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Friday, 26 April 2013

Nathu-La trade likely to kick-start


Sikkim: Nathu-La trade likely to kick-start from May 1



Gangtok, April 26, 2013
The District Collectorate (East) AK Singth on April 24 said that the process for issuance of passes for the Nathu-La border trade has begun and 222 traders have applied for the post so far.
The border trade is likely to start from May 1 for this season.
“We have received a total of 222 applications from the traders who want to do the business this year and these applications are under verification. The passess will be issued once verification is over,” Singh said, adding that the traders have been asked to submit their applications.
The DC office in Gangtok is the competent authority to issue the passes to traders who are interested to carry out trade through Nathu-La border.
This is the eight year of the trade between two Asian giants after it was resumed in 2006 after a gap of 44 years.
The official sources from the Commerce and Industries department here said that the official opening of the trade this time would be done by the senior official of Directorate General of the Foreign Trade on May 1. “For this, we have already written a letter to the office of the DGFT and waiting for their confirmation,” a senior official said.
On the other hand, the traders this year are hopeful that the trade would go out smoothly.
“Last year frequent landslides had disrupted the trade, we hope this time the trade will be good both the sides, a trader in Gangtok remarked.
The last year’s trade had been beneficial for both the countries, as India registered an export volume at Rs 59881780 and the import recorded was Rs 10146622.
Last year DGFT had included five new items for import and seven more items for export in the list thereby increasing the item of import to 20 and export to 36.
(Courtesy: Sikkim Express)

Anarchy and Hegemony


Anarchy and Hegemony


Stratfor
By Robert D. Kaplan
Chief Geopolitical Analyst
Everyone loves equality: equality of races, of ethnic groups, of sexual orientations, and so on. The problem is, however, that in geopolitics equality usually does not work very well. For centuries Europe had a rough equality between major states that is often referred to as the balance-of-power system. And that led to frequent wars. East Asia, by contrast, from the 14th to the early 19th centuries, had its relations ordered by a tribute system in which China was roughly dominant. The result, according to political scientist David C. Kang of the University of Southern California, was a generally more peaceful climate in Asia than in Europe.
The fact is that domination of one sort or another, tyrannical or not, has a better chance of preventing the outbreak of war than a system in which no one is really in charge; where no one is the top dog, so to speak. That is why Columbia University's Kenneth Waltz, arguably America's pre-eminent realist, says that the opposite of "anarchy" is not stability, but "hierarchy."
Hierarchy eviscerates equality; hierarchy implies that some are frankly "more equal" than others, and it is this formal inequality -- where someone, or some state or group, has more authority and power than others -- that prevents chaos. For it is inequality itself that often creates the conditions for peace.
Government is the most common form of hierarchy. It is a government that monopolizes the use of violence in a given geographical space, thereby preventing anarchy. To quote Thomas Hobbes, the 17th century English philosopher, only where it is possible to punish the wicked can right and wrong have any practical meaning, and that requires "some coercive power."
The best sort of inequality is hegemony. Whereas primacy, as Kang explains, is about preponderance purely through military or economic power, hegemony "involves legitimation and consensus." That is to say, hegemony is some form of agreed-upon inequality, where the dominant power is expected by others to lead. When a hegemon does not lead, it is acting irresponsibly.
Of course, hegemony has a bad reputation in media discourse. But that is only because journalists are confused about the terminology, even as they sanctimoniously judge previous historical eras by the strict standards of their own. In fact, for most of human history, periods of relative peace have been the product of hegemony of one sort or another. And for many periods, the reigning hegemonic or imperial power was the most liberal, according to the standards of the age. Rome, Venice and Britain were usually more liberal than the forces arranged against them. The empire of the Austrian Hapsburgs in Central and Eastern Europe often protected the rights of minorities and prevented ethnic wars to a much greater degree than did the modern states that succeeded it. The Ottoman Empire in the Balkans and the Middle East frequently did likewise. There are exceptions, of course, like Hapsburg Spain, with its combination of inquisition and conquest. But the point is that hegemony does not require tyrannical or absolutist rule.
Stability is not the natural order of things. In fact, history shows that stability such as it exists is usually a function of imperial rule, which, in turn, is a common form of hierarchy. To wit, there are few things messier in geopolitics than the demise of an empire. The collapse of the Hapsburgs, of the Ottoman Turks, of the Soviet Empire and the British Empire in Asia and Africa led to chronic wars and upheavals. Some uncomprehending commentators remind us that all empires end badly. Of course they do, but that is only after they have provided decades and centuries of relative peace.
Obviously, not all empires are morally equivalent. For example, the Austrian Hapsburgs were for their time infinitely more tolerant than the Soviet Communists. Indeed, had the Romanov Dynasty in St. Petersburg not been replaced in 1917 by Lenin's Bolsheviks, Russia would likely have evolved far more humanely than it did through the course of the 20th century. Therefore, I am saying only in a general sense is order preferable to disorder. (Though captivating subtleties abound: For example, Napoleon betrayed the ideals of the French Revolution by creating an empire, but he also granted rights to Jews and Protestants and created a system of merit over one of just birth and privilege.)
In any case, such order must come from hierarchal domination.
Indeed, from the end of World War II until very recently, the United States has performed the role of a hegemon in world politics. America may be democratic at home, but abroad it has been hegemonic. That is, by some rough measure of international consent, it is America that has the responsibility to lead. America formed NATO in Europe, even as its Navy and Air Force exercise preponderant power in the Pacific Basin. And whenever there is a humanitarian catastrophe somewhere in the developing world, it is the United States that has been expected to organize the response. Periodically, America has failed. But in general, it would be a different, much more anarchic world without American hegemony.
But that hegemony, in some aspects, seems to be on the wane. That is what makes this juncture in history unique. NATO is simply not what it used to be. U.S. forces in the Pacific are perceived to be less all-powerful than in the past, as China tests U.S. hegemony in the region. But most importantly, U.S. President Barack Obama is evolving a doctrine of surgical strikes against specific individuals combined with non-interference -- or minimal interference -- in cases of regional disorder. Libya and Syria are cases in point. Gone, at least for the moment, are the days when U.S. forces were at the ready to put a situation to rights in this country or that.
When it comes to the Greater Middle East, Americans seem to want protection on the cheap, and Obama is giving them that. We will kill a terrorist with a drone, but outside of limited numbers of special operations forces there will be no boots on the ground for Libya, Syria or any other place. As for Iran, whatever the White House now says, there is a perception that the administration would rather contain a nuclear Iran than launch a military strike to prevent Iran from going nuclear.
That, by itself, is unexceptional. Previous administrations have been quite averse to the use of force. In recent decades, it was only George W. Bush -- and only in the aftermath of 9/11 -- who relished the concept of large-scale boots on the ground in a war of choice. Nevertheless, something has shifted. In a world of strong states -- a world characterized by hierarchy, that is -- the United States often enforced the rules of the road or competed with another hegemon, the Soviet Union, to do so. Such enforcement came in the form of robust diplomacy, often backed by a threat to use military power. Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush were noted for American leadership and an effective, sometimes ruthless foreign policy. Since the Cold War ended and Bill Clinton became president, American leadership has often seemed to be either unserious, inexpertly and crudely applied or relatively absent. And this has transpired even as states themselves in the Greater Middle East have become feebler.
In other words, both the hegemon and the many states it influences are weaker. Hierarchy is dissolving on all levels. Equality is now on the march in geopolitics: The American hegemon is less hegemonic, and within individual countries -- Egypt, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Tunisia and so on -- internal forces are no longer subservient to the regime. (And states like Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are not in the American camp to the degree that they used to be, further weakening American hegemony.) Moreover, the European Union as a political organizing principle is also weakening, even as the one-party state in China is under increasing duress.
Nevertheless, in the case of the Middle East, do not conflate chaos with democracy. Democracy itself implies an unequal, hierarchal order, albeit one determined by voters. What we have in the Middle East cannot be democracy because almost nowhere is there a new and sufficiently formalized hierarchy. No, what we have in many places in the Middle East is the weakening of central authority with no new hierarchy to adequately replace it.
Unless some force can, against considerable odds, reinstitute hierarchy -- be it an American hegemon acting globally, or an international organization acting regionally or, say, an Egyptian military acting internally -- we will have more fluidity, more equality and therefore more anarchy to look forward to. This is profoundly disturbing, because civilization abjures anarchy. In his novel Billy Budd (1924), Herman Melville deeply laments the fact that even beauty itself must be sacrificed for the maintenance of order. For without order -- without hierarchy -- there is nothing.


Read more: Anarchy and Hegemony | Stratfor

Monday, 22 April 2013

Northeast India and Southern China: A point of conflict or of regional integration?


Hriday Sarma
April 16, 2013

Northeast India is a relatively secluded sub-state region that has of late started acquiring significance at the international level as a potential site of major conflict between China and India, or as a potential bridge between them.

Introducing the Research Problem
The Northeast frontier of India[i] is a landlocked region with a 2.62 hundred thousand square kilometer geographic area, 73% of which is included in the hill region and the remaining 27% included in the plain region.[ii] Presently, this sub-state territory of independent India is federally delineated under 8 major administrative provinces, which are nationally called states.
The Northeast region has historically been “the backyard” of the country.[iii] Until some time back it remained isolated due to a masterly-negligence policy pursued by New Delhi.[iv] However, of late this hinterland region has become a primary subject of India’s foreign policy formulation.[v] It is also getting due attention in India’s long-term[vi] and short-term[vii] national economic policies. India has internally upgraded the Northeast as a new strategic-pivot point in terms of national security[viii] and is externally trying to sell the idea that the region is a possible land-linkage between South Asia and South-East Asia.[ix]
The high politics of state survival from the standpoint of political realism
New Delhi has been the centre-of-gravity of mainland India since pre-colonial times in terms of the agglomeration of federal political institutions and administrative bodies,[x] and the degree of centralization within these federal power structures has only progressed with time. What we have today is a strong state that is highly centralized in New Delhi, which from time to time voluntarily disburses different degrees of powers to different sub-state administrative units according to the temporal needs of the state.
Interestingly, at present, the Northeast has a petite 25 out of the total 545 directly elected members in the Indian Parliament’s Lower House (Lok Sabha)[xi] and 14 out of the total 245 indirectly elected members in its Upper House (Rajya Sabha).[xii] These figures make explicit the feeble political sway that Northeast can possibly exert over the Central Government in New Delhi. Moreover, Northeastern states rarely speak with one voice because of intense bickering between them over different intra-regional issues.[xiii] This has incessantly persisted ever since the very region was formally incorporated with the mainland region at the time of India’s independence.[xiv] Also, the faraway geographical distance between the Northeast and the Centre was a major contributing factor for the region to be nationally considered a peripheral zone of the state. A general inference that can be made from this is that, within the Indian political-superstructure, the Northeast region lies at the base of the pyramidal structure, expected to dutifully follow the instructions passed-down from the apex point.
Currently, it is not the native population of the Northeast region that is endeavoring to break free from their historic relative isolation and embrace the outside world. Rather, it is Centre that is pursuing a national securitization strategy to elevate the geostrategic significance of this entire region to the level of a ‘strategically sensitive zone’. This is being done in consideration of China’s ever-growing assertiveness all across its near-abroad regions. Even today, China considers the whole of Arunachal Pradesh, which is one of the states within Northeast, as ‘South Tibet’. Since the last few years China has articulated its diplomatic contestation over the legal status of Zangnan (the Mandarin name for Arunachal Pradesh) in different international institutions. In 2009, China won a crucial vote in the Asian Development Bank against India's "disclosure agreement", which prohibits the ADB to fund any future development project in the state under India's responsibility.[xv] Furthermore, even today, China is not issuing visas to any Indian government official hailing from Arunachal for any official visit to the country and ‘stapled visas’ to non-officials from this contested province.[xvi]China’s position, therefore, is that the natives of Arunachal Pradesh are in fact citizens of China who do not require official entry visas for travelling within its sovereign territory.
Much of the Sinophobia in India emanates from the mega dams that China now yearns to activate on the highest river in the world, the Brahmaputra (Yarlung Tsangpo), which is also the lifeline of Northeast. For years, China has been nurturing plans of diverting high volumes of water from this river using the western route section of its South–North Water Transfer Project.[xvii] Since 2010, the groundwork is already underway on the 510 MW Zangmu dam. Moreover, China has officially approved the construction of three more hydro-power projects in the middle reaches of the river: Dagu damn of 640 MW capacity, Jiacha dam of 320 MW capacity, and Jiexu dam, the capacity of which is yet to be determined.[xviii]
These dams, upon completion, will pose as an acute existential threat to the downstream riparian regions, which includes the entire Northeast of India as well as Bangladesh.
image: The Hindu Business LineThis ongoing uncertainty presents India with no alternate choice other than building-up and upgrading an all-inclusive military infrastructure in the Northeast that will offer effective resistance to a possible Chinese military assault. In 1962, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) retreated after it had reached deep into Tezpur, a populous town in north-central state of Assam, for the fact that China was then not in a position to efficiently sustain the PLA’s lines of communication.[xix] However, today China has greatly fortified its position along its Southwestern flank by expanding a network of road,rail, and air links that connects its main cities to its border areas.[xx] Whereas, on the Indian side of the border there is as yet no single concrete highway that connects Guwahati, the major city of Assam and the gateway of Northeast, to any of the border points in Arunachal Pradesh.
The heightened Sinophobia that has of late gripped India has resulted in the rolling-out of many Central Government funded Special Area Programmes for the Northeast, like the Border Area Development Programme, the Hill Areas Development Programme, etc. However, in this process of infrastructure development in the region, the Centre is considering ‘securitized development’ as the basic premise for sustainable development. Hereby a befitting example is the proposed Trans-Arunachal highway, a 1811 km, two-lane, mega highway project,[xxi] except for the Bandardewa-Itanagar-Holongi stretch that will be four-lane.[xxii] The highway will connect Tawang in the Northwest tip of Arunachal Pradesh to Kunabari in the Southeastern end of the state and further run down to connect with the Bogi Beel bridge in Assam,[xxiii]which is likely to be completed by 2015, and will then be the longest bridge in the country.[xxiv] The highway will pass through mid-belt of Arunachal Pradesh and will inter-connect 12 out of the 16 district headquarter towns of the state.[xxv]
Regional economic integration and “modernity-globalization”
In order to balance the conceivable Chinese military threat over the Northeast, the Centre is endeavoring to open up previously sanctimonious state borders along Northeast with the objective of encouraging greater cross-border trade with India’s eastern flank neighboring countries. The Centre believes that a gradual easing of the border restrictions with its neighboring countries will tempt the foreseeable economic superpower, China, to give-up its ambition of a military seizure of the contested region one fine day in the future in lieu of the lucrative economic gains that it stands to accrue by participating in cross-border trade.
Currently, India has a few bi-lateral trade outlets with its neighboring countries to the east, like Nathu La border point with China, Moreh-Tamu border point with Myanmar,[xxvi] Baliamari – Kalaichar and Lauwaghar – Balat border haats, which are traditional weekly village markets, with Bangladesh,[xxvii]Apart from these trade outlets, India allows its local border-area populace to carry out limited cross-border trading, like trade along the Stilwell Road at Nampong (Arunachal Pradesh) near Pangsau Pass, between the people residing along the India-Myanmarese border.[xxviii] Other inter-state connectivity projects are on the anvil like the Kaladan Project, a 593 km long Transit Transport Project, which will connect the Eastern Indian seaport of Kolkata with the seaport in the Western Myanmar Rakhine state capital of Sittwe.[xxix] However, the Centre is keeping a close watch on the nature and volume of bi-lateral trade that is happening through India’s border along Northeastern region. This it will continue to do in the future, while it simultaneously promotes a progressive increase in the level of cross-border bi-lateral trade with neighboring states to the level of building asupra-regional multi-lateral trade complex with the Northeast as its epicenter.
The Northeast, with approximately 3.85 percent of India’s total population[xxx] and 7.9% of the total geographical area of the country,[xxxi]contributed a mere 2.39 percent of the total GDP of India in the financial year 2011-2012.[xxxii] Indeed, the figure has remained at less than 3 percent over the last many decades. According to the profit making rules of market economics, the aforementioned factual data qualifies the region as ‘unnecessary-baggage’ that India is haplessly carrying. It needs to scrape this relatively un-productive region for the rest of the market-economy to function in a robust manner and without having to bear the excessive burden of feeding the region with undue concessions.
However, the Centre is well aware of the enormous commercial value of the as yet unexplored natural resources in Northeast, like uranium reserves at the Borholla oil fields in Jorhat district,[xxxiii] shale-gas deposits in Assam-Arakan basin,[xxxiv] high-grade fossil limestone or 'nummulitic' limestone deposits of Assam and Meghalaya,[xxxv]Today, the business moguls of the mainland region of the country as well as international entrepreneurs are knocking at the doors of Centre to secure a stake in the Northeast resource pie. So, the fallacies of eggheads based at Centre to do away with Northeast, if at all, are tantamount to economic suicide on the part of India, even under the rules of market economics.
Today, a form of modernity-globalization[xxxvi] is sweeping around the world, and the Centre is pursuing a middle-path to deal with Northeast under the hitherto prevailing environment of dormant violence, which has occasionally erupted in the past. The Centre, on its own, is taking-up industrialization projects in the region that aim to generate social benefits for the native population, like employment insurance, education, etc. Also, it is allowing limited direct and indirect foreign investment to infusing venture capital in the region and encourage it to steadily integrate with the global financial system.
A point that needs further emphasis is that the Centre’s present pro-poor socio-economic policies and schemes for Northeast, as mentioned above, are allowing the native population of this relatively cut-off landmass a space to breathe in a suffocating external milieu. The natives have now started securing financial support in different forms, by engaging in limited cross-border people-to-people trade at a supra-regional level, which is gradually augmenting their meager level of sustenance. This process is a calculated maneuver on part of the Centre to enable the Northeast to relish the limited fruits of globalization.
Also, the Centre’s aforementioned strategy compliments the objectives of the local politicians of the region, who want to shore-up their support among the residing majority rural and urban-poor population. The overall plan is to create a win-win situation for the power holders at the Centre and in the Northeast, while leaving the natives of the latter to clamor among themselves for securing the residual gains from the situation.
Critical Theory: a possible rescue path for the Northeast
Until recently, the Centre, the powerful guardian of India, wherein diverse nationalities homogeneously domicile, had practically curtailed almost all socio-cultural inter-exchanges and economic transactions between Northeast and the geographically adjacent regions that presently lie within the sovereign territories of India’s neighboring countries. This, of course, implies the fact that the two aforesaid regions shared intimate socio-cultural affinity, political interactions, and economic exchanges in the past.[xxxvii]
However, the Centre has now changed its general strategy for dealing with the Northeast, seeking to bring it into the center of national geostrategic and economic realms. The Northeast itself is too weak to stay immune from the internal changes that the Centre is trying to push through. Neither is it strong enough to defend itself from external encroachment by sovereign powers if left unprotected by Centre, which goes contrary to the demand for secession from India by numerous militant organizations actively functioning in the region.
It is also worth mentioning that, in the future, an onslaught of excessive trade and commerce under an open-border regime will further deteriorate the aesthetic beauty of Northeast that has existed since people began to settle the area in distant prehistory. In order not to distort the historic identity of the Northeast, the Centre should discard its positive discriminatory policies and schemes towards the region, like categorization of NE states as Special Category States, etc.
The Northeast will genuinely benefit from the impending wave of globalization at its doorsteps only if Centre lets the region gradually integrate on its own with South Asia and Southeast Asia. While this process unfolds, the Centre must ensure that the region is able to sustain its innate identity, which is characterized by minimum internal clashes between the different indigenous (ethnic) groups that domicile the land. If the Centre continues to forcefully or tacitly coral the region in the future, this will yield similar results that the region witnessed over the second half of the 20th century: violent secessionist movements, widespread human trafficking, etc.
Furthermore, state (Centre’s) intervention should in no way mean bureaucratic service delivery for wielding centralized power in this hinterland region. Rather, the state needs to pursue a new operation style of functioning through which its activities endeavor to reinvent the traditional genius of the people of Northeastern region.[xxxviii]
The Northeast is not a monolithic entity; rather, it is a whirlpool of vagaries. It has long been witness to protracted socio-political conflicts, driven greatly by economic motives, between the different indigenous (ethnic) groups in their respective efforts to dominate one another. Today, the region needs the benign supra-governance of New Delhi (Centre) in order not to fall back into the vortex of previous conflicts. While at the same time, the Centre needs to take into consideration the extra-regional historic linkages of the region and thereby gradually subside the face value of India’s presently most revered colonial inheritance, i.e. the Westphalia-based concept of inviolable state borders.
Critical Theory seemingly provides an acceptable solution for the present and future predicaments of Northeast in terms of temporal morals and ethics of civilized humanity. However, this approach calls for the Centre to unload the powers that it wields over the region vis-à-vis a rising China, which has, over many centuries, practically adhered to the concept of “strategic frontier” theory- expanding or contracting borders according to national power projection[xxxix]. If the Centre practically pursues the Critical Theory approach to dealing with the Northeast then this is likely to endanger the relatively stable temporal global system of nation-states.
Conclusion
It is unlikely that the Northeast will be able to withstand the onslaught of globalization, given the momentum of trends such as human migration and technological development.[xl] It is most likely that the influx of cheap illegal immigrant laborers from Bangladesh to the Northeast, whose legal status of citizenship is at present reluctantly monitored by the locals, will one day become political-masters of large parts of the region. China, the next global superpower, is likely to point out its Tibeto-Burman/Mongoloid ethnic and cultural connections with several ethnic groups of Northeast[xli] and offer to assist them in resisting what they may see as Indian imperialism over the region. However, by then, the waves of globalization will have engulfed the Northeast and the people residing in the region, both natives and outsiders who have settled here, will be highly Indianized, i.e. deeply conditioned in support of India, and are likely to strive on their own in a globalized environment to assert their Indian-ness vis-à-vis the burgeoning extra-regional influences in the Northeast.



[i] The term “Northeast” frontier was first articulated by Alexander Mackenzie, an officer who served the British Crown in India. He held many positions during his Commissioned service, among which were Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal, Chief Commissioner of Burma, etc., which endowed him with sufficient practical knowledge of the region.
Mackenzie, A. (1884). History of the Government with the Hill Tribes of the Northeast Frontier of Bengal. Calcutta: Home Department Press.
[ii] Mandal, D. (2009). VAT and Unfair Tarde Practices- An Analysis. In Mandal, R. K. (Ed.). Value Added Tax in Northeast India: Issues and Strategies. Mittal Publications : New Delhi.
[iii] The British pursued limited administration of the Northeast frontier. Through-out the course of British rule in India, it remained a frontier region, and never constituent part of the mainland British India Empire. The Inner Line Regulations ensured that the hill regions beyond the plains of Assam were largely left to their traditional chiefs once they accepted British suzerainty. The princely kingdoms of Tripura and Manipur were treated as dependencies, remote controlled by political agents but not administered on an everyday basis.
Ibid at i
[iv] a willful negligence on part of the Indian Government to solve the problems besetting the Northeast for the last many decades.
Singh, T. K. (Ed.). (2008). Look East Policy & India's North East: Polemics and Perspectives. New Delhi: Concept.
[v] In India's Union Budget 2013-14 Finance Minister, P Chidambaram, has finally proposed to link Northeast India to Myanmar under the rubric of its Look East Policy. This policy was officially adopted In 1991 with the philosophy of achieving economic with the South-East Asia, however due to the many physical and technical barriers in this regard it was henceforth kept in a frozen state for long.
Full text Union Budget 2013-14: Read Finance Minister P Chidambaram's budget speech BUDGET 2013, (2013, Feb 28). IBN Live. Retrieved:http://ibnlive.in.com/news/full-text-union-budget-201314-read-finance-minister-p-chidambarams-budget-speech/375639-7-255.html
[vi] The “Peace, Progress and Prosperity in the North Eastern Region: Vision 2020"emphasizes on infrastructure development in the Northeast, connectivity of Northeast with the rest of the country, sector-specific and industry-wise national strategy to be followed to better integrate the region within the current globalized processes and contexts, etc.
Rao, G. M. (2008). Peace, Progress and Prosperity in the North Eastern Region, Vision 2020. National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, 13.
[vii] India’s Eleventh Five Year plan gave special importance to North East region, primarily issues relating to women, education and skill development.
Engendering the Eleventh Five Year Plan: Removing Obstacles, Creating Opportunities. (2008). National Alliance of Women, Ministry of Women and Child Development, UNDP, UNIFEM. New Delhi. Retrieved : http://www.aicte-india.org/downloads/engendering_XI_five_year_plan.pdf
[viii] Indian Minister of External Affairs, Dr. Sashi Tharoor, reiterates the high ‘strategic’ significance of the country’s North- East region in India’s foreign policy.
Association of International Relations. (2010). From Land locked or Land Linked: North East India in BIMSTEC. Shillong, Meghalaya.
[ix] Ibid at vi
[x] See Capper, J. & Anon (1918). Delhi - The Capital of India. Asian Educational Services: New Delhi.
[xi] Lok Sabha (House of the People) Retrieved from : http://parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/intro/introls.htm
[xii]General Information for Members of Rajya Sabha. Retrieved from :http://rajyasabha.nic.in/rsnew/general_information/general_information_main.asp
[xiii] Sahni, A. (2002). Survey of Conflicts & Resolution in India's Northeast. Faultlines,12 (3).
Also See. Baruah, S. (2005). Historicizing Ethnic Politics in Northeast India In Phukan. G. (Ed.) Inter-ethnic conflict in NorthEast India. South Asian Publishers Pvt Ltd : Delhi.
[xiv] internal conflicts have been a permanent feature of the Asian political landscape since 1945, of which post-colonial India is no exception.
Chonzom, T. & Heimerdinger, P. Conflict in Northeast India: Issues, Causes and Concern. Heinrich Böll Foundation. Retrieved:http://www.in.boell.org/web/52-259.html
Also See. Id at xiv (Sahni, A.)
[xv] Samanta, P.D. (2009, Sept 18). China strikes back on Arunachal. Indian Express. Retrieved: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/china-strikes-back-on-arunachal/518626
[xvi] Author has personally confirmed with concerned sources.
Also See. No visa for officials from Arunachal, stapled for non-officials: China. Indian Express. (2011, January 13). Retrieved:http://www.indianexpress.com/comments/no-visa-for-officials-from-arunachal-stapled-for-nonofficials-china/737059/
[xvii] South–North Water Transfer Project is a multi-decade infrastructure project undertaken by China that aims to transfer extremely high volumes of water from the watery south to heavily industrious but arid north of the country. The Project has three sections of routes, namely Western route, Middle routes and Eastern route.
Nickum, J.E. (2002). A Brief Report on the Status of the South to North Water Transfer. United Nations: Human Development Report. Retrieved:http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global//hrdr2006/papers/James_Nickum_China_water_transfer.pdf
The second phase of this plan (i.e. the South–North Water Transfer Project) is to transfer the waters of various rivers in the south-west - the Yarlung Zangbo, the Lanchan River and the Nu - to the Yangtze, and then move the water further northward from there (finally connecting to the Yellow river). This large South-North Water Transfer" is sometime referred to as Great Western Route or the New Moon Canal Project.
Weiluo, W. (2006). Water Resources and the Sino-Indian Strategic Partnership, China Rights Forum,1. Retrieved:www.hrichina.org/public/PDFs/CRF.2006/CRF-2006-1_Water.pdf
[xviii] Krishnan, A. (2013, Jan 30). China gives go-ahead for three new Brahmaputra dams. The Hindu. Retrieved:http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/china-gives-goahead-for-three-new-brahmaputra-dams/article4358195.ece
[xix] Ramdasani, A. (2012). Why China Went Back in 1962? Strategic Perspectives. Centre for Strategic Studies and Simulation (CS3), Unified Services Institution: New Delhi.
[xx] China has developed a network of internal highways and subsidiary/ feeder roads in the TAR to connect strategically significant border areas with India, Nepal, Bhutan and Pakistan by means of motorable roads. It has developed 58, 000 road network in Tibet, including five major highways and a number of subsidiary roads.
Chansoria, M. (Summer. 2010). Trendlines in China's Infrastructure Development in Tibet. CLAWS Journal, pp.178-79.
[xxi] A Note on Trans-Arunachal Highway: Submitted to Secretary to Governor. (2008, March 13). Retrieved :http://www.arunachalpwd.org/pdf/Trans%20Arunachjal%20Highway%20-%20Note%20submitted%20to%20Secretary%20to%20Governor.pdf
[xxii] Measures on to improve infra on Arunachal border: Min (2010, Sept. 10). Zee News. Retrieved :http://zeenews.india.com/news/Northeast/measures-on-to-improve-infra-on-arunachal-border-min_654214.html
[xxiii] Ibid at xviii
[xxiv] Patel, B. S. (2012, May 6). A long wait for longest bridge in country. Indian Express. Retrieved : http://www.indianexpress.com/news/a-long-wait-for-longest-bridge-in-country/945859
[xxv] Ibid at xviii
[xxvi] Mattoo, A. & Happymon , J. (2010). Shaping India's Foreign Policy: People, Politics, and Places. New Delhi: Har-Anand Publishers: New Delhi.
[xxvii] Trade in Border Haats across the border at Meghalaya between Bangladesh and India. (2011, July 1). DGFT PUBLIC NOTICE No.61/(RE 2010)/2009-14. Government of India, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Department of Commerce. Retrieved :http://www.eximguru.com/notifications/trade-in-border-haats-across-23280.aspx
[xxviii] Ibid at xv
[xxix] Oo, A. M. (2013, Jan. 23). Indian Look East Policy and the Kaladan Project of Western Burma. Mizzima. Retrieved :http://www.mizzima.com/research/8787-indian-look-east-policy-and-the-kaladan-project-of-western-burma.html
[xxx] 2011 Census of India. Government of India. Ministry of Home affairs. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner. Retrievedhttp://censusindia.gov.in/2011-prov-results/data_files/india/table_1.pdf
[xxxi] Ibid at ii
[xxxii] GDP of States & Union Territories for FY2012. VMW Analytic Services. Retrieved :http://unidow.com/india%20home%20eng/statewise_gdp.html
[xxxiii] Industrialinfo.com (2009) India's ONGC Limited Discovers Uranium Deposists During Oil Field Exploration in Assamhttp://www.ordons.com/asia/central-asia/1543-indias-ongc-limited-discovers-uranium-deposits-during-oil-field-exploration-in-assam.pdf
[xxxiv] Rao, V.K (2010). Potential Shale Gas Basins of India Possibilities & Evaluations. Paper presented at seminar of India Unconventional Gas Forum, New Delhi, India.
[xxxv] Holtec Consulting Private Limited. (Cons). Manufacturing of Value added products based on Limestone and Coal in Assam and Meghalaya. Retrieved from North Eastern Development Finance Corporation Ltd. website : http://www.nedfi.com/tedf/manufacturing_of_value_added.htm
[xxxvi] ‘modernity globalization', which aims towards a universal culture, produces effects on dismantling national cultures and on creating forms of contradiction and conflicts, and hence on supporting a specific form of modernism.
Zayed A. (2003). Modernity Globalization and Dismantling National Cultures. The World of Thought, 1(32).
[xxxvii] The author while explaining the idea of shared history and regional interconnectedness points out that the Ahom rulers of Assam used to sent an annual "Peshkash" or tribute to the Dalia Lama based in Lhasa.
Mishra, S. (2008). Between Borders Writing Histories of Borderland Identities in Northeastern India. In Contested Space and Identity in the Indian Northeast. New Delhi: Academy of Third World Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia University.
Also see, Within the Indian sub-continent, the Neolithic culture of Northeastern India has no strict parallels within the subcontinent …Three characteristic features of the Neolithic culture in Northeast India viz. celt making traditions, Cord-impressed pottery, and rice agriculture, are more or less similar to the Neolithic cultures of East Asia and Southeast Asia…. Northeast India has the evidence of intermixing of the cultural elements due to the migrations of different peoples with different cultures in different times.
Hazarika, M. 2006. Neolithic Culture of Northeast India: A Recent Perspective on the Origins of Pottery and Agriculture. Ancient Asia, 1, pp. 25-44. Retrieved: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/aa.06104
[xxxviii] Chakrabarty, G. (2008). Economic Policy and the North East Looking Beyond Neo-Classical Praxis. Pg-184. In Deb, B.J., Sengupta, K. & Datta-Ray B. (Eds.) Globalization and North East India. New Delhi: Concept Publishing Company.
[xxxix] Lin, C. (2011). China’s New Silk Road to the Mediterranean: The Eurasian Land Bridge and Return of Admiral Zheng He. ISPSW Strategy Series, 165, pp.1-23.
[xl] Globalization is embedded in evolutionary time. Taken in this sense globalization becomes a human species feature, part of its ecological adaptability and ability to inhabit all of planetary space.
Pieterse, N. J. (2012). Periodizing Globalization: Histories of Globalization. New Global Studies, 6(2, 1).
[xli] Ibid at xii

Hriday Sarma is a M.Phil Researcher at the Academy of International Studies, Jamia Millai Islamia University (New Delhi). He is presently acting as ‘Sp. Correspondent (South-to-South Development Cooperation)’ for Global South Development Magazine (produced by Silicon Creation- Finland) and ‘South Asia Coordinator’ for Association for Conflict Resolution (International Section), a U.S. based professional organization.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Sikkim's clash of civilisations


Sikkim's clash of civilisations

The old faultlines of identity remain despite aggressive modernity

Sunanda K Datta-Ray

The seminar on "Tibet's Relation with the Himalayas" that the Foundation for Non-Violent Alternatives (FNVA) organised in Gangtok last week recalled Jigdal Densapa who died recently. Descended from Sikkim's ancient Lepcha chiefs and a hereditary Kazi of Barmiok, Densapa was secretary to the last Chogyal of Sikkim. Sir Patrick Shaw, a former Australian high commissioner to India, called him "the only modern man in Sikkim".

That's what I remembered as learned seminar papers by Sangeeta Thapliyal of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses' Col P K Gautam or Nani Bath of Itanagar's Rajiv Gandhi University focussed on threats to national identity in Nepal, Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh. With modernity run riot in Sikkim, I didn't see a single man in the ankle-length robe called baku or kho, which is the Sikkimese male's traditional attire. Densapa wore it with dignity.

The empty desolation of the Chogyal's palace is as indicative of the new Sikkim as bustling crowds in the wide walkway of Mahatma Gandhi Marg. Its crowded shops and cafes cater mainly to budget tourists whose colloquial Bengali rises stridently above the hubbub. But here and there, pleasant sanctuaries like Baker's Cafe and the just-opened Coffee Shop, offer a touch of more sophisticated leisure. Where smelly, run-down Dewan's in the bazaar was once the only hostelry, hotels now sprout every few yards, ranging from the ostentatious Mayfair and elegant Denzong Residency to hole-in-the-wall hovels. Two boast casinos where locals squander their new-found wealth on the turn of the wheel.

Rajiv Gandhi's calculation that only 15 per cent of development funds reach the target means that 600,000 Sikkimese are making money hand over fist. In their past innocence, my Sikkimese friends didn't think of exploiting the absence of excise duty under the Chogyal. But the shrewd Indian businessmen who flooded Gangtok after the protected kingdom became India's 22nd state quickly grasped they needed only an address in Sikkim, a front man and a dummy company to make a killing from duty-free goods. Soon, greed overcame prudence. Factories elsewhere in India began rolling out manufactures stamped "Made in Sikkim". The exchequer may have lost Rs 3,50 crore on evaded tobacco duty alone.

Despite aggressive changes, however, Sikkim cannot afford to abandon its past. The 300,000 registered "Sikkim subjects" (meaning they or their ancestors were bona fide residents of the kingdom) pay no income tax. About 225,000 of them are ethnic Nepalese. Another 35,000 Nepalese probably have fake certificates.  Sikkim's Tibeto-Buddhist ethic has been watered down, and some indigenes complain of existing on sufferance. Kazi Lendhup Dorji, the first chief minister whom many Sikkimese regard as the "country-seller" even while they formally honour his memory, once chided me for not speaking Nepalese. "It's the language of the people," he said.

The monarchy would never have been overthrown and the kingdom merged without Nepalese cooperation. Since they accused the Chogyal and his Bhutiya-Lepcha courtiers of trampling on their Hindu Nepalese identity, you would expect them to make common cause now with West Bengal's militant Nepalese, especially as Darjeeling district once belonged to Sikkim. Gangtok's fairy-tale Assembly even recently passed a resolution supporting Gorkhaland. But do they want to join it? Certainly not. As Kazi's Hindu ethnic Nepalese successor Nar Bahadur Bhandari put it, Sikkim had merged but would not be submerged.

Since they are no longer fighting a durbar that derived its symbols and rituals from Manchu China, the Nepalese who constitute 75 per cent of Sikkim's population don't need to reinvent themselves as Gorkha. They are proudly Sikkimese, masters in their own home. Merger would erode an identity that synthesises the legacy of six centuries of Tibet's cultural influence. Sikkim can be put in India, but Tibet can't be taken out of Sikkim. Merger would also cost the Sikkimese their protected jobs and special privileges.

Uttam Lal, a young idealist who teaches geography and natural resources management at Sikkim University, spoke passionately of the threat that both man and beast face on Sikkim's border with Tibet. He meant mines, barbed wire fencing and other defensive measures. The menace of modernity is no less serious. It is as much in need of the attention of organisations like the FNVA, which calls itself an "institute for developing peace studies". There can be no peace unless healthy survival is ensured.

Tailpiece: When Densapa led a group of fellow Bhutiya-Lepcha notables to Delhi to seek Scheduled Tribe (ST) status, Kunwar Natwar Singh, then a minister, remarked wryly he had never seen such a sophisticated bunch of tribals. But ST status was granted.

Friday, 19 April 2013


Reach out to China, via Sikkim

It must be nearly 40 years since I made my way to Nathu-la, the pass at 14,400 ft that is supposed to be one of three Himalayan trade routes between India and China. It was a different world. Sikkim was a monarchy then and India and China bitterly critical of each other.
My travelling companion, Prince Wangchuck, was an engaging youth full of fun and promise. Now revered by legitimists as the 13th consecrated Chogyal of Sikkim, he is a 60-year-old recluse lost in meditation in some Nepalese sanctuary.
Wangchuck had a smattering of Mandarin. “Ni hao ma … How are you?” he asked the Chinese soldier on the other side of the barbed wire beyond the crudely painted “India Wall”. The man stared at us in surly silence. Wangchuck repeated the question. Again, there was no reply. Finally, when he yelled, “Ni hao ma?” a third time, the Chinese sentry grunted “Wo hen hao, xiexie… I am well” in an angry tone that suggested the opposite.
India probably hoped that China’s willingness to trade through this gap in the Himalayas implied acceptance of Sikkim’s status as an Indian state. For China did not reciprocate when India acknowledged Chinese sovereignty over Tibet in the 2003 “Declaration on Principles for Relations and Comprehensive Cooperation” between India and China. An American scholar, David Scott, points out in Sino-Indian Territorial Issues: The Razor’s Edge?, “the text shows a one-way agreement, one-way obligations and one-way concessions”. As for the complacent claim of implicit Chinese acceptance of Indian sovereignty, Scott warns “that was implied rather than explicit, de facto rather then de jure.” As if to bear out Scott’s doubts, China contested Indian control of the 2.1-sq-km Finger Area tract in northern Sikkim five years after the Declaration.
Delivering the K. Subrahmanyam Memorial Lecture, “China in the Twenty-First Century: What India Needs to Know About China’s World View” in New Delhi last August, Shyam Saran, former national security adviser, observed that although China handed over maps during Wen Jiabao’s 2005 visit “showing Sikkim as part of India… recently, some Chinese scholars have pointed out that the absence of an official statement recognising Indian sovereignty leaves the door open to subsequent shifts if necessary.”
Even the ostensible commercial rationale for reopening Nathu-la (ironically, on the Dalai Lama’s birthday, July 6, 2006) doesn’t appear to have been realised. Traditionally, trade between Sikkim and Tibet was conducted along 13 routes. The British preferred Nathu-la because of its gentler gradients and shorter distances (54 km from Gangtok, 520 km to Lhasa). Its closure in 1962 together with all the other passes marked the end of an era in history. The only person permitted for 44 years to cross the barbed-wire frontier at Nathu-la was a Chinese postman with an Indian military escort, who would hand over an empty mailbag to his Indian counterpart in a building at the border.
The closure sounded the death-knell of Kalimpong in West Bengal, once the meeting place of kalons (ministers) from Sikkim, Bhutan and Tibet and the nerve centre of the Tibet trade. More than 10,000 men were employed in sorting mounds of dirty white, grey or black wool from Tibet into neat bales for export to Britain and the US. Thousands more provided fodder and maize for mules, and exotic entertainment for their masters enjoying a 10-day respite from the privations of a bleak and dangerous road. The daily turnover of more than `400 million persuaded the State Bank of India to open a branch in Kalimpong.
Apart from wool and Kuomintang silver dollars, the caravans brought yaks’ tails, musk, borax, curios and Chinese rice. They took back cement, kerosene and all the manufactures of Indian factories. A car for the Dalai Lama was dismantled and carted up piece by piece. Indian officials turned a blind eye when rations and equipment for Mao Zedong’s forces, including jeeps from Kolkata, were similarly exported and reassembled at a factory at Phari on the Tibetan plateau.
Two new marts were set up at Sherathang in Sikkim and Rinqingang in Tibet under the 1991 Sino-Indian memorandum of understanding. But only local people can use the marts. However, Sikkim can now import several new items including readymade garments, shoes, quilts and blankets, carpets and Tibetan herbal medicines. The earlier list was restricted to 15 items like wool, cashmere goat, yak tails, sheep skins, horses and salt. Traders complained these items were of little value. “Who wants yak tails nowadays?” they asked.
The original export list of 29 items (including clothes, tea, rice, dry fruits and vegetable oil) has also been expanded to include processed food, flowers, fruits and spices, and religious products like beads, prayer wheels, incense sticks and butter oil lamps. The Sikkimese would like much more relaxation. They say the restriction to locals only encourages Rajasthani traders to operate benami through Sikkimese front men.
Two other passes — Gunji in Uttarakhand and Shipki in Himachal Pradesh — have also been opened. But the total trade isn’t even an infinitesimal fraction of the $66 billion bilateral trad. It makes no dent in India’s $23 billion trade deficit. Smuggling is rife through Nepal and, to a lesser extent, some north-eastern states.
But even if neither the political nor the economic argument for reopening the three passes has been fulfilled, it doesn’t mean they should be closed again. On the contrary, more passes should be opened and imaginatively administered on both sides of the border to encourage the human contact that is now sadly absent from Sino-Indian relations.
Back in Gangtok after many years, I couldn’t visit Nathu-la again. Severe hailstorms had blocked the road.
The writer is a senior journalist, columnist and author