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Rowlatt Committee

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The Rowlatt committee was a Sedition Committee appointed in 1918 by the British Indian Government with Mr Justice (Sydney) Rowlatt, an English judge, as its president. The purpose of the committee was to evaluate the links between political terrorism in India, especially Bengal and Punjab, and the German government and the Bolsheviks in Russia.[1][2][3] It was instituted towards the end of WW I when the Indian Revolutionary movement had been esepcially active and had achieved considerable success, potency and momentum and massive assistance was received from Germany which planned to destabilise British India.[2][3][4]These included supporting and financing Indian seditionist organisations in Germany and in United States as well as a destabilisation in the political situation in neighbouring Afghanistan following a a diplomatic mission that had attempted to rally the Amir of Afghanistan against British India. Attempts were also made by the Provisional Government of India established in Afghanistan following the mission to establish contacts with the Bosheviks. A further reason for institution of the committee was emerging civil and labour unrest in India around the post-war recession, eg the Bombay mill worker's strikes and unrests in Punjab, and the Spanish Flu epidemic that killed nearly 13 million people in the country.[5]

The evidence produced before the committee substantiated the German link, although no conclusive evidence was found for a siginficant contribution or threat from the Bolsheviks. On the recommendations of the committee, the Rowlatt Act, an extension of the Defence of India act of 1915, was enforced in response to the threat in Punjab and Bengal.[1] The Rowlatt Act instituted on the Committee's recommendations, had a significant impact on the political situation of India, irrevocably placing her on a path of political movement headed by Gandhi that ultimately dominated the Indian Independence movement for the next 20 years. Also known as the Black Act, it vested the Viceroy's government with extraordinary powers to quell sedition by silencing the press, detaining the political activists without trial, and arresting without warrant any individuals suspected of sedition or treason. In protest, a nationwide cessation of work (hartal) was called, marking the beginning of widespread, although not nationwide, popular discontent.

The agitation unleashed by the acts culminated on 13 April 1919, in the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in Amritsar, Punjab when the British military commander, Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer, blocked the main entrance to the Jallianwallah Bagh,a walled in courtyard in Amritsar, and ordered his soldiers to fire into an unarmed and unsuspecting crowd of some 5,000 people who had assembled there in defiance of a ban. A total of 1,650 rounds were fired, killing 379 people (as according to an official British commission; Indian estimates ranged as high as 1,500[6]) and wounding 1,137 in the episode, which dispelled wartime hopes of home rule and goodwill in a frenzy of post-war reaction.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Tinker 1968, p. 92
  2. ^ a b Lovett 1920, p. 94, 187-191
  3. ^ a b Sarkar 1921, p. 137
  4. ^ Colett 2007, p. 218
  5. ^ Chandler 2001, p. 179
  6. ^ Ackerman, Peter, and Duvall, Jack, A Force More Powerful: A Century of Nonviolent Conflict p. 74.

References

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