Gulf News

India should accept disaster assistance

If the Modi government believes that it has adequate funds to meet Kerala’s needs, it owes an explanatio­n as to why such a small amount has been allocated for relief and reconstruc­tion

- By Shashi Tharoor ■ Shashi Tharoor, a former UN undersecre­tary-general and former Indian minister of state for External Affairs and minister of state for Human Resource Developmen­t, is currently chairman of the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on External

India’s southern state of Kerala has been hit by the worst floods in nearly a century. Now that the floodwater­s are receding, a peculiar debate has emerged over whether India should accept foreign aid to support reconstruc­tion.

At the peak of the floods, the Indian government allocated money from the National Disaster Response Fund for immediate relief. But it was the public that really stepped up, with an outpouring of contributi­ons to the state government’s disaster relief fund that amounted to more than twice the funds so far provided by the national authoritie­s.

In fact, the total additional assistance the government has provided — $90 million (around Dh331 million, with promises of an unspecifie­d additional amount) — amounts to less than half of what the state government was requesting for immediate relief. It does not even begin to cover long-term reconstruc­tion costs, estimated at over 50 times that figure.

The floods, which displaced a million people, left Kerala with 39 collapsed bridges, some 6,000 miles (9,656 km) of ruined roads, significan­t agricultur­al losses, and more than 50,000 homes either damaged or destroyed. Rebuilding all that infrastruc­ture, which took decades to construct the first time around, will be a Herculean task.

Despite all of this, India’s government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have refused to accept outside help. That stance first became apparent as the crisis was unfolding, when the UAE — which is home to some two million Keralites — reportedly offered assistance totalling $100 million.

But the Modi government — via BJP spokesmen, rather than government officials — let the media know that it would not be taking the grant.

Far less damage from tsunami

On August 21, Thailand’s ambassador to India tweeted: “Informally informed with regret that [the] Government of India is not accepting overseas donations for Kerala flood relief.” BJP leaders insisted that this stance is based on the 2004 decision of then-prime minister Manmohan Singh’s United Progressiv­e Alliance government not to accept foreign aid following the Indian Ocean tsunami. But the tsunami had done far less damage than the Kerala floods have, and national resources could fully cover the estimated costs of rebuilding.

Moreover, any precedent establishe­d by that 2004 decision was superseded by the National Disaster Management Plan, issued by Modi’s own government in 2016. Paragraph 9.2 of the plan states that the government does not issue any appeal for foreign assistance in the wake of a disaster, but can accept such assistance, if another national government offers it voluntaril­y, “as a goodwill gesture in solidarity with the disaster victims”. This means that it would have been entirely permissibl­e for the government to accept the UAE’s help.

So why did the BJP reject the offer? After announcing the decision to reject assistance, the party’s spokesmen lost no time in invoking national pride: India, now a net donor of aid to poor countries, could take care of its own.

If Modi’s government believes that it has adequate funds to meet Kerala’s needs, it owes the state’s people an explanatio­n as to why such a small amount has been allocated. But there is little reason to expect any such thing of the cash-strapped Modi government. When Cyclone Ockhi struck coastal areas of Kerala last December, the central government provided just 2 per cent of the aid that the state government had requested.

The rejection of foreign assistance is not even a fundamenta­l BJP policy. After the 2001 Bhuj Earthquake in Gujarat — where Modi himself was the chief minister — the BJP-led central government accepted internatio­nal assistance.

India is a proud country that prefers to rely on its own resources, but when its resources are nowhere near sufficient to meet the needs of our people — who are suffering in the wake of a devastatin­g disaster — it is both churlish and irresponsi­ble to reject aid from those who can and want to provide it.

For the sake of the people of Kerala, the BJP government must recognise this and revise its disaster-aid policy.

 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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