India is My Home

~ By Taslima Nasreen

Although I was not born an Indian, there is very little about my appearance, my tastes, my habits and my traditions to distinguish me from a daughter of the soil. Had I been born 20 years earlier than I was, I would have been an Indian in every sense of the term. My father was born before partition; the strange history of this subcontinent made him a citizen of three states, his daughter a national of two.

In a village in what was then East Bengal, there once lived a farmer, his name was Haradhan Sarkar, one of whose sons, Kamal Krishna Sarkar, driven to fury by zamindari oppression, converted to Islam and became Kamaal Uddin Sarkar. I belong to this family. Haradhan Sarkar was my great-grandfather’s father. Haradhan’s other descendents obviously moved to India either during or after partition and became citizens of this country. My great grandfather, a Muslim, did not.

Even though I was born well after partition, I wrote a number of poems and stories lamenting the loss of undivided Bengal, indeed undivided India, even before I visited this country. I simply could not bring myself to accept the bit of barbed wire which kept families and friends apart even though they shared a common language and culture. What hurt most was that this wire had been secured by religion. By my early teens, I had abandoned religion and turned towards secular humanism and feminism which sprang from within me and were in no way artificially imposed.

My father, a man with a modern scientific outlook, encouraged me to introspect, and as I grew older I broke away not just from religion but also from all the religions customs, indeed the very culture, which constantly oppressed, suppressed and denigrated women. When I first visited India, specifically West Bengal, in 1989, I did not for an instant think that I was in a foreign land. From the moment I set foot on Indian soil, I knew I belonged here and that it was, in some fundamental way, inseparable from the land I called my own.

The reason for this was not my Hindu ancestors. The reason was not that one of India’s many cultures is my own or that I speak one of India’s many languages or that I look Indian. It is because the values and traditions of India are embedded deeply within me. These values and traditions are a manifestation of the history of the subcontinent. I am a victim of that history. Then again, I have been enriched by it, if one can call it so. I am a victim of its poverty, colonial legacy, faiths, communalism, violence, bloodshed, partition, migrations, exodus, riots, wars and even theories of nationhood. I have been hardened further by my life and experiences in a dirty, poverty and famine stricken, ill-governed theocracy called Bangladesh.

The intolerance, fanaticism and bigotry of Islamic fundamentalists forced me to leave Bangladesh. I was forced to go into exile; the doors of my own country slammed shut on my face for good. Since that moment, I sought refuge in India. When I was finally allowed entry after a few years, not for an instant did I think I was in an alien land. Why did I not think so; especially when every other country in Asia, Europe and America felt alien to me? Even after spending twelve years in Europe I could not think of Europe as my home. It took less than a year to think of India as my home. Is it because we, India and I, share a common history? Had East Bengal remained a province of undivided India would the state have tolerated an attack on basic human freedoms and values and the call for the death by hanging of a secular writer by the proponents of fundamentalist Islam and self-seeking politicians? How would a secular democracy have reacted to this threat against one of its own? Or is the burden of defending human and democratic values solely a European or American concern? The gates of India remained firmly shut when I needed her shelter the most. The Europeans welcomed me with open arms. Yet, in Europe I always considered myself a stranger, an outsider.

After twelve long years in exile when I arrived in India, it felt as though I had been resurrected from some lonely grave. I knew this land, I knew the people, I had grown up somewhere very similar, almost indistinguishable. I felt the need to do something for this land and its people. There was a burning desire within me to see that women are educated, and independent, women stand up for and demand their equal rights and freedom. I wanted my writings to contribute in some way to the empowerment of these women who had always been oppressed.

While I was living in West Bengal, a few fatwas were issued against me, and some Islamic fundamentalists in Hyderabad chose to launch a physical attack upon me. After hearing of the incident in Hyderabad, Muslim fundamentalist leaders in West Bengal, became so excited that they wasted no time in issuing a new fatwa against me and set a price on my head. Almost twenty five per cent of India’s population is Muslim and, unfortunately, the most vocal representatives of this considerable community are fundamentalists. No educated, civilized, cultured, secular and enlightened Muslim is regarded as representative of the community. What can be a greater tragedy than this?

India was my second home. Because a handful of Muslim fanatics did not want me to stay in India, I was forced to leave the country in 2008.Recently I have written book remembering those painful days.

In my book Exile, I wrote about the series of events leading to my ouster from West Bengal, then Rajasthan and eventually India, my house arrest, and the anxious days I had to spend in the government safe house, beset by a scheming array of bureaucrats and ministers desperate to see me gone. Without a single political party, social organization or influential personality by my side, I had been a lone, exiled, dissenting voice up against the entire state machinery with only my determination at my disposal. But there was one thing I was sure of -I hadn’t done anything wrong, so why should I be punished unfairly? Why wouldn’t I be allowed to live in a country I love?

Why would a nation that prides itself on being a secular democracy bow down to the diktats of a section of dishonest, misogynist, intolerant fanatics, and banish an honest, secular humanist writer? Despite being forced to leave, I have eventually ignored all the prohibitions and bans and threats, and come back to India.

I have come back because I have nothing else but India, and because I hope India will one day truly encourage free thought. I wish to live in this country and be allowed the freedom to express my opinions even if they are contrary to others. I wish for neighbouring nations to learn from India’s example and be inspired – they who yet do not know the meaning of freedom of speech.

Writers across the world are being persecuted, whipped, tortured, imprisoned, killed and exiled. But, leave alone dictators, even democratic governments are no longer interested in freedom of expression. Whenever I try to point out the significance of such a fundamental right, I am informed that even freedom of speech must have its limitations and that it cannot be used to hurt someone’s sentiments.

Wouldn’t it be extremely difficult to ensure that you never hurt someone’s sentiments? People keep hurting us, intentionally or not, by words or deeds. Our world is populated by a multitude of opposing mindsets. They clash and hurt each other but also have an in-built mechanism to manage hurt. Unfortunately, religious fanatics use the excuse of injured sentiments to cause further mischief, refusing to listen or be placated.

It is a moment of crisis for democracy when a citizen is robbed of their right to speak and express their opinions. Social change makes it necessary that a few feathers will be ruffled and a few egos will be wounded. It hurts people’s sentiments when you try to separate religion and State, when you attempt to abolish misogynistic laws; equality between men & women cannot be achieved without hurting religious sentiments. A lot of people had been outraged when the Crown and the State were being forcibly separated in the Continent. Galileo’s and Darwin’s views had upset many pious people of their times. The superstitious are routinely offended by the evolution and advancement of science. If we stop expressing our opinions because someone will be hurt by it, if we curb the growth and development of scientific knowledge, if we forcibly try to stall the march of civilization, we will end up inhabiting a stagnant quagmire instead of basking in a possibly raging cascade of knowledge and plenitude.

If the objective is to say exactly what everyone would love to listen to, then we would have no need for freedom of speech. Such rights are important primarily for those whose opinions are different or usually don’t follow the status quo. Freedom of speech is the freedom to say something you might not like to hear. Those who never hurt other’s sentiments do not need freedom of speech. A State that chooses to side with those who seek to oppose such freedoms, instead of ensuring that they are brought to book, will be responsible for its own eventual destruction.

Some time back, one such a draconian law against freedom of speech was abolished by the Government of India. I was among those who had worked towards this goal and our success was a significant acknowledgment of the systematic persecution many have had to go through because of such laws. I have had to face it too, which is why I am glad to have been part of such a reform initiative, despite not being a pure-born citizen of India. The world is constantly vigilant that no one hurts the sentiments of those who are opposed to human rights and women’s rights. When will the world learn to see all as equal? When will it learn to stop pleasing extremists and begin to respect reason and humanism instead?

In Bangladesh, you may know that Hindu temples and homes are again being attacked by Muslim fanatics. You also know that secular bloggers and progressive people were hacked to death. And you know about the terrorist attack at Dhaka Cafe. Those terrorists were around twenty years old. They were not poor, not illiterate. Heavily indoctrinated in Islam, they shouted ‘Allah-hu-Akbar’ while slaughtering people.

Those terrorists had nothing but religion as their guide. Young men have been brainwashed· with Islam. They have been fed the belief that non-believers, non-Muslims and critics of Islam should be killed. By killing them, they have been convinced, they will go to heaven. They have also been taught that jihad is mandatory for every Muslim and Muslims should strive to turn Dar-ul-Harb (the Land of the Enemy) into Dar-ul-Islam (the Land of Islam).

There is no point trying to confuse the issue by saying that poverty, frustration, lack of jobs and the absence of hope force people to become terrorists. It is, in fact, the other way around. The new terrorists are often rich and educated, highly qualified professionals, who have been seduced by fanaticism. They join terrorist organizations because they know they will be at liberty to do whatever they wish to do, and be given the sanction to rape, kill and torture at will.

Many organizations and institutions in Bangladesh have been funded by Islamic fundamentalists from rich Arab countries for decades. Madarsas and mosques have long been breeding grounds for Islamic fundamentalists. Islamization in Bangladesh started not long after its creation in 1971. It is tragic that Bangladesh, whose very birth was premised on secularism and a rejection of the two-nation theory, has degenerated into an Islamic fundamentalist country.

In the early 90s, when I was attacked by Islamic fundamentalists, a fatwa was issued against me, a price was set on my head, and hundreds of thousands of Muslim fundamentalists took to the streets demanding my execution. The government, instead of taking action against the fundamentalists, filed a case against me on the charges of hurting the religious sentiments of people. I was forced to leave the country and that was the beginning of what today’s Bangladesh is – a medieval and intolerant nation of bigots, extremists and fanatics. And you know, governments have been preventing me from entering my country.

I truly hope that the secular movement in my country will begin again and turn into a positive political movement for a true democracy and a secular state – a state which affirms a strict separation between religion and state, and maintains a uniform civil code, a set of secular laws that are not based on religion, but instead, on equality, and an education system that is secular, scientific, and enlightenment- based.

People must know that Islam should not be exempt from the critical scrutiny that applies to other religions aswell; they must understand that Islam has to go through an enlightenment process similar to what other religions have gone through, by questioning the inhuman, unequal, unscientific and irrational aspects of religion.

The narrow-minded political will forever seek to plunge society into darkness and chaos, while a handful of others will always strive for the betterment of society and to have good sense prevail. It is always a few special people who seek to bring about change; that is how it has always been.

I have been living in exile since 1994. I know I have no other alternative but to live in exile for the rest of my life. I feel, I have nowhere to go, no country or home to return to. I say now, India is my country, my home. How much more will I have to suffer at the hands of fundamentalists and their political allies for the cardinal sin of daring to articulate the truth?

Even after all that has happened, I still believe, I still dream, that for a sincere, honest, truly secular writer of the subcontinent, India is the safest refuge, the only refuge.

(This article is the summary of the address made by Ms. Taslima Nasreen, author at the India Ideas Conclave at Goa on 5th November, 2016)

Growing Strategic Partnership between India and Vietnam

~ By Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan

Vietnam’s social-economic development:

Amid complex developments in the global political and security landscape,coupled with a slow recovery of the world economy, Vietnam is still able to maintain relatively high growth and stability. During 2011-2015, GDP growth stood at 5.82% per annum and is projected to reach 6.5% in 2016.We are striving to achieve a growth of 6.5-7% in the next 4 years (2017-2020). The size and strength of the economy continues to grow. Foreign investors have great confidence and see Vietnam as a destination for investmentowing tothe followingreasons:

First, the Vietnam’s political – social stabilityis maintained. Vietnam is an open economy with a steady growth in trade:  two-way trade during 2011-2015 grew by15%, reaching 330 billion USD in 2015 (equivalent to 1.6 times the size of GDP). We are striving to achieve the target of 600 billion USDby 2020. So far, Vietnam has received nearly 290 billion USD in FDI with more than 22,000 projects from 116 countries and territories.

Second, Vietnam is actively promoting international integration with a focus on economic integration. We have participated in the ASEAN Community (with a population of 650 million people, a GDP of 2.500 billion USD). 13 free trade agreements (FTAs) have been concluded, including many next-generation Agreements such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) in which Vietnam and India areboth participating countries.

Third, Vietnam’s legal framework has gradually improved to support economic development. The 2013 Constitution lays an important foundation for improving business and investment environment. A number of important legislations such as Procurement Law, Investment Law, Corporate Laware being reviewed and amended to create a more conducive environment and equality for both Vietnamese and foreign businesses.

Fourth, with a population of over 91 million, Vietnamhas a labor force accounting for 70% of the population with enhanced training and quality. Vietnamhas entered a “golden population” period. Thiswill provide opportunitiesfor investors asVietnamwill become a very promising market for business and trade. The size and purchasing power of theVietnamese market continues to attain steady and stable growth as compared to other markets in Asia.

Fifth, there remain vastpotentials for furtherdevelopment in Vietnam, especially in infrastructure such as road, railway, aviation, the areas,which need very large amount of capital. Vietnamhas great strength and can makefurther development in agriculture and processing industry.In particular, tourism is also a potential area. The country boasts a long coastline along with a large number of historical sites, beautiful landscapes and cultural heritages recognized by UNESCO. In recent years, revenues from tourism have recorded an annual increase of 21%. Vietnam welcomed more than 8.7 million international visitors in 2015. However this numberremains low compared to neighboring countries such as Thailand, Singapore or Malaysia.

India is amongVietnam’s 10 largest trade partners with an annual two-way trade of about 5.5 billion USD.We hope to welcome an increasing number oflarge Indian corporations to invest in the country, making India one of the leading investors. We appreciatethat India has provided incentive credits and technical assistance,capacity building in areas that Vietnamhas the demand such as infrastructure, transport, digital technology, English training, capacity building for small and medium enterprises. In the coming time, we suggest that the two countries should expand cooperation in new areas such as the use of atomic energy for peaceful purposes, research and use of space for peaceful purposes, renewable energy, energyefficiency, and high-technology.

Vietnam’s foreign policy and the relations with India

The foreign policy of Vietnamis further inherited and developed from the outcomes of recent Congresses of the Communist Party of Vietnam. Vietnamconsistently pursues a foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, cooperation and development; multilateralisation and diversification of relations and proactive international integration. Vietnamwants to be a friend, a reliable partner and a responsible member of the international community.

Vietnamgives prioritiesto relations with neighboring countries, major partners and key partners.Accordingly, India-as a comprehensive strategic partner- continues to be a priority partnerof Vietnam. India is among the four countrieswith which Vietnamhas established comprehensive strategic partnership. Vietnamand India are two brotherly countries, having a long tradition of friendship.  The great and deepfriendship between the twopeoples were founded by President Ho Chi Minh and Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru and nurtured by generations of leaders. Vietnamalways treasures the warm sentiments, the invaluable support and assistance extended by Government and people of India to our country during our past struggle for national independence as well as in the current cause of national development. The Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between Vietnamand India is growing strongly and extensively, ranging from political, diplomatic, defense and security cooperation to trade, investment, science and technology, education and training, culture and people exchange.

Vietnamsupports the “ActEast policy” of India. We hope that India will promotea more practical and effective partnership with ASEAN and implement successfully the strategy to connect the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, further enhance India’srole and position in the region and in the world. Vietnamstands ready to support India’s candidacy as permanent member of the UN Security Council when it is expanded. Vietnamhopes India will play a greater role in Asia-Pacific. We support India’s joining to APEC when the decision on the suspension of admitting new membership is removed and on the basis of consensus among all members.

Vietnamhighly appreciatesIndia’spositive stance on the East Seaissue (South China Sea), in which India will continue to promote the non-militarization, respect for the diplomatic and legal processes, settlement of disputes by peaceful means in accordance with international law, in order to maintain peace, stability, security, safety of navigation and over-flight in the East Sea. The National Assembly of Vietnamwelcomes India tofurther maintain and enhance the cooperation in oil and gas exploration with Vietnamin the East Sea.

– To the prosperity of India and happiness of its people!

– To the further consolidation and development of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between Viet Nam and India, and between the two Legislatures.

– To the good health of you all present here today.

(This article is the summary of the remarks by H.E. Ms. Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, President of the National Assembly of Viet Nam at the civic reception hosted in her honour by India Foundation on 10thDecember, 2016 at New Delhi)

Book Review: Shaida Mohammad Abdali’s “Afghanistan Pakistan India: A Paradigm Shift”

Publisher: Pentagon Press

Price: Rs.705/-

Book Review by: Deeksha Goel

Shaida Mohammad Abdali is serving the Government of Afghanistan as its Ambassador to India and is the Non-resident Ambassador to Nepal, Bhutan and Maldives.

In his book, Afghanistan-Pakistan-India, Ambassador Abdali has explored the potential of the trilateral relationship between the three countries, which is also his area of expertise. He has written extensively about the past and present of the political, defence, and economic situation of the three nations. Major events of the last decade have been clearly highlighted ranging from the internal conflicts and the Taliban regime to the impact of USA’s invasion in the region after 9/11. To expand, he has included the role of Pakistan-India relations on the development and stability of the region at large and Afghanistan in particular.

The book further talks about the historic ties that India has shared with Afghanistan and how the same had been developed upon in the recent past. Be it reconstruction, academic scholarships, or military assistance, India has been the largest regional aid provider for Afghanistan. He goes on to talk about the multifaceted relationship in the context of their strategic partnership agreement. He has also underlined the significance of India’s reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan. He has further examined India’s role in education, training of civilian and military personnel, health infrastructure and economic development.

Talking about Afghanistan, Ambassador Abdali has recognised the need for the nation to play its own unique role in bringing about crucial changes in the region. Besides, being a point of contact between central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia and the Middle East, Afghanistan is currently the missing link for ensuring a smooth transit of people, trade, energy and goods within the region. He has further enlisted four factors for Afghanistan’s weakness, they are:

  1. A regional pursuit of geopolitical ambitions
  2. Destabilising efforts of the non-state armed groups
  3. A weak Afghan Government and weak state institutions
  4. Rapid growth of poppy cultivation

Talking about the history of Afghanistan-Pakistan, Ambassador Abdali emphasizes that the current state of relations has been a predictable outcome of the initial unhealthy start between Afghanistan and Pakistan following the birth of the latter in 1947. The primary bone of contention, however, dates back to 1893, when the Durand Line border between the two nations was imposed by the British for reasons of imperial control and the burning question of the cohesiveness of the Pashtun nation was born as its unfortunate result.

The modern, nationalistic thinking of Sardar Daoud Khan is elicited, who, in 1955, “was emboldened enough to confront the radical elements. On August 31, 1955, he allowed women to appear in public without the veil, and women of the royal family were publicly seen without the purdah for the second time in the country’s social history.” Daoud’s governmental reforms were carried out in the spirit of Amir Amanullah Khan’s thinking, who struggled for an enlightened and modern free society where human rights and civil liberties could be ensured for all the people of Afghanistan.

Further, adding on to the cooperation among India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, the author has expressed concern on the prevalent situation. Economically, the region is at a standstill. It is faced with severe economic crisis, the growth rates are at an all-time low, vast resources have been left untapped and major signature projects such as TAPI and others are still in nascent stages. He further noted that SAARC, the region’s most aspiring organisation, has remained dysfunctional. Writing about the cooperation between India and Pakistan in the context of Afghanistan, the author says that “Cooperation does not imply an absence of conflict but takes place in situations in which actors perceive that their policies are actually or potentially in conflict, not where they are at harmony.”

Discussing sinister elements threatening regional security, in particular, that of Afghanistan and India, Mr. Abdali points out that such internationally famous terrorist organizations as the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the Tahreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Haqqani network are living peacefully and thriving in Pakistan as they implement their nefarious designs against Afghanistan and the Indian administered Kashmir.

The author is of the view that all these terrorist organizations should be isolated, and then Pakistan should be forced to dismantle them while removing all obstacles it throws in the way of regional trade and cooperation. Besides that, he also suggests that Afghanistan should not be abandoned by the major powers as it was once left in isolation decades ago by the USSR and the United States.

In his concluding chapter, Ambassador Abdali writes of Afghanistan being an unstable country that continues to suffer from insecurity and weak governance. Dilapidated Afghan institutions remain incapable of delivering services to the Afghan people who are tending to lose faith in central government. He has also enlisted the external and internal factors that affect the stability of Afghanistan and have been identified by the World Bank. They are:

External Factors:

  1. Strategic Location
  2. Pakistan and the Extremist Groups in Afghanistan
  3. The Durand Line

Internal Factors:

  1. Government Structure, Bureaucracy and State Functions
  2. Lack of skilled Human Resource in Governance
  3. Low Salary
  4. Lack of merit based appointments
  5. Inadequate mechanisms for Performance Management
  6. Imbalanced Delegation of authority among the Government Departments
  7. Corruption
  8. Drug Production

Mr Abdali concludes by saying that unless the three countries address the common problem of terrorism firmly and sincerely, there would be no good future in sight. He reiterates Afghanistan’s assistance in formulating a joint counter-terror strategy with both Pakistan and India. With regard to overall trade at the larger level, Mr Abdali has expressed the need for a more concerted and energetic regional and international effort to enable Afghanistan to take fuller advantage of its geographical position at the crossroads of difference cultures, states and peoples.

(Reviewer is a Senior Research Fellow at India Foundation)

Strategic Partnership between India and Vietnam is Growing

~ By Ms. Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan

Vietnam’s social-economic development:

Amid complex developments in the global political and security landscape,coupled with a slow recovery of the world economy, Vietnam is still able to maintain relatively high growth and stability. During 2011-2015, GDP growth stood at 5.82% per annum and is projected to reach 6.5% in 2016.We are striving to achieve a growth of 6.5-7% in the next 4 years (2017-2020). The size and strength of the economy continues to grow. Foreign investors have great confidence and see Vietnam as a destination for investmentowing tothe followingreasons:

First, the Vietnam’s political – social stabilityis maintained. Vietnam is an open economy with a steady growth in trade:  two-way trade during 2011-2015 grew by15%, reaching 330 billion USD in 2015 (equivalent to 1.6 times the size of GDP). We are striving to achieve the target of 600 billion USDby 2020. So far, Vietnam has received nearly 290 billion USD in FDI with more than 22,000 projects from 116 countries and territories.

Second, Vietnam is actively promoting international integration with a focus on economic integration. We have participated in the ASEAN Community (with a population of 650 million people, a GDP of 2.500 billion USD). 13 free trade agreements (FTAs) have been concluded, including many next-generation Agreements such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) in which Vietnam and India areboth participating countries.

Third, Vietnam’s legal framework has gradually improved to support economic development. The 2013 Constitution lays an important foundation for improving business and investment environment. A number of important legislations such as Procurement Law, Investment Law, Corporate Laware being reviewed and amended to create a more conducive environment and equality for both Vietnamese and foreign businesses.

Fourth, with a population of over 91 million, Vietnamhas a labor force accounting for 70% of the population with enhanced training and quality. Vietnamhas entered a “golden population” period. Thiswill provide opportunitiesfor investors asVietnamwill become a very promising market for business and trade. The size and purchasing power of theVietnamese market continues to attain steady and stable growth as compared to other markets in Asia.

Fifth, there remain vastpotentials for furtherdevelopment in Vietnam, especially in infrastructure such as road, railway, aviation, the areas,which need very large amount of capital. Vietnamhas great strength and can makefurther development in agriculture and processing industry.In particular, tourism is also a potential area. The country boasts a long coastline along with a large number of historical sites, beautiful landscapes and cultural heritages recognized by UNESCO. In recent years, revenues from tourism have recorded an annual increase of 21%. Vietnam welcomed more than 8.7 million international visitors in 2015. However this numberremains low compared to neighboring countries such as Thailand, Singapore or Malaysia.

India is amongVietnam’s 10 largest trade partners with an annual two-way trade of about 5.5 billion USD.We hope to welcome an increasing number oflarge Indian corporations to invest in the country, making India one of the leading investors. We appreciatethat India has provided incentive credits and technical assistance,capacity building in areas that Vietnamhas the demand such as infrastructure, transport, digital technology, English training, capacity building for small and medium enterprises. In the coming time, we suggest that the two countries should expand cooperation in new areas such as the use of atomic energy for peaceful purposes, research and use of space for peaceful purposes, renewable energy, energyefficiency, and high-technology.

Vietnam’s foreign policy and the relations with India

The foreign policy of Vietnamis further inherited and developed from the outcomes of recent Congresses of the Communist Party of Vietnam. Vietnamconsistently pursues a foreign policy of independence, self-reliance, peace, cooperation and development; multilateralisation and diversification of relations and proactive international integration. Vietnamwants to be a friend, a reliable partner and a responsible member of the international community.

Vietnamgives prioritiesto relations with neighboring countries, major partners and key partners.Accordingly, India-as a comprehensive strategic partner- continues to be a priority partnerof Vietnam. India is among the four countrieswith which Vietnamhas established comprehensive strategic partnership. Vietnamand India are two brotherly countries, having a long tradition of friendship.  The great and deepfriendship between the twopeoples were founded by President Ho Chi Minh and Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru and nurtured by generations of leaders. Vietnamalways treasures the warm sentiments, the invaluable support and assistance extended by Government and people of India to our country during our past struggle for national independence as well as in the current cause of national development. The Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between Vietnamand India is growing strongly and extensively, ranging from political, diplomatic, defense and security cooperation to trade, investment, science and technology, education and training, culture and people exchange.

Vietnamsupports the “ActEast policy” of India. We hope that India will promotea more practical and effective partnership with ASEAN and implement successfully the strategy to connect the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, further enhance India’srole and position in the region and in the world. Vietnamstands ready to support India’s candidacy as permanent member of the UN Security Council when it is expanded. Vietnamhopes India will play a greater role in Asia-Pacific. We support India’s joining to APEC when the decision on the suspension of admitting new membership is removed and on the basis of consensus among all members.

Vietnamhighly appreciatesIndia’spositive stance on the East Seaissue (South China Sea), in which India will continue to promote the non-militarization, respect for the diplomatic and legal processes, settlement of disputes by peaceful means in accordance with international law, in order to maintain peace, stability, security, safety of navigation and over-flight in the East Sea. The National Assembly of Vietnamwelcomes India tofurther maintain and enhance the cooperation in oil and gas exploration with Vietnamin the East Sea.

– To the prosperity of India and happiness of its people!

– To the further consolidation and development of the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between Viet Nam and India, and between the two Legislatures.

– To the good health of you all present here today.

(This article is the gist of the remarks by H.E. Ms. Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan, President of the National Assembly of Viet Nam at the civic reception hosted in her honour by India Foundation on 10thDecember, 2016 at New Delhi)

 

Commemoration Program for 1971 India-Pakistan War

7e5a0488 7e5a0314India Foundation organised an event on 15th to 16th December, 2017 to commemorate the India-Pakistan War 1971 and the Liberation of Bangladesh. As an opening remark, Shri Shakti Sinha, Director, Nehru Memorial and Museum & Library, recalled the historic chain of events and mentioned that this remains an important part of history in the Indian subcontinent. Further, he touched on the significant roles played by figures like Babu Jagjivan.

7e5a0283 7e5a0173Shri VK Singh, Minister of State, Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, who participated at this event talked briefly about the significance of the day, that is, 16 December 1971. He considered it to be a “historic and memorable day”. To him, celebrating this war of liberation brings back nostalgia. He also gave respect to those who gave up their lives for this cause and said that it is not enough to honour those brave-hearts who shed their precious lives during the war. According to him, the struggle for Bangladesh was carried out in seven different periods. There were ups and downs in the struggle but the events that unfolded in 1971 were remarkable. Shri Singh went on to mention about the refugee problem that cropped up in March of this year as a result of the crackdown. He also recalled the gradual build-up of Mukti Bahini. This war for the liberation of Bangladesh, to Shri Singh, was the greatest war in the military history of the world in several ways. It was made possible because of the joint efforts of the two forces and because of the immense support from the people of Bangladesh.

7e5a0352 7e5a0347Speaking on this solemn event, Smt. Meira Kumar,former Speaker, LokSabhaproudly elucidated the spirit of patriotism and sacrifices that were made during the 1971 War. She aptly considered it to be a “movement of undiluted national pride”. Giving a personal touch in her speech, the former speaker narrated the role of her father who was India’s Defence Minister then. It took the country 17 months to prepare for the 1971 war. As a part of the preparation for the war, there were discussions regarding where the war should be fought, and it was made clear that it would be in Bangladesh. She, similarly with Shri Singh, talked of this as a “historic” event.

The importance of public support and participation in times of such crisis was emphasised by the former speaker. Smt. Kumar spoke on a very important issue, that is, the rightful duty of every Indian citizen to defend his/her country and that such task of safeguarding national interests and integrity should not be left solely to the soldiers. She concluded by saying that the human spirit and a strong sense of unity and humanity led to the victory of the mentioned war. It was, to her, indeed a “classic war”.

His Excellency,Shri Pranab Mukherjee, Hon’ble President of India, addressed the veterans who participated in the India-Pakistan 1971 Liberation of Bangladesh. He noted that with the able and mature leadership of Sheikh BangabandhuMujiburRahman, who is described as Father of Nation and also the helping hand provided by India under the leadership of late Prime Minister, Smt. Indira Gandhi afforded the dignity of human lives and also the basic fundamental rights of individuals to have their freedom from the oppressive, tightened rules of the military junta in Pakistan. TheHon’ble President mentioned that it was the conspiracy of the military junta, the then ruling Pakistan, to deny the legitimate right of the people of East Bengal or East Pakistan to have their own elected government. He expressedgratitude that few organizations like India Foundation,Nehru Memorial Library and Trust, Babu Jagjivan Trust and the organization of the war veterans have collaborated to organize such events. He remarked that the new generation of Bangladesh,which was born after 1971 were also Indians who are not aware of the tremendous sacrifices of their forefathers and that they should learn about it. Bangladesh, a land of rivers in whose soil large number of BangladeshiMuktiBahini and Indian soldiers laid their lives and their blood got mixed with the soil of Bangladesh, has in fact made the land more fertile for producing ideas. His Excellency further reiterated that the historic bond, which has been created by this heroic struggle, would further enhance the cooperation between India and Bangladesh. He closed his address citing the role of Rabindranath Tagore, the same poet who composed national songs for both the countries. Both the songs being sung together brings India and Bangladesh as integrated emotionally.

7e5a0076 7e5a0474His Hon’ble Minister, Mr. Mofazzal Hossain Choudhury Maya, Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief, Bangladesh humbly began his address by addressing his gratitude to the organizers, and acknowledged the citizens and the Government of India for their help, empathy, sacrifices and cordiality which accelerated the independence of Bangladesh. In his speech he remembered Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman with deep respect. He also conveyed his gratitude to Hon’ble Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina. Stressing on the help and support provided by the Government of India and Indian people, he appreciated the immense assistance in terms of arms, military training, shelter, food, medicine, friendly treatment. The Indian Government played a significant role to create international support in favour of liberation of Bangladesh. For all these supports, the Minister on behalf of the people and the Hon’ble Prime Minister of Bangladesh, sincerely conveyed his heartfelt gratitude and deep respect to the people and Government of India.

Speaking of the great sacrifices, Mr. Mofazzal Hossain Choudhury Maya remembered not only the Bangladeshis who sacrificed their lives in the war, but also thousands of Indian soldiers who sacrificed their lives too. He reiterated that India stood by the side of the war trodden Bangladesh when Bangabhandu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was reconstructing the country. Acknowledging the friendly relationship between India and Bangladesh, he commended that the Hon’ble Prime Minister of India, Shri Narendra Modi has taken the relationship of the two countries to a great high and dimension. Bringing context of militancy and terrorism, he strongly remarked that Bangladesh dislikes militant activities and affirmed their position against militancy. He reassured that neither Bangladesh nor India will give shelter to any terrorist and promised to work together for eradication of militancy and terrorism.

On a concluding note, the Hon’ble Minister expressed planting a new seed of stronger cooperation in the horizon of friendship between India and Bangladesh which will work against all harmful forces and calamities.

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Syndrome of Underdevelopment in Odisha

~ By Sandeep Mahapatra

You would think that one of the first State to be formed  11 years prior to independence would have taken  pole position in today’s India but the truth is the state lags behind on all parameters of development. Majority of the villages are still waiting for the most basic amenities of the modern times.  The ornament like eulogies of peace loving, mineral rich etc etc. are used as alibi to cover up such anomalies.  Odisha of the present day is a far cry from what it should have been in its more than eight decades of its being.

The recent incidences of a tribal man carrying his dead wife as the hospital authorities refused to provide an ambulance, and another one where an 80 year old dead woman being subjected to the ignominy of being broken into two, to be able to be carried on a pole are just but two instances of many such tragedies that may have gone unreported.  Scores of children have died due to Japanese Encephalitis in Malkangiri district in a span of 15 days or which speaks volumes about the health care  system or absence thereof in the State. In all such instances except for making the customary statement, the Govt. of the day in the State has done little to remedy the situation.

They highlight the widespread despair of the state led by a government  that boasts of policies “from cradle to the grave”. Nothing could be far from the truth. Of late, the  refrain has been that a commoner is living on “ dole outs”. The BJD Govt. that tom toms, at the drop of a hat, tom toms that it provides rice at Rs.2 a kilo and meals at Rs. 5 a plate. But visit to any district in the western Odisha region will tell you a an entirely different story, tragic taleswhere every year thousands of menfolk with the entire family in tow, are forced to migrate to Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Tamil Nadu for more than six months of back breaking labour in brick kilns, live in shelters with under conditions worse than shanties, and often denied even their dues for the work they do. They are cheated, humiliated, beaten up and left to fend for themselves, only to  to return the next year to the same life so that they could repay the advance they had taken the previous year from the owner. The vicious cycle continues year on year…so much for a state that boasts about countless welfare scheme.

Travesty that seizes the poor could not be more amplified than in Odisha.

These are only a few instances indicative of the fact that the state is plagued with acute poverty. Let us not forget the countless farmer suicide that went unnoticed last year as the national media turned a blind eye to this despicable situation.

The situation is no different in the coastal districts either, considered as a region better off than the western districts. A month or two back, reports of severe malnutrition in many villages of Jajpur District were widely reported in the local media. As chance would have it, this even caught the attention of of the TRP motivated national media. .

The fundamental questions – what ails the State? Why Odisha has lagged behind despite having the potential and resources to do much better? Why it is that a state with more than 3.5 Crore population has failed to live upto the expectation of its people???

These are pertinent questions and anyone having some amount of interest in the state will be able to answer, rather these questions are often being posed by all those who eulogise about the history of the state especially on its foundation day;April 1. The state of affairs is not taken as a challenge but rhetoric, perhaps may be because such speakers don’t want to face the reality and/or have no answer/s for these oft-posed questions.

Decades back, the Odia State Board school education system, the text books mentionedHirakud Reservoir and Rourkela Steel plant as the marvels of the state post independence. Close to three decades now, these are the only two landmark developmental work that comes to any average Odia’s mind. Both these landmarks were constructed more than 50 years back, barring the Paradip Port, a DRDO research centre, afew engineering and medical colleges, no new additions were made which could have contributed in the field of education or employment. Post independence, the only avenue that an Odia person could have looked for was a Govt. job with little or no scope for promotion of entrepreneurshipwhich could be one of the reasons for lack of entrepreneurial zeal in the state that subsists till date.

At the political leadership level some leaders did comeup to the national stage and it would be wrong not to acknowledge their efforts for the state, but overall, for many of them it was more of self preservation than interest of the state that took precedence. Added to this, the fact that the state has only a handful of seats in the Lok Sabha meant that in terms of power play also, it mattered little. Though MPs of the state have gone on to become Ministers at the Centre, they have not held significant positions, barring exceptions, to wield power that could tilt the balance in favour of Odisha

According to one estimate, Odisha government had signed MoUs with 92 companies during the period between 2000 and 2014. And only 41 industries have started partial production so far. These 41 units which have started partial production include 35 steel units, three power plants and one each in aluminium, cement and auto-ancillary sector. Most of the power, aluminium and steel projects happen to be facing land acquisition hurdles and acute shortage of raw material. Another estimate reveals that close to 95 MoUs were signed during the period between 2000 and 2012. Quite a reflection on the state of affairs in Odisha.

As we all know, signing MoUs is not difficult  as Odisha has been favourable investment destination, both domestic and foreign. This investment inflow is not because of the investor friendly nature of the dispensation of the state here else they would have all seen the light of the day. They come to the state because Odisha has minerals.

It is home to about 33 percent of the iron ore reserves, 55 percent of bauxite, 25 percent of coal, 40 percent of manganese and 95 percent of chromite in the country. Government’s industrialisation plans from the very start were almost entirely dependent on large scale extraction and exploitation of the state’s mineral resources which incidentally are located in the tribal heartland, which has constantly been vulnerable to radical movements, armed or otherwise. The tribal people account for a whopping 24 percent of the state’s population. Consideration of the potential trouble areas did not precede signing of the MoUs, resulting in a staggering gap between promise and delivery of the industrial projects.

In the last two years Odisha government has brought two policy documents: a new ICT Policy- 2014 and Industrial Policy Resolution -2015. Projecting on the new ICT Policy, Chief Minister claimed: “In fact, we target to create one lakh jobs in IT sector in the next five years. It is a matter of pride that growth rate of IT exports from the state is more than the national growth rate for last many years. Bhubaneswar has equally made good progress in IT SEZ sector too.”

How so we wish that the state government also brings out white papers on the promises it made and abysmal failures due to lack of political will.

Apart from the two high profile policy resolutions, the government has organized two highly hyped investor’s meets in Mumbai and Bengaluru in this year.  In the investors’ meet of Mumbai on February 14, held as part of the Make in India Week, there is media reportage of Odisha bagging Rs 70,959 crore investment commitments, including around Rs 30,000 crore investments in the mineral sector and the rest in areas like food processing, electronics, textiles and renewable energy. In the subsequent two-day investors’ meet of Bengaluru on August 25 & 26, the government has boasted of holding discussions with at least 66 companies and attracting investment as much as Rs 90,490 crore.

 A reality check of the proclaimed endeavours for industrialisation and employment generation during a prolonged tenure of the present dispensation discloses least progress on the ground, due to lack of political vision and sincerity. The regional equilibrium in terms of expanding upstream manufacturing base in the Western part,   fostering   downstream industrial infrastructure in the coastal belt, building multi-mode line of communication between the two regions and promoting service sector with special focus on tourism across the geographical expanse should be the ideal development blueprint of the State. The key in realising this objective lies in keeping the provincial policy approach in sync with lager development efforts of the central government which presently entrust foremost emphasis on industrialisation in the Eastern India and on its unique Sagar Mala project in Peninsular India. On the contrary, Odisha leadership joins the path of Chief Ministers elsewhere, whotry to project themselves as future alternatives to current national eldership by making false projections of their respective provincial development endeavours.   However, the hard reality is that achievement of substantive progress in a province is the stepping stone for elevation of concerned provincial leadership into national one. Gujarat is clear a testimony to this commonsensical wisdom.

The ground level implementation of the even Central schemes are in a shambles. It seems the vested interest wish to perpetuate poverty and underdevelopment. It is needless to reaffirm that Odisha has been deliberately kept poor and her people have been forced to suffer from deprivation and indignity, despite being rich in culture, natural resource, forest cover, marine space, attractive tourism potential, unique handicraft, ancient trading background, and above all historically powerful statecraft (political admistration, for instance, Kalinga is one of the oldest states in the human history).People in ground have been compelled to become dependent on ready help from outside, instead ofbeing ensured with constructive avenues, sense of self help, and enterprising work culture. Since independence most of its ruling elites except few statesmen are responsible for this state of affairin Odisha.

The policy documents and the investor’s meet (people often call them jamborees for the favourites of the current regime in the state) are merely pie in the sky. The adage – all sound and fury and no substance – sums up the rule of the BJD in the state. The present governing dispensation has hammered the final nail to the coffin.

And the innocent masses have no option but to carry them by themselves. Change in the need. Change is the demand.

India Ideas Conclave 2016

~ By Prasanna Karthik R

Ideas are central human actions, and ideas are what strengthen any human institution.The institution of democracy is no exception to this rule. The churning of new ideas and revisiting old ideas is vital for maintaining a progressive vibrancy in our society. It is with this objective that India Foundation conceived the India Ideas Conclave, to bring together people with different perspectives, engaging with an open mind in meaningful discussions and debates.

The third edition of India Ideas Conclave happened between the 4th and 6th of November in Goa. The event had about 300 guests from different professions, with a proven track record of intellectual contributions to various spheres of national importance, handpicked as delegates. The Conclave also had a list of illustrious speakers, from a wide range of professions, geographies, faiths, and ideological affiliations; at the end of the day, India’s diversity lends it a strategic soft power advantage.

Given the current churning in the Indian society caused due to discarding of old ideas that had limited our growth, embracing of new ideas that can leap frog our development, and the consequent increase in the engagement of various sections of the society in shaping the national narrative, the theme of this edition of the Conclave was aptly chosen to be – ‘India at 70 – Democracy, Development & Dissent.’

Inaugural Session & Keynote Address:

The inaugural session was chaired by Suresh Prabhu, Union Minister for Railways. Suresh Prabhu began by talking about the conception of the idea of the Conclave and how it has evolved over last three editions. He spoke about various issues currently plaguing the world and how democratic setup could be an answer to them. He said that the role of dissent is integral to democracy, but it isn’t the sole purpose. He also spoke about the role of parliament in resolving any issues in the democracy, and encouraged the audience to participate in the upcoming discussions.

The other speakers for the inaugural session where Swami Tejomayanda, the Global Head of Chinmaya Mission Worldwide, and Sher Bahadur Deuba, former Prime Minister of Nepal. Swami Tejomayanada argued that all types of governance models, dictatorial and democratic, have had their share of successes and failures and thus, no system is fool-proof, and stressed that the idea of governance should not be to please others or self but to think what is right and what is good for all.Impressing upon the wisdom of the scriptures for understanding various aspects of society, he declared the conference open. Sher Bahadur Deuba,spoke about the Indo-Nepalese relations and the close ties between both the countries in terms of culture, language, religion and fraternity.

The key note speech was delivered by Amit Shah, the National President of the Bharatiya Janata Party. The BJP President commenced his speech by noting that democracy inherently covers development and dissent, and there was no need to use the three words democracy, development and dissent explicitly. He further expressed that democratic ideals have existed in India since long, and asked the audience to evaluate where other nations that won independence along with India are currently standing in comparison with us. In his concluding remarks, Amit Shah pointed out that democracy and development aren’t two different things, and added that one must be free to say anything including criticism of the Prime Minister or ruling dispensation, but speaking against the nation can’t be camouflaged as freedom of expression and will not be acceptable.   

The key note speech was followed by a video recorded speech of HH Dalai Lama, who called himself a ‘son of India,’ as India has nurtured him both physically and spiritually. HH Dalai Lama called upon spiritual leaders to spread this message to the masses and stressed on getting rid of any element of feudal societies—which is distinct from the real message of dharma—and bringing in true democracy.

Plenary Discussion I: Defence at 70

The session was chaired by Gen. VP Malik (former Chief of Indian Army), Amb. Daniel Carmon (Israeli Ambassador to India), Pratyush Kumar (President of Boeing India), and Amb. Arun Kumar Singh (former Indian Ambassador to US), as speakers.

Gen. Malik stated that defence is an important element in today’s India, and that the report card of Indian Defence establishment is more positive than negative. He spoke about the success of the Indian Army, and its failure in 1962 due to the ill-conceived policy of forward deployment done during that period. Daniel Carmon, talked about the three D’s that Israel follows as core principles- Democracy, Development, Defence, besides highlighting 25 years of India-Israel diplomatic partnership.

Dr. Pratyush Kumar, questioned why even after 70 years, India carries the moniker of the largest importer of defence, and stressed on how India can build strategic self-reliance and create globally competitive industrial base in the defence sector. Arun K Singh, began by saying that political and military aspects not only have an impact on defence but also influence the nature of international partnerships. He spoke about India’s four critical partners namely, Russia, Israel, France and US.

Plenary II: Governance at 70

Thesession was chaired by Jayant Sinha (Minister of State, Ministry of Civil Aviation), and had Baijayant Jay Panda (MP Biju Janata Dal), HimantaBiswaSarma (Finance Minister, Government of Assam), Rajeev Chandrasekhar (MP, Independent), A Surya Prakash (Chairman, PrasarBharati), and Archana Chitnis (Minister of Women and Child Development, Government of Madhya Pradesh).

Jayant Sinha welcomed the distinguished speakers and went on to ask four basic questions, for the speakers to deliberate upon:

  1. Is the governance system embedded in our country’s ethos?
  2. Is there a need to look at the balance between legislative and judiciary in the country?
  3. How is the governance system functioning at State and Local levels in the country?
  4. Are the political parties in the country functioning optimally?

Rajeev Chandrasekhar, spoke in his opening remarks about dual weaknesses of the public systems in the country- being opaque and a closed system on one hand, while being inefficient in handling the public finances on the other. He said that we should reach swarajya to have a governance system which is embedded in our country’s ethos. Baijayant Panda, admitted that our governance system is working, but not well and hence there is more scope for improvement. He also stressed on the fact that India has inherited a centralized governance system and therefore along with fiscal devolution, structural reforms are needed for decentralization of power.

Surya Prakash, gave a very lucid presentation regarding the history of Parliamentary System in the country. He gave a glimpse of the parliamentary changes from 1952 to 2014 in terms of political and occupational democratization of the parliament, and questioned the elected representatives for their obsession with privileges and absenteeism in parliament. Archana Chitnis, remarked that the politicians are not the rulers but the custodians or trustees of the power entrusted by the citizens, and went on to state that it took many years for the governments to say ‘Skill India,’‘Startup India,’ ‘Stand Up India’ which should have been adopted into policy making much earlier after independence.

Himanta Biswa Sarma, remarked that while the constitution framework is absolutely in tune with our cultural ethos, the main challenge for our generation is in protecting and preserving our ethos amid growing western influences.He further added that time has come to create a situation where every citizen in the country, irrespective of the geographic location, can have equitable access to resources for development.

Plenary III: India Global at 70

The session was chaired by MJ Akbar (MoS, Ministry of External Affairs), and had Daniel Twining (Director and Senior Fellow at German Marshall Fund), Dr. Patrick French (Writer & Historian), Prof. Walter K Andersen (John Hopkins University), Amb James Tien (Trade Representative of Tiawan to India), as speakers.

MJ Akbar spoke about the pertinent need to have a ‘transformative thinking’ in context of India’s Foreign Policy. Describing the theme of India’s Foreign Policy under PM Modi he stated the theme to be – ‘Power of Balance’ – which allows a nation like India having balanced relations with nations from across the globe.

Daniel Twining started his remarks by stating that the accelerating Indo-US relations shall be the central driver for global peace and prosperity in the 21st century. He pointed out the synergy between India and US as both nations oppose terrorism, believe in an open plural community, a free society, and an open world.

Dr Patrick French described his pessimism regarding the bleak prevailing global scenario, ranging from US elections, preparations of baltic countries against Russian invasion, Brexit referendum, civil and proxy wars in West Asia etc. He also cautioned about the increasing pollution levels in the Capital New Delhi and across the country serving as a detriment in future growth prospects of the nation.

Prof Walter Anderson dispelled the legacy notions which suspected India to not last for 70 years as a united nation or remain democratic for such a tenure. The key question raised by Prof Anderson is that whether India can leverage the geopolitical advantage to present and play a considerable role in presenting a robust global strategic vision.

Ambassador James Tienstated that with the ascent of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Foreign Policy, the relations between India and Taiwan have significantly accelerated, and he expressed hope that with the interlinking of ‘Southbound policy’ of Taiwan and ‘Act East’ policy of India, both nations can immensely leverage their resources for creating shared prosperity.

Plenary IV: Education in India at 70

The session was chaired by Prof. Sunaina Singh (Vice Chancellor, EFLU, Hydrabad), and had Prof. Harsh V Pant (Professor of International Relations, Kings College), Prof. M Jagadesh Kumar (Vice Chancelleor, JNU), TV Mohandas Pai (Educationist and Former Member of Board, Infosys), and Ratin Roy (Director, NIPFP).

Prof. Singh traced the education system in India to over 5000 years and said that the present education system is “a legacy we’ve inherited from our colonial past.” She further said that the education system per se needs to be “harnessed to the Indian reality” and that there is a need to plan accordingly for the next 20 to 25 years.

Ratin Roy expressed his surprise that while India produces CEOs for global corporations such as Google, Microsoft, Pepsi etc., the ability to produce people to run India’s public service institutions is dismal. He explained the insufficiency of professionals such as educators, doctors, engineers, etc. to serve the entire population of India, and the disconnect of the students with scholars and creative thinkers and involvement in protests and demonstrations.

Prof. Jagadesh Kumar started by saying that all his life as a Professor at IIT he thought about electronics and integrated circuits but since he joined JNU ten months ago, he has been hearing only about freedom of expression, dissent, strikes, dharnas and gheraos. He stressed on the importance of educational institutions in nurturing human resources and concluded by quoting Mahatma Gandhi – “Whatever you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it.”

Prof.Pant spoke about the lack of research and scholarship in our universities, and stressed that knowledge is going to play the key role in determining who will be the leaders of the 21st century. Further expressing his dismay at the present state of Indian education system, he lamented that, “we are staring at an intellectually barren landscape in our universities.”

Mohandas Pai highlighted the three global trends that are profoundly impacting education: technology changing the face of job market, large number of jobs that are about to become obsolete, and the nature of markets to be altered forever. He said that globalization has changed the way we perceive national boundaries, but education has not progressed at the same pace. Conclusively, he said our universities must embrace technology as it has fundamentally altered how we create and consume knowledge.

Plenary V: Dissent at 70

The session was chaired by Swapan Dasgupta (RS MP), and had Roopa Ganguly (RS MP), Shekhar Gupta (Senior Journalist), Ashok Malik (Senior Journalist), Vivek Agnihotri (Film Maker), and Aatish Taseer (writer and journalist) as speakers.

Swapan Dasgupta, spoke about media reports on how India is facing an emergency like situation in today’s times, and how over the past two years there has been a lot of hue and cry about the space of dissent being truncated. He said such malicious reporting has greater implications as when a false message is repeated frequently, it becomes a truth. He said that there are different types of dissenters in India and labelling and shutting down doors on them or celebrating them are not binary options. Roopa Ganguly, spoke about various issues that people face today – from poor infrastructure in North East to Triple Talaq. She also spoke on the current situation in Bengal and expressed displeasure over how the ruling party government oppresses opposition voices.

Shekha Gupta, started his presentation saying that there are mainly two kinds of dissent – one that we see in totalitarian countries and the one that we see in democratic societies. He said that he does not agree with Government’s decision to ban NDTV for a day but he thinks that the current government is handling the economic situation in the country better than the previous dispensation.

Shri. Malik started by comparing dissent and disagreement. Then he went on to say that dissent in one sphere could be counter-dissent in another sphere. He then stated that the newspaper Telegraph which had carried strong remarks against BJP Government at the Centre and Trinamool Congress Government in Bengal has suddenly stopped carrying strong comments against Bengal Government.

Vivek Agnihotri, talked about how the topic of dissent is a very contentious one. He objected to the view that ‘my dissent is better than yours’.  Aatish Taseer, shared his attachment with India, and spoke about cultural dissent and Mc Caulay’s intentions to introduce English based education system in pre-Independent India.

Panel discussion on nature of Nationalist Narrative

The discussion was chaired by Ashok Chowgule, and had Tavleen Singh (Senior Journalist and Author), Dr.David Frawley (Teacher of Vedanta), Lalitha Kumar Mangalam (Chairman, National Commission for Women), Shankar Saran (Professor, NCERT), Madhu Kishwar (Maulana Azad National Professor, ICSSR).

Ashok Chowgule started by highlighting the importance of nationalist narrative, and how it impacted the vote share of BJP in 2014 general elections. Tavleen Singh, asserted that Nationalism should be instilled from and by the people themselves and not be defined by politicians. She called for seizing the narrative away from politicians and bringing it back to the people.

Dr. Frawley affirmed that India is not just a modern state like US or some European nations, and that it has around 5000 years old legacy. He further added that post-independence, this narrative was deconstructed by the colonial minds, and what is needed today is a national identity and not a regional one as often represented by regional political parties etc. Lalitha Kumarmangalam highlighted the need for inculcating basic civic duty among Indian citizens especially with reference to respect for women in the society. She spoke about the need for beginning the change right from home and for inculcating correct values among the children in society.

Shankar Sharan began his presentation by stating that nationalism as a concept is not a very old subject and it originated only about 250-300 years ago. Quoting from the definition given by   Aurobindo 100 years ago, he said, “Nationalism is the faith. Sanatan Dharma is the only true nationalism.” He closed his remarks by stating that India must be called a civilizational state. Madhu Kishwar, opened her remarks by explaining how Stalinist philosophy is propagated in the guise of human rights, subaltern and minority studies. She targeted the left discourse by pointing out that multi ethnic and multi-cultural is not new to India, where people breathe differences.

Panel Discussion on Evolution, Impact and Role of Social Media

The session was chaired by Sadanand Dhume (Resident Fellow, American Enterprise Institute), and has Rupa Subramanya (Economist and Author), Shefali Vaidya (Consulting Editor, Media Vidya), Nistula Hebbar (Political Editor, The Hindu), Kanchan Gupta (Commissioning Editor and Commentator, ABP News) as speakers.

Sadanand Dhume, started the session by mentioning that his Tweet, “Freedom of expression is doing fine. It is monopoly of expression under threat,”got disproportionately high amount of traction. He further argued that monopoly in religion, markets and bureaucracy is being challenged by social media. Rupa Subramanya, began by sharing her experience with social media. She told that she realised the power of social media in the lead up to 2014 General Elections and that social media challenges biases, forces to question status-quo, and pushes to come out of the comfort zone.

Shefali Vaidya, shared her personal story and how her blogs got traction throughout Twitter. She compared the narrative of Good Dissent vs Bad Dissent to Good Taliban vs Bad Taliban. She also told that today’s social media users are not just passive consumers but active contributors. Nistula Hebbar, said she started using social media as a tool for her book promotion, but took cognizance of its significance in 2014 general elections, when she felt that the campaign was as much online as on-ground. She admitted that the mainstream media has taken cognizance of social media and now online articles are drafted differently than that of print media.

Kanchan Gupta started-off by remarking that Twitter wasn’t meant for what it is being used for now. Social media will have to build its credibility, if it were to substitute the mainstream media. Media in India today is pretty much homogenous in approach and content, and that mainstream media has largely co-opted social media.

Panel Discussion on Youth Perspectives

The session was chaired by Sanjeev Sanyal (author and historian) and had Swadesh Singh (National Vice President, BJYM), HindolSengupta(Editor at Large, Fortune India), Shubhrastha (Senior Research Fellow, India Foundation), and Nupur Sharma (Advocate and BJP Politician).

Swadesh Singh, initiated his remarks by pointing out that when we talk of youth, we shouldn’t lose focus and must talk of every section and class of youth. Talking about the aspirations of a Dalit Rural Uneducated girl he said that all what she needs in life is a good quality of life and respect from the society.

HindolSenguptaemphasised on the need to dissent against three prevailing truths in the society: dissent against wrongful handing out of labels and tags, dissent against distortion of history, dissent against blocking access to alternative discourses on national stage.

Shubhrastha, began her remarks by stating the ‘Representation Deficit’ of the youth in the sphere of political and governmental decision making, including the Parliament. She talked about the need for creation of platform which can be used to channelize the energies of youth into more constructive activities for the benefit of the nation.

Nomesh Bolia, talked about the significant hunger among the youth to contribute. He went on to highlight the lack of platforms where the youth can contribute especially in the field of policy making.

Nupur Sharma, tried to argue that much of the dissent these days is manufactured and is aimed at reaping political gains.

In addition to the sessions detailed above, the conclave had the following accomplished individuals making presentations on various topics:

  1. Tarek Fatah – Author & Columnist
  2. DattatreyaHosabale–Sah-Sarkaryavah, RashtriyaSwayamsevakSangh
  3. Mahmood Madani – Islamic Scholar & Politician
  4. Shaida Mohammad Abdali–Ambassador of Afghanistan to India
  5. Sajad Lone–Minister, Government of Jammu & Kashmir
  6. AroonPurie – Founder-publisher and editor-in-chief of India Today
  7. LobsangSangey–Chief Executive of the Tibetan Government-in-Exile
  8. TaslimaNasreen–Writer, secular humanist and human rights activist
  9. Arnab Goswami– Senior Journalist & former Editor in Chief of Times Now

The evening of day two of the conclave also had noted singer Mohit Chouhan casting his magic over the delegates, who had gathered on the sea shore for a sumptuous dinner.

 

Bilateral Dialogue on “India and Nepal: Exploring New Vistas”

12 13India Foundation, New Delhi in collaboration with Neeti Anusandhaan, Pratishthan,Nepal (NeNAP) and Nepal Center for Contemporary Studies (NCCS) organized a bilateral seminar on “Nepal and India: Exploring New Vistas” on November 2 and 3, 2017 at Radisson Hotel, Kathmandu. Inaugurated by the Rt. Honorable Prime Minister of Nepal,Mr. Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ and closed by His Excellency the President of India Shri Pranab Mukharjee, the seminar discussed several aspects of India-Nepal relations, featuring imminent speakers from India and Nepal with proven repute in  several aspects of these relations. The report below summarizes the major proceedings of the seminar and recapitulates the crux of what was said in different sessions in the two days.

Inaugural Session

The inaugural session of the seminar was graced by Rt. Honorable Prime Minister of Nepal, Mr. Pushpa Kamal Dahal. On the dais, besides him were Shri Ram Madhav, the General Secretary of Bharatiya Janata Party and the Director of India Foundation, Shri Neelakantha Uprety, the former Chief Election Commissioner of Nepal, Capt. Alok Bansal of the India Foundation, and Shri Lok Raj Baral, the Chairperson of the Nepal Center for Contemporary Studies.

Welcoming all the dignitaries on the dais and delegates and guests on the floor, Prof Dr Lok Raj Baral, former Ambassador of Nepal to India, remarked that the seminar was a new start to add impetus to the age-old cultural ties between the two peoples. As a guest speaker, Ram Madhav, the General Secretary of Bharatiya Janata Party said, “India has already experienced 80 years of democracy. It began in 1935 with the India Independence Act.”

He added, “We began our process of Constitution building in 1947 and it took us threeyears. Constitution making is not easy. We took threeyears to make sure that everybody was happy and satisfied. Today, afterseven decades of our independence, we can proudly say we are the largest democracy in the world. We are also successful and that is something we are proud about. In 1947, we had decided that our journey would be democratic. In those days, democracy wasn’t as highly regarded as it is today. Yet, we decided that that would be our political model and we stuck with it.”

Explaining the nature of India Foundation, Shri Madhav said, “Our organization, the India foundation, is not a conventional think tank. We want to ensure that ideas are implemented. We want to talk about issues facing both sides so that we can have a bilateral relationship and also we can help each other become successful countries. What do we need to do in order for us to jointly progress in critical areas like trade? That is the main idea for us holding this two-day conference.”

Shri Pushpa Kamal Dahal, Rt. Honorable Prime Minister of Nepal mentioned the visit of His Excellency the President Pranabas historic, as it was taking place after years of the visit of former Indian President K.R. Narayanan. He opined that the impact of this visit, added to his own visit of India in the recent past, would bring the two nations closer. The Prime Minister also mentioned the old geographical, historical and cultural bonds, which was not limited to documents and treaties. The misunderstandings, if there were any, were all transient.

Mentioning the potential of the two regions, the Prime Minister said, “We have tremendous potential; we need to unleash it. We have a glorious history of humanity, spirituality, innovation and wisdom. Ours are lands of Buddha, Mahaveera and Gandhi. Our pioneering philosophers have bequeathed us a glorious tradition; we need to revive our glory.”

The Prime Minister also discussed at length the problems of poverty and backwardness, and urged the need for noble work, imagination and innovationto address the same. He termed India-Nepal relation as ‘multi-dimensional’. He expressed happiness at the fact that Eminent Persons Group (EPG) had started working, and it could devise better means to strengthen the relations. In the meantime, he stressed the need to develop new infrastructure, better connectivity through roads and railways, technology transfer, mitigation of trade deficit, unrestricted market access, and collaborative efforts to combat climate change, disasters, and other common issues.

The Prime Minister also cited the necessity to honor one another’s dignity and honor. In an interdependent world, partnership has no alternative. So, he informed that Nepal was trying to negotiate and develop an India-China-Nepal tripartite partnership. He also stressed the need to enhance people-to-people interaction among the populace of India and Nepal, for which, the planned Hindu-Buddhist Circuit would be a great boost.

The seminar began with a discussion on “Inclusive Democracy: Experience of India and Nepal.”Chaired by JNU Professor, S.D. Muni, the seminar featured former Prime Minister of Nepal, Dr. Baburam Bhattarai,Member of Indian Rajya Sabha and journalist, Shri Tarun Vijay, former minister Shri Mahantha Thakur,  and Member of Lok Sabha, Shri RP Sharma as speakers.

The second day in the first session of the seminar was a discussion on “Reinvigorating the Civilizational Links: Bonds beyond Borders.” Chaired by former Chief of Nepal Army General, Rookmangad Katuwal, it featured Indian parliamentarian, Mala Rajya Laxmi Shah, JNU Professor,Dr Sangeeta Thapaliyal, former Diplomat and Professor, Dr. Jaya Raj Acharya, and former Diplomat and Nepal’s former Ambassador to India, Prof. Lok Raj Baral.

The third session of the seminar was on “Connectively and Freedom of Movement.” Moderated by Shri Jayant Prasad, Director Indian Defence and Strategic Analysis (IDSA) and former Ambassador of India to Nepal, this session featured Sh. Nisha Taneja and Dr. Vandana Mishra from India, and Shri PrashantJha and Dr. Arzu Rana Deuba from Nepal.

17 14The fourth session of the seminar was a discussion on “Sharing the Federal Experience.” Chaired by former Indian diplomat G. Parthasarathy, it featured Dr. Sekhar Koirala, Shri Shakti Sinha, Dr. Krishna Hachhethu and Dr. Rajest Kharat as speakers.

The fifth session of the seminar was a discussion on“Geo-Political Imperatives: Nepal’s Relation with its Neighbors.” Chaired by former Prime Minister of Nepal, Dr Baburam Bhattarai, it featured G. Parthasarathy, Capt. Alok Bansal, Dr. Sekhar Koirala and Shri Pashupati Shumsher JBR as speakers.

At the end of all these discussions, the Valedictory Session of the seminar was organized, which was addressed by Shri Pranab Mukherjee, His Excellency the President of India. Shri Mukherjee, in his address, mentioned the priority of his government to help Nepal move into the path of development and prosperity. He expressed happiness at the achievement and progress made in bilateral relations between India and Nepal, but expressed the need to enhance the partnership. Mentioning the unique civilizational linkages and fraternal ties, national treatment to each other’s citizens, and shared beliefs, he said, “Nepal and India share a common destiny. At a time when Nepal was on the threshold of new ear, presently engaged in charting out a course of socio-economic development, he applauded Nepal for its enterprise and achievement and expressed India’s willingness to share its experience in building strong democratic institutions.”

President Mukherjee stressed the need to enhance trade and economic engagements and increase job opportunities, infrastructural development, rural development, manufacturing capacity etc. Mentioning that several million Nepali citizens were working in India, he said, “We cannot remain hostage of political baggage”, and stressed the need to prioritize long-standing development partnership.

He expressed satisfaction at the development of small development projects that are joint ventures of India and Nepal. He also assured India’s commitment to post-earthquake reconstruction efforts that involve Indian assistance of 9000 million US Dollars. Mukherjee reminded the audience of the various projects—hulaki roads, first international oil pipeline, cross-border transmission lines and railways—under constructions. The completion of hydropower projects like Arun 3 and Upper Karnali, he believed, would enable Nepal to use the same transmission line to export its power later, when the surplus was generated. He also stressed the need to work further on flood management, irrigation and multi-purpose projects like Pancheshwor, Saptakoshi and Sunkoshiprojects.

Lauding the valor of the Gorkhas, he made a special mention of their contribution in the security of India. He also expressed his happiness at the close academic partnership through 300o annual scholarships to students, 250 scholarships to employees, and the decision of the government of India to allow Nepali students to partake in IIT entrance examination in Nepal itself.

President Mukherjee called Nepal the crucible of social and cultural tradition of Hinduism and Buddhism, and expressed his gladness that a Hindu-Buddhist circuit was being worked out to enhance tourist flow, by laying newer networks of roads and railways. In a common ecological landscape, he stressed the need to have similar approaches to environmental conservation.

President Mukherjee also highlighted his government’s special focus on sub-regional cooperation mechanisms like movement of goods and motor vehicle agreements. He expressed his dismay that in forums like SAARC, some members were using terror as a state policy against humanity, and appealed everyone to join hands in vanquishing cross-border and state-sponsored terrorism. He urged, that in places sharing open borders, we should be more vigilant to ensure that our borders are not misused by elements that do not share love for the two countries in their heart.

President Mukharjee admitted that due to an overwhelmingly large bilateral relation, it is possible that minute misunderstandings might sometimes take place between India and Nepal, but he suggested bilateral talks and dialogues as solutions. Finally, in favor of a united, stable, peaceful and prosperous Nepal, he expressed India’s commitment to stand by it, and called for a stronger public and private sector partnership for shared prosperity.

Before the address of His Excellency the President of India, Nepal’s External Affair Minister,Dr.PrakashSaranMahat addressed the gathering. He enumerated various bilateral relations between India and Nepal related to trade, infrastructural development, power generation, tourism and employment, and stressed the priority of his government to enhance such relations in the days to come.  He remarked, “The seminar’s value had been enhanced by the presence of President Mukherjee.”

He recalled the long and glorious political career of President Mukherjee as a statement and a leader of high stature. He mentioned the unique relationship of Nepal and India, which are time tested, comprehensive, deep and multi-dimensional in terms of geography, history and culture that bind the people together through a multi-faced, people-to-people relation. He said, “Our relations cannot be compared with any other relationship. Many Nepali political leaders and activists participated in India’s freedom movement, and the Indian leaders helped Nepal in its quest for democracy.”

He also mentioned a huge Nepali workforce in India. He lauded India for being the first country to respond to the need of Nepal in the earthquake of 2015.   He called for a stronger understanding and cooperation to make all bilateral mechanism function. He expressed his government’s commitment to work in this direction in order to strengthen bilateral mechanism.

He added, “We made a special understanding of the need to review treaties and agreements to update them. Imminent Person’s Groupwas working to chart out an area that needs mitigation.” Dr. Mahat also highlighted trade and transit and called for solving huge trade deficit, exemplified by 1:13 export ration between Nepal and India. Cross-border railways, integration check posts and cross-border transmission lines, he mentioned, are projects that could enhance connectivity. He also stressed the need to harness power potential and its transmission. He also foregrounded the need to develop better technological ties between the two nations.

Dr. Mahat opined that Nepal’s glorious cultural and religious heritage provides a great opportunity to develop Hindu-Buddhist circuit for enhanced tourism. He also informed that Nepal is against any form of terrorism and that it would not allow its territory to be used by terrorist forces against the interest of the two nations. He also mentioned the government’s initiatives to make the open border more secured. He appealed India to stand together with Nepal at the regional and international forums to reap harvest of technology and solve collective problems like human trafficking.

Dr. Mahat expressed his happiness on being able to launch the new constitution, and assured that its due amendment will accommodate the voices of all to make it more inclusive. The minister also assured that Nepal would support India’s claim for a permanent position in the UN Security Council.

The last session of the two-day seminar on bilateral relations between India and Nepal was on “Economic Growth: Interests and Imperatives.” Chaired by Shri Madhav Kumar Nepal, the former Prime Minister of Nepal, the session featured former Indian diplomat Shri Shakti Sinha and Shri Birendra Gupta, entrepreneur Shri Sekhar Golchha, and economist Dr. Haribansha Jha.

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Symposium on Jammu Kashmir: On 70th Accession Day

113 112 A symposium on the occasion of 70th accession day of Jammu and Kashmir state to India was organized under the aegis of India Foundation & JK Study Center on 26th October, 2016. The symposium was organized in the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library. Dr Jitendra Singh, Union Minister of State (Ind Charge) for Development of North Eastern Region & MoS PMO, was the chief guest for the occasion.

In his inaugural address Jitendra Singh said that the glory that Maharaja Hari Singh had brought to the state of Jammu & Kashmir eroded over the past 60 years but circumstances are gradually changing and people see a glimpse of hope today. Giving the rationale behind celebrating the accession day, he said that most states in India today celebrate their foundation days so why treat Jammu & Kashmir any differently.

Talking about the accession of Jammu & Kashmir to India, Mr. Singh said that today there is a confusion as regards the facts of the accession and that there is a deliberate attempt to conceal facts so that the issue remains disputed. The so-called intellectual class also raises questions on whether the state of Jammu & Kashmir wanted accession to Pakistan or wished to remain independent. But the truth is beyond these speculations.

Dr Jitendra Singh while discussing the role of Maharaja Hari Singh said that history has been very unkind to a king who loved his people and who was a great patriot. Maharaja Hari Singh, in his time, had build institutions to strengthen science, health and governance.

Director of JKSC, Padma Shri Jawaharlal Kaul discussed the anomalies caused due to Article 370. Shri Maroof Raza talked about the unholy intentions of Pakistan in Kashmir. He gave a threadbare description of the sequence of events during the 1948 attack. The event was moderated by Shri Alok Bansal, director of the India Foundation. Shri Ashutosh Bhatnagar, Secretary of JKSC, gave the vote of thanks.

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