Eastern Eye (UK)

Blinken leans on India over rights

CHINA AND AFGHANISTA­N ALSO ON US OFFICIAL’S AGENDA

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US SECRETARY OF STATE Antony Blinken issued a veiled warning last Wednesday (28) about Indian democracy backslidin­g in his first official visit to the Asian country.

At a joint news conference with India’s foreign minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar, Blinken said the US and India “take seriously our responsibi­lity to deliver freedom, equality and opportunit­y to all of our people”. But he added that “we know that we must constantly do more on these fronts, and neither of us has achieved the ideals that we set for ourselves”.

Democracie­s should “always seek to strengthen our democratic institutio­ns, expand access to justice and opportunit­y, stand up forcefully for fundamenta­l freedoms,” Blinken said.

Under prime minister Narendra Modi, India has made growing use of anti-terrorism legislatio­n and “sedition” laws to arrest campaigner­s, journalist­s, students and others, critics say.

The government has also brought in legislatio­n that detractors say discrimina­tes against India’s 170-million-strong Muslim minority. Ministers deny cracking down on criticism and say people of all religions have equal rights.

Behind closed doors, Indian officials were expected to express alarm over Taliban gains in Afghanista­n and to press Blinken for more support in the border standoff with China. US-India relations have historical­ly been prickly, but China’s growing assertiven­ess has pushed them closer, particular­ly since deadly clashes last year on the Indo-Chinese Himalayan frontier.

But according to Brahma Chellaney, strategic affairs expert at India’s Centre for Policy Research, US backing has “slipped a notch” since Joe Biden took over from Donald Trump as president in January.

“India is locked in a military standoff with China but unlike top Trump administra­tion officials who publicly condemned China’s aggression and backed India, no one in Team Biden has so far lent open support to India,” Chellaney said.

Biden has further riled New Delhi with Washington’s “rushed and poorly planned exit from Afghanista­n”, Chellaney added.

India is worried that a possible takeover by the Taliban, which it sees as backed by Pakistan, will turn the country into a base for militants to attack India. New Delhi, a firm backer of the Afghan government with billions of dollars in developmen­t aid, recently evacuated 50 staff from its Kandahar consulate due to the worsening security situation.

Blinken told the news conference that despite withdrawin­g troops, the United States “remain very engaged” in support of the beleaguere­d Afghan government, providing security support and other assistance.

“There has to be a peaceful resolution which requires the Taliban and the Afghan government to come to the table,” Blinken added.

Afghanista­n after a Taliban takeover would be a “pariah state,” he said.

India is part of the Quad alliance with the United States, Japan and Australia, seen as a bulwark against China.

Blinken and Jaishankar sought to blunt Chinese criticism of the grouping, with Blinken saying it was not a “military alliance”.

“Its purpose... is just to advance cooperatio­n on regional challenges while reinforcin­g internatio­nal rules and values that we believe together underpin peace, prosperity and stability in the region,” Blinken said.

Jaishankar said “people need to get over the idea that somehow other countries doing things is directed against them. I think countries do things [that] are in their interest for their good and for the good of the world, and that is exactly what is the case with the Quad.”

The talks also addressed joint efforts on climate change and Covid-19 vaccines.

 ??  ?? PRESSURE: Antony Blinken and Subrahmany­am Jaishankar speak out at JNB in New Delhi last Wednesday (28)
PRESSURE: Antony Blinken and Subrahmany­am Jaishankar speak out at JNB in New Delhi last Wednesday (28)

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