Commentary/Rajeev Srinivasan
The Brits are willing to apologise, and our PM says, 'Please don't'!
I don't know if it's just me, but I have the distinct feeling that life is
getting more Kafkaesque. I have noticed that every time I turn around, there is yet another event that causes me to do a double-take: ironies that are sometimes
delicious, sometimes wry -- things I wish I didn't have to see. Sometimes it's
definitely poetic justice, and I smile; other times, I have to throw up my hands
in despair for this great nation of ours.
Delicious Irony Number 1: The China-Pakistan border fence. Newspaper reports suggest China is fencing off and securing its entire border with Pakistan
and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. Apparently, the Chinese have to worry about
Islamic fundamentalism being exported from Pakistan to the restive Uighur
Muslims in Xinjiang. Sweet irony, indeed.
The Chinese built the Karakoram highway connecting Urumqui in Xinjiang through
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir to Islamabad, with the intent of 'containing' and
encircling India and encouraging secessionists in Kashmir, by supplying Pakistan
with arms of all sorts. The M-11 nuclear-capable missiles that Pakistan has
acquired have travelled down this very highway. He who lives by the sword...
The Uighur Muslims have become increasingly radicalised. The Economist reports,
"China's response has been typically ruthless. Military analysts think that
1 million troops are stationed in Xinjiang... Uighur organisations abroad say
more than 1,000 executions have taken place since the rebellion escalated last year and over 10,000 people have been arrested." By the way, China executed, in
1996, three times as many people as the rest of the world combined! Quite a few were Tibetans and Uighurs. Well, I guess it is another form of birth control.
The Xinjiang region is a Han Chinese colony. A Turkic central Asian state, it
was taken over by the Chinese in 1949, and then has been the target of Han
resettlement and thus demographic warfare. Han Chinese, reports the reliable
Economist, have gone from 5 per cent to 38 per cent of the population since 1949. Any lessons
there for hard-line Indian nationalists regarding Kashmir?
I wonder where the bleeding-heart 'idealists' are -- why aren't they sympathising
with their brethren in Xinjiang? Why isn't Pakistan making a fuss about the
oppression of Muslims on their border -- are Uighur Muslims somehow lesser than
Kashmiri Muslims? Where is the world media, with its great concern for the
underdog? What's good for the goose, etc.
So why isn't there an electrified fence, with shoot-on-sight orders to the
troops, on the Line of Control in Kashmir?
Delicious Irony Number 2: American nuclear activities. A while ago, somebody
named Gaurav Kampani, who apparently works for the National Resources Defense
Council in the US, waxed eloquent on these very pages about why India must cap
its nuclear weapons program. All 'decent' nations have signed the CTBT, implied
this fellow, so India must too. Imagine my pleasant surprise when I saw the
selfsame NRDC had disclosed that the US, in violation of its commitments under
the CTBT, continues to build nuclear weapons.
Furthermore, the recently declassified documents said, if I am not mistaken,
that the US had never had any intention of stopping nuclear testing. The
fig-leaf of 'sub-critical' explosions and computer simulations was used to
justify this stance. But this could have been predicted by looking at the US's
general strategic perspective, which is very simple -- it wants to be the only,
and paramount, big power on earth. I admire Americans for having such a clear and well-articulated vision.
The February 1996 document, referred to as the Stockpile Stewardship and
Management Program, has only been released in part -- and it is damning. It
intends to "ensure the preservation of the core intellectual competence of the
US in nuclear weapons..." Eerily reminiscent of George Kennan, former US foreign
secretary: "The US has 8 per cent of the world's population and enjoys 33 per cent of the
world's resources. US foreign policy is intended to keep it that way." Any
questions?
The NRDC, bless them, said in their comments: "The SSMP is a bloated, but
entirely predictable and largely self-defined response of the nuclear weapons
establishment that has been told to adapt to the imposition of a 'no nuclear
explosions' constraint with virtually all other
basic underpinnings of US nuclear weapons policy left unchanged." Italics mine. In other words, CTBT is immaterial, as far as
the US is concerned.
The American message is the oldest of all -- might is right. It is perfectly okay
to dissimulate, to prevaricate, equivocate, just plain lie, in the pursuit of
protecting national interests. One of these days India's class of wide-eyed,
babe-in-the-woods 'intellectuals' will wake up to this fact. Or so I hope. But
given my not-so-delicious ironies, that day is very far off. Why exactly they
are so purblind, I shall never know. As they say, you can lead a horse to water,
but...
Not-so-delicious Irony Number 1: Inder Gujral and the British Queen. It has only
been a couple of weeks since I complained on these pages that nobody had asked
the British to apologise for Jallianwala Bagh (and my outspoken friend Varsha Bhosle had suggested the same). I am delighted to note I was wrong. It turns out that a group of NRIs had in fact asked for it -- they demanded the British Queen visit Jallianwala Bagh and apologise.
For good measure, they wanted the Kohinoor diamond back too. It is alleged that Maharaja Dalip Singh, the eight-year-old son of Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Punjab,
had been tricked by the British into signing the jewel over to them: it now
forms part of the British crown jewels. When he grew up, apparently Dalip Singh waged an unsuccessful campaign (he was living in Britain then) to get the jewel back.
So far, so good. There is precedent for a British apology: in November 1995,
when the same queen visited New Zealand, an official statement said the
British government proffers "profound regret and apologises unreservedly for the loss of lives because of hostilities arising from this invasion, and the
devastation of property and social life which resulted therefrom." The reference
was to the Maoris, who had been brutalised by British settlers a century ago.
Fairly satisfactory sort of verbiage, one would think. At Jallianwala Bagh,
1,650 bullets were fired, 379 people were killed; a total of 1,600 dead and
wounded. Hardly any of the bullets were useless. Yet, being reasonable, many
Indians would have been content with merely a statement to be read out by the
Queen when she visited Jallianwala Bagh. Although the New Zealand
apology was accompanied by a $100,000,000 restitution and the return of 39,000 acres of land.
But we did not reckon with the formidable Prime Minister Gujral. He made one of
the more mystifying pronouncements a politician has made in recent times. In an
interview with The Observer, London, he allegedly said a) the Queen
should not visit Amritsar at all, b) there was no need to return the
Kohinoor ("India's wealth does not depend on the Kohinoor") and c) (I believe)
there was no need for the British to apologise for anything.
We have had some decidedly odd statements coming out of Delhi. But this takes the cake. Let me see, the Brits are willing to apologise, and an Indian says,
"No, please don't." Does it imply, like, that we deserved Jallianwala Bagh?
Tells me just how out of touch I am with the latest trends in diplomacy. Silly
me, I used to think it was part of the job description of a prime minister to
pursue his country's interests! That bulldog Winston Churchill (obnoxious as his
colonialism was) comes to mind.
Not-so-delicious Irony Number 2: Kerala and bandhs. Pursuant to a petition by a
businessman's association, the Kerala high court recently ruled that bandhs
(enforced shutdown of everyday economic activity for a political purpose) were
not legal. The logic, as I understand it, is that the alleged free speech
protection for the strikers was not so great as to outweigh the economic losses
and inconvenience to the public caused by the forced cessation of activity.
In a state like Kerala, where there have been 11
politically-motivated state-wide strikes in the last year, one would imagine the
general public would be ecstatic, although I am sure certain lumpen elements
would deplore the loss of steady employment as 'enforcers'. I understand the
public was delighted.
But then the Kerala government turned around and did something extraordinary: it
appealed its own high court's decision to the Supreme Court! I am appalled. We
are talking about the utter and ultimate perversion of the satyagraha and other
Gandhian ideals here. Typical caving in to vested interests -- in this case, the powerful
trade unions the Marxists cultivate.
Bandhs cause significant loss of revenue to the state and to the public; they
are a law-and-order nightmare as 'enforcers' frequently assault those who do not
voluntarily shut down shop for the sake of the inquilab; buses are burned,
trains damaged, public buildings attacked. Yet the Kerala government would
rather side with these anti-social elements! Personally, I submit those damaging
public property should be summarily executed.
Not-so-delicious Irony Number 3: The spectacle of the Congress. The Congress
party has clearly fallen on hard times. At its recent confabulation in Calcutta,
president Sitaram Kesri begged Sonia Gandhi to take over the
party. And in the most self-abasing terms, suggesting that he was merely a
seat-warmer, that she was the natural leader of the party.
This reminds me of two incidents: one, D K Barooah during the Emergency coming
up with the inimitable slogan 'India is Indira and Indira is India' -- serious
sycophancy in action; two, in the Ramayana where Bharata rules the kingdom as a
regent, with the absent Rama's sandals on the throne. I wonder if Sonia Gandhi has any shoes to spare.
Sic transit gloria mundi, or roughly, how the mighty have fallen! There used to
be Congress presidents of the calibre of Subhas Chandra Bose, Jawaharlal Nehru,
Annie Besant -- people of obvious merit even if one didn't necessarily agree with
their views. I find it hard to imagine Subhas Chandra Bose asking some foreigner
of no credentials whatsoever to lead the nation.
What, after all, are Sonia Gandhi's credentials? None that are immediately
visible to the naked eye, I am afraid. She merely happens to be married into the
Nehru dynasty. For Congressmen to believe this is reason enough to elevate her
to demigod status shows a) desperation, b) contempt for the intelligence of the
masses. I hope the masses aren't really that dumb.
The irony here is that Mahatma Gandhi was of the opinion that after freedom, the Congress should disband itself. Apparently, 50 years on, it has.
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