[Whether the ambitious plans in industries like mining and manufacturing will work out remains to be seen. In November, a consortium of public and private Indian companies, led by the state-owned Steel Authority of India, won a bid to mine in three states in Afghanistan, which includes the construction of a six million-ton steel plant, an 800-megawatt power plant and 200 kilometers each of road, rail and transmission lines – as well as a pledge to set aside one percent of profits for establishing educational and medical facilities.]
By Heather Timmons
Gurinder Osan/Associated Press
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, right, and
Hamid Karzai, shake hands after a meeting in
|
As the United
States
winds down its military engagement in Afghanistan , optimism is growing about the role India can play to stabilize and develop the country.
This week, visiting United States Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta encouraged
Indian leaders to take
a more active role in Afghanistan , involvement once considered by the United States as merely an opportunistic way for India to antagonize Pakistan .
The United
States ’
encouragement is hardly needed. India plans to “intensify” its already “high
level political engagement and broad-based development assistance in a wide
range of sectors,” India’s minister for external affairs, S.M. Krishna, told
Afghanistan’s visiting foreign minister, Zalmai Rassoul, in a speech in New
Delhi last month. With
assistance from Europe and the United States expected to drop substantially, India may be left as one of Afghanistan ’s most prominent aid partners.
Here on India Ink, we have been asking: Does this make any sense? On
first glance, at least, India seems an unlikely provider of development assistance
because of the serious issues troubling it at home. Many of the same things
that Afghanistan needs, from infrastructure to education, India is having troubles providing for many citizens, even
without the regular threat of attacks from the Taliban.
India’s state-run power industry struggles to get enough fuel thanks to mismanagement and bureaucracy, even
its brightest youth can’tland a spot at a good university and about third of its citizens live in destitute poverty, with hundreds of millions
malnourished. The current central government is grappling with a growing
deficit, shrinking economic growth and an increasingly dissatisfied voter base.
It’s no surprise that India ’s Afghanistan plans have been greeted with some skepticism.
“In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king,” said Rajeev
Malik, an economist at CLSA, a research and brokerage house, who has been a
sharp critic of India ’s fiscal policy and government. “India has not managed to fix these issues itself,” he said,
but added that the country “probably has more experience than Afghanistan .”
Courtesy of SEWAA Self Employed Women’s Association center
in Kabul , Afghanistan .
More ambitious plans are in place. In October of last year, when Afghanistan ’s president, Hamid Karzai, visited India , the two countriessigned a strategic agreement that
said India would train and equip Afghan security forces. This
month, India is holding meetings for regional investors interested in
Afghanistan in New
Delhi .
Invitees include Turkey , China and Pakistan . Over a dinner in May in New Delhi , Mr. Rassoul told Indian government advisers Afghanistan would like India to concentrate on building up governance, law courts and
health care.
“We don’t want a fundamentalist Afghanistan , just like everyone else,” explained Syed Akbaruddin,
spokesman for India ’s Ministry of External Affairs, in a recent interview.
“We don’t want an Afghanistan that slides backward.”
The two countries share ties cemented long ago, he said, citing the
well-known Rabindranath Tagore story “Kabuliwala,” about an Afghan fruit
seller who befriends an Indian girl. India has a limited physical presence on the ground in Afghanistan , he said, which should quell concerns that India is focused on containing or antagonizing Pakistan . “What do we have in Afghanistan that is a threat to Pakistan ?,” he asked rhetorically.
Staunch supporters of India ’s involvement say sheer practicality of the alliance
makes it work.
“Today the average Afghan knows that for many of the things that would
lead to an improved quality of life, India offers the most viable option,” said C. Uday Bhaskar, a
security analyst based in New
Delhi .
To explain, he offered an example: The quality of higher education in Britain or the United States or Australia might be better than in India , he said, but most Afghans can’t afford Western
universities, and if even they could, they probably wouldn’t get a visa to go
anyway.
Much of what is on Afghanistan ’s “wish list” can be “enabled in a considerable degree
by India ,” Mr. Bhaskar said. President Karzai himself attended an
Indian university, doing his postgraduate studies at Himachal
Pradesh University , in Shimla.
Others note that the “aid” relationship is not new. “People forget
this has been going on quietly for a long time,” said K. Shankar Bajpai, a
former ambassador to China , Pakistan and the United States , who is now an analyst with Delhi Policy Group. For six
decades, India was “very much engaged” in Afghanistan , working on everything from building tunnels through the
mountains of the Hindu Kush to education and health programs.
Recently, the two countries have built up a “friendly relationship
without some of the imperial hang-ups that spoiled Delhi and Kabul ’s relationship in the past,” he said. In a sign of this
friendliness, in March, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called Mr. Karzai to
congratulate him on the birth of his daughter.
Another factor to consider is that while India ’s development problems weigh heavily on the country’s
poor and middle class, facilities for the wealthy in India are often world class. Many of Afghanistan ’s wealthy are already beneficiaries, and these
upper-class industries and ties are only expected to grow.
Take health care: India ’s private hospitals, and especially those in New Delhi , serve as de facto doctors’ offices for wealthy Afghans,
who are just a two-hour flight away. Hospitals like Max Healthcare’s giant
facility in Saket have special facilitators for Afghan patients who come for
everything from in vitro fertilization treatments to heart trouble, doctors
say. Often, their Afghan patients pay in crisp United States dollar bills.
On the other end of the economic spectrum, at least one Indian charity
has also been successful in Afghanistan .
The Self Employed Women’s Association(SEWA), which
starts women’s self-help groups, has been running vocational training programs
in Afghanistan since 2008, teaching women to make jam and sew clothing,
among other skills. The group said it has trained 3,000 Afghan women so far,
despite two fatal terrorist attacks on the team in Kabul . The women, who are often orphans or widows, use the
training to earn an income outside their home.
Whether the ambitious plans in industries like mining and
manufacturing will work out remains to be seen. In November, a consortium of
public and private Indian companies, led by the state-owned Steel Authority of
India, won a bid to mine in three states in Afghanistan, which includes the
construction of a six million-ton steel plant, an 800-megawatt power plant and
200 kilometers each of road, rail and transmission lines – as well as a pledge
to set aside one percent of profits for establishing educational and medical
facilities.
“We are very bullish about this,” the chairman of SAIL said when the
deal was announced. Total investment by the Indian companies is pegged
at $10.8 billion.
The big numbers, heavy-duty infrastructure plans and optimistic
outlook are a stark contrast to SAIL’s India performance. In February, SAIL said quarterly
profits fell by more
than 40 percent from the same period the year before, thanks in part to higher
raw material costs and SAIL’s inability to get coal from another state-owned
company.
@ The New York Times
Brussels , 7 June 2012 : The International Crisis Group
strongly condemns the alleged plot to assassinate human rights activist Ms.
Asma Jilani Jahangir, a member of the Crisis Group Board of Trustees and former
President of the Supreme Court Bar Association. Crisis Group calls on the
government of Pakistan
to take prompt action to pre-empt any such plot and immediately investigate the
source of these threats, to be followed by prosecutions as appropriate.
[“This most recent threat against Asma is not only reprehensible and
unacceptable, it is a challenge to the rule of law in Pakistan and a clear statement
of disrespect for international human rights norms, which Asma has defended and
advanced throughout her career”, said Tom Pickering, Chairman of the Board of
the International Crisis Group.]
“With this foreknowledge and
warning, it would be unconscionable for Pakistan 's
governing authorities not to take every possible precaution to protect Asma and
her family”, said Louise Arbour, President and CEO of the International Crisis
Group. “They must investigate the allegations immediately and thoroughly and
bring to justice those who would make these kinds of threats against the life
of this courageous woman”, she said.
Ms. Jahangir has served on the
Board of Trustees of the International Crisis Group since 2002. A former
President of the Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan, she has been twice
elected as Chairperson of the independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan.
She is also a Director of the AGHS Legal Aid Cell, which provides free legal
assistance to the needy. In 1998, Ms. Jahangir was appointed United Nations
Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions to the
Commission on Human Rights, and in 2004 she was named United Nations Special
Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief for the Human Rights Council.
She has been subject to threats
and harassment throughout her career, including being placed under house arrest
and later imprisoned for participating in the movement to restore political and
fundamental rights under the military regime in 1983. She was again placed
under house arrest in 2007 by then-president General Pervez Musharraf. Due to her
efforts to secure justice for disadvantaged groups, she has been frequently
threatened by militant groups.
“This most recent threat against
Asma is not only reprehensible and unacceptable, it is a challenge to the rule
of law in Pakistan and a clear statement of disrespect for international human
rights norms, which Asma has defended and advanced throughout her career”, said
Tom Pickering, Chairman of the Board of the International Crisis Group.