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Parliament of India

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The Parliament of India (or Sansad) is bicameral. It is located in New Delhi at Sansad Marg. This is the supreme legislative body of the Republic of India.

The Indian Parliament consists of two houses - the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha - and the President of India.

Any bill can become an act only after it is passed by both the houses of the Parliament and assented by the President.

Lok Sabha

The Lok Sabha is also known as House of People or the lower house. Almost all of its members are directly elected by citizens of India. It is the more powerful of the two houses since it can precede or overrule the upper house in many matters. The Lok Sabha has 545 members as of now. The number of members in Lok Sabha is regulated by Article 81 of the Constitution of India. It has a term of 5 years (it may be dissolved earlier by the President in the event of no party getting a majority). 543 members are directly elected by the people in a general election:

The representatives from States and Union Territories are directly elected by the people on the basis of universal adult suffrage. Every citizen who is over 18 years of age is eligible to vote. There is reservation of some seats for members of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes but not for members of any other community.

Rajya Sabha

The Rajya Sabha is also known as Council of States or the upper house. Its members are indirectly elected by members of legislative bodies of the states.

The Rajya Sabha has 250 members in all. Elections to it are scheduled and the chamber cannot be dissolved legally. Each member has a term of 6 years and elections are held for one-third of the seats after every 2 years. The composition is specified in Article 80 of the Constitution of India.

The Council of States is designed to maintain the federal character of the country. The number of members from a state depends on the population of the state (e.g. 31 from Uttar Pradesh and 1 from Nagaland).

Houses of Parliament

The Houses of Parliament (Sansad Bhavan) is a circular structure designed by the British Architect Edwin Lutyens in 1911. The roof of the outer circle of the structure is supported by 257 granite pillars. The Houses are located on Janpath, a stone's throw away from the presidential palace (Rashtrapati Bhavan).

Terrorist Attack on the Parliament of India

A heavily armed 'fedayeen' (suicide squad) attempted to storm India's parliament complex on December 13, 2001, triggering a firefight in which six militants, six police officers and a gardener perished. At least 25 people were injured in the gun battle and most of them were evacuated to a nearby government hospital. According to eyewitness, the attackers, burst into the area in front of the parliament just before noon local time (0630 GMT) dressed in black military fatigues and drove through the outer barricades opening fire and lobbing grenades when they could not pass through the inner security ring. One attacker was wearing explosives strapped to his body and blew himself up soon after the men broke in. Security forces immediately sealed off the red sandstone parliament building where discussions were to have begun on a new anti-terrorist bill.
India says that the groups behind the December 2001 attack on the Indian parliament — Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Toiba are Kashmiri militant groups operating from Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK or Azad Kashmir) and both believed to be members of the United Jihad Council (UJC).

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