Post-WWII Context:
- Britain emerged from WWII economically devastated тАФ no longer had the resources to maintain an empire.
- Labour Party won the British general elections (July 1945) under Clement Attlee тАФ more sympathetic to Indian independence.
- Royal Indian Navy Mutiny (February 18тАУ23, 1946): Indian naval ratings (sailors) at Bombay, Karachi, and other ports mutinied against British rule тАФ the most significant indication that British military control was ending. The mutiny was put down but INC recognized its significance (Vallabhbhai Patel negotiated the sailors' surrender).
Provincial Elections (Winter 1945тАУ46):
- Congress swept the general seats.
- Muslim League swept the Muslim reserved seats тАФ emerged as the unquestioned voice of Muslim India.
- This made the partition scenario increasingly inevitable.
Cabinet Mission (MarchтАУJune 1946):
- Three British Cabinet ministers: Lord Pethwick-Lawrence (Secretary of State), Sir Stafford Cripps, and A.V. Alexander.
- Cabinet Mission Plan (May 16, 1946):
- Rejected Pakistan as a geographic entity.
- Proposed three-tier federal structure: All-India Union, Groupings of Provinces (Group A: Hindu-majority provinces; Group B: Muslim-majority northwest provinces; Group C: Muslim-majority northeast тАФ Bengal and Assam), and individual Provinces.
- Constituent Assembly to draft the constitution.
- Interim Government to be formed immediately.
- Congress accepted (with reservations about the Groups).
- Muslim League initially accepted (June 6, 1946), then rejected (July 29, 1946) тАФ when Congress president Nehru indicated provinces could choose not to join Groups.
- Interim Government (September 2, 1946): Jawaharlal Nehru became Vice-President of the Governor-General's Council (effectively PM); Congress-dominated. Muslim League joined in October 1946 but continuously disrupted work.
Direct Action Day (August 16, 1946):
- Muslim League, having rejected the Cabinet Mission Plan, declared "Direct Action" тАФ mass mobilization.
- Led to the Great Calcutta Killings (August 16тАУ19, 1946) тАФ communal riots; approximately 4,000 killed in Calcutta alone.
- Riots spread to Noakhali (October 1946), Bihar (October 1946), spread across North India.
Mountbatten Plan and Partition (June 3, 1947):
- Lord Mountbatten arrived as Viceroy March 22, 1947 (replacing Wavell).
- Concluded that partition was inevitable.
- June 3, 1947: Announced the Partition Plan (Mountbatten Plan):
- India to be partitioned into two independent commonwealths: India and Pakistan.
- Existing provincial boundaries to be used as a basis, with partition of Punjab and Bengal.
- Princely states given the choice to join either dominion or remain independent (Sovereignty was restored to them on transfer of power).
- Sir Cyril Radcliffe тАФ headed the two Boundary Commissions (Punjab and Bengal) тАФ drew the borders in 5 weeks while confined to his house.
Indian Independence Act, 1947:
- Passed by the British Parliament; received royal assent July 18, 1947.
- Pakistan became independent: August 14, 1947.
- India became independent: August 15, 1947 (midnight August 14тАУ15).
- Both became Dominions (not complete republics yet) тАФ Governor-General of India: Lord Mountbatten; of Pakistan: Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
- Jawaharlal Nehru's famous speech: "At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom." (Tryst with Destiny speech, August 14тАУ15, 1947.)
- India became a Republic on January 26, 1950 with its own Constitution coming into force.