Emergency Provisions (Articles 352–360)

Emergency provisions are contained in Part XVIII of the Constitution (Articles 352–360).

These provisions enable the Central Government to assume extraordinary powers during abnormal situations.

Inspiration: Borrowed from Weimar Constitution of Germany.


Types of Emergency

TypeArticleGround
National Emergency352War, External Aggression, Armed Rebellion
President’s Rule (State Emergency)356Failure of Constitutional Machinery in State
Financial Emergency360Threat to Financial Stability

1. National Emergency (Article 352)

Grounds

National Emergency can be proclaimed on:

GroundMeaning
WarDeclared war against India
External AggressionAttack from outside (e.g., China 1962, Pakistan 1971)
Armed RebellionArmed revolt inside India (e.g., 1975 Emergency)

Important Change by 44th Amendment (1978):

Before 44th AmendmentAfter 44th Amendment
“Internal Disturbance”“Armed Rebellion”

WBCS PYQ: “Internal Disturbance” was replaced by which term?
Armed Rebellion

WBCS PYQ: Which amendment made this change?
44th Amendment (1978)


Proclamation

DetailInformation
Declared byPresident
On written advice ofUnion Cabinet (added by 44th Amendment)
Prior to 44th AmendmentPresident could declare on his own

Parliamentary Approval

DetailInformation
Must be approved within1 Month
ByBoth Houses of Parliament
Majority requiredSpecial Majority (majority of total membership + 2/3 present and voting)

Duration

StageDuration
After approvalValid for 6 months
ExtensionCan be extended indefinitely by Parliament every 6 months

Revocation: President can revoke by another proclamation. Also, Lok Sabha can revoke by passing a resolution with simple majority.


Effects of National Emergency

A. On Centre-State Relations

EffectDetail
Centre gets power over State subjectsArticle 353
Federal system becomes unitary in practice

WBCS PYQ: During National Emergency, the form of government becomes?
Unitary


B. On Fundamental Rights

Two articles deal with suspension of FRs during National Emergency:

ArticleEffect
Article 358Automatically suspends Article 19 (Six Freedoms)
Article 359President may suspend enforcement of Fundamental Rights (except Article 20 & 21)

Difference between Article 358 and Article 359:

FeatureArticle 358Article 359
SuspendsArticle 19 onlyAll FRs (except 20 & 21)
Automatic?Yes (automatic)No (President’s order needed)
Applicable only forWar & External AggressionWar, External Aggression & Armed Rebellion

WBCS PYQ: Which Articles cannot be suspended even during Emergency?
Article 20 and Article 21

WBCS PYQ: Article 19 is automatically suspended under which article?
Article 358

WBCS PYQ: President can suspend enforcement of FRs under which article?
Article 359


National Emergencies in India

EmergencyYearReasonDeclared by
First1962China WarDr. S. Radhakrishnan
Second1971Pakistan WarV.V. Giri
Third1975Internal Disturbance (Armed Rebellion)Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

WBCS PYQ: How many times has National Emergency been declared in India?
Three Times

Note on 1975 Emergency:

  • Declared by President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed
  • On advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
  • Lasted from June 1975 to March 1977
  • Also called “Internal Emergency”

44th Amendment (1978) – Major Changes to Emergency Provisions

ChangeDetail
“Internal Disturbance” replaced by“Armed Rebellion”
Written advice of CabinetMade mandatory
Article 20 & 21Cannot be suspended
Emergency can be revokedBy resolution of Lok Sabha with simple majority

WBCS PYQ: Which amendment restored the original nature of the Constitution after Emergency?
44th Amendment (1978)


2. President’s Rule (Article 356)

Also Called

  • State Emergency
  • Constitutional Emergency

Ground

Failure of Constitutional Machinery in a State.

How it happensDetail
Governor sends report to PresidentArticle 356
President satisfies that situation has arisenCannot be challenged in court (44th Amendment)

Declaration

DetailInformation
Declared byPresident
UnderArticle 356
Proclamation can be issuedWithout Governor’s report also (but rarely)

WBCS PYQ: President’s Rule is imposed under which article?
Article 356


Parliamentary Approval

DetailInformation
Must be approved within2 Months
ByBoth Houses of Parliament

Duration

StageDuration
Initial6 Months
Maximum3 Years

How to extend beyond 1 year?

  • National Emergency must be in operation in that State
  • Election Commission certifies that elections cannot be held

Effects of President’s Rule

AreaEffect
State ExecutiveGovernor runs administration on behalf of President
State LegislatureMay be suspended or dissolved
ParliamentCan legislate on State subjects (Article 357)
State Legislative AssemblyPowers exercised by Parliament

WBCS PYQ: During President’s Rule, who runs the State administration?
Governor


Most Asked Fact

QuestionAnswer
Which State has been under President’s Rule maximum times?Uttar Pradesh (more than 10 times)
Which State had President’s Rule for longest duration?Punjab (1987-1992 – about 5 years)

S.R. Bommai Case (1994)

DetailInformation
Landmark case onArticle 356
Supreme Court heldPresident’s Rule can be challenged in court
Proclamation can be struck down ifBased on irrelevant or malafide grounds

WBCS PYQ: Which case limited the misuse of Article 356?
S.R. Bommai Case (1994)


3. Financial Emergency (Article 360)

Ground

GroundDetail
Threat to financial stability or credit of IndiaPresident can declare

Declaration

DetailInformation
Declared byPresident
UnderArticle 360

WBCS PYQ: Financial Emergency can be declared under which article?
Article 360


Parliamentary Approval

DetailInformation
Must be approved within2 Months
ByBoth Houses of Parliament

Duration

DetailInformation
No fixed maximum durationCan be extended indefinitely

Effects of Financial Emergency

EffectDetail
President may direct reduction of salaries– Government employees
– Supreme Court Judges
– High Court Judges
Centre gains financial control over StatesAll money bills of States require President’s approval

Important Fact

FactDetail
Financial Emergency has NEVER been declared in India(as of 2024)

WBCS PYQ: Which type of emergency has never been imposed in India?
Financial Emergency (Article 360)


Comparison of Three Emergencies

FeatureNationalPresident’s RuleFinancial
Article352356360
GroundWar, External Aggression, Armed RebellionFailure of Constitutional MachineryFinancial Instability
Approval time1 Month2 Months2 Months
Initial duration6 Months6 MonthsNo fixed limit
Fundamental Rights affected?Yes (Article 19 suspended)NoNo
State GovernmentContinuesSuspendedContinues
Parliament can legislate on State subjects?Yes (Article 353)Yes (Article 357)No
Never imposed in India?No (imposed 3 times)No (imposed many times)Yes

Important Amendments Related to Emergency

AmendmentYearChanges
38th Amendment1975Made Emergency declaration largely beyond judicial review
42nd Amendment1976Strengthened Central Government powers during Emergency
44th Amendment1978• “Internal Disturbance” → “Armed Rebellion”
• Cabinet advice made mandatory
• Article 20 & 21 protected
• Easier revocation of Emergency

WBCS Most Repeated Questions

QuestionAnswer
National Emergency articleArticle 352
President’s Rule articleArticle 356
Financial Emergency articleArticle 360
How many National Emergencies in India?Three (1962, 1971, 1975)
Article 19 suspended automatically under?Article 358
Enforcement of FRs suspended under?Article 359
FRs never suspended?Article 20 and Article 21
“Internal Disturbance” replaced by?Armed Rebellion
Which amendment made this change?44th Amendment (1978)
Financial Emergency imposed?Never
State with maximum President’s RuleUttar Pradesh
Case on Article 356 misuseS.R. Bommai Case (1994)
Part XVIII deals withEmergency Provisions
Emergency provisions borrowed fromGermany (Weimar Constitution)

WBCS Revision Box

🔹 Part XVIII → Emergency Provisions (Articles 352-360)
🔹 Article 352 → National Emergency
🔹 Article 356 → President's Rule (State Emergency)
🔹 Article 360 → Financial Emergency
🔹 National Emergency → 3 times (1962, 1971, 1975)
🔹 1975 Emergency → Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed (President), Indira Gandhi (PM)
🔹 Article 358 → Automatic suspension of Article 19
🔹 Article 359 → President may suspend enforcement of FRs
🔹 Article 20 & 21 → Never suspended (even during Emergency)
🔹 44th Amendment (1978) → "Internal Disturbance" replaced by "Armed Rebellion"
🔹 Financial Emergency → Never imposed in India (Article 360)
🔹 S.R. Bommai Case (1994) → Article 356 can be challenged in court
🔹 Germany (Weimar Constitution) → Source of Emergency provisions

Quick Memory Trick

“352 – Nation Danger”
“356 – State Fails”
“360 – Finance Woes”

“20-21” → Always Safe (Cannot be suspended)

“358-359” → Suspension of Rights


Quick Practice Questions (WBCS Pattern)

1. National Emergency can be declared under which article?
(a) Article 352
(b) Article 356
(c) Article 360
(d) Article 368
(a) Article 352

2. How many times has National Emergency been declared in India?
(a) Once
(b) Twice
(c) Three times
(d) Four times
(c) Three times

3. Which Fundamental Rights cannot be suspended even during Emergency?
(a) Article 14 and 15
(b) Article 19 and 20
(c) Article 20 and 21
(d) Article 21 and 22
(c) Article 20 and 21

4. The term “Internal Disturbance” was replaced by “Armed Rebellion” by which amendment?
(a) 38th Amendment
(b) 42nd Amendment
(c) 44th Amendment
(d) 52nd Amendment
(c) 44th Amendment

5. Which type of Emergency has never been imposed in India?
(a) National Emergency
(b) President’s Rule
(c) Financial Emergency
(d) All of the above
(c) Financial Emergency

6. President’s Rule is imposed under which article?
(a) Article 352
(b) Article 356
(c) Article 360
(d) Article 365
(b) Article 356

7. During President’s Rule, maximum duration is:
(a) 6 months
(b) 1 year
(c) 2 years
(d) 3 years
(d) 3 years

8. Which landmark case limited the misuse of Article 356?
(a) Kesavananda Bharati Case
(b) Maneka Gandhi Case
(c) S.R. Bommai Case
(d) Golaknath Case
(c) S.R. Bommai Case

9. Article 19 is automatically suspended under:
(a) Article 352
(b) Article 356
(c) Article 358
(d) Article 359
(c) Article 358

10. Emergency provisions are borrowed from which country?
(a) USA
(b) UK
(c) Germany
(d) Ireland
(c) Germany