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The Eighth Schedule of the Constitution defined 14 languages in 1950: [4] Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu and Urdu. [5] In 1967, the 21st amendment to the constitution added Sindhi to the Eighth Schedule.
Eighth Schedule to the Indian Constitution. Add languages. Add links. Article; Talk; English. ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...
Amendment of First Schedule to Constitution [112] 31 July 2015 Exchange of certain enclave territories with Bangladesh and conferment of citizenship rights to residents of enclaves consequent to signing of Land Boundary Agreement (LBA) Treaty between India and Bangladesh. 101st: Addition of articles 246A, 269A, 279A. Deletion of Article 268A.
Substituted Articles 44, 70, 102, 115 and 124 of the constitution. Amended part III of the constitution out of existence. Altered the Third and Fourth Schedule. Extended the term of the first Jatiya Sangsad. Inserted a new part, VIA in the constitution and. Inserted new articles 73A and 116A in the constitution. Significant changes included:
The Constitution of Bangladesh [a] is the supreme law of Bangladesh. Adopted by the 'controversial' [1] [2] [3] and virtually "one-party" [4] Constituent Assembly of Bangladesh on 4 November 1972, it came into effect on 16 December 1972. The Constitution establishes Bangladesh as a unitary parliamentary republic.
The Court remarked that the Indian constitution was drafted by a constituent assembly representative of the Indian people in territorial, racial and community terms, [42] and not "ordinary mortals", while the same could not be said for the Malaysian constitution, [43] [44] which was enacted by an ordinary legislature.
As per the sixth schedule of the Constitution of Bangladesh, the text of Mujib's telegram stated the following. This may be my last message, from today Bangladesh is independent. I call upon the people of Bangladesh wherever you might be and with whatever you have, to resist the army of occupation to the last.
The Indian constitution is the world's longest for a sovereign nation. [4] [5] [6] At its enactment, it had 395 articles in 22 parts and 8 schedules. [a] [18] At about 145,000 words, it is the second-longest active constitution—after the Constitution of Alabama—in the world. [49]