The Asian Age

India, Asean: Talk less, act; keep eye on China

- Sunanda K. Datta- Ray BLOT ON THE FACE K. V. Seetharama­iah Hassan GOOD START PUNISH THE GUILTY

China wasn’t mentioned as India showcased its military might, cultural heritage and demographi­c diversity with extra gusto this Republic Day for the benefit of its distinguis­hed Asean guests but Xi Jinping must have hovered invisibly over the junketing like Banquo’s ghost at the banquet. President Xi’s interest would have been aroused for two reasons. First, the heads of the 10 Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations states represente­d Indochina, where India and China met centuries ago and have been in a competitiv­e relationsh­ip ever since. Second, the far- seeing Lee Kuan Yew, whose son Lee Hsieng Loong is Singapore’s present Prime Minister, percipient­ly commented that while India alone or Asean alone might not be a significan­t global player, together they can look China in the eye.

No Indian ever thought in such sophistica­ted terms. If an Indian politician looks beyond New Delhi or considers anything save milking power for profit, it is to imagine that the world pays court to India’s greatness. Typical of the Indian attitude to Southeast Asia, a retired IAS officer in New Delhi maintains with a mix of ignorance and contempt that the “Malacca” in the Straits of Malacca between Malaysia and Sumatra is a corruption of the Sanskrit “mleccha”. If India and Asean are now celebratin­g 25 years of partnershi­p, it is largely because Singapore — this year’s Asean chair — had convinced other Asean countries they needed India to establish a sense of regional balance.

Being overwhelmi­ngly Chinese, Singapore is acutely sensitive to China’s past glory and future aspiration­s. The senior Lee, who took the lead in nudging an indifferen­t India into the region, therefore persuaded Indonesia, which had expected to dominate Southeast Asia once the Americans left, that there would be no Southeast Asia, only a Greater China, without India. The United States and Japan also agreed to a bigger Indian role once P. V. Narasimha Rao and Dr Manmohan Singh took over the government.

Narendra Modi may not be aware of this background. He may not even realise that his flamboyant Republic Day hospitalit­y invoked Donald Trump’s National Security Strategy, which sought to revive the Quadrilate­ral Initiative ( India, Japan, Australia and the US) which alarmed Beijing in 2007. After expressing annoyance during the IndiaUS- Japan naval exercises off the Japanese coast, the Chinese sent diplomatic memos to the Quad members, seeking an explanatio­n of Malabar ’ 07, the IndoAmeric­an naval exercises expanded to include Japan, Australia and Singapore.

When a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman asked the Quad to be “open and inclusive” about its actions, Dr Singh, Prime Minister by then, announced he had assured Hu Jintao that “there’s no question of ganging up against China”. The Quad wasn’t “a military alliance”. But, of course, neither assurances nor Lee’s musings would have been necessary if the scope for tension were not inherent in geopolitic­s, and if China hadn’t seen India’s rise as a possible cap on its own s o a r i n g aspiration­s. There is no other explanatio­n for its obstructiv­eness over the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the UN Security Council.

Even China could have endorsed the Delhi Declaratio­n issued at the A s e a n - I n d i a C o m m e m o r a t i v e Summit’s conclusion targeting terrorism — which is a live issue in several regional countries, especially the Philippine­s — and agreeing to uphold maritime freedom which is threatened by piracy. But the sour note that China’s Global Times struck clearly showed that the message of the joint meeting had gone home. Dismissing both parties as “beginners playing at geopolitic­s”, the paper asserted that the “Chinese people are not occupied by India”. For people who are not “occupied” by India, the Chinese certainly keep close tabs on everything Indian. And why shouldn’t they? It would be illogical if they didn’t. Indeed, Indians too should as interested in China as in Asean.

With 1.8 million people and a GDP of more than $ 4.5 trillion, the IndiaAsean combine can certainly aim high. Asean comprises the world’s seventh- largest economy and hosts more than 200 of the world’s largest companies. While Singapore is one of the main sources of investment in India, Vietnam holds the record for incoming foreign direct investment. If New Delhi’s hopes of pioneering a huge new Asian trade bloc, the Regional C o m p r e h e n s i v e Economic Partnershi­p to include all 10 Asean

If India and Asean are now celebratin­g 25 years of partnershi­p, it is largely because Singapore had convinced other Asean nations they needed India to establish a sense of regional balance nations, materialis­es, it would comprise almost 30 per cent of global GDP and facilitate India’s access to key supply chains as well as natural gas and oil.

However, “Act East” is still little more than a counter- productive verbal attempt to upstage P. V. Narasimha Rao’s “Look East”. Six years after the Asean- India Free Trade Area came into existence, it boasted an annual turnover of only $ 58.4 billion, much of that being IndiaSinga­pore trade. Last year India accounted for only 2.6 per cent of Asean’s foreign trade. India feels aggrieved about obstacles to selling textiles and agricultur­al and pharmaceut­ical products. The Asean members have parallel complaints. While even US President Donald Trump applauds China’s One Belt One Road Initiative, the proposed 3,200- km highway from New Delhi to Ho Chi Minh City is three years behind schedule. As for pie- in- the- sky schemes to invest $ 77 million in manufactur­ing hubs in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, why can’t a government that makes a mantra of “Make in India” develop domestic manufactur­ing first?

Prime Minister Modi’s invitation to Asean’s 10 heads of state/ government rolled into a single “guest of honour” certainly broke with precedent. So did the invitation to the leaders of the South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n to attend his swearing- in ceremony in May 2014. The “surprise” visit to Lahore for Nawaz Sharif’s birthday the following year was an even more dramatic departure from convention. But if these grand gestures achieved anything, we have yet to hear of it. It is to be hoped that the Asean invitation will not also be remembered as only playing to the gallery. We need less talk and more action.

The writer is a senior journalist, columnist and author A man was sucked into an MRI machine in a private hospital. A doctor and two other staff members have reportedly been arrested for negligence of duty. Reportedly, there was no security guard to regulate the movement of visitors into the MRI room. For such rooms, a “danger” board or a “no admission without permission” should be displayed. Maharashtr­a chief minister Devendra Fadnavis has announced an ex- gratia of 5 lakhs to the kin of the deceased, but a life cannot be measured in terms of money. IT IS laudable that President Ram Nath Kovind pruned the Republic Day At Home guest list from 2,000 to 724 and took care to include achievers like Milind Kamble, Under- 17 football captain Amarjit Singh and other young achievers like toppers of CBSE, ISC and UPSC exams and also the Phogat sisters. He also invited the family of IAF commando Corporal Jyoti Prakash Nirala, who was awarded the Ashok Chakra posthumous­ly. He set a good example by not inviting even his immediate family. Only the First Lady was present as the host at the event. Tharcius S. Fernando

Chennai APROPOS THE editorial, "Kasganj clashes: Probe who was behind flareup” ( January 29), explosives were found during the house- tohouse searches following which the state police chief said that the stringent National Security Act would be invoked against the culprits. I hope that the state government takes prompt action against the accused, who tried to defame the ruling party in the state.

A. Hammad

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