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'India is a heartless state' The attitude has changed

Devil Soul

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By:Kuldip Nayar 11 hrs ago | Comments (2)

India is a heartless state

Not long ago, a disaster in any part of the country would elicit national response. People would go door-to-door to collect money, clothes, utensils, medicines and many other things of daily use to transmit through agencies which were voluntarily engaged in relief and rehabilitation work. The attitude has changed in the last few years. People are, no doubt, concerned and sympathetic. But there is no countrywide effort to organise help. The atmosphere is no more animated with the zeal which I recall used to be there.

Take the example of Uttrakhand. The devastation has been on a massive scale. More than 5,000 people have reportedly died and the material loss runs into hundreds of crores of rupees. Yet the reaction has been tepid. Efforts are visible on individual scale. But the nation as such is not concerned. Particularly, the states in the south and the east have shown less involvement. The governments, both in the hilly state of Uttrakhand and at the Centre, were too late to respond and had no clue what to do. Even after 10 days of the disaster, 20,000 people were stranded at different places. What dominated the discussion was not the scale of assistance but whether it was man-made or the nature’s fury. Of course, it was man-made. The reasons are obvious.

The trees to accommodate the ever growing bureaucracy were cut. The de-silting of river is out of any government’s agenda. The National Disaster Management Board was tried for the first time and found wanting. Political parties have done nothing concrete except politicising the tragedy. The official appeal to contribute to the prime minister’s relief fund has been issued as a matter of routine. Surprisingly, no foreign country has offered help to evacuate the stranded people, much less any material assistance. Pakistan has missed a golden opportunity to befriend the common Indian. Islamabad should have sent trucks of food and medicines to the Wagha border. New Delhi would have lost face if it had stopped the aid.

If one were to analyse the tragedy, one would come to the conclusion that the nation has lost sensitivity. Different states have over the years become islands by themselves and there is hardly any tragedy which transcends the border. When it came to rescuing the victims, states like West Bengal and Gujarat preferred to evacuate the habitants of their own area. The absence of national feeling may well be the reason that every state is putting up dams in catchment areas. They think that the consequential loss is to other states not to them. And so many dams have come up that they are counterproductive. Of course, the money spent has enough leeway for corruption at political and official levels. The land and timber mafias have played havoc at the expense of the nation too.

The countrywide coordination is possible at the level of environment ministry. It can also ensure that ecology is not disturbed. But the ministry is so much under pressure from different lobbies and state governments that it has become only a signing authority. The area around Uttrakhand is so fragile that the central government did not want to disturb the ecology. But both political parties, the Congress and the BJP, joined hands to have the proposal scuttled.

And the behaviour of the people in Uttrakhand itself was inhuman. There are instances to show how shopkeepers charged exorbitant prices for things of daily use. A biscuit packet was sold for Rs200. A loaf of bread was priced at Rs100. There are instances of looting and even molesting of women. One woman required medical help. But her gold chain was pulled from her neck and she was left bleeding. Even sadhus and sants made most of the situation, robbing money and ornaments from the deceased.

The only bright side is the work done by the army and the air force. They evacuated thousands of people stuck at different places. The survivors in fact narrated the difference between the government which did not do anything and the army and air force which rescued them and gave them food and shelter. One air force helicopter, engaged in rescue operation, crashed because of bad weather. Twenty lives were lost.

India is a heartless state. Over the years, it has deteriorated in values. There is not a semblance of idealism left to talk about social justice or to lift the lower half to the level where it can lead a viable living. Poverty, unemployment and malnutrition, signs of a decaying society, are increasing day by day. We are, almost back to the Hindu growth rate of four per cent per annum. A dollar fetches Rs60. In fact, the rupee is in shambles.

Today’s spectacle of poor growth and the dismal future is because political parties have catered to their fiefdoms without keeping before them the picture of India on the whole or the growth of every sector or every area. Unfortunately, the parties have not realised that their politics may feather their nests but would not take the country forward.

Both the Congress and the BJP, the two main parties are the most to blame. They have seen to it that they do not compromise even though a bit of cooperation would have done wonders. Parliament has been more or less standstill. No business has been transacted session after session, creating a new record of inactivity. The parties admit this and some leading members have no hesitation in saying so in private. Yet they do not cross the line even word-wise in the house lest it should harm them.

India does not have much leeway. The speed with which we are going down the hill indicates a ruin of great magnitude. There is every reason why the two main parties should come together to take the country further. They should at least have a joint action on the rehabilitation of victims. But that would require a stand above party lines.

In today’s approach to occupy the kursi, it is difficult to imagine that any political party would place the national interest first. Even several disasters like the one at Uttrakhaned cannot change the thinking of political parties. It is tragic, but true.

The writer is a senior Indian journalist.
- See more at: The attitude has changed | Pakistan Today | Latest news | Breaking news | Pakistan News | World news | Business | Sport and Multimedia
 
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@Devil Soul To tell you the truth, more people has come to help in Uttarakhand disaster, and if you don't know, due to technology, it has made things easier to do so.

Just an example.
A person working in Uttarakashi put on FB that they need 4X4 vehicles as cars cant access many regions. A group of such vehicle owners came to their place just to help them out.

They asked what is needed and what they have in plenty.

People due to social networks are easily getting info about relief material required,

People from southern states asked these people for guidance as they left for Uttarakhand few days after disaster. So the editor is wrong here too.

If govt., officials fails, it gets reported by the people.

I was lucky enough to come in contact with them and I know what they are actually doing.

Political parties always do politics on any issue. Whether it is terrorist attack, natural disaster or anything.

These senior journalists, don't go to ground zero, don't check how people are coordinating, or how they are helping Army, how NGOs are coordinating or how Indian Inc. are chipping in Uttarakhand relief effort.

They sit in their cozy, AC room passing judgement about entire India just for their monthly cheque from a news magazine.
 
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@Devil Soul To tell you the truth, more people has come to help in Uttarakhand disaster, and if you don't know, due to technology, it has made things easier to do so.

Just an example.
A person working in Uttarakashi put on FB that they need 4X4 vehicles as cars cant access many regions. A group of such vehicle owners came to their place just to help them out.

They asked what is needed and what they have in plenty.

People due to social networks are easily getting info about relief material required,

People from southern states asked these people for guidance as they left for Uttarakhand few days after disaster.

If govt., officials fails, it gets reported by the people.

I was lucky enough to come in contact with them and I know what they are actually doing.

Political parties always do politics on any issue. Whether it is terrorist attack, natural disaster or anything.

These senior journalists, don't go to ground zero, don't check how people are coordinating, or how they are helping Army, how NGOs are coordinating or how Indian Inc. are chipping in Uttarakhand relief effort.

They sit in their cozy, AC room passing judgement about entire India just for their monthly cheque from a news magazine.

Thank you for the info:smitten:, but u need to forward this info to Kuldip Nayar, he is the one who wrote this piece, may b he will use this info in this next article :woot:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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By:Kuldip Nayar 11 hrs ago | Comments (2)

India is a heartless state

Not long ago, a disaster in any part of the country would elicit national response. People would go door-to-door to collect money, clothes, utensils, medicines and many other things of daily use to transmit through agencies which were voluntarily engaged in relief and rehabilitation work. The attitude has changed in the last few years. People are, no doubt, concerned and sympathetic. But there is no countrywide effort to organise help. The atmosphere is no more animated with the zeal which I recall used to be there.

Take the example of Uttrakhand. The devastation has been on a massive scale. More than 5,000 people have reportedly died and the material loss runs into hundreds of crores of rupees. Yet the reaction has been tepid. Efforts are visible on individual scale. But the nation as such is not concerned. Particularly, the states in the south and the east have shown less involvement. The governments, both in the hilly state of Uttrakhand and at the Centre, were too late to respond and had no clue what to do. Even after 10 days of the disaster, 20,000 people were stranded at different places. What dominated the discussion was not the scale of assistance but whether it was man-made or the nature’s fury. Of course, it was man-made. The reasons are obvious.

The trees to accommodate the ever growing bureaucracy were cut. The de-silting of river is out of any government’s agenda. The National Disaster Management Board was tried for the first time and found wanting. Political parties have done nothing concrete except politicising the tragedy. The official appeal to contribute to the prime minister’s relief fund has been issued as a matter of routine. Surprisingly, no foreign country has offered help to evacuate the stranded people, much less any material assistance. Pakistan has missed a golden opportunity to befriend the common Indian. Islamabad should have sent trucks of food and medicines to the Wagha border. New Delhi would have lost face if it had stopped the aid.

If one were to analyse the tragedy, one would come to the conclusion that the nation has lost sensitivity. Different states have over the years become islands by themselves and there is hardly any tragedy which transcends the border. When it came to rescuing the victims, states like West Bengal and Gujarat preferred to evacuate the habitants of their own area. The absence of national feeling may well be the reason that every state is putting up dams in catchment areas. They think that the consequential loss is to other states not to them. And so many dams have come up that they are counterproductive. Of course, the money spent has enough leeway for corruption at political and official levels. The land and timber mafias have played havoc at the expense of the nation too.

The countrywide coordination is possible at the level of environment ministry. It can also ensure that ecology is not disturbed. But the ministry is so much under pressure from different lobbies and state governments that it has become only a signing authority. The area around Uttrakhand is so fragile that the central government did not want to disturb the ecology. But both political parties, the Congress and the BJP, joined hands to have the proposal scuttled.

And the behaviour of the people in Uttrakhand itself was inhuman. There are instances to show how shopkeepers charged exorbitant prices for things of daily use. A biscuit packet was sold for Rs200. A loaf of bread was priced at Rs100. There are instances of looting and even molesting of women. One woman required medical help. But her gold chain was pulled from her neck and she was left bleeding. Even sadhus and sants made most of the situation, robbing money and ornaments from the deceased.

The only bright side is the work done by the army and the air force. They evacuated thousands of people stuck at different places. The survivors in fact narrated the difference between the government which did not do anything and the army and air force which rescued them and gave them food and shelter. One air force helicopter, engaged in rescue operation, crashed because of bad weather. Twenty lives were lost.

India is a heartless state. Over the years, it has deteriorated in values. There is not a semblance of idealism left to talk about social justice or to lift the lower half to the level where it can lead a viable living. Poverty, unemployment and malnutrition, signs of a decaying society, are increasing day by day. We are, almost back to the Hindu growth rate of four per cent per annum. A dollar fetches Rs60. In fact, the rupee is in shambles.

Today’s spectacle of poor growth and the dismal future is because political parties have catered to their fiefdoms without keeping before them the picture of India on the whole or the growth of every sector or every area. Unfortunately, the parties have not realised that their politics may feather their nests but would not take the country forward.

Both the Congress and the BJP, the two main parties are the most to blame. They have seen to it that they do not compromise even though a bit of cooperation would have done wonders. Parliament has been more or less standstill. No business has been transacted session after session, creating a new record of inactivity. The parties admit this and some leading members have no hesitation in saying so in private. Yet they do not cross the line even word-wise in the house lest it should harm them.

India does not have much leeway. The speed with which we are going down the hill indicates a ruin of great magnitude. There is every reason why the two main parties should come together to take the country further. They should at least have a joint action on the rehabilitation of victims. But that would require a stand above party lines.

In today’s approach to occupy the kursi, it is difficult to imagine that any political party would place the national interest first. Even several disasters like the one at Uttrakhaned cannot change the thinking of political parties. It is tragic, but true.

The writer is a senior Indian journalist.
- See more at: The attitude has changed | Pakistan Today | Latest news | Breaking news | Pakistan News | World news | Business | Sport and Multimedia

Well I guess he did not know how smart phones and tabs with internet connectivity changed everything in ground situations.
 
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Thank you for the info:smitten:, but u need to forward this info to Kuldip Nayar, he is the one who wrote this piece, may b he will use this info in this next article :woot:
I would rather tell you who is open to hear other side of story than an idiot journalist. :D
 
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I would say this is because, in the past, people did this as there were serious state failings/ shortcomings in the response. Nowadays things have changed and the federal and state govts have immense resources that eclipse the efforts of any individual. As you can see the IAF/IA/CAPFs/GoI launched the largest rescue effort in India's history so it's not like there was no help. As such this filtered down to the general population ie thigns were being done in a BIG way and there was little they could add.



But after seeing the number of FB campaigns and the like I have no doubt common Indians still cared a lot for their fellow Indians.
 
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Well I guess he did not know how smart phones and tabs with internet connectivity changed everything in ground situations.

Can you blame him? The guy is like a million years old.

220px-Kuldip_Nayar-2.jpg


Born in 1923!
 
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Is Kuldip Nayar in India at present ?
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Uttarakhand: India gives generously, mostly online | NDTV.com

A major reason is that we've introduced online payments which many are availing this time to make a contribution," said an official. And that's 10,264 who've logged on to pmindia.gov.in to contribute Rs. 3.57 crore . And many others have also logged on to their online bank accounts to give an additional Rs. 7.2 crore but their numbers or identities are unknown. "We have no way of knowing the profile of the people who are giving," said the official.
 
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Just an example.
A person working in Uttarakashi put on FB that they need 4X4 vehicles as cars cant access many regions. A group of such vehicle owners came to their place just to help them out.

How did they find the Fb page?
 
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RIP author , we collected goo no. of funds and we helped our enemy too when they are in trouble if iam not wrong . Our army rescued 1000's of people .
 
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