Friday, December 25, 2009



We often crib about the poor state of affairs of our nation. We are ruthless at attacking our elected representatives on their governance. We have started loving to hate our governments on issues such as decrepit roads, improper sanitation facilities in the country, malnutrition, the fact that 70% of the nation is still below the poverty line and more recently the security issues. I think it is fair for the people of this country to be unhappy and dissatisfied even after 60 years of independence and despite now being well into the 21st century. The China- comparison only makes the resentment grow among us.


I sometimes can’t help but draw an analogy wherein I see India as one huge, mammoth-sized machine with thousands of complicated mechanical parts with grease all around them (obviously to make the parts function smoothly), yet rusted at most ends. A machine that should function 24 hours round the clock, 365 days in a year, a machine which is always under maintenance (which from the face of it looks shoddy), a machine which produces all kinds of noises, it creeks, it groans, it spews oil only to suggest that this is one old dilapidated machine which needs a replacement. Yet, the machine does not stop functioning.


When we got independence from the British Empire, we not only inherited the railway network or the postal service or the English language which were solid foundations for India that was to grow and become self-sufficient, but the codicil to the British will also prescribed for us- a major chunk of the rural population, bureaucracy, hunger, depleted reserves of every kind from food grains to foreign currency… and ofcourse our neighbor Pakistan. Yet, we had a visionary in Nehru who gave us the IIMs, the IITs, the public sector. He launched programmes to harness nuclear energy. He asked for dams to be built, power projects to be erected. No wonder he is called the ‘Architect of Modern India’.


But we faced 2 wars during his term as India’s PM. Today we are continually pestered and needled by China who claims its right over Tawang which is very much a part of our Arunachal Pradesh. The McMahon line is still disputed. Our foreign ministry seems to be always kowtowing China. Then there has been an obvious chronic problem on the west side with Pakistan. They continue to wound us all across with their terrorism nexus. The government, as we know, keeps providing evidences to the Pakistani government against the culprits of the 26/11 attack so as to force Pakistan to bring them to book, but only in vain so far. We spend humungous amounts on our defense and internal security. Our intelligence agencies work round the clock to foil plots, yet the terrorist acts sometimes seem inexorable. To add to our government’s woes, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka too demand a separate foreign policy for each one of them.
As if the external threat was not enough, at home the government faces the rise of the Maoists who have managed to hold the government at ransom time and time again.
Moving from security issues, there are other vagaries the nation faces today. To list a few such as, an irresponsible opposition party in the parliament, being awarded the Commonwealth Games for 2010 but being frequently doubted on our ability to host them, the Satyam scam and the after effects of it, the world financial crisis which forced the government to dole out incentives to save our economy, poor rains, spiraling food inflation, being stocked out of rice and having to import it, the greenhouse gases issue that has recently forced the country to pledge emission cuts in the near future possibly at the cost of development, the ailing government airline company, the ever volatile prices of crude that hit everyone of us, the sectarian politics advocated by the Thackreys or the Mayawatis of this country, rains or lack of them in key agrarian states of India, not to forget a slew of scams viz., the Koda scam, the Babri Masjid report, the submarine scam, army ration pilferage scam, the 2-G spectrum swindle, the illegal monies in Swiss bank accounts and the list can run into pages.


Despite having drawn a grim picture of the ugly machine that India is, we still have managed to record better than expected figures of 2nd quarter growth showing light at the end of these financially woeful days. We continue to be counted as drivers of world economy in the future (along with China ofcourse). We continue to hold elections in a manner so as to attract awe from study groups from around the world. We continue to play an important role in redeveloping Afghanistan. We continue to be heard at world forums. We continue to attract foreign investments. We continue to give the fairest trial to Ajmal Kasab. We have finally been de-hyphenated from Pakistan at the international level. The machine continues to function.
But, all this only makes me more confused and fuddled. Should I as a citizen be happy with the state of affairs of this nation as we continue to progress, however slowly, despite the challenges (listed above) which are more or less inextricable? Obviously, to make our ministers more accountable is an answer. Or should we ask for more and be justified for being a dissatisfied lot? I don’t have the answers to the above. But India’s case doesn’t cease to amaze me and I for one will surely continue tracking it only in quest for answers.



4 comments:

  1. Being right about most things above, and the ensuing genuine confusion regarding the state of India's growth made me realize that India is & has always been a land of contradictions. However, the only reason we realize it is because we are directly affected by it, and because we have never seen other nations inside out. I would list the following examples:

    1. Check out the contradictions in US, ruled largely by corporations (& not the administration), denied basic health amenities (something we Indians take for granted!!)and die due to insufficient healthcare, denied right to livelihood - as a farmer (check out various cases of Monsanto vs independant farmers) and have to turn over their farms to corporates as they cannot afford to farm anymore, denied right to information (check out cases for Genetically Modified foods) and die of allergic shocks as a result, selectively media coverage & access on America's war on terror & elsewhere), and much more. It seems to me that as the American society moves forward, it sheds a lot of basic rights which we as Indians are enjoying today (but may not, since we ape the Americans)

    2. Its hardly necessary to check out Chinese policies where thousands of housing schemes were razed overnight for Beijing Olympic infrastructure, people face floods every year without respite in the three Gorges dam region, Tibetans & Mongoloids are treated as secondary citizens in the far-out regions, more people have mercs & bmws, but many more work 16 hour days without time to even visit the loo and may not earn the equivalent of a merc's tyre in a year... tell me about contradictions!!!

    3. Europeans are not far behind by excluding east Europeans from mainstream economy, their own policies driven by American debt, their infrastructure driven by the east european labour, their riches coming from hundreds of years of accumulated wealth from former colonies, monopoly businesses like nuclear power & aeroplane manufacture, their companies holding stock in war prone & rebel African countries - they seem to be living off the rest of the world!!!! & yes, their citizens face the same problems as the Americans - only lesser because the countries are smaller & hence tightly controlled...

    The gist of the examples lies not in comparing us with ourselves, but showing everyone faces a different problem. While we may be as imperfect as the others - our balance of facilities and troubles being pathetic, and yet we - as a people - never seem to give up - never ask for 40 hour work week - never think of invading any other country - believe in cleaning our home before asking others (aka Copenhagen) - are willing to talk before showing the danda - want peace with everyone even at cost to ourselves - provide aid to impoverished countries even though we don't have enough to eat ourselves - have a constitutional duty to listen to each citizen - run a 150 year old rail network with the same infrastructure - run the same administrative service that was created to constrict the public at large & still achieve worthwhile results - reach the moon - launch satellites for even the developed countries - and yet not profiting by sale of even one major weapon on earth!!! (which by the way is the largest business on earth..)

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  3. I pretty agree with Honshu
    Our country is a docile one, with all the values in place. However corrupt a politician is, whatever media footage he needs, he cannot negate the INDIANism in all of us - which is to help others without any expectations. The freedom struggle which was fought half a century back has made us humble. Also our "unity in diversity", has taught us many a things, like to adjust in whatever circumstances one faces.

    But this doesn't mean, we should sit and relax. Even goodness needs to be worked upon, or we might get pounced upon by tigers around us. Rather than comparing ourselves with other nations and their problems, we should compete with ourselves in order make this nation live a good life!!!

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  4. really well written! I especially liked that you presented both sides with equal gusto so you let the reader think for themselves, really very very nice, everything very succintly put:) Plus, its true, we are a patriotic lot sometimes when we think of how amazing the country is but there are basic problems ESPECIALLY obvious corruption and inefficiency that actually disgust all of us, so it is quite a quandary..

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