HomeNewsOpinionFali Nariman, a beacon of moral courage when Emergency was proclaimed

Fali Nariman, a beacon of moral courage when Emergency was proclaimed

Fali Nariman was Additional Solicitor General of India when Emergency was declared. He resigned in protest, displaying moral fibre when it was scarcely discernible in the executive or judiciary. A look at that tumultuous period through his experiences provides an important takeaway. Once laws remove restraints on the executive, they will act with 'hobnailed boots'

June 25, 2025 / 13:08 IST
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Fali Nariman
The day after Emergency was imposed, Fali S. Nariman, then serving as Additional Solicitor General (ASG), tendered his resignation in protest.

The political challenge posed by a movement led by Jayaprakash Narayan was a precursor to the national emergency imposed by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in June 1975. But what ultimately forced Gandhi to impose Emergency on the midnight of 25th June was the Supreme Court’s interim order passed by vacation judge, Justice VR Krishna Iyer on June 24. The order was in an appeal filed by Gandhi against the Allahabad High Court judgment which held Gandhi guilty of ‘electoral malpractices’ and disqualified her from holding public office for six years.

Justice Iyer allowed Gandhi to continue as Prime Minister and as a Member of Parliament (MP) in the Lok Sabha, and even draw a salary in her capacity as PM. But at the same time, the order barred her from participating in the proceedings of Parliament and voting as an MP.

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What started as a political challenge turned into a legal crisis for Gandhi. And some of the sharpest responses came from the legal circle against her decision to impose an emergency.

Integrity to say no