The main objective of shaping the Indian States into
sizeable or viable administrative units was sought to be achieved by a
three-fold process of integration (known as the ‘Patel Scheme’ after Sardar
Vallabhbhai
Patel, Minister –in-charge
of Home Affairs)-
1.
216 states were merged into respective
provinces, geographically contiguous (connected) to them.
·
These merged states were included in the
territories of the states in part B in the First Schedule of the constitution.
·
The process of merger started with the merger of
Orissa and Chhattisgarh States with the then Province of Orissa on January 1,
1948.
3.
The third form of integration was the
consolidation of groups of states into new viable units, known as Union of
States.
·
As many as 275 states were integrated into 5
Union s- Madhya Bharat, Patiala and East Punjab States Union, Rajasthan,
Saurashtra and Travancore- Cochin. These were included in the States in part B of
the First Schedule.
·
The other three States included in Part B ere-
Hyderabad, Jammu and Kashmir and Mysore.
·
Jammu and Kashmir acceded to Indian on October
26, 1947, and so it was include as a state in part B, but the government of
India agreed to take the accession subject to confirmation by the people of the
state, and a constituent. Assembly subsequently confirmed it, in November,
1956.
·
Hyderabad did not formally accede to India, but
the Nizam issued a proclamation recognizing the necessity of entering into a
constitutional relationship with the Union of India and accepting the
Constitution of India subject to ratification by the Constituent Assembly of
the State, and the Constituent Assembly of that state ratified this.
It is noteworthy here that the rajpramukhs of the five
Unions as well as the Rulers of Hyderabad, Mysore, Jammu and Kashmir all
adopted the Constitution of India, by proclamations.
The process of integration culminated in the Constitution (7th
Amendment) Act, 1956, which abolished part B states as a class and included all
the states in Part A and B in one list.
The special provisions in the constitution relating to part
B states were, consequently omitted. The Indian States thus lost their identity
and become on uniform political organization embodied in the Constitution of
India.
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