Deccan Chronicle

Why India doesn’t have friendly neighbours

- Aakar Patel Aakar Patel is a writer, columnist and executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal (India)

Alittle under 30 years ago, after Vishwanath Pratap Singh became Prime Minister, he met with Sri Lanka’s President Ranasinghe Premadasa. Singh, a polite man, says he was surprised when the first thing Premadasa said to him was: “When are you taking your Army back?”

The reference was to the Indian Peace Keeping Force, a group of soldiers from the Indian Army sent to Lanka to fight the Tamil Tigers. India had deployed tens of thousands of its jawans (over 1,000 of whom would die fighting the Tamilians), and we had thought of it as a sacrifice for the Lankans. However, the Lankans, according to Singh, saw it as interferen­ce after a point and wanted the Indians out of their country.

The civil war in Lanka ended with a victory of the Sinhalese nationalis­ts, and today Lanka is no longer in the influence of India as it was 30 years ago. If there is a nation that many Lankans see as interferin­g, it is China. The giant ports being developed by the Chinese in Colombo and Hambantota are projects of a scale India cannot compete with. However, they come with a compromise, which the China model of developmen­t brings with it. There is no time here for details, but to some extent it means more or less like having Chinese colonies on your land. And to a larger extent, it means having to take on debt from the Chinese that you may or may not be able to afford.

The Chinese are executing today the most important and largest infrastruc­ture project of the world. It is called One Belt, One Road. The belt is a series of highways and the “road” is a network of ports and sea routes.

It held a meeting in May to show its vision and India boycotted it. However, all of India’s neighbours attended, except for one, Bhutan.

Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Maldives and Nepal all attended, leading to fears of encircleme­nt in the community that thinks about strategic affairs in India.

India warned those attending that the partnershi­p with the Chinese would come at a heavy price, but almost nobody heard us. The question is: Why not? The answer, to return to the original point of this article, is that almost all of India’s neighbours either dislike or suspect us.

Even in Hindu Nepal, Indians are not particular­ly popular. We have no neighbour with whom we have a relationsh­ip like the United States has with Canada. All our borders seem to be like the US and Mexico’s, or worse.

Perhaps the fault is entirely that of our neighbours’. Certainly the average Indian holds the impression that we are victims of other nations’ mischief.

This is coupled with the prejudiced view many of us have of our neighbours. We believe Bangladesh­is are illegal immigrants, Nepalis are watchmen and Pakistanis are terrorists.

Anti-India riots broke out in Nepal a few years ago in which people were killed and property was damaged. This came after a report that actor Hrithik Roshan said he hated Nepalis. Roshan had said no such thing, and the report was false, but the thing to ask is: Why did the Nepalis believe it immediatel­y?

Today Nepalis in the northern part of the country think India is playing games by dividing their country into hill-people and plains-people and instigatin­g a long and painful blockade against the former (who are the elite). They also think India is interferin­g with their constituti­onal processes.

It is possible that India has legitimate concerns and interests in Nepal. However, we must ask ourselves is why our relations with a Hindu country are in such tatters that we could not get them to side with us against the Chinese.

Even with Bhutan, our only “friend” against the Chinese, our relationsh­ip is not one of equals. Under Nehru India imposed on Bhutan something called a Friendship Treaty, which actually was nothing of the sort. The treaty gave India a veto on Bhutan’s foreign policy. The exact words are “the Government of Bhutan agrees to be guided by the advice of the Government of India in regard to its external relations.”

This was removed only a few years ago, I think under Atal Behari Vajpayee.

Nehru inherited an aggressive­ly expansioni­st imperial state which had tentative borders. Neighbouri­ng states feared the India of the British Raj, and legitimate­ly. Our failure has been that we have not been able to overcome that fear and distrust and build relationsh­ips that are meaningful and based on respect and mutual interest.

That failure showed in our isolation at the belt and road summit. India will not be able to match for a long time China’s economic influence on our neighbours. But that does not stop us from being real friends with them.

Neighbouri­ng states feared the India of the British Raj, and legitimate­ly. Our failure has been that we have not been able to overcome that fear and distrust and build relationsh­ips that are meaningful and based on respect and mutual interest.

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