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Call of the New Year: Clear vision, concerted action
By Atal Behari Vajpayee
My musings from Kumarakom - II
In my article yesterday, I had expressed some thoughts on the
Kashmir question and the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid dispute,
the two problems that we have inherited from the past. Today I
wish to share my vision of how we can leave a better legacy for
our future generations.
I am one of those fortunate people in public life who have not
only observed, but also participated in the evolution of
independent India from 1947 till now. As a student I had taken
part in the freedom movement. As a young man of 22, I had seen
our first Prime Minister, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, unfurl the
Tricolour at Red Fort at that immortal midnight hour on August
15. Little did I know that just after a decade I would be sitting
with him in Parliament discussing and debating affairs of the
nation. It is a tribute to the power of India's democracy that an
ordinary man like me, son of a village teacher, has since been
called upon to serve the nation as its Prime Minister. The days
of dynasties are over in India's vibrant democracy.
When I look back at free India's journey through the past five
decades, I am filled with pride and disappointment in equal
measure. Pride because we have been successful in preserving two
ideals that are most precious to all of us: one, the unity of
India, and two, our democratic system. This is not a mean
achievement given the track record of many newly independent
countries, including some in our own neighbourhood. Few countries
in the world, facing the kind of challenges of development and
governance that India does, have so steadfastly continued on the
democratic path. Similarly, few multi-religious, multi-lingual
and multi-ethnic societies in the world have presented such an
exemplary demonstration of unity in diversity as India has done.
Proud achievements
On the developmental front too, we have many proud achievements
to our credit. All the governments of the past, belonging to
different parties and coalitions, have contributed in their own
way to India's self-reliant progress on several fronts. Many
developing countries look up to India as an example for building
indigenous policies and programmes for socio-economic
development. We should never belittle India's achievements, as
some people do. Such belittlement only serves to spread cynicism,
apathy and inaction, qualities we must shun.
Nevertheless, I am as distressed as all my countrymen are at the
wide gulf between India's indisputable potential and her actual
performance. Nothing agonises me more as the Prime Minister than
the realisation that millions of my countrymen, even after five
decades of Independence, still do not have enough to eat and
proper roofs to sleep under. Many have to suffer even for the
lack of drinking water and basic medical care. If children are
deprived of good food, good education and good upbringing, the
loss is not only theirs and their families'; the nation too
deprives itself of precious human resources for its all-round
development.
We must change this reality, and we can. India does not lack the
requisite natural resources to remove these basic developmental
inadequacies. We also have a vast reservoir of talented and hard-
working men and women. Many of those who have gone abroad to work
have scripted amazing success stories, earning high reputation
for themselves and their motherland in their host countries. I
often ask myself the question: if Indians can overcome all the
odds and succeed spectacularly outside India, why can't we do so
in India itself?
Yes, we can create prosperity for all. We can fully remove
poverty, unemployment and all other traces of underdevelopment
from India. What is needed is an inspiring national vision, a
strong sense of purpose shared by all the citizens and
communities of our diverse country and a single-minded
determination supported by concerted action to achieve what are
identified as common national goals.
Strong national mind
A nation attains greatness when it develops a strong national
mind. All of us know that the power of the mind is immense. It is
true about the individual mind, and also true about the national
mind. When India was unfree, attainment of freedom was our
single-minded national objective. Sadly, after Independence, we
failed to mobilise our national energies for a similar single-
minded pursuit of the goals of nation-building.
Our first task is to strengthen the awareness that we are one
people - sisters and brothers who are children of the Great
Mother India. Ours is a vast and varied country. Sometimes,
however, we get so involved in our own narrow concerns and so
obsessed with our own specific identities, that we tend to ignore
the chief source of our national pride and strength - namely,
India's diversity and her essential unity. Some of our citizens
focus too much on one or the other aspect of our diversity,
ignoring the common national bonds that unite us. Others ignore
our diversity and, instead, tend to overemphasise only certain
aspects of our national unity. In my view, both approaches are
wrong.
Diversity does not permit divisiveness or exclusiveness.
Similarly, unity cannot be achieved through uniformity.
In this context, I must confess that the growing trend of
intolerance which I see in our society today worries me deeply.
This trend must be checked.
India belongs equally to all her citizens and communities, not
more to some and less to others. At the same time, all citizens
and communities have an equal duty to strengthen our national
unity and integrity, and to contribute to the nation's progress.
In recent times, there has been a tendency to focus more on one's
rights, and less on one's duties. This must change.
Mutual tolerance
Throughout her long history, India's unity is nurtured by an
ethos of secularism that teaches all her people not only to
tolerate each other's customs, traditions and beliefs, but also
to respect them. Mutual tolerance and understanding leads to
goodwill and cooperation, which in turn strengthens the silken
bond of our national unity. Secularism is not an alien concept
that we imported out of compulsion after Independence. Rather, it
is an integral and natural feature of our national culture and
ethos.
This being India's social truth, I find it both strange and
disconcerting that our polity is sought to be divided between
``secular'' and ``communal'' parties. Indian people do not give
their mandate to any party or a coalition that does not follow a
secular, inclusive and integrative agenda. To think otherwise is
to disparage our people's democratic intelligence.
Leaving non-issues behind, politics and governance in India
should be redirected towards achieving faster, more balanced and
more equitable socio-economic development. Our people's hunger
for development is growing. However, the governmental machinery
is not working fast enough to meet this hunger. Most often our
people's demands are very simple and basic: better road
connectivity, better drinking water and sanitation facilities,
assured and adequate supply of power to farmers, etc.
Both the Central and State Governments have drawn up many
policies and programmes to deliver these needs, for which
significant resources are budgeted. The system of implementation,
however, routinely lets us down. Those who suffer the most
because of delayed and defective implementation of policies,
programmes and projects are invariably the poor and the
underprivileged - especially Dalits, Adivasis and OBCs. This has
been the experience both at the Centre and in the States. And all
parties that have been in power have experienced this major
shortcoming in India's developmental strategy.
Radical reforms
Therefore, the time has come to introduce radical developmental
reforms, which should encompass, besides economic reforms,
administrative and judicial reforms.
The most important component of these reforms is to fix
transparent accountability at all levels and increase people's
involvement in monitoring the functioning of all agencies that
impact on development. This is necessary to check corruption,
which drains away so much of the budgetary resources of the
Centre and the States. Development is too important a matter to
be left to bureaucrats alone. People must be empowered not only
to demand results, but also to actively participate in the
attainment of results. This calls for a new partnership between
the Government and the people in consonance with the true spirit
of democracy.
I need hardly add here that this places a far bigger
responsibility on our citizens than has been realised by them so
far. The habit of looking to the Government for a solution to
every problem must give way to a new democratic attitude of fully
participating in the Government's efforts and of maximising the
scope of non-governmental efforts. This calls for a better work
culture, a superior civic culture, strong discipline and a
radical shift in the attitude of the citizenry from rights to
duties. This also increases the responsibility of our elected
representatives in Parliament, State Legislatures and Panchayati
Raj institutions. They must act as good law-makers and effective
overseers of the Executive.
I have another thought to share with my countrymen. Some people,
while talking about economic reforms, often raise voices of alarm
and impending national crisis. Recalling how India became a
colony of a foreign trading company in the past, they prophesy
that India will again be ``sold out'' to foreigners if economic
reforms are allowed to be continued. This is a ludicrous
prophesy. India is a free nation. It is a democratic nation
governed by the will of the people. It is also an incomparably
stronger nation today than when the British colonised us. Who can
dare sell out today's India? And who can dare buy out today's
India?
Economic reforms
We have a vibrant and self-reliant economy. The true purpose of
economic reforms is to further strengthen our economy, while
removing its self-evident weaknesses, so that poverty and
unemployment can be removed at a faster pace. As is well known,
these reforms have been pursued by all Governments at the Centre,
and most State Governments, since 1991. Nearly all political
parties in the country have been a part of these governments.
Thus, a strong basis for a national consensus on the agenda of
reforms already exists. We must further strengthen this agenda by
depoliticising it.
We need to broaden and further accelerate the economic reforms,
so that our economy becomes sufficiently productive to meet the
growing demands of our growing population. But there is also an
added urgency to this task. We are living in a world of
globalisation, created by the information and communication
revolution, global trade and greater inter-dependence among
nations. Today there is far greater open competition among the
economies of nations around the world than was conceivable even a
few decades ago. For example, when I heard the grievances of
coconut and areca nut growers in Kerala in the past few days -
and these are genuine grievances - I could clearly see the forces
of globalisation at work behind these seemingly local problems.
Neither Indian industry nor agriculture can ignore the new
competitive global environment in which they are called upon to
operate. Our industry has to improve its manufacturing and
management practices; our agriculture should be freed from many
infrastructural, investment and other constraints that have
prevented it from growing to its full potential; we have to
minimise the costs and maximise the quality of our products and
we have to be better at marketing internationally.
Need for partnership
We have to urgently improve our urban and rural infrastructure.
The National Highway Project and the Rural Roads Project are two
of the several important initiatives our government has taken in
this direction. We have to create a better partnership between
the Government and the private sector. The private sector, whose
scope in the nation's development is steadily increasing, must
learn to work for public good rather than for narrow private
gain. We must make all sectors of our economy more knowledge-
intensive, beginning with a rapid introduction of Information
Technology. We should bring greater efficiencies in our financial
sector, so that the cost of capital in India comes down,
especially for small-scale industries and businesses. We need to
reduce the size of the Government, so that more resources can be
channelled for people's welfare and development. We must also
reform our labour laws and make them more conducive to faster
economic growth and greater employment generation. Some of these
are difficult measures, but we cannot shirk away from any of
these imperatives.
Our Government will, of course, take necessary measures to
protect the national interests against unfair trade and
investment practices from outside. But it is high time all
sections of our industry, agriculture and services sector
realised that, increasingly, these issues are being governed by a
multilateral framework, to which India is a signatory. This
global framework has created challenges, opportunities and also
obligations. This new reality cannot be wished away by any party
or government. It is our collective responsibility to devise a
national strategy that effectively counters the challenges and
seizes the opportunities of globalisation. This is too important
an issue for India's future economic development to be
politicised for narrow, short-term gains.
Dear countrymen, I see immense opportunities for India's all-
round progress in the new century. I am also full of hope that
our people will seize these opportunities. My hopes are
especially pinned on our youth, who today constitute nearly two-
thirds of our population. Indeed, India has the highest number of
young people in the world today. We are inheritors of an ancient
civilisation which is also forever young. Guided by the light of
the eternal and universal values of our civilisation, inspired by
a modernising vision of national development, and powered by the
youthful energy of one billion children of Bharat Mata, we can
certainly make the 21st century India's century.
This is the hope and this is the New Year resolve that I wish to
convey to all of you from Kumarakom.
(Concluded)
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