| Bihar Movement | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | 18 March 1974 (1974-03-18) – 25 June 1975 (1975-06-25) (emergency) | |||
| Location | Bihar, India | |||
| Caused by | Corruption in public life | |||
| Goals | Dissolution of Bihar legislative assembly | |||
| Methods | Protest march,street protest,riot,hunger strike,strike | |||
| Resulted in | Did not succeed,emergency imposed | |||
| Parties | ||||
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| Lead figures | ||||
TheBihar movement, also known as theJP movement, was a political movement initiated by students in theIndian state ofBihar against misrule andcorruption in thestate government, in 1974. It was led by the veteran socialistJayaprakash Narayan, popularly known as JP. The movement later turned against Indian Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi's government in the central government.[1][2] It was also referred to asSampoorna Kranti (Total Revolution Movement).[3]
When theNav Nirman movement resulted in the forced resignation of the Gujarat government, student protests had already begun in Bihar. Unlike the Nav Nirman movement, political student outfits likeAkhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) connected with theJana Sangh, Samajwadi Yuvajan Sabha (SYS) connected withSamajwadi Party, andLok Dal took an active role in the JP movement.All India Students' Federation (AISF) connected with theCPI was also involved.[1]
Opposition parties called a statewide strike from 1973. This resulted in police firing on strikers inBhopal, the capital ofMadhya Pradesh, causing the deaths of eight students on 17 August 1973 owing to their participation in the JP Movement. The Raina Enquiry Commission also confirm that the action of the then Congress Government inMadhya Pradesh was in excess and the Government had not handled the situation properly.
On 18 February 1974, thePatna University Students Union organized a convention which invited student leaders from the whole state.[1] They formedBihar Chhatra Sangharsh Samiti (BCSS) to spearhead the agitation.[2]Lalu Prasad Yadav was chosen as a president. Among the several contemporary youth leaders wereSushil Kumar Modi, Narendra Singh,Bashistha Narain Singh,Chandradeo Prasad Verma, Md Shahabuddin &Ram Vilas Paswan. Their demands were related to education and food in hostels.[1]
BCSS called for agherao atBihar Legislative Assembly during a budget session on 18 March 1974.[3] They blocked all roads to the assembly and damaged government properties, including the telephone exchange and the residence of former education ministerRamanand Singh, which was set on fire.
Chief MinisterAbdul Ghafoor convinced student leaders that he would look into demands. But students at colleges and universities kept protesting and damaging property.[3] The killing of three students by police inPatna provoked student opposition across Bihar.[1] BCSS declared a statewide strike on 23 March.[3] Meanwhile, JP visited Gujarat to witness the Nav Nirman movement on 11 February and declared his intention to lead on 30 March 1974.[1] BCSS approached JP to lead the agitation[2] while he was withdrawing himself from theBhoodan movement. He agreed.[1]

On 1 April 1974, Indira Gandhi responded to the Bihar Movement's demands for the removal of the elected government. She asked, "How can such persons who continue to seek favours from themoneyed people ... dare to speak of corruption?"[4] A silent student procession of 10,000[3] was held in Patna on 8 April. On 12 April, government opponents died in police firing atGaya during theParalyse the Government programme.[1] Students also demanded dissolution of theBihar Legislative Assembly. People demonstrated by blocking roads such as NH 31 and imposing a self-curfew.[3] JP went toDelhi and attended a conference of Citizens for Democracy, an organization demanding civil rights, held on 13 and 14 April.[1] During May 1974 various students' and peoples' organisations kept demanding dissolution of the assembly and also demanded the government's resignation, but did not succeed.[3]
On 5 June, he told people at a Patna rally to organize a protest at theBihar Legislative Assembly, which resulted in the arrest of 1,600 agitators and 65 student leaders by 1 July 1974. He advocated a program of social transformation by participation of youth in social activities. He called itTotal Revolution (Sampurna Kranti) Movement. Protests and closure of colleges and universities also occurred on 15 July. Some colleges started after that and examinations were held. JP told students to boycott examinations but many students appeared in examinations.[3] He called for a three-day statewide strike starting from 3 October and addressed a massive public gathering on 6 October.[1]
Demanding the resignation of MLAs started on 4 November, much as theNav Nirman movement had done, but 42 out of 318 MLAs had resigned before that, including 33 from opposition parties. Many MLAs refused to resign.[3] Government tried hard to stop people from reaching Patna for the movement and alsolathi charged people.[1]
On 18 November, at a massive gathering at Patna, he spoke to theCongress government of Indira Gandhi.[1] He realised the importance of fighting within the democratic system rather than a party-less democracy so he contacted opposition parties, which finally resulted in the formation of theJanata Party.
The Bihar Movement turned into aSatyagraha and volunteers kept protesting at theBihar Legislative Assembly, inviting arrest starting on 4 December. Indira Gandhi did not change the Chief Minister of Bihar,Abdul Ghafoor, because she did not want to give in to protestors' calls for the dissolution of the assembly as she did in Gujarat.[1]JP kept travelling all across India, strengthening and uniting opposition parties to defeat Congress. The election in Gujarat was delayed untilMorarji Desai went on a hunger strike demanding it be held. The election was held on 10 June and the result was declared on 12 June 1975, with Congress losing. The same day(12 June 1975), theAllahabad High Court declared Indira Gandhi's election to the Lok Sabha in 1971 void on grounds of electoral malpractice. The court thus ordered her to be removed from her seat in Parliament and banned from running in elections for six years. It effectively removed her from the Prime Minister's office. She rejected calls to resign and went to the Supreme Court. She recommended PresidentV. V. Giri to appointA. N. Ray as a Chief Justice to get a favourable outcome in the case.[1] JP opposed such a movement in his letters to Indira Gandhi and called for her to resign.
She imposed a nationwideEmergency to safeguard her position on the night of 25 June 1975. Immediately after proclamation of emergency, prominent opposition political leadersJayaprakash Narayan &Satyendra Narayan Sinha were arrested without any prior notice, so were dissenting members of her own party. JP was held in custody atChandigarh even after he had asked for a month's parole for mobilising relief in areas of Bihar gravely affected by flooding. His health suddenly deteriorated on 24 October, and he was released on 12 November; diagnosis atJaslok Hospital, Bombay, revealed kidney failure; he would be on dialysis for the rest of his life.[1]
After Indira Gandhi revoked the Emergency on 21 March 1977 and announced elections, it was under JP's guidance that theJanata Party (a vehicle for the broad spectrum of the anti-Indira Gandhi opposition) was formed. Considered to be an election of newcomers, a huge crowd of youth activists and leaders used to gather[5] before the residence of the Bihar Janta party presidentSatyendra Narayan Sinha. The Janata Party was voted into power, and became the first non-Congress party to form a government at the Centre in India. In Bihar, after the Janata Party came to power,Karpuri Thakur won the chief ministership battle from the then Bihar Janata Party President Satyendra Narayan Sinha to become the Bihar Chief Minister in 1977.[1]
On 17 February 2002,Sampoorna Kranti Express, named in recognition of the Bihar Movement, started its service betweenRajendra Nagar Terminal inPatna andNew Delhi. It is one of the fastest train services in India, traversing a distance of 1001 kilometres in under 12 hours, with an average speed of nearly 82 Kmph .[6]