
National desk:
After our country became independent, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru declared the present tricolor flag as the national flag on 22nd July 1947 in the Constituent Assembly. which had three colors. Painted saffron on top, white in the middle and green on the bottom. The Ashoka Chakra was made of blue in a white band with twenty-four tiles representing religion and law. The same form of the national flag tricolor still exists today.
The first national flag of the country was offered in 1921 by Mahatma Gandhi. In which Bapu had spoken of making the two-coloured flag the national flag. The flag was made by Pingali Vankaya of Machilipatnam. Of the two colours, red represented the Hindu and green represented the Muslim community. In the middle was Gandhiji's charkha, which was proof that the flag of India was made from cloth made in our country.
Thereafter, the three-coloured Swaraj flag was used in the Khilafat movement under the freedom movement. Motilal Nehru hoisted this flag in the Khilafat movement and later Congress in 1931 sanctioned the Swaraj flag as the national flag. The rules and regulations of the tricolor flag based on the Swaraj flag were made by the Flag Code of India. which stipulated that the flag would be used only on the occasion of Independence Day and Republic Day. with saffron on top, white in the middle and green on the bottom. Also in the middle was a blue winch.
Since 1947, the present tricolor flag has been accepted as the national flag of independent India. In 2002, Naveen Jindal filed a petition in the Supreme Court. In favor of which, the Supreme Court directed the Government of India that the flag could be used in a controlled manner on other days as well. Under the subsequent reform that took place in 2005, the tricolor flag can also be used in some garments.
In line with the provisions of the Indian Flag Code, the government appeals to citizens and children to use only the paper national flag. Also paper flags should not be mutilated or thrown on the ground after the ceremony is over. Such flags should be disposed of in accordance with their dignity.
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