Policy of heavy taxation, imposition of excise duties on indigenous industries like textiles, lack of irrigation facilities for farmers etc. The shortcomings of the Act of 1892 were obvious. There remained farmers etc. The shortcomings of the Act of 1892 were obvious. These remained. The Government could always pass Bills disregarding opposition by Indian members. The vehement criticism by Indian members proved ineffective in preventing the Government from following a policy of repression, large scale imprisonments, deportations etc. Following the agitation against the partition of Bengal, natural calamities like the Great Famine and Plague epidemic etc. Which in the 1880s resulted in the death of a large number of people. At its 22nd session at Kolkata presided over by Dadabhai Naroji in 1906, the Congress declared Swaraj as its goal and demanded immediate expansion of the Legislative Councils to secure larger control over the financial and executive administration of the country. The Indian Councils Act of 1909 empowered the Governor General to nominate one Indian member to the Executive Council leading to the appointment of Shri Satyendra Prasanno Sinha as the first Indian member. The Government of India Act 1909 increased the number of members of the Indian Legislative Council from 16 to 60. Elected members were to be returned by constituencies, such as municipalities, district and local boards, universities, chambers of commerce and trade associations and groups of persons such as land-holders or tea planters. If an industrial dispute or a labour dispute arises, then that is a matter for the local police to handle and not for the CISF to handle. The CISF will only guard the establishments, and the installations of the establishments.
