EDITORIAL

CAUGHT ON THE
WRONG FOOT

Long ago, Johan Bunyan wrote The Pilgrimage of Grace that was destined to become a classic. He elevated the status of the pilgrims to the highest pinnacle of glory. Indeed, the renunciation, the dedication and the commitment of the pilgrims rightly earns them the choicest place in society. In 1995 when the Amarnath pilgrims were attacked by the terrorists, a delegate from our State with an NGO had said in his intervention before the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights that "pilgrims were the messengers of peace, and bullets should not be their reward." This sentence made a wonderful impact on the members of the Commission and accordingly a note was taken that the armed men in Kashmir were violating human rights. It has happened again though .....more

BRANDISHING
THE LETTER

The APHC is happy with the letter it has received from the military ruler of Pakistan promising continued moral, psychological and diplomatic support to Kashmir insurgency......more

A dream waiting
for its chance

By M J Akbar

Rajiv Gandhi wanted to give Benazir Bhutto a welcome such as no visiting dignitary had ever received in India. Was this innocence or overconfidence? Some of the starry-eyed even had visions of a handsome Gandhi and a beautiful Bhutto making a perfect...more

Tackling water
problem in State

By Raja Ji

In recent, years, there has been an increasing realisation of the antic-ipated scarcity of water in the future. The rapid increase in the State's population as well as higher per capita consumption of water for a higher standard living has led to more and more....more

Doing with the west

By B K Karkra

The West never had it so good. In the centuries gone by, it had colonies. Today, it has the wealth of peace and rules the world eonomy sitting at home.........more

EDITORIAL

CAUGHT ON THE WRONG FOOT

Long ago, Johan Bunyan wrote The Pilgrimage of Grace that was destined to become a classic. He elevated the status of the pilgrims to the highest pinnacle of glory. Indeed, the renunciation, the dedication and the commitment of the pilgrims rightly earns them the choicest place in society. In 1995 when the Amarnath pilgrims were attacked by the terrorists, a delegate from our State with an NGO had said in his intervention before the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights that "pilgrims were the messengers of peace, and bullets should not be their reward." This sentence made a wonderful impact on the members of the Commission and accordingly a note was taken that the armed men in Kashmir were violating human rights. It has happened again though the pilgrims this time had only a narrow escape at Chamalwas, 160 kilometres from Jammu on the national highway. The terrorists hiding in the mountain fastness in Ramban – Banihal area, targeted a military lorry plying on the national highway, killed three jawans of the army and injured 4 others. The convoy carrying the pilgrims was only a kilometre away and had a providential escape. Had not the army vehicle born the brunt, dozens of pilgrims would have been gunned down.

The administrative machinery comes under heavy critics,. The pilgrimage fever had gripped it for more than two months. There was hardly a day when tall reports of ‘elaborate arrangement’, ‘foolproof security’, ‘full facility’ and the like of it were not splashed across the front page of the newspapers. The impression was given that the conditions on the ground had improved beyond expectation or had been brought under control and the pilgrims have to fear nothing. This false sense of security prompted thousands of prospective pilgrims to come to Jammu and get themselves registered with the tourism department. The department authorities profusely propagated that the rush was so great that it could not be coped with. An air of confidence and assurance was created all around. But then suddenly, the terrorists appeared.

This time right on the top of the national highway at very critical location where it would have been extremely difficult to counter their attack even if the forces were in good number. It is the strategic height which they had occupied and which facilitated them to give a strong cover to two or three of their disguised activists put to actual operation. The question is why is it that our security forces are always taken by surprise? After all surprise is the keynote principle of guerrilla warfare. How could the security forces and the police ignore a sharp turn or a narrow passage between the steep hills and the nullah deep below? This is not the first time that the terrorists have selectively struck on the crucial national highway. It is obvious that they will not attack the ordinary buses and trucks carrying either passengers or goods to the Valley and Ladakh. The pilgrims are the sitting ducks they could have shot at. But since by chance the military truck preceded the pilgrims’ caravan, it became the immediate target. This exposes the tall claim of the authorities, the security apparatus, the transport chapter, the intelligence agencies, the local informers etc. of having made fool proof arrangements for the safe passage to yatra. If the security forces had any apprehensions, they should not have hesitated to inform the Government. In particular, the local police should have ensured that the terrorists are not in the proximity of the national highway or their access to a vantage point isn’t that easy wherefore they can strike. Who should be held accountable for this dereliction of duty? No Government has a right to play with the lives of the common citizens. If it fails to protect their life and property, it has no right to be in the seat of power. This being a recurring feature, the State Government cannot escape the blame. If it has the qualms of conscience, it should vacate. The State is playing with the sentiments of the pilgrims and rests content with a word of condemnation that too in warbled idioms and phrases, so that the terrorists are not given direct affront. It is a different matter that the pilgrims will not be deterred by these brutal and inhuman attacks and that they will continue their onward journey. The question is who is responsible for the loss of innocent lives if the attack had been directed against the pilgrims?

In any case, it appears that there is hardly any cohesion among the various departments responsible for the safe journey of the pilgrims to Amarnath and back. The tourism department, the home department, the revenue department and the intelligence organisations, all are pulling indifferent direction. Their planning is defective, their vision is blurred, their initiative is damp and their sense of responsibility is dead. An inquiry should be held in the incident and the defaulters should be punished so that the ‘Pilgrimage of Grace’ does not become the ’ Pilgrimage of Disgrace’.

But at the same time, we would like to say a word to the pilgrims. Do these young and old pilgrims coming from remote parts of the country ever have an opportunity of listening to the radio about the situation in Kashmir.? In the first place do they know on the map of India where Kashmir is where its boundary begins? I cannot forget an incident happened in 1991. In New Delhi a few friends from the State met with a couple of MPs and tried to explain to them what was happening in Kashmir. After giving a fairly elaborate report of the ground situation when insurgency was at its peak, one of the MPs, hitherto listening with rapt attention, quipped melodiously in vernacular," Kashmir main larai hai to aap Srinagar chale jao. Wahan hamara hawai jahaz utarta hai." The prospective pilgrims before taking the train to Jammu Tawi should read as much material on current history and geography of Kashmir as they can lay their hands on. This will open their eyes and they will realise that it is a terrorist-ridden area where anything can happen at any time. They must know that war veterans of Afghanistan, unparalleled in mountain and in guerrilla war are stalking the mountain heights of Kashmir, the entire Pir Panchal range with their guns turned towards the south. They must make sure whether they are prepared to die in a chance encounter before they may die the sweet death by trekking over the high mountains in the foots of the Lord. If the pilgrims can restrain themselves and their nonchalance, the pressure on the Government would be reduced and those limited numbers trekking over the mountains can be better served and protected.

BRANDISHING THE LETTER

The APHC is happy with the letter it has received from the military ruler of Pakistan promising continued moral, psychological and diplomatic support to Kashmir insurgency. One would like to ask the APHC a simple question. You are fighting against Indian democracy saying you have been denied the right of self-determination. But you sought and got the encouragement from a military ruler who trampled under his iron heel the right of preserving self-determination which the people of Pakistan had won through a general election which sent the majority party into the seat of power. How do you expect this ruler and his Government to assure you the preservation of your right to self-determination?

A dream waiting for its chance

By M J Akbar

Rajiv Gandhi wanted to give Benazir Bhutto a welcome such as no visiting dignitary had ever received in India. Was this innocence or overconfidence? Some of the starry-eyed even had visions of a handsome Gandhi and a beautiful Bhutto making a perfect pair on the ramparts of Red Fort while they declared peace before captive television cameras and liberated masses while their aides filed applications to Oslo for the next Noble Peace Prize.

The opening moves between the two had been promising. Rajiv Gandhi had taken the initiative, sent Romen Sen to prepare the ground, and the two signed an agreement promising no first -attack on each other's nuclear installations. The Soviet Union made this the basis for a message to Benazir that the Soviets were ready to help Pakistan build three nuclear plants if they could get their own quid pro quo, which was inclusion of Najibullah in the Afghan Interim Government following the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. But that is another story, or is it? The tentacles of this subcontinent cling to one another across time and space, history and geography. Afghanistan too has become part of the Kashmir story.

We are talking of the 1980s, and the Eighties were another world, much more distant from today than the lapse of a mere decade would suggest. For one, so many of hte principals are dead. Rajiv Gandhi, Zia-ul Haq, Najibullah. Even the Soviet Union is dead.

There was a debate in Delhi even in the 1980s about whether India should deal with the leader of a military coup, General Zia-ul Haq, or wait for the establishment of a democratic order, which meant inevitably the arrival of Benazir Bhutto. Gen. Zia, who had to hang Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto in order to preserve his coup, made more than one effort to open a peace front with India. Like any sensible military man, he had both a deeper knowledge and a consequent respect for the abilities of the enemy. Even when Pakistan lost a few posts on the Siachen glacier under his watch, he did not order expensive (particularly in human terms) retaliation, instead he dismissed what had been lost as ice and stones.

Gen. Zia's focus was on the lucrative Western front in the Eighties, on the dream war in Afghanistan against the might of Soviet troops, funded by the CIA, which meant hard cash in liquid flow without any questions asked. It was a war that the Soviet Union could never win and Pakistan could never win. If Gen. Zia had a post-Afghan war grand vision then that too lay in the West, of a great alliance of Muslim countries between Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey and all the Muslim Central Asian republics that would soon, he had no doubt, prise themselves away from the Soviet empire. He was not wrong about the consequences of a Soviet defeat in Afghanistan but his great alliance was opium smoke. It had on basis in the realities and interests that govern relations between nations.

Zia's India policy had more to do with Punjab than Kashmir. All through his term the Valley was at peace with itself, and kept its undercurrents under control. Punjab was on fire, and Gen. Zia always kept a supply of matchsticks on hand, but under cover. Out of cover he took the position of a peacenik, claiming that he could not fight on two fronts, and throwing more than one ball (occasionally a cricket ball) towards India for Delhi to pick up.

Rajiv Gandhi was cool to the General, treating Zia's overtures with a disdain that bordered on condescension. Rajiv did not need to be told what price India and his family had paid for the troubles in the Punjab. The official line was dutiful faith in democracy. But there was an unmentioned element as well. Zia was not "one of us", Benazir Bhutto was. The Oxbridge factor was of great help to Benazir who maintained sometimes indiscreet channels to Rajiv Gandhi through her years of exile and during her years of struggle against Zia. The Oxbridge types, who wanted to trust Benazir instead of the "unreliable" Zia, were elated when time and circumstance brought her to power through an election. It was too good to be true. Oxbridge had been elected in both countries.

Rajiv Gandhi could separate social circumstance from political behaviour, but he was not immune to the former. He took the first opportunity he got, that of a Saarc summit in Islamabad, to extend the visit into a bilateral. On their first evening in Islamabad, the Gandhis (including Sonia, Priyanka and Rahul) dined alone with the three reigning Bhuttos: Benazir, her mother Nusrat and her husband Asif Zardari. Both told their delegations later that politics was off the menu, and that they had fun. It was utterly believable.

There was agreement in that first summit on protection for nuclear installations, and some progress towards a common position on NPT. Rajiv Gandhi suggested that secret negotiations should continue between officials on this: the "invisible" dialogue. More visible would be talks on reduction of conventional arms and Siachen, Rajiv urged free flow of information, travel and popular-cultural exchanges. Benazir on her part stressed that only a control of the arms race between the neighbours could after the ''poverty-heritage." As is evident there was no shortage of good English metaphor. Benazir mentioned Kashmir; Rajiv opted for silence. He realised later that this silence was not playing well back home, particularly on the eve of a general election which according to the opinion polls, would result in a sharp setback if not defeat. He stopped over in Pakistan a few months later, on the way back from a non-aligned summit in Belgrade. When asked about Kashmir at a joint press conference, he was vehement that it was an integral part of India.

Although the fires burned in Punjab, Rajiv Gandhi did not ignore Kashmir. He attempted a variation of the model that had worked with some success in Assam and Punjab creating an electoral pact with Dr. Farooq Abdullah. He analysed, correctly, that the decline in the Valley began with the dismissal of Farooq Abdullah's Govenrment by Indira Gandhi in 1984. But the answer the two found was on solution. The advantage of the Abdulllahs had been that they represented Kashmir against the encroachment into the Valley by the Congress (despite his differences with Sheikh Abdullah Jawaharlal Nehur never allowed the Congress to operate in the state). The raison d'etre of the National Conference was diluted by this alliance. The Congress gained nothing, while the Conference lost all. Simultaneously the substantial economic progress that the two promised in their joint campaign was nulified by the inertic of the state government and the sabotage of the Central Government. The anger that simmered against the accord created a devastating foundation for the future.

When the unholy combination of Delhi and Srinagar once rigged the elections in 1989 to deliver a victory to Farooq Abdullah, a running fever became epidemic.

When V P Singh became Prime Minister in November 1989 he inherited a Kashmir that made Punjab look manageable. In a few unbelievable week the peace of the Valley was gone, not to return till the moment of writing. The first major incident was the kidnaping of his home minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed's daughter; that was how Kashmir welcomed the first Kashmiri home minister of India. The government traded militants for the hostage. Farooq Abdullah resigned. Bullets began to ricochet through the city and the Valley. The Mirwaiz was killed. His funeral became a protest demonstration against India. Police opened fire, killing more than they would admit. V P Singh sent Jagmohan as governor, who in turn instituted a harsh regime.

Rajiv Gandhi tried to keep some semblance of the momentum he had created with Benazir Bhutto alive. During a visit to Namibia, where both he and V P Singh were present, he introduced the new Prime Minister to Benazir's national security adviser Iqbal Akhund. The message that V P Singh repeatedly received from Benazir was that she-and implicitly Pakistan-had nothing to do with the uprising in Kashmir. She even sent a special emissary, a man who is back in the news, a former high commissioner for Pakistan in Delhi, Abdus Sattar. Both V P Singh and his foreign minister Inder Gujral could hardly disguise their cynicism about such assurances. The irony is that Benazir Bhutto's ignorance may have been genuine.

Rajiv Gandhi and Benazir Bhutto shared at least one problem. Because they were elected to power they assumed they understood the complexities of power. In fact both inherited an election victory with the martyrdom of a parent. Both needed to learn on the job, and took too long to do so. Destiny made them Prime Minister when they were young, and then snatched time away from their grasp.

Rajiv Gandhi's government had frayed at both the edges and the centre when he launched his Pakistan initiative; his own credibility had soured. However, there was no objective reason for any dramatic or radical rethink on Kashmir in the late Eighties: the problem of Kashmir waxed only after Rajiv began to wane.

Benazir Bhutto's naivete may be understandable in retrospect but that hardly makes it more forgivable. Worse, she learnt nothing from the dismissal of her first government, within a year or so of Rajiv's defeat. She thought that she had been removed because of her rapport with Rajiv Gandhi and her Indian manoeuvres. That was a symptom, not a cause. No one in Pakistan's Establishment could have seriously considered her unpatriotic; she had no reason to be. Her problem was her visceral hatred of the Army that had supported the hanging of her father and kept Gen. Zia in power, and her suspicion of the Army as an institution and its senior officers as a permanent enemy. She could not coexist with an Army that had become a major power centre in Pakistan. Gen. Zia had used his 10 years to create political space for the Army; this fitted well with a demographic fact, that a quarter of Pakistan now has some economic interest in the armed forces either immediate or past employment of some member of the family. She jostled with this powerful force instead of accommodating it. She had neither the party cadre nor sufficient reserves of sustained popular support to take on the Army. She overestimated herself. But when she came to power a second time, agains fortuitously, she thought she could appease her tormentors by being holier than thou on India. She became hysterical on Kashmir, using language that would embarrass a Jihadi in an effort to mobilise support in an election she would lose to Nawaz Sharif (who kept his cool and advocated better relations with India). Sitting in Delhi at that time was the sphinx P.V.Narasimha Rao. The visual comparison between a ranting Benazir and a pouting Rao as the two dominated their respective obedient television channels was almost funny. Interestingly, the only time that Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif co-operated was when they tried to unite against the generals. Benazir was having a baby at the time, and enjoying two honeymoons: one with her husband, and a political one with Nawaz Sharif, who even sent flowers to her hospital bed. The generals were not necessarily better equipped intellectually than their civilian competitors, but they had the enormous base of the one stable institution in a country that has not been able to create a reliable polity.

Hindsight provides a better line of vision. When Benazir Bhutto claimed that she had no knowledge of any Pak help to Kashmiri insurgents in 1989 and 1990 she was only providing evidence of her own impotence. What is clear now is that certain elements, across the arc from Kashmir to Afghanistan, decided of follow up the Decade of Punjab with the decade of Kashmir. The objective situation was right for this. The war in Afghanistan was over, leaving thousands of trained, motivated and well armed fighters with no place to go for a holy war. (Many of there continued their holy war in Muslim countries like Egypt and Algeria). These men could not have been used in Punjab; a jihadi can hardly go to Paradise via Khalistan. But Kashmir could became a battleground for such martyrs, as the killing fields of Afghanistan had once been. One of the preceived problems of militancy in Kashmir had been the Kashmiri's reluctance to indulge in violence. A gun culture had to be induced into the Valley, leaving the rest to the inevitable fallout of a few years of point and counterpoint between insurgents and India's security forces.

Battles take time. They may also be independent of other impulses. Clearly Nawaz Sharif felt some urge to practice what he had preached during the election campaign that gave him an unprecedented majority. While he moved towards Lahore, the parallel policy begun some years ago found its culmination in Kargil. In a remarakable repetition of what had happened in 1990 Nawaz Sharif sent word to Delhi that he was not behind Kargil, although he did not deny complete knowledge of what was happening. Was Nawaz Sharif being disingenuous? Frankly, it does not matter much now.

For those who ran the Kargil sideshow are officially in charge of Pakistan, and they want their own dialogue with India. Is this an invitation to an Abbasid dinner? (The Abbasids seized power in Baghdad after they invited their rivals to a dinner at which they massacred them).

Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee is, understandably, a little anxious: a man who has felt cold steel in his back is loathe to leave it exposed a second time. Is there a rational reason for a change a attitude in the Pakistan Army? Sentiment is best left out of calculations; seven if exists, it is too sloppy to hold anyting together. Is there a hard and rational reason to expect sincerity? Yes.

Why? Does the Pakistan Army accept that its policy has failed in Kashmir? No. That is not the reason. Irrespective of what we may feel, Islamabad does not believe that its Kashmir Decade has been a failure. They believe that these 10 years have weakened India economically and psychologically. Nor do the generals believe that they were defeated in Kargil, where we had to conquer to won and they had to survive to declare victory.

It was the denouement that was critical. Bill Clinton has now revealed what was known already, that he forced Islamabad to withdraw its own and auxiliary forces from the hilltops where the battle raged. One thing became clear after Kargil, that was not a solution. India had the power to reverse any tide. Second, the world was not ready to stand by and watch two nuclear powers battle. Suddenly, the meaning of international intervention, which Pakistan has always wanted, changed. America twisted Pakistan's arm because it had clearly initiated hostilities. The world wants a settlement, not a victory.

This is the world of the 21st century, not of the 1950s or even the 1980s and 1990s.

Equally, India and Pakistan, now rescued from any self-induced sense of insecurity by the nuclear status, are at a point where their people dearly want to leave the poison of confrontation behind and challenge that poverty-heritage and Benazir Bhutto spoke of. Who could want nuclear destruction when there is so much to live for? There is so much faith in the idea that if only India and Pakistan cooperated they could leap towards prosperity. It is a dream waiting for its chance. And, of course, the Army and the BJP came in power in Pakistan and India.

Tackling water problem in State

By Raja Ji

In recent, years, there has been an increasing realisation of the antic-ipated scarcity of water in the future. The rapid increase in the State's population as well as higher per capita consumption of water for a higher standard living has led to more and more consumption of water for domestic, industrial, agricultural and hydro power generation purposes.

City of Jammu at present is served by both the surface water of river Tawi and ground water drawn from tube wells and dig wells. However, the rural areas of Jammu still depend upon the water drawn from the ponds, the lakes and from the streams. Of particular concern are areas where water scarcity (defined as having more than 600 people for every million cubic meters of water) already exists.

Statements of Mr Sagar that Govt. is fully committed to provide drinking water facilities in every nook and corner of the State, is seen no where. In water scarce area the people say; do this Govt. need another term for fulfilling this statement. There is no water shortage in Jammu or Kashmir Division yet many trips of water tankers are being pressed into service to meet the requirement of the people. Control rooms are being set up to monitor the drinking water supply position at various places but all on papers and taken as a political statement by thirsty people.

Sometimes people in general think that free use of water is a matter of their right. Instead of thinking that the water being key resource for survival of life on this planet is being carelessly used, squandered in utter disregard of consequence for future of mankind. People put the water pumps at the main connection (Supply) to suck whole water resulting in less supply of water to that area. Who is responsible for this? We cannot expect people to be having the civic sense or sense of sharing concern. We only need threats through paid advertisements published in News Papers by the Superintending Engineer (Urban). Publishing is all loss to the Govt. Exchequer. No action has been taken against the defaulters till date.

Officially at present 5.05 crore gallons of drinking water is available against the total requirement of 6.30 crore gallons for a pupulation of 14 lakhs of Greater Jammu.

Now let us also put a quick look on the Govt's claim for augmenting water supply in the State during its four years rule i.e. Sagar Se Gager Tak, 171 villages hamlets in Jammu and 121 villages hamlets in Kashmir being provided water through tanker service under drinking water augmentation programme, 40 lakh gallon per day water added to the existing system of Srinagar and 52 lakhs gallons per day in Jammu city, 101 tube wells dug out of which 46 in Jammu and 55 in Kashmir, 48 water supply schemes under taken in border areas. 15 more villages provided drinking water facilities, of these 569 hamlets benefitted in Jammu, 511 in Kashmir and 93 in Ladakh. A celebrated Urban water supply scheme taken up in 27 towns, 13 in Kashmir and 14 in Jammu, work completed in 11 towns etc. etc. and etc.

Imagine how many crores have been spent on these works till date. But people are still thirsty. The undisputed fact is that water is increasingly becoming a scarce resource in our State. Think success, forget failure, is this Mr Sagar's slogan. Yes, the agenda prepared in this plan is to make a survey for Ganesh Nag water supply scheme for Chowghem block, Sitli filteration plant, Jammu, compensation to State for losses it suffered as a result of the Indus water treaty. It is estimated that State suffers Rs. 6000 crores loss per year in terms of energy. Loss and 352 crores per day in terms of agriculture produce. Delay caused in construction of Shalipurkandi Dam on Ravi by Punjab Govt. and loss to State for want of water allocation amounted to over Rs. 750 crore etc. etc. and etc. This all is to be suhmitted to the Central Govt. as a money siphoning plan.

In Kashmir every politician in power as a matter of trend, always and every now and then wants Kashmir package from the centre. It may be KPs Rehabilitation plan for settlement in Say Panun Kashmir i.e. Govt's allotted Districts, drought package, Hail storm package etc. etc. Now it is the turn of water package.

Although during the last financial year as many as Rs. 42 crores were spent in execution of 166 different water supply schemes in Jammu Division alone. During the current financial year Rs. 40 crores have been sanctioned for this purpose. A Rs. 32 crore immediae proposal for drinking water requirement for Jammu division was presented to the Central team of officers that recently visited the State. Under the disguise of sensitive states where to search for credibility. Now the Centre's water package in terms of train full of water is coming to Jammu soon, where and how.

Doing with the west

By B K Karkra

The West never had it so good. In the centuries gone by, it had colonies. Today, it has the wealth of peace and rules the world eonomy sitting at home. This is how it is happening.

Normally, a currency is worth what it buys. However, for some reasons, this purchasing-power parity principle does not apply to the valuations of various global currencies. In fact, the currencies of the developed countries of the West appear to be abnormally over-valued, but strangely, these are quite in demand still. The impact of this apparent artificiality in the international monetary system, of which we also seem to be a silent victim, deserves to be studied in some detail.

We may begin by looking in to the working of the purchasing-power parity principle first. The idea was initially mooted in the United Nations Organisation many years back in the context of measuring the poverty levels in the developing world on more realistic basis. An U.S. dollar is currently worth about forty-seven Indian rupees as per the international exchange rates. However, forty-seven rupees would buy nearly six times more for a common man in India than what an U.S. dollar would buy for his counterpart in the States. A British pound that is available for around sixty-five rupees will not carry you beyond twenty K.M. in London in a city bus. Here, one hundred and thirty rupees, worth just about two pounds sterling, would easily take you all the way from Delhi to Chandigarh, a distance of over two hundred and fifty K.M. In Paris, you need two and a half French Francs, equivalent of fifteen rupees, to empty your bladder in a public toilet. In India, a small family can have a square meal at home within this amount.

Our Gross Domestic Product for the year 1999-2000 stood at Rs. 1569868 Crores or around 334 billion U.S. dollars at the then current price levels. As against this, our G.D.P. was assessed at as high as 2230 billion U.S. dollars after applying the purchasing-power parity principle for the purposes of the World Development Indicators. Put simply, it means that the U.S. dollar stands inflated by around six times of its real value from our common mans point of view. He is, therefore, left wondering why an U.S. dollar should be selling for more than eight rupees. At the international exchange rates, our per capita income works out to less than a dollar a day, but in reality it is close to five dollars. Measured on the purchasing-power parity principle, we are not all that miserable a nation that we appear from New York. We are, in fact, the fourth largest economy of the world after the U.S.A., China and Japan. Nonetheless, when our G.D.P. gets divided by a billion, the nations with much smaller population like the U.K., Germany, France, Italy and even Brazil surge much ahead of us in prosperity levels and we find ourselves standing among the poorest nations of the world.

Why is the Indian rupee so poorly placed in relation to the Western currencies? I posed this question to Mr. Bijoy Premi, the Managing Director (Europe) of a renowned multinational company based in Singapore. Mr. Premi, being a person of Indian origin settled in London for over three decades, has seen both sides of the world. He explained that India today was prepared to buy the West at any cost. Plenty of black money was floating in our economy and some Indians had it sacks full of it. Such moneyed persons were always prepared to purchase U.S. dollars, pounds sterling, Francs and Euros at any price to have the privilege of visiting various European and American destinations for fun. Then, the West held monopolies over many technologies, pharmaceutical drugs and so many other goods and services that we needed rather badly. These had to be, thus, purchased on their terms. However, our predicament had some thing to do with our obsession with gold also that was, in any case, available everywhere in the world at rates cheaper than those prevailing in India. I thought Mr. Premi had just said it. No wonder, even around five centuries back, Babur remarked in his 'Baburnama' that the only things good about India were that it was a big country and had plenty of gold.

We had nothing to take from the West when they came to do business in this part of the world centuries back. They had to, thus, pay for their purchases in bullion. The East India Company was in quite a bit of bother on this count when they commenced their trading activities in our subcontinent. They had lot many things to take from us, but we were not interested in any of the things that they could offer us. At long last, we started purchasing their cheap drill cloth to their great economic relief. They came in to their own only after their military victories at Plassey (1757 AD) and Buxer (1764 AD) that won them the Diwani of Bengal. They were then able to purchase goods from us without paying in gold out of the revenue surpluses of Bengal, generated through ruthless cruelty. It was their political domination and the industrial revolution back home that eventually enabled them to squeeze us of the bulk of our wealth.

It is really sad that we now find ourselves under a high situational compulsion to dance to their economic tunes. We do not hold monopoly over a single item of critical importance to them (after our monopoly over jute was effectively neutralized by them). Even in the sunrise area of our strength, information technology, we are just allowing ourselves to be used by them. There is no doubt at all as to who is calling the shots in this area, though we are earning a lot of foreign exchange (so dear to our heart) through our I.T. related services to them. We have already won the battle against political imperialism. Now, we must prepare ourselves for struggle against economic imperialism, so that we get in to a position to do business with the West on more equitable terms.

 
 



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