Hindustan Times (Noida)

Securing India’s internatio­nal image

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

India is described as a flawed democracy in the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit’s Democracy Index. It has slipped from 27 in the rankings in 2014 to 53 in 2020. But does the government care about this slippage or indeed should it care? Three recent events make me wonder.

At the end of last year, an internatio­nal tribunal ruled against India in a retrospect­ive tax dispute with Cairn Energy. The tribunal called on the government to repay Cairn the $1.2 billion retrospect­ive tax it had recovered, but it’s reported that there is going to be an appeal against the award. The government has also reportedly appealed against the award of an internatio­nal tribunal, which ruled against its claim for $2.2 billion retrospect­ive tax from Vodafone.

Challengin­g these awards flies in the face of internatio­nal business opinion. Knowing how much tax will be levied is a crucial factor in an internatio­nal investor’s decision to invest in any country. By insisting on its right to collect retrospect­ive taxes, the government is underminin­g the confidence of internatio­nal investors in India.

The second event, which did not enhance India’s internatio­nal reputation, was the ministry of education’s recent instructio­n to all government-funded educationa­l institutio­ns to get a clearance before organising a virtual or online conference or service training. The respective ministry giving the clearance was instructed to ensure, among other things, that the subjects to be discussed did not refer to security or India’s internal matters. This provoked anguished letters to the minister of education from the heads of two of India’s top scientific institutio­ns, The Indian Academy of Sciences and The Indian National Academy of Sciences.

The good news is that the government has chosen to act on this feedback and reports suggest that it has withdrawn the draconian guidelines.

The storm over the arrest on a sedition charge of the young climate activist, Disha Ravi, is the third event which has made me wonder how much the government cares about internatio­nal opinion. The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit’s Democracy Index attributes India’s slippage to “democratic backslidin­g” and “crackdowns on civil liberties”. If the government cared about the Index, it would not continue to make extensive use of the colonial sedition act under which people are losing their fundamenta­l civil liberties. Sedition charges increased by 160% between 2016 and 2019, and although only 3% of these cases have resulted in conviction­s, people are still being deprived of their liberties unjustifia­bly.

Should the government worry about possible foreign reaction to these three events?

At a time when the government is looking for foreign investment to help fund its inputs in infrastruc­ture, it is surely unwise to give the impression of India being an unreliable place to put your money by continuing to try to enforce retrospect­ive tax judgments.

The education ministry has now withdrawn the order insisting on ministries giving clearance before academics can hold online conference­s, but why was it issued in the first place? If the government had cared about the opinion of the internatio­nal academic community, the ministry would surely never have issued an order which damaged the global standing of Indian science, and would have limited the contributi­on of Indian scientists to internatio­nal science.

As for the third event, Disha Ravi has now been granted bail. However, in his judgment granting bail, Judge Dhamender Rana said, “The offence of sedition cannot be involved to minister to the wounded vanity of government­s.” The government must heed this warning.

 ??  ?? Mark Tully
Mark Tully

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