K. Gopalan vs State of Madras (supra), Kharak Singh vs State of U.P. (supra) and A.D.M. Jabalpur vs Shivakant Shukla .(supra) cover and form the source of all the varie ties or aspects of the rights that go to constitute what is compendiously described as personal liberty are suspended during the operation of the proclamation of emergency and the and the orders made or passed thereunder are not open to challenge on the ground of their being inconsistent with or repugnant to Articles 14, 19, 21 and 22 of the Constitution in view of the aforesaid Presi dential Orders dated June 27, 1975 and January 8, 1976 which totally take away the locus standi of the detenus to move any court for the enforcement of the aforesaid fundamental rights and the petitions out of which the present appeals have arisen did not seek to enforce the orders laying down the conditions of detention but on the contrary challenged them and covertly sought to enforce the very rights which are suspended, they were clearly untenable and it was not open to the High Court of Bombay to strike down the afore said clauses of the Maharashtra Conditions of Detention Order, 1974 ignoring the weighty observations made by this Court in the State of Bombay vs Virkumar Gulabchand Shah(2) to the effect that measures which often have to be enacted hastily to meet a grave pressing national emergency in which the very existence of the State is at stake should be con strued more liberally in favour of the State than peace time legislation.