Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
India

Wrong To Compare Present Situation To Emergency, No Full Stops To Indian Democracy: Mark Tully

IANS, 25 Jun, 2018 12:25 PM
    Former BBC broadcaster and noted writer Mark Tully has dismissed the claims of the opposition that the current situation in India is very much similar to the Emergency, even as he warned the people of "an atmosphere of fear" that has been created in the country.
     
     
    In the foreword to the latest edition of the 1977 book "For Reasons of State: Delhi Under Emergency" by John Dayal and Ajoy Bose, Tully looks back at the days of Emergency under the Indira Gandhi regime and terms it as an "illegal act". 
     
     
    "Today, once again, there is a government with an absolute majority and a very powerful Prime Minister dominating his party. This has created an atmosphere of fear. This atmosphere of fear is heightened among certain communities, particularly the Muslims, by the ideology of Hindu extremist groups that appear to have powerful influence on the government…
     
     
    "However, it would be incorrect to say this is like the Emergency. The Constitution has not been suspended and all the fundamental rights still remain in place. The press has not been censored and Opposition leaders have not been arrested," writes 82-year-old Tully, who has previously authored some fascinating books like "No Full Stops In India" and "India In Slow Motion".
     
     
    Tully further highlights that as far as the media is concerned, it would again be wrong to compare the present situation to the Emergency. 
     
     
    He also says that there is no sign of any "widespread anger" against the Prime Minister Narendra Modi led NDA government but there is, in his own words, increasing signs of disappointment. 
     
     
    "I think if this disappointment is powerfully expressed by the Opposition and sections of the press, people will ask, ‘Narendra Modi promised so much but what has he done, where are the acche din (Good Days) that were supposed to come?'" he adds. 
     
     
    According to the publisher, Penguin Random House India, this widely acclaimed book returns after 41 years with a new thought-provoking Introduction by the authors and an insightful foreword by Tully at a time when the lessons of the Emergency have fresh, contemporary relevance.
     
     
    "For the perceived threats today, I still believe that there will be no full stops to Indian democracy. After all, the Emergency proved to be only a comma," he writes. 
     
     
    "For Reasons of State", not to be confused with Shashi Tharoor's "Reasons of State" (1981) dealing with almost the same subject, tells the story of the travails of ordinary folk during the 19-month-long Emergency by two young city reporters who had a ringside view of events. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Charges Laid After Two Police Cars Destroyed, Officers Hurt In Crash

    Charges Laid After Two Police Cars Destroyed, Officers Hurt In Crash
    Two men from Nanaimo, B.C., are accused of using a Dodge pick-up truck as a weapon in a crash that destroyed two police vehicles and injured two officers.

    Charges Laid After Two Police Cars Destroyed, Officers Hurt In Crash

    45-Year-Old NRI Woman Found Dead In Bathtub Of Luxury Hotel In Faridabad

    Police said they reached the hotel after receiving a distress call from Ritu Kumar’s sister who had reached the hotel and found the room locked from inside.

    45-Year-Old NRI Woman Found Dead In Bathtub Of Luxury Hotel In Faridabad

    Lured To Ghaziabad Madrassa, 10-Year-Old Survivor Says She Was Raped By Juvenile And Maulvi

    Lured To Ghaziabad Madrassa, 10-Year-Old Survivor Says She Was Raped By Juvenile And Maulvi
      A Crime Branch team on Wednesday visited a madrassa in Ghaziabad where a 10-year-old girl was allegedly raped by a juvenile after being taken from her house in east Delhi’s Ghazipur, police said.

    Lured To Ghaziabad Madrassa, 10-Year-Old Survivor Says She Was Raped By Juvenile And Maulvi

    Delhi High Court Grants Bail To Suhaib Ilyasi To Take Care Of Sick Wife

    Delhi High Court Grants Bail To Suhaib Ilyasi To Take Care Of Sick Wife
    A bench of Justices S Muralidhar and IS Mehta granted the relief to Suhaib Ilyasi subject to his furnishing a bond of Rs. 20,000 and a surety of the like amount.

    Delhi High Court Grants Bail To Suhaib Ilyasi To Take Care Of Sick Wife

    Asaram Used To Signal With A Torch To Get Women To His Room: Witness

    Asaram Used To Signal With A Torch To Get Women To His Room: Witness
    Asaram used to give signals to three girls, who used to stay with him, by using a torch, a prosecution witness said.

    Asaram Used To Signal With A Torch To Get Women To His Room: Witness

    24 Injured As Gas Cylinder Explodes In Ludhiana

    24 Injured As Gas Cylinder Explodes In Ludhiana
    The cylinder explosion took place in a a house belonging to a man identified as Ashok Kumar in Smart Colony.

    24 Injured As Gas Cylinder Explodes In Ludhiana