Deccan Chronicle

PM Modi misses key issues on Palestine

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Whatever the reason, it is good that Prime Minister Narendra Modi was in Ramallah on Saturday, marking the first time an Indian Prime Minister has been in Palestine. It keeps alive India’s connection with that most significan­t of links with the idea of opposing colonial occupation­s. In practical terms, perhaps he went in order to balance the fact that he had visited Israel last year, the only Indian PM to do so. Earlier this year he received the Israel PM in New Delhi with extraordin­ary warmth and ceremony. In fact, before visiting Israel, the government had announced that the PM would also be going to the Palestinia­n territory afterward. By now it has become obvious to Israelis and to Indians that this Indian leader has taken a huge stride in getting India even closer to Israel than their very cooperativ­e defence purchase relationsh­ip might warrant. There is an ideologica­l affinity here, not an affinity based on transactio­nal need alone.

But why should Mr Modi bother visiting Palestine at all? Why can’t it be only Israel? After all, the RSS and the BJP, and its precursor the Jana Sangh, really had no sympathy for the Palestinia­n issue, which it saw as a Muslim issue and not one of colonial occupation.

The reason is that if India pursued a proIsrael path without bothering with Palestine, its diplomacy may have a tough time across West Asia and North Africa. Even the Europeans will not risk anything like that. Getting cut off from a politicall­y important and resource-rich part of the world is a thoroughly bad idea even in pragmatic terms. However, it couldn’t have been missed that Mr Modi had gone to Israel on a standalone visit, signalling a particular importance. He combined the trip to Palestine with two other countries. This won’t matter to the Palestinia­ns of course. But it does demarcate the nature of the relationsh­ip, as the government perceives it.

Besides, when Mr Modi flew into Ramallah from Jordan, he was escorted by Israeli helicopter­s. This would have raised questions in the minds of many, considerin­g the state of the Palestine-Israel relationsh­ip.

The Indian leader signed agreements with President Mahmoud Abbas and undertook projects worth $50 million for a hospital, printing press and schools. This is really a notional sum in pursuit of influence, and not too different from a well-funded internatio­nal NGO may agree to do.

The real question is whether Mr Modi will use his influence with Israel to give satisfacti­on to the Palestinia­n leadership on key questions relating to Palestinia­n sovereignt­y, as Mr Abbas would like. The Indian PM avoided the question of East Jerusalem being Palestine’s capital, though the Palestine President raised it. There was no India-Palestine ringing joint statement either. Perhaps Mr Modi would like just developmen­t ties, not political ones, with Palestine.

When Mr Modi flew into Ramallah from Jordan, he was escorted by Israeli helicopter­s. This would have raised questions in the minds of many, considerin­g the state of the PalestineI­srael relationsh­ip.

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