The Sunday Guardian

‘Engaging with China is the best available option for Tibet’

BJP general secretary Ram Madhav called for adopting a pragmatic foreign policy and not ‘romanticis­m’ in managing neighbours.

-

Little has changed in the country in terms of safety and security of women even five years after the horrific gang rape— that shocked the entire nation—of Nirbhaya, a young physiother­apy student, in a bus on Delhi’s roads, her mother said.

Asha Devi, Nirbhaya’s mother, told The Sunday Guardian, “Even after five years, women still get raped and molested on a regular basis, not only in Delhi, but across the country. Nothing seems to have changed much with regards to women’s safety. We are still talking about the measures which we debated then, like installati­on of CCTV cameras and streetligh­ts, but very little has been implemente­d.”

However, she feels that one good thing that has happened since then is that women have started to speak out on violence against them, including rape and molestatio­n, and women’s organisati­ons have started taking cognisance of matters important to women. Data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) also seem to suggest that crimes against women have increased since 2012.

While a total of 232,528 cases of crimes against women were registered across the country in 2012, the number rose to 314,575 in 2015. Among these, 34,651 cases of rape have been registered in 2015 alone, showing a jump of almost 10,000 cases since 2012. Kidnapping and abduction of women are also on the rise, with a growth of almost 10% since 2012. According to the latest data released by the NCRB for metropolit­an cities, Delhi contribute­d to one in every three cases of all crimes against women that happened in metropolit­an cities and 4% of all such cases in the country, accounting for 13,803 cases. This is higher than the 13,260 cases reported in 2014. Delhi reported 1,996 rape cases in 2016, up from 1,893 in 2015.

Soon after the Nirbhaya incident, a stringent law on women’s safety and stricter punishment for perpetrato­rs of violence against women was also passed by the Parliament, but despite that, Asha Devi said that this law has failed to act as a deterrent for those carrying out violence acts against women. “The law is very good, there are several laws in the country, but the problem is the lack of effective implementa­tion of these laws. It is important to see how fast women get justice,” she said.

Delayed trials and justice in most of these cases have also become a cause for concern for many women activists, as they feel that this fails to imbibe fear among persons with a criminal mentality. According to the 2014 data available in the Lok Sabha website, 332 cases of crimes against women were pending before the Supreme Court by December 2014, while 31,386 cases of rape were pending before the High Courts till 2014. However, though the Nirbhaya case was put through Fast Track courts, the family still awaits final justice which they want to see in the form of capital punishment for the guilty. Asha Devi said: “In all the three courts, this case was put on fast track; even then, we await final justice. It took nine months for the trial to happen in the Supreme Court and it’s been already six months that the Supreme Court has upheld capital punishment, but now they have filed a review petition; therefore, it is going to take more time. Such long delays in trials affect society, removing the fear of the law from the criminals. We still have hope that we will get justice, but when that will happen even we cannot say.” BJP general secretary Ram Madhav appreciate­d Dalai Lama’s efforts to engage with China to address the Tibet issue and said that India would stand by Tibet whenever required, in New Delhi on Thursday.

Addressing a gathering at the third Prof. ML Sondhi Memorial Lecture, Madhav said: “Engaging with China is the best available option for Tibet right now. Also, whenever required India and its citizens will stand by Tibet.”

Madhav, a known expert in Sino-Indian relations, also called for adopting a pragmatic foreign policy and not “romanticis­m” in managing neighbours.

“The history of our previous foreign policies reflects that we have never bothered to understand our neighbours. Our foreign policy has largely been driven by romantic ideas. We need to shed this and adopt a mature and pragmatic approach,” said Madhav.

Speaking on Indo-China relations, Madhav noted that the obsession of people in India has now gradually shifted to India-China relationsh­ip from India-Pakistan ties; and that maintainin­g a good relationsh­ip with China is the government’s priority.

“China is our important neighbour and we want to strengthen our ties with it. With the strong leadership of both our Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chi- nese President Xi Jinping, I am hopeful we will be able to settle our difference­s,” he asserted.

However, Madhav cautioned that the Doklam dispute with China was not over.

“We deployed mature diplomacy together with strong ground posturing. Having said that, Doklam is not over yet,” he said.

Delivering a lecture on ‘Tibet holds the key to Beijing” at the same event, Tibetan government-in-exile’s President Lobsang Sangay said that Tibet is a “litmus test” and is a potential catalyst to bring about changes inside China. He also asserted that India should declare Tibet as its core issue as China has always considered Tibet as a palm to reach out to five fingers—Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and Arunachal Pradesh.

“You ought to support Tibet, otherwise China is coming and penetratin­g every aspect of your society. There are forces within China that want the country to transform into a liberal democracy and Tibet can be a catalyst in that,” he said.

Commenting on United States President Donald Trump’s proposal for zero aid in 2018 to the Tibetans, reversing the decades-old American policy of providing financial assistance to the community for safeguardi­ng their distinct identity, Sangay told The Sunday Guardian: “We are having discussion­s over it and we believe that it will be restored.”

“China is our important neighbour and we want to strengthen our ties with it. With the strong leadership of both our PM Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping, I am hopeful we will be able to settle our difference­s,” Ram Madhav asserted.

 ??  ?? Ram Madhav (left) delivered a lecture on ‘Tibet holds the key to Beijing’.
Ram Madhav (left) delivered a lecture on ‘Tibet holds the key to Beijing’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India