalition
government of the Congress
Party. The 16th national general election, held in early 2014, saw a
huge victory of the BJP; it gained an absolute majority and formed a government under
the premiership of Narendra Modi, a BJP leader and till then
the Chief Minister of Gujarat. The
Modi government's sweeping mandate and popularity helped the BJP win
several State Assembly elections in India. The Modi government
implemented several initiatives and campaigns to increase manufacturing and
infrastructure — notably — Make in India, Digital India and Swachh
Bharat Abhiyan.
Very informative.
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