PM INAUGURATES SYMPOSIUM ON THE PEACE DIVIDEND: PROGRESS FOR INDIA
AND SOUTH ASIA
The Prime Minister
inaugurated conference "Hindustan Times Leadership Initiative
-- The Peace Dividend: Progress for India and South Asia",
here today.
Following is the
text of the Prime Minister’s inaugural address on the occasion:
"When the
Hindustan Times Leadership Initiative invited me to this Conference,
what really attracted me was the powerful imagery of the peace
dividend as the engine of progress in our region. At the same
time, I must confess to some sadness that – over half a century
after all the countries of our region attained independence –
this truth still needs to be emphasized.
The peace dividend
for South Asia is the creation of new hope and opportunity for
its billion and a half people. We need no stronger justification
for peace than this simple statement. The investment inputs required
to reap this dividend are pragmatic policies, rational economics
and popular participation.
There can be no argument
about our inherent advantages, common interests and complementary
strengths, which present a tremendous opportunity for our region
to realize its full potential:
- First and foremost, our rich and
varied human resources. Our citizens have created waves around
the world with their technical, financial and managerial expertise.
Their energies and talents can find greater application in regional
cooperative enterprises.
- Second, our populations are younger
than the world average, and will therefore constitute an increasing
proportion of the global workforce in the future.
- Third, our technological advances
have put us at the vanguard of today’s Knowledge Economy, enabling
us to accelerate our development process.
- Fourth, the size and increasing
purchasing power of our collective market create economies of
scale for cost-effective production.
- Fifth, efficient exploitation
of our synergies can vastly enhance intra-regional trade, even
as we work towards a rule-based international trading regime.
- Sixth, the region has massive
untapped capacities for hydropower and unexploited hydrocarbons,
which can more than meet its huge energy deficit.
- Seventh, the rich diversity of
our bio-resources – in the Himalayan region and elsewhere –
are yet to be exploited for our common benefit.
- Eighth, our combined political
weight and economic strength can give us considerable leverage
in pursuing our shared objective for a cooperative multi-polar
world order.
The peace dividend
lies in converting this exciting potential into vibrant reality.
Our region is heir to a centuries old tradition of tolerance,
pluralism and creative interaction. We need to recapture this
ethos in the modern context.
In the post-Cold
War world of globalisation, countries around the world are increasingly
focusing on regional economics. Political disputes have been resolved
diplomatically or quietly deferred for tackling at a more opportune
time. Conflict has given way to cooperation; dialogue moderates
differences. There is a clear recognition that hostility only
stunts economies, inhibits trade and retards progress.
This realization
has dawned not only in the developed world, but also in developing
regions that have experienced bitter differences and violent conflicts
in the past. It encompasses Mercosur and the Andean Pact, COMESA
and SADC, NAFTA and APEC. Nearer home, we have the outstanding
example of ASEAN. South Asia needs the wisdom to heed these lessons.
By most estimates
trade within regions accounts for nearly three-fourths of global
trade. Yet inspite of our geographical proximity, shared economic
characteristics and similar development infrastructure intra-South
Asia trade is under 5% of our total foreign trade.
We must discard
the myth that, because of the asymmetries in our economies, the
smaller countries do not benefit from closer economic integration
within South Asia. Our free trade agreements with Nepal and Sri
Lanka have resulted in narrowing the trade deficit of both these
countries with India. In fact the success of the India-Sri Lanka
Free Trade Agreement has inspired us to expand its scope to cover
services and investment in a comprehensive economic partnership
agreement.
Energy is one
area with the greatest promise of mutually enriching partnerships.
Nepal and Bhutan today have an estimated potential of 100,000
MW of environmentally clean hydro-power. Bangladesh has similarly
promising reserves of natural gas. They need to sell these energy
sources. India is the only viable buyer and its energy demands
are expanding exponentially. There is obvious scope for win-win
arrangements. The hydroelectric projects in Bhutan illustrate
this dramatically. Bhutan’s per capita income of $ 600 today is
expected to double by the end of 2005, when the 1020 Megawatt
Tala power plant is completed.
The optimum management
of our regional water resources for irrigation, navigation and
flood control can have a multiplier effect on infrastructure,
development and growth in our entire region. This requires not
only financial investments, but also maturity of policy. We should
recognise that an enduring partnership can only be built on the
basis of each country wisely exercising the rights of a lower
riparian, and responsibly fulfilling the obligations of an upper
riparian.
Our region sits
astride the land routes and sea lanes that connect the worlds’
big energy sources of the Middle East to the expanding energy
markets of East and Southeast Asia. With our extended neighbourhood
of Iran and Afghanistan, our land mass also links the new energy
sources of Central Asia with the warm water ports of the Indian
Ocean in the South. It does not require much imagination to envisage
how close regional cooperation can cash in on the strategic importance
of our location.
Our most important
common war today is against poverty, disease, hunger and under-development.
We can share experiences and promote intra-regional linkages for
economic and social development. A small, but significant, beginning
has been made by our SAARC Experts Group on Poverty Alleviation.
The Group, drawn from all SAARC countries, has extensively documented
best practices in poverty alleviation programmes across the region.
It has made detailed recommendations for regional dissemination
of information on these practices and for regional capacity building.
We have to show dedication in implementation of these recommendations
and multiply such examples of regional experience sharing.
As we develop
greater economic stakes in each other, we can put aside mistrust
and dispel unwarranted suspicions. We will also develop mutual
sensitivity to each others’ concerns and promote more of our common
interests. If we provide legitimate avenues of free commercial
interaction, we can eradicate the black market and underground
trade. We could jointly tackle smuggling, drug trafficking, money
laundering and other trans-national crimes, which today flourish
in our region because of our mutual rivalries and inadequate coordination.
Once we reach that stage, we would not be far from mutual security
cooperation, open borders and even a single currency.
If this seems
unrealistic and utopian, perhaps we are being unnecessarily cynical.
Let us remember that the world did not anticipate the sudden end
to the Cold War or the collapse of the Berlin Wall. No one thought
Apartheid South Africa could be transformed bloodlessly into Mandela’s
Rainbow Country. Not many political analysts would have predicted
that the hostile suspicion between Russia and China could be converted
in such a short time into a strategic partnership.
Each one of these
developments flowed from objective factors in the global environment,
but actually occurred because of some enlightened and responsible
decisions by people at the helm of affairs.
I would suggest
that the demands of globalisation and the aspirations of our people
provide the objective bases for our energetic pursuit of a harmoniously
integrated South Asia. Our people, businesses and organisations
are waiting to interact more closely with each other. This includes
producers and consumers, investors and markets, doctors and patients,
artists and audiences, students and universities. They are all
part of the supply and demand dynamics of a vast sub-continent.
They see the unexploited potential in their own neighbourhood.
They have waited for over an half century for its fulfilment and
are now impatient to move ahead.
We can sense
this impatience in the outpouring of popular sentiment after our
initiatives. The increased travel between India and Pakistan of
Parliamentarians, businessmen, artists and sportsmen show the
intense desire for amity and goodwill. We have to respond to this
desire by seeking every possible way to banish hostility and promote
peace.
If we in South Asia
look back objectively at the experiences of our freedom struggles
and of our nation-building, the one stark lesson that stands out
is the imperative of forging a unity based on our commonalities.
Whenever we have dissipated our energies in internal squabbling,
external forces have come in to sort out our differences and stayed
on to exploit our resources. We should never create the possibility
of reliving these historical experiences in new forms and on different
fronts.
All these are
aspects which your conference could discuss as it exchanges ideas
on the economic, strategic and geopolitical future of India and
South Asia, ahead of the forthcoming SAARC Summit. Our search
for pragmatism, maturity and wisdom will have to involve both
governments and civil society. It will also require a wide-spread
understanding that in today’s context, collective regional interest
is an expression of enlightened self-interest.