The Congress formed its ministries in Assam, Bihar, Bombay, Central Provinces, Madras, NWFP, Orissa, and United Provinces. The Muslim League formed its ministries in Bengal and Sind. A
coalition government consisting of the Congress, Unionist Party, and the Akalis was formed in
Punjab Province. Members of the
Constituent Assembly of India were selected through an
indirect election by the elected legislators in the
1946 Indian Constituent Assembly election, conducted under the British government's
Cabinet Mission plan.
Punjab Province A well-documented account of how the coalition government − under popular
Punjabi Muslim,
Hindu, and
Sikh leaders such as
Khizar Hayat Tiwana,
Chhotu Ram, and
Tara Singh − led by the
secular Unionist Party in
Punjab Province collapsed as a result of a massive campaign launched by the then
Punjab Muslim League has been given by Sharma, Madhulika. AIML (Punjab) deemed the coalition government 'non-representative' and thought it was their right to bring such a government down (notwithstanding the fact that it was a legal and democratically elected government). AIML (P) called for a 'Civil Disobedience' movement − fully backed by Mr. Jinnah and Mr.
Liaquat Ali Khan, after they had failed to enlist Sikh support to help form an AIML-led government in Punjab. This led to bloody communal riots in Punjab during the later part of 1946. By early 1947, the law and order situation in the province came to such a point where civil life was utterly paralyzed. It was under such circumstances that the
Premier of Punjab (
Chief minister),
Khizar Hayat Tiwana of the coalition-led
Unionist Party, was forced to resign on 2 March 1947. His cabinet was dissolved the same day. As there was no hope left for any other government to be formed to take the place of the Khizer government, the then
Punjab Governor Sir Evan Jenkins imposed Governor's rule in Punjab on 5 March, which continued up to the partition day, that is, 15 August 1947. Akali-Dall Sikhs, with 22 seats, were major stakeholders in the coalition along with Congress (51) and the Unionist Party (20), who were infuriated over the dissolution of the Khizer Government. It was in this backdrop that on 3 March 1947, Akali Sikh leader
Master Tara Singh brandished his
kirpan outside the Punjab Assembly, saying openly, "down with Pakistan and blood be to the one who demands it". From this day onwards, Punjab was engulfed in such bloody communal riots that history had never witnessed before. Eventually, Punjab had to be
partitioned into the
Indian and
Pakistani Punjab. In the process, a huge number of people were massacred, millions were forced to cross over and become refugees, and thousands of women were abducted, raped, and killed across all religious communities in Punjab. == References ==