In 2024, India entered the fiftieth year of the imposition of the emergency.
Emergency provisions are placed in Part XVIII of the Indian Constitution.
The phrase 'armed rebellion' was inserted by the 44th Amendment Act of 1978, replacing the original phrase 'internal disturbance'.
This kind of transformation of the political system from federal (during normal times) to unitary (during emergency) is a unique feature of the Indian Constitution.
Emergency provisions relating to suspension of Fundamental Rights were borrowed from Weimer Constitution of Germany.
In ADM Jabalpur vs Shivkant Shukla (1976), the Supreme Court ruled that detention without trial was legal during an emergency.
The Punchhi Commission which was constituted in 2007 recommended that Article 352 to be used only as a measure of ‘last resort’.