Posts Tagged ‘Manmohan Singh’

Grouchy dragon, defiant tiger

November 30th, 2011


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgA comment on a social networking site summed it up neatly: ‘Twenty years ago India was in economic doldrums, and the country’s finance minister made a beeline to Western capitals for prescriptions of recovery. Today, the same man, as prime minister is visiting Western capitals to prescribe measures for them to come out of their economic crisis.’


 


Even making allowances for hyperbole, the grain of truth in that statement cannot be denied even by India’s obdurate critics. Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh’s visits to Bali – to attend the 9th India-Asean summit and the 6th East Asia Summit – and Singapore last week were not mere extensions of India’s Look East policy, but a sign, seen often, of India’s assertiveness on the global stage.


 


It was a lack of this trait, combined with its innate lack of self-belief, that led to India’s consignment to the sidelines in the present world order. Today, when the signs are all clear that the world order has worked to the benefit of a few nations and denied the emerging powerhouses their due, and its jettisoning a question of ‘when’ and not ‘if’, India clearly doesn’t want to be left behind in the history books yet again.


 


Even if it means standing up to the dragon on our east – as was evident during Dr Singh’s recent foray into its backyard – never mind that China gave us a bloody nose in 1962 and still sits on thousands of square kilometres of our territory and continues to make minatory noises over Arunachal Pradesh which it claims is disputed.


 


The standing up was evident not merely from an attendance at the Asean and EAS summits, but that these engagements served to bring to the discussion table a topic that China would rather engage bilaterally with the Asean nations – maritime security. Aka, right of navigation in the South China Sea, which China virtually claims is its private lake.


 


With a bulk of the trade from the region using this route to reach the western shores of America and beyond, the issue is a livewire one. Especially for India, whose growing economic ties in the region mean accessing the sea route and whose ship, INS Airavat, was subject to a barrage of questions a few months while on the sea.


 


China never took us seriously,” says an Indian official who was part of the prime minister’s delegation to Bali and Singapore. “We were boxed in in South Asia, and never considered fit enough to break out of that mold.”


 


First with the AB Vajpayee government – which initially invited global opprobrium by going nuclear and soon engaged with the world thanks to its growing economic clout – and the succeeding Manmohan Singh one which forged ahead with India’s newfound confidence, the official says there was little China could, and can, do.


 


So was it mere economics at play here? “Of what use is your economic strength if you are unable to defend it?” counters the official. “China cannot walk in like they did in 1962 because of our (nuclear) capability. We are not a pushover anymore.”


 


But with the Indian economy grinding to a slow halt, in reflection of global cues, was India better off in its splendid isolation – like Myanmar? Is the economic clout about to disappear like a mirage?


 


“Yes, our economy is in slowdown mode,” says another official. “But let’s not forget, we will still grow at 7 percent – which, if you look around us, is not bad at all. And isolation is no more an option, it is an increasingly dependent world, as even Myanmar has realised.”


 


Which, if you look at the country with which India shares its longest border and which is our first touchpoint with Asean, is true. Scheduled as the next chair of Asean – its first international outing under the military junta – Myanmar has also begun its slow march to popular rule, which has left the Indian foreign office in a ‘We said so’ mode.


 


So despite his advancing age, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh keeps a punishing schedule, clocking admirable airmiles in the process, and engaging with the world as never before, even inviting the criticism ‘prime minister for foreign affairs’.


 


And despite perceptions to the contrary, the Indian foreign office is at pains to explain that what is at the core of Indian policy is to do what is best for India.


 


“If we are targetting China why would it be our single largest trading partner in goods (with services included, it is America)?” asks an official who has engaged with China in the past.


 


What has changed, he says, is that India-China relations, which were uni-dimensional once upon a time, today cover a gamut of issues. “Previously our only engagement with China was over the border,” the official says. “Today, border is just one issue between us.”


 


Perhaps reflective of the many dimensions of the bilateral relationship, at their bilateral in Bali “which lasted longer than the scheduled 40 minutes,” Dr Singh and his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao – the two have met at least four times in the last one year – spoke of there being room for both the Asian giants and the importance of working together.


 


And, while Asean discussed maritime security much to China’s chagrin, the critical statements coming out of Beijing subsequently warning against ‘outside interference in the region’ were symptomatic of rocky nature of the relationship between India and China.


 


“We are not a threat to China. Yet,” says an official on the condition of anonymity. “What China is trying to do is to see that we never emerge as one.”


 


So is India being deliberately provocative by engaging with nations in its sphere of influence? “No, we are not,” says the official. “But then we too don’t like them being in Pakistan, etc, will they because of that?”


 


In a region where the Indian – Indic, if you will – historic influence is all too clear in the customs and languages, perhaps it is only right that Indian re-establish its presence, a desire that is in sync with the sole superpower America’s unstated aim of containing the Chinese dragon.


 


As India played out its role in Bali, a role that had been pre-scripted, the concatenation of events hold a portent. President Barack Obama, who has spoken of his warm ties with Dr Singh and who nevertheless did not find the time to meet with the latter – their last engagement was in India a year ago – was the first bilateral meeting that the Indian prime minister held in Bali.


 


In his opening remarks Dr Singh ‘reported’ to the US president that ‘all the irritants in their ties have been removed’. Just a couple of days before, India had amended its nuclear liability laws to be more in tune with the American nuclear industry’s demands. India’s domestic nuclear liability laws which placed unlimited liability on the suppliers was the single issue that held up not only the operationalisation of the India-US nuclear deal but also had a cascading effect on the entire gamut of ties.


 


‘We have tabled the new guidelines, it is for the American industry to let us know they meet their expectations,” said sources in the government.


 


In another sign, Australia – whose Prime Minister Julian Gillard held a pull-aside meeting Dr Singh in Bali – relented from its earlier refusal to supply uranium to India, a move that will still have to be approved by the ruling Conservative Party caucus in December.


 


And Japan, which had always remained sceptical of a nuclear India and which put its strategic dialog with India on the backburner after the Fukushima disaster in March, agreed to resume the civil nuclear agreement talks with India.


 


All of which, when read together rather than as isolated developments, would indicate an American nod behind it all.


 


“We are not in any camp, the days of the world being divided into camps are over,” says an Indian official. “For those with the outdated cold war outlook on the world all this would seem strange, but it is not ‘if you are not with us, you are against us’ anymore.”


 

Thus it is, that India seems comfortable supping with China even while disagreeing on the menu, and picking and choosing the ingredients from the American kitchen, in its effort to host a grand banquet. In an emerging world that has trade as the fulcrum and not ideological shibboleths, India, with an economist prime minister, seems a cinch for the long haul.

Dr Singh flies back into Delhi

November 22nd, 2011


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgPrime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh returned to New Delhi on Sunday night after concluding his three-day, two-nation tour to Bali and Singapore where he attended important Asian groupings and held important bilateral meetings.


 


By all accounts it was a successful overseas visit, not merely for the fact that he managed to articulate India’s standpoint across fora or offered prescriptions for global ills, but more for the fact that Dr Singh managed to walk the diplomatic tightrope between diverse suitors even while keeping a firm eye on where his interests lay.


 


If the 9th India-Asean and the 6th East Asia summits signalled a ganging up against China — at least in popular perception, if not in reality — where maritime security, an euphemism for navigation through South China Sea, was up for discussion despite Beijing’s chagrin, Dr Singh also held his own at the bilateral meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao, which according to official extended well below the scheduled time. “They get along very well,” said a source who was in on the discussions.


 


And, if he managed to keep China in good humour, Dr Singh also tried to put the spluttering India-United States tie back on the rails with his long-in-coming bilateral with US President Barack Obama. As the prime minister ‘reported’ to Obama, the irritants in the ties between them were being sorted out: the nuclear liability bill was being tweaked, and India voted against Iran on the IAEA report over its nuclearisation plans.


 


If diplomacy was the art of walking the tightrope with a blindfold, then this visit showed that Dr Singh has evolved into a lithe trapeze artist, swinging from end to end without once losing his grip.


 


Highly-placed government officials in New Delhi, concurred. “We calculate what is in our best interests and act accordingly,” they said. “We follow who/what is in our interests, and we work with whoever for it. After all, we are in a situation where there are many powers, and the world has moved on from a position of ‘if you are not with us you are against us’ kind of mindset.”


 


“If you are used to a bipolar world you may find this unsettling, but we are the only ones practising this, everyone does it. It is taking into account global realities.”


 


Pointing out that in his opening remarks at their bilateral on Friday in Bali, Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao said that whenever the two nations worked together they were able to articulate global concerns better, the sources said not only did the meeting between them last longer than scheduled, they also had a frank discussion on all issues of concern to them.


 


“Prime ministers don’t negotiate, they only discuss issues and leave the negotiations to the others,” the sources said.


 


In fact, more than the stapled Chinese visas for the people of Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh, which the sources said have stopped for a few months, what is important is their position on Kashmir where, since the mid-1990s they have kept out of it as a bilateral issue.


 


“In fact, if you want to see how much the world has moved on look no further than Kashmir,” another official said. “There was a time when it was the only issue being discussed on global fora vis-a-vis India. Today is anyone even mentioning it? India’s position has been accepted.”


 


If India’s liability clause for foreign suppliers of nuclear plants and its stand on Iran’s nuclear issue were irritants with the US, both the issues were sought to be nixed last week. India’s tabled new regulations on the liability of suppliers for discussion, and voted against Iran on the IAEA report on its nuclear plans.


 


While on the nuclear law the sources said they were yet to hear from the suppliers lobby on the amended clauses, even while not ruling out politicisation of the issue, on Iran, it was clear that merely because it had voted against Iran India won’t plumb wholesale for a hard line as the West would like.


 


Our position has always been there there should not be any further nuclearisation of the region, but that doesn’t mean we don’t support Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy. “We are very clear that yelling at them won’t work. At the same time, they must clarify to the international community what they are doing, legitimate concerns should be addressed through the IAEA, in that sense nothing has changed for us.”


 


But even this little movement, it seems, has thawed the US’s position. For in a quick pull-aside on the sidelines of the East Asia summit, Australian Prime Minister Julian Gillard apprised Dr Singh of the steps being taken by her government to secure her Labour party’s okay for selling uranium to India, a turnaround from Canberra’s earlier stated position.


 


This change, sources said, could only have come about on the US’s insistence.


 


“All this shows that the world is changing, it is not a static entity anymore, we are successfully dealing with the US, Russia and China and others to secure what is the best for India,” the sources said.


 

Dr Singh returned ahead of Parliament’s winter session beginning Tuesday, where there is no dearth of issues bedevilling his government. Will he and his managers show the same ingenuity in dealing with domestic issues as they have done overseas? Let’s wait and watch.

Nehru’s bust unveiled in Singapore

November 22nd, 2011


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgAs a 1000-strong Indian community applauded, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh on a rain-filled Sunday evening unveiled a bust of and marker on India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru in Singapore’s Asian Civilisation Museum.


 


Speaking on the occasion, Dr Singh said, “In honouring Nehru you honoured India and all the values India stands for. Secularism, democracy, freedom and the rule of law… This bust and marker will stand as yet another symbol of close relations between India and Singapore.”


 


The marker is fifth in the series of the National Heritage Board’s Friends to our Shores series which commemorates eminent personalities from overseas who had a connection to Singapore.


 


http://im.rediff.com/news/2011/nov/20nehru1.jpgSpeaking on the occasion, Singapore’s emeritus senior minister Goh Chok Tong said, “This commemorative marker and bust are symbols of the long standing friendship between Singapore and India that Nehru helped foster with his visits.”


 


Other than honouring his achievements, the marker also details Nehru’s three visits to Singapore between 1937 and 1950.


 


Nehru’s bust wax created by eminent sculptor and painter Biman Bihari Das and commissioned by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations.


 


The other four persons so honoured by the NHB are Joseph Conrad, Ho Chi Minh, Dr Jose Rizal, and Deng Xiaoping

We the feeble

August 17th, 2011


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgAt the best of times India appears ungovernable, its Oriental chaos, a metaphor for its vibrancy, often shrouded by unfair comparisons with the orderly Occident. Alas, we are clearly not living in the best of the nation’s times, so the chaos appears even more uncontrollable.


 


The economy, touted as the toast of the world (or at least that part of the world that matters to the articulate, middle class, affluent Indian), is not on a roll anymore it seems. It is no coincidence that social activist Anna Hazare’s campaign targets, and in turn appeals to, this burgeoning section of India that is concerned as much with the decimal points in the GDP growth and the dollar-rupee tango as by the aam aadmi’s railway coach being left behind by the chugging engine of growth.


 


Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in his statement in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday, too directly appealed to this segment of the population, perhaps knowing well its fickleness. Why else would he slip in this paragraph in a speech devoted to Hazare’s campaign: ‘India is an emerging economy. We are now emerging as one of the important players on the world stage. There are many forces that would not like to see India realise its true place in the Comity of Nations. We must not play into their hands. We must not create an environment in which our economic progress is hijacked by internal dissension. We must keep our mind focused on the need to push ahead with economic progress for the upliftment of the aam aadmi.’


 


This middle class beast everyone courts is a strange one. Its prosperity since 1991, when the Pearly Gates to prosperity were thrown open by Finance Minister Manmohan Singh, is accompanied by a gnawing sense of guilt over the ones left behind. It seeks affirmation it is neither responsible for nor unconcerned about the mind-numbing poverty around its towers of wealth. Twenty years later, in a cruel twist of irony combined with fate, the chicken from that liberalisation have come home to roost when its chief architect has been elevated to the post of prime minister.


 


The middle class that benefited from 1991 is very different from the one that existed previously. Then the Indian felt himself to be in a position of disadvantage vis-à-vis the world outside and was happier looking inside. Heck, even Pakistan was better off than us!


 


But the Indian since then is a different creature. Thanks to the freeing up of controls across the board he has seen the world (if not entirely, at least the parts of it that matter to him), he follows international events across media, and realises that with purchasing power the world is indeed flat. Thanks to his global perspective, or looking outside, it has not taken him long to realise that he has been short-changed, the miasma of prosperity that is around him has lulled him as the elected representatives were on a looting spree.


 


It can be no one’s case, least of all mine, that corruption is an offshoot of 1991. And it certainly is not my case that corruption can be eradicated. It can be contained, yes. So I am all in agreement with Prime Minister Dr Singh when he says there is no magic wand to deal with the issue.


 


The only problem I have with that statement is, just what were you up to, Mr Prime Minister, for seven years in office? Did it need an old man in a not-in-use-anymore Gandhi cap for your government to realise that middle India was fast losing its fascination with meaningless homilies?


 


The Congress party, that grand old party of India’s freedom movement spearheaded by Mahatma Gandhi, has moved so far away from the Father of the Nation’s ideals that anyone laying claim to Gandhiji’s legacy strikes terror deep in its heart, petrifying it, rendering it incapable of coherent thought and action.


 


It happened in the mid-1970s when a zephyr called Jayaprakash Narayan turned into the tempest for Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Against brute State force, Loknayak crystallised the change that Indians then sought: true democracy. With the benefit of hindsight we now know that the Congress could have dealt with him differently, but power often robs you of one critical faculty needed to retain it: clarity of thought.


 


More than a generation has passed since then, and kids who grew up in the shadow of that revolution, probably watching their parents wax eloquent about JP (mine did, for sure), are at the forefront of a new revolution.


 


The Congress government then had unleashed its howitzers against people’s power, and paid the price in the elections that followed. As of Wednesday, there has been little evidence that this Congress government has learnt from history – its leading lights of today all had a ringside view of events as they unfolded then, surely they know better? 


 


Critics argue that Hazare is no JP, and they are probably right. But even they cannot deny that a raging conflagration is set off by a trifling spark. Unlike JP’s revolution, Hazare doesn’t enjoy the undivided Opposition’s trust, nor is he a unifying force behind the non-UPA political spectrum. But what he lacks in numbers, Hazare has made up in terms of reach thanks to media, social and otherwise.


 


But Hazare is not the issue, and the government should not make him into one. Rather, it should focus on the issue he has voiced: corruption that is depriving people of the mind-boggling welfare funds but for which India would already be a member of the Comity of Nations the prime minister often speaks about. The articulation may have middle class voice, but it is a cry about the deprived millions. The aam-aadmi, as the Congress refers to them.


 


You can argue that a mere few thousands are chanting Hazare’s mantra of change, and be right. But ignore it, dismiss it, brush it aside as inconsequential – as this government’s spokespersons have been doing all along, just as they belittled JP all those years ago — and you will be guilty of turning a blind eye to an incendiary spark.


 

The government needs to come out of its splendid isolation and smell the coffee. I am told the flavour of the season is jasmine.

2010: A mandate betrayed

December 28th, 2010


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgAs an ancient civilization that has seen vicissitudes go by with equanimity, India is no stranger to fluctuating fortunes. But despite the fortitude sharpened over millennia, it is hard to remain mute, or neutral, as one witnesses the political charade that has been unfolding on the political stage for the better part of 2010.
As India has hobbled along these last 63 years trying to keep its long overdue tryst with destiny, there have been times more often than one can remember when the promise has been betrayed by a class that pretends to serve but in reality is only self-serving.
So it is that even the most hardened optimists — like this writer — will always qualify their rosy outlook for India with the words, ‘But, then, you never know…’ – only because we know that since time immemorial the curse of this land has been its men of destiny who have repeatedly let it down.
But not even hardened experience could have prepared one for the slide in 2010 where a government that assumed power a year ago on the back of a mandate of hope has simply squandered away its reservoir of goodwill and betrayed the mass of expectations which fuelled it to power.
After all, this was supposed to be a government of the aam-aadmi. But the unfolding scams during the year, involving sums that simply boggle the mind, show yet again that when it comes to decisions the common man’s interest is not at the core of decision-making.
Every government has its quota of scams, some artificial, some inflated, and some true. What separates the good government from the bad is how it reacts when scams break, what counter-actions it takes to punish the guilty, to recover the loss to the nation and to put in measures to prevent a repetition in future. Anything less would be seen as being complicit in the financial skullduggery.
Alas, judging by this yardstick, the Manmohan Singh government has failed, and failed miserably. Consider the two humongous scams to hit the headlines during the year: the Commonwealth Games, and the 2G spectrum allocation. In both cases, the government first pretended the scam did not exist, then denied the extent of the scam, before ordering a probe that satisfied very few. Even now, it seems more set on silencing the Opposition’s furore than on bringing the guilty to book.
Naturally, the opposition parties from both sides of the political spectrum, the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Left parties, in an unprecedented act paralysed Parliament’s winter session with their demand for setting up a joint parliamentary committee probe into the 2G spectrum scam, a demand the government is loath to concede for reasons of its own, despite the prime minister likening himself to “Caesar’s wife”.
The irony could not have been starker. In the last six months of the year, leaders of the P5 nations — the United Kingdom, the United States, France, China and Russia — have beaten a path to New Delhi in an effort to be on the right trading side of an economy the world acknowledges is on the cusp of transformation.
Yet, even as a new India yearns to ensure its rightful place in the new world order, what could derail its chances is the old ghost from its past that is suffocating the sleeping giant like an incubus: corruption.
That Indians have an ambivalent attitude towards corruption, is a given. We do not mind winking at it if we felt the government was also doing our work. The CWG and 2G spectrum scams have shattered this delusional sense of security. Both the Games and the spectrum scams involved aspects that didn’t touch the aam aadmi’s life. The former was about showcasing India’s arrival on the world stage by hosting its biggest international extravaganza to date, while the latter involved — simply put — selling of airwaves.
The widespread dismay is that while the aam aadmi was being passed off with homilies about lack of resources to elevate his life from the miserable to the tolerable, millions of rupees were seen to be siphoned off by the political class, with no one punished till the final week of the year. It is a conspiracy of silence where self-preservation is the need of the hour.
That this should happen on the watch of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, whose working combination seems to have struck a chord with the public – if you drown out the negative chorus on Twitter – is, in my opinion, the biggest disappointment of the year for those praying for a new dawn.
Sadly, when it comes to tackling the cancer eating into the vitals of the nation, the couple seems hamstrung. Speeches pour forth, condemnations are issued, but there are no worthwhile explanations coming about why nothing was done when the exchequer was actually being bled.
It could well have been this waffling over corruption that sent the aam aadmi away from the Congress party by the droves in the Bihar assembly election and into the arms of Nitish Kumar, a man who doesn’t merely stop at issuing homilies about zero tolerance for corruption but who lives by his word, realizing that it is not enough to personally incorruptible but also provide a corruption-free administration in order to make a difference.
It is a lesson the Congress party will do well to internalize, for as Bihar is to India what India is to the world: a land of glorious past belied by a miserable present which holds it back from its rightful future.
Instead, the Congress party and its government are unable to break free of the shackles of the past. Under attack over corruption, it has preferred to divert attention to bogeys from yore that are best buried and forgotten. It could have taken its cue from the Allahabad high court verdict on Ayodhya as a collective desire to bury the past and move on.
Clearly, this is a winter of discontent whose icy fingers are seeping through the warm coverlet of positive sentiment. With critical state assembly elections due next year – including in bellwether states like Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal – the cold season is set to yield to a scorching summer.

Silence is not always golden, Mr Prime Minister

November 19th, 2010


http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgOne of the enduring memories of the Diwali weekend visit by the planet’s most powerful man – second most powerful, if you go by the recent Forbes ranking – to Mumbai was his interaction with college students at St Xaviers college, where he fielded diverse, and uncomfortable, questions. Questions ranging from what jihad meant to him to Pakistan, but Obama was game for everything.

The answers may not have satisfied everyone, but by opening himself to questions Obama won hearts and minds in an information-starved India.

Watching him open-mouthed, I realised that he opened up because of two possibilities. One, he had nothing to hide, or two, he did but was willing to brazen it out. The jury may be out on where Obama fits in, but my point is that it’s only those who have things to hide, who don’t have answers to uncomfortable questions, take refuge in silence and non-cummunication.

Unfortunately, a leader who communicates is not an image that sits well in India. When was the last time you had the prime minister, or the Congress president, or the young man who everybody believes is being groomed for the top job in the country, express their worldview in an open interaction? How many of our chief ministers go about meeting their constituents? Narendra Modi is a name that comes up often here, but who else?

Media conferences happen may once in a while, but a Town Hall kind of meeting that Obama addressed, where the citizens’ concerns are directly addressed? If you rule out the ubiquitous election meetings the answer is, never.

Why is it that in this age of exploding communication, our leaders, regardless of age and ideology, shy away from communicating to the people who elect them? Why this unwillingness to be subject to some grilling by the people who voted you into office?

Could it be that our political leaders believe that once the votes are cast, the master-servant equation that powers the democratic machinery changes forever, till the next time the votes need to be canvassed?

It could be that most of our politicians belong to an era when communication only meant writing letters, making a speech and issuing press releases. The man who as finance minister ushered economic revolution in the country, has failed to realise that concomitant to his reforms is the explosion in media we see all around us, which have erased the distance between the ruler and the ruled, thanks to instant communication courtesy the internet.

To the undiscerning eye, the ensuing cacophony may seem like a media circus, but the true communicator – like Obama – would harness this favourably.

The counterpoint can be imagined: Ah, but the internet and such are a young man’s playthings, you don’t expect eminence grise to get online and chat, do you?

Which can be rebuffed with a quick: But what’s age got to do with anything, dude! The internet is just a medium. The print was yesterday’s, television is today’s and the internet is the medium of tomorrow. What matters is how effectively you use it.

Hugo Chavez is all of 56 years young, one doesn’t hear him cribbing about technology or new media as he engages with his constituents on Twitter. Or for that matter the venerable Fidel Castro, who engages a team to tweet for him. Only part of their reason could be to appear ‘cool’ and ‘with it’; mostly it is done out of their desire to get their message across.

Our own B S Yeddyurappa is no spring chicken, but thanks to twitter I knew this afternoon that the embattled Karnataka chief minister who is facing corruption charges has ‘ordered a judicial probe by a retired Supreme Court judge into all land deals, in and around Bangalore, in the last 10 years’.

I wish I knew, similarly, as a citizen and not a journalist, what our prime minister thought of the various issues dogging his government, of which there are plenty.

I wish someone would tell him, and the rest of the political establishment, that communication is the hallmark of a true leader. All the legendary leaders were skillful communicators who used the tools of the day to get their point across – to the people, not to a privileged junta.

And going by the silence from 7, Racecourse Road, the people are not the only ones eager to know what goes on in the occupant’s mind – even the Supreme Court of India, which has ordered the prime minister to file an affidavit explaining his silence on the 2G spectrum scam, would like to know it!

Really, did things have to come to such a sorry pass where the prime minister, for the first time ever, has to explain his silence/inaction to the top court in the land? Even Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was directly accused of involvement in the Bofors scam but which was never proved, did not face such a situation. Nor did P V Narasimha Rao, believed by many (not me) to have presided over the most corrupt government in independent India.

Not even his political opponents suspect Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to be corrupt. Nor does anyone doubt that Dr Singh is a good man who has the nation’s wellbeing at heart. But often, a good man’s silence has the potential to cause more harm than a bad man’s deeds, and we have know this from the ancient legends of this land.

There are so many questions that Dr Singh can address, and here’s a sparse sample: Why, despite the widespread knowledge that Andimuthu Raja’s actions as telecom minister would cause a humongous loss to the exchequer, was he persisted with? Why were his dubious actions not annulled and his orders reversed? Why did it take so long for Raja to be sacked from the cabinet?

If what we learnt in our civic lessons years ago, that in a democracy the people are supreme, is true, why is the prime minister rushing to answer the Supreme Court and not the people whose mandate made his government? Couldn’t he have avoided the embarrassment by being more open and direct with the people in the first place?

And, there is a lesson in this sorry episode for all future, budding politicians. The point is, will they learn it?

Can we move on from Pakistan, Mr Prime Minister?

July 16th, 2010

http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgEvery ruler of men and minds since time immemorial has longed to leave his legacy behind — some through grandiose physical ones like the Taj Mahal or the pyramids; some leave behind a revolutionary thought, a philosophy, like Krishna, Gautama, Jesus Christ and Mohammed; but most die trying.

The exceptions are rare, almost non-existent. I was reading Michel Danino’s riveting book The Lost River, on the Saraswati which was the cradle of the civilisation posterity has exclusively credited to the Sindhu/Indus, and was amazed to find that the remains have no pointer to the ruler/s. No grand places. No temples. No monuments. Nothing. Just urban conglomerations. In fact, early English excavators with their Egyptian and Roman background even dismissed the archaeological findings as unspectacular. Who ran the vast swathe of settlements on the banks of the Saraswati whose impeccable urban order we are unable to replicate 5000 years later in our cities? We don’t know because the rulers didn’t think that was important.

If only our modern rulers thought along those lines, better would be our lot. Instead they choose to run after a legacy, making a grand statement, little realising that legacy is what happens when you do your job well. So we’ve had prime minister after prime minister tilting at the scales, chasing a dream. Nehru may have wanted to be known as the champion of global peace and India-China brotherhood but we best remember him as the architect of the modern nation-State; Indira Gandhi may have wanted to better her father, but we remember her for creating Bangladesh, imposing Emergency and Operation Bluestar; with her son it was a case of what could have been rather than what he did or did not do.

P V Narasimha Rao, for instance, did not set out to leave a legacy when he liberalised the economy, he just didn’t have a choice given what profligate governments before him had done. In fact, despite his vast intellectual superiority, I don’t think even he could have foreseen how his decision would unleash a dormant nation. Today, his party may demonise him for the Babri masjid demolition but no one can take away what he did to the Indian spirit in 1991.

Similarly, A B Vajpayee did not set out to leave a legacy when he detonated the bomb in 1998. But by staring down the international pressure that followed, he gave his people tremendous self-belief. And when he stepped down in 2004, we knew for the first time that non-Congress governments can run the nation better. That was his legacy.

Neither Rao nor Vajpayee strove to be remembered – they did what they had to do, and when it is consonance with the national spirit, as it was for them, legacy was created.

Manmohan Singh, finance minister to Rao in 1991, obviously doesn’t think the economic liberalisation was his legacy, so when he got the unexpected chance in 2004 to be remembered by posterity he grabbed it with both hands. The Indo-US nuclear deal may have been the culmination of what Vajpayee’s government had done in the previous term, but Dr Singh left his mark by staking his government’s future for America’s embrace.

The War on Terror may have gone wrong and America in general may be reviled in the Arab world and elsewhere but India has been unique in that the superpower enjoys enormous popularity here, especially among the large, clamorous and influential middle class which equates socialism with deprivation and American capitalism with prosperity. So when Dr Singh docked the Indian ship of state next to Washington DC’s berth, he brought foreign policy in line with the people’s wishes – and that will always be his legacy.

In his second term, when he is running after another legacy – something that’s never been done before – he is being not just greedy but even stands to lose it all. Perhaps he needs to be told that peace with Pakistan has been given a shot by every single prime minister before him – I don’t think anyone walked extra miles for this than Vajpayee; the attempts failed not because they lacked conviction but because the issue is far too complex.

Plus, if you remove the Wagah border brigade and the peaceniks who come alive every now and then, there is no groundswell within India in favour of peace. Ask anyone and they will tell you yes, peace is desirable with Pakistan but at what cost, do they really want peace?

Dr Singh’s own Congress party, with its elephantine memory, knows it and hence its lukewarm response to the prime minister’s ambition.

His own ministers know it.

When it comes to peace with Pakistan, it won’t be wrong to say that Dr Singh stands completely alone in his government, in his party and in his nation.

I wish somebody would tell the prime minister that peace with Pakistan is a good thought. Indians and Pakistanis can be friends but India and Pakistan can never be friends in our lifetime. Maybe after another 30-40 years, when a generation that is untouched by the past comes to power in both nations, it could be come a reality – assuming that the two nations don’t bomb each other out in the meantime.

For the present, the people are not enthused by peace with Pakistan because it doesn’t matter to them anymore. The common belief is that India has left Pakistan far behind in the global sweepstakes and while yes, if its hidden war on us were to stop we can progress even faster, we have done well without them so why bother? Peace with the neighbour obviously means greater dividends for Pakistan than it does for India.

Things could be different if those extending the hand of friendship in Pakistan are able to make some minimum guarantees, they will be surprised by what India can and will offer in return, but it is an open secret that the nation that broke away over the two-nation theory is itself a living example of two nations in one today.

One is the civilian one we see, where elections are held, the president, prime minister and others are selected and who run the nation for all practical purposes.

The second nation is the real one, it is the one that calls the shots on critical issues – and India is a hyper-critical issue for them. It is possible that Messrs Zardari, Gilani, Qureshi et al have a burning desire for peace with India matching Dr Singh’s – but unfortunately for them, the decision is not theirs to take.

Dr Singh can deal with them till the cows, bulls and every animal on Noah’s Ark come home but each time he will realise that it’s always back to square one. Hopefully someday soon he will outgrow his magnificent obsession.

There’s a nation full of problems waiting for that day.

Will the real prime minister please stand up?

May 24th, 2010

http://im.rediff.com/uim/news/sai.jpgOne year ago, when the second edition of the United Progressive Alliance came to power, one felt that we would be seeing a different government. There was unanimity among various groups that the first one was a holding operation; trammelled by its lack of parliamentary numbers and a fire-breathing Left, it stumbled through five years of staying in office without really doing much.

Apart from the prime minister’s pet project, the nuclear deal with the United States over which much blood was spilt with the Left, that government did get some landmark legislations passed. Like the right to information and the national rural employment scheme.

But throughout those five years an impression was created, and the Left did little to correct it, that the UPA government wasn’t being given breathing space to do the things it really wanted to. Perhaps the voters too bought the argument last year, since Verdict 2009 cut the Left down apart from boosting the Congress’s numbers.

A year on, after it’s clear that the Left was only UPA I’s whipping boy. A year on, despite getting rid of Prakash Karat and his band of fiery men, the UPA has been as sluggish as it was in its first term. So was the known devil (Left) better than the unknown angels (Mayawati, Mulayam and Mamta)? The only hint came at the prime minister’s press conference today where, when asked if he missed the Left parties’ support, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said, “If wishes were horses beggars would ride.”

For those of us who resented the pressure the Left brought to bear on UPA I, it is clear in retrospect — as it is no doubt clear to the prime minister — that the Left was not in it to strike deals or cut corners. They approached decisions through the prism of principle and policy, there was no surprise about it. With the new bunch of friends the UPA has acquired, it is all about politics, pulls and pressures.

What it has meant to governance is to project an image that the centre cannot hold. That the prime minister is not in control (which is worse if you realise many think that the remote control to the government anyway lay in 10 Janpath).

The prime minister’s cabinet thus resembles a daycare centre where children are running riot, with the babysitter unable to maintain order.

The Union Cabinet posts are filled not on merit but based on allies’ intransigence. So a Muthuvel Karunanidhi is able to cock a snook at the prime minister, at the Congress party and its president Sonia Gandhi and retain a minister who caused pecuniary loss to the nation. We pilloried a prime minister for a scam worth a niggardly Rs 64 crore; but a mere minister who caused thousands of crores to vanish sits pretty.

Naturally when the prime minister opens his mouth about poverty alleviation in his second press conference in India as prime minister, there are silent guffaws.

Blame some of the last few incumbents for the erosion in its image, but the prime ministership of India is not a pushover. Indians like their rulers to show steel — which is why Indira Gandhi, despite her many flaws, remains a perennial favourite. The only time the UPA’s prime minister of six years has shown steel was when the Left’s demands got to him, and that was a good two years ago.

Even if you put it down to personal style — I cannot be like my boss nor he like me, I know — the prime minister has not convinced that his style works.

It is not just that he has been unable to either gag his ministers who clearly believe words speak louder than action or rein in those who think they are not accountable to anyone for their actions. The prime minister’s worst achievement is that in the one year of his second government, he has not sent out the message that he means business.

And this time there’s no pesky Left around to pin the blame on.

What can be worse for a nation suffering the ill-effects of untrammelled inflation than having a celebrated economist at the helm who is unable to control it? You can draw two inferences from this failure. One is that the economist in him doesn’t know how to control prices. The other, less charitable, inference is that he doesn’t think it is cause enough to worry; in other words, Marie Antoinette like, he just doesn’t care.

You can tug at the leash to join the global high table. You can let out a collective gasp that India is one of the letters in the four-letter acronym BRIC that is destined for greatness tomorrow. The world’s most powerful man may take tips from you on how to manage his nation’s ravaged economy. These are all heady things, no doubt, miracles for people like who me who grew up in an India of deprivation and penury.

Alas, but of what use is any of it when our internal affairs is in a shambles!

If UPA I had no clue about warding off jihadi attacks, UPA II has no clue about preventing Maoist attacks. Terror earlier came wrapped in a green flag; today it comes covered in a red flag. Seeing how effete the government is in tackling their threat, it is a question of time before the Naxalites move out of the red corridor and into our cities and towns. Will the government’s wait for a strategy cost the nation dear?

After so much brouhaha over the women’s reservation bill, there’s been no squeak out of the government on its fate. Will its structure change, as the allies have been demanding? Considering how successful the latter have been in getting the government to include caste as a factor in the ongoing census, the signs are clear. This government is malleable on most issues.

What was also clear, thanks to today’s press conference, is that prime minister doesn’t have all the answers. Either he doesn’t have all the facts at his disposal, or you can contact the PMO.

But don’t blame me, I didn’t vote for this government!

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