The Invisible Cage: National Emergency & Fundamental Rights
A Visual Masterclass for UPSC Aspirants on Articles 358 and 359. Don’t let your marks be suspended!
🚀 Key Takeaways: The High-Octane Summary
- Automaticity: Article 358 triggers automatically; Article 359 needs a specific Presidential order.
- Scope: Article 358 is limited to Article 19; 359 can cover all (except 20 & 21).
- Trigger Point: Article 358 only works for External Emergency (War/Aggression).
- Duration: Article 358 lasts for the entire emergency; Article 359 is for a specified duration.
- Legal Immunity: Only laws related to the Emergency are protected from challenge.
- Sanctity: Articles 20 & 21 remain untouched even in the darkest of emergencies.
Are You Being Watched? The Sneaky Suspension of Article 19 (Article 358)
Article 358 provides for the automatic suspension of the six Fundamental Rights guaranteed by Article 19 as soon as a National Emergency is proclaimed on grounds of war or external aggression. No separate legislative or executive order is required to strip these liberties.
⚙️ The Mechanism
When a National Emergency is declared, the state is freed from the restrictions imposed by Article 19. This means the Legislature can make any law and the Executive can take any action that would otherwise be inconsistent with the six rights (Speech, Assembly, Association, Movement, Residence, Profession).
🛡️ The 44th Amendment Guardrail
Initially, Article 19 was suspended for internal disturbances too. However, the 44th Amendment Act (1978) restricted this. Now, Article 358 only operates during an ‘External Emergency’ (War or External Aggression) and NOT an ‘Internal Emergency’ (Armed Rebellion).
💡 Pro-Tip: The ‘Law-Specific’ Protection
Wait! The State doesn’t get a free pass for everything. Only those laws that are specifically connected with the Emergency are protected from being challenged in the Supreme Court. Any regular law unrelated to the crisis can still be struck down if it violates Article 19.
The Presidential Trap: Can Your Court Access Be Blocked? (Article 359)
Article 359 does not suspend Fundamental Rights themselves, but it empowers the President to suspend the right to move any court for the enforcement of specified Fundamental Rights. In essence, the rights exist on paper, but the legal remedy is killed.
Unlike 358, this is manual. The President must issue an order specifying exactly which rights’ enforcement is being suspended. This order must be approved by both houses of Parliament.
The suspension can apply to the whole country or just a specific part. It can last for the duration of the emergency or a shorter period, as mentioned in the order.
Post the 44th Amendment, the President CANNOT suspend the right to move the court for Articles 20 (Protection in conviction) and 21 (Right to life and liberty). This is the crown jewel of Indian Democracy.
The Ultimate Duel: Article 358 vs. 359
Do not confuse these two! Here is the cheat sheet that separates the toppers from the rest.
| Feature | Article 358 | Article 359 |
|---|---|---|
| Rights Affected | Only Article 19 | All (except 20 & 21) as per Order |
| Activation | Automatic upon Proclamation | Manual Presidential Order |
| Scope | Entire Country | Whole or Part of Country |
| Emergency Type | Only External Emergency | Both External & Internal |
| Suspension | Suspends the Rights themselves | Suspends the enforcement/remedy |
The Secret Files: Things Most Aspirants Get Wrong!
🚨 Q: Does a National Emergency automatically end Article 21?
NO! Since the 44th Amendment Act, 1978, the enforcement of Article 21 (Right to Life) and Article 20 (Rights of accused) cannot be suspended by any order under Article 359. This was a response to the dark days of the ADM Jabalpur case.
🚨 Q: What happens to the laws after the Emergency ends?
The moment the Emergency is revoked, Article 19 revives automatically. Any law made during the emergency that was inconsistent with Article 19 ceases to have effect, except for things done while the law was still active.
🚨 Q: Can the State pass ANY law under Art 358?
Only if the law contains a recital that it is in relation to the Proclamation of Emergency. If it doesn’t mention the emergency context, it can be challenged for violating Fundamental Rights.
Still Confused about Constitutional Provisions?
The difference between Article 358 and 359 is a classic UPSC trap. Don’t fall for it. Get one-on-one mentorship from ex-aspirants who have mastered the Indian Polity.
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