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Will
India welcome China's growing interest in SAARC? Ideally, yes. It
helps New Delhi's recent initiatives to remain in close contact
with Beijing. The context of Atal Behari Vajpayee's visit to China
last June is too fresh to be forgotten. To the Chinese leadership,
the idea to get closer to South Asia's regional grouping appears
to be geographically logical, if not for any other consideration.
China shares borders with four of the seven members of the South
Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), which was formed
in Dhaka in 1985 : Bhutan, Nepal, India and Pakistan.
But
India has yet to react to China's latest proposition to have a formal
relationship with this South Asian grouping. And, in fact, New Delhi
may take time before it makes its viewpoint known to the rest to
the region, and to the world at large. Beijing's intent about developing
proximity with SAARC was expressed through China's ambassador to
Nepal, Mr Sun Heping , who chose to reveal the matter in a newspaper
interview. " The time is now basically ripe to establish relations
between China and SAARC," he told People's Review, an English
weekly, on March 25. In fact, an indication of such an expression
had surfaced as early as January, when SAARC met for its 12th summit
in Islamabad. Prime Minister Wen Jiabao was the only non-SAARC leader
to send a special message of goodwill to the summiteers.
Analysts
in Kathmandu, where the secretariat of the regional body is located,
agree that SAARC as a bloc stands to gain from the vast market potential
that China has to offer. And because of its size, population and
economic activities, India is bound to be the largest beneficiary.
To transform this positive scenario into a reality at the dawn of
the new millennium, leaders of the region should disown an anachronistic
part of history and let their present-day political geography take
its course. But are countries with a legacy drawn from the British
empire prepared to taken on the challenges of a globalised world
of inter-dependence? Are they prepared to shun rivalries and enhance
cooperative bilateral relations in the first place ?
Till
the mid-70s South Asia remained a mere geographical expression
with mutually reinforcing economic activities at a low ebb. It failed
to emerge as a distinct identity shaped by the security considerations
of the Cold War. But in later years regional leaders who stood
at variance began to converge on the need for a broader regional
cooperative framework. The issue picked up after Birendra, the then
king of Nepal, called for cooperation in exploiting the abundant
water resources for mutual benefit in the Colombo Plan Consultative
Conference held in Kathmandu. However the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan in 1979 and the return of Indira Gandhi to power
had mutually conflicting implications in that the former underscored
the urgency of forging an alliance to contain the expanding security
threat in the region and the latter acted as an impediment.
India always suffered from the perceived threat that all
smaller neighbours would gang up against it while Pakistan
suffered from Indo-phobia, fearing that such a forum would help
India to perpetuate its dominance over the region in general and
Pakistan in particular. However, both countries failed to see the
security threat of Moscow in the strategic canvas of South Asia.
Nevertheless the proposal to concretise a regional arrangement
got through with Pakistan seeing in it a chance to engage India
in the regional body thereby reducing Indo-Soviet collusion
and with India seeing in it a chance to disengage Pakistan from
the US-China-Pakistan axis which was gradually taking shape. It
was against this background that SAARC came into being. It is another
matter that Indo-Pak relations frequently blowing hot and
cold continue to stand in the way of the unhindered growth
of the regional body.
In SAARC political matters always get precedence over
mutual economic benefits and cooperation which in fact
form the very spirit of the regional body. The SAARC Charter stipulates
that the summit should be held every year and there is no provision
for adjournment. But only 12 summits have been held during the past
19 years of its existence. Behind every adjournment lie predominantly
political factors. To put it more clearly at the bottom of
it lies the tug of war between the two sharks of SAARC.
Various social and economic issues like collective efforts
for poverty alleviation and campaigns against trafficking in women
have been sacrificed at the altar of their mutual feud. For instance
the 11th SAARC Summit that was to be held in November 1999 was deferred
to January 2002 at the request of Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee
to protest the bloodless coup by Pervez Musharraf that catapulted
him to power on October 12 the same year.
The Indian leadership chose to ignore the fact that Ziaur
Rahman the then president of Bangladesh and one of the architects
of SAARC was himself a military ruler. And several military
rulers of Pakistan and Bangladesh have already participated in earlier
SAARC summits. Seasoned Nepali diplomat Yadav Kant Silwal, who previously
served as the SAARC secretary general, says : "Soured Indo-Pak
relations have adversely affected the growth of SAARC."
The less-than-happy relations between Nepal and Bhutan
India and Pakistan and Bangladesh and India continue to dog the
regional grouping. Needless to say SAARC remains Indo-centric
politically economically and socially. At the start of 2002,
President Pervez Musharraf had to fly to Kathmandu, the venue of
the 11th summit, via Beijing, due to the ban on the use of Indian
airspace. The situation had only partly improved on the eve of the
12th conference being held in Pakistan. Nepal's Prime Minister Surya
Bahadur Thapa had to take a flight to Bangkok first to reach the
Pakistani capital. The return journey was quicker as both India
and Pakistan had lifted the ban by the time the summit was over.
A seemingly serious process to bring about a thaw started in January
this year. Exchange of increased number of diplomats between the
two capitals and a much awaited visit by the Indian cricket team
to Pakistan are some recent positive developments.
In the 10th summit - held in Colombo - all SAARC leaders
had expressed grave concerns over the nuclear arms race which had
stalled the concept of free trade among and between the South Asian
countries. To make matters worse, terrorists attacked the Indian
parliament building. India's anger against Pakistan intensified,
resulting in a further delay of the convening of the 11th summit
in Kathmandu.
In order to steer the regional grouping ahead, both India
and Pakistan need to establish good relations with all their neighbouring
countries cut down their defence budget and lay stress on
socio-economic development. The agreement on SAFTA the SAARC
Social Charter, and the additional protocol on terrorism in the
recent Islamabad Summit may go a long way in promoting meaningful
cooperation and economic development in South Asia. For the first
time in the history of SAARC "Kashmir" and
"crossborder terrorism" did not figure in the summit.
But India and Pakistan must prefer consultation over confrontation
concord over discord. Like Indonesia in ASEAN India should
first evince magnanimity corresponding to its size population
and resources. Over the past few years India has made great
strides in its economy. In 2003 its economic growth rate registered
7.5-8 per cent, and there is a possibility of it exceeding even
China in the next few years. To facilitate the growth of SAARC
bilateral issues should be allowed to be discussed not on
the sidelines of the summit but formally in the summit itself.
Thirteen important Conventions have already been signed. But these
do not provide the region cause for complacency. If the two countries
continue to look at each other through suspicious eyes SAARC
is bound to become a hostage to their tensions.
Meanwhile, the prospect of China's involvement in SAARC has
begun to attract public attention since the Chinese Ambassador put
to rest erstwhile speculations by saying : "Being a close neighbour
of South Asian countries China has always attached great importance
to cooperative relations with SAARC. The Chinese government is ready
to work together with the governments of all South Asian countries
to promote the cause of peace and development in the region."
The response comes in the wake of the 12th SAARC Summit which concluded
in Islamabad in January this year. Diplomatic analysts are of the
view that China's entry would trigger a flurry of economic activity
thereby ensuring economic progress of the region. That such declared
interest comes at a time when relations on both Sino-Indian as well
as the Indo-Pakistan fronts are upbeat can hardly be coincidental.
Former SAARC secretary-general Silwal has this to say: "
It is a welcome sign. China is a huge market with a 1.2 billion
plus population." The caveat, he says, are outstanding issues
including border disputes. Unless there is an atmosphere of trust
and confidence, China's association with SAARC cannot generate expected
economic dividends through trading activities.
However Silwal holds no brief for keeping China at
bay. We must keep on holding interactions with it he says.
"I don't think economic activities will grow overnight after
China's joining SAARC since China itself is in a transitional
phase, like Japan in the '50s."
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