US move to cut aid to India rejected by record votes
C K Arora in Washington
The proposal to reduce American development aid to India in fiscal 1998 was rejected by a record 260 votes by the US House of Representatives on Thursday.
At the end of the three-and-a-half-hour debate, some 342 members
voted against and 82 in favour of the amendment introduced in protest against India's ''poor'' human rights record.
The amendment, moved by Republican Congressman Dan Burton, sought to reduce the aid from $ 56 million to $ 42 million -- a
cut of 25 per cent.
The mood in the House was against the anti-India measure from
the very outset. Some 27 Congressmen participated in the debate.
Of them, only three members, including its mover Burton spoke
in favour. The remaining 24 Congressmen, drawn from both the
Democratic and Republican party, opposed it.
The rejection of the amendment is a decisive defeat for the
anti-India lobby in the House, which brings such a measure every
year, apparently at the biddings of Khalistani and Kashmiri
separatists, to embarrass the Indian government.
The opposition to the measure was led by top Republican leaders,
including House Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Benjamin
Gilman and its South Asia panel chief Doug Bereuter.
They urged fellow Congressmen to defeat the measure as it would
jeopardise US relations with India in a year when it was
celebrating the golden jubilee of its Independence.
Other members joined them in highlighting the trade and strategic
importance of India and said that its new economic policy,
introduced six years ago, offered tremendous opportunities to the
US businesses.
Some of them even drew attention to the uncertainty in the US
relations with China and said, if there was any cooling off in the
Washington-Beijing ties, India could offer an ''equally attractive
market for our goods''.
Most of them acknowledged flaws in India's human rights record
but made it a point to refer to the steps that New Delhi had taken
to remedy the situation.
In this context, they commended the work done by the National Human Rights Commission. Its role in championing human rights and punishing the errant security officials had won praise worldwide, including the state department, they added.
The strongest opposition to the measure came from three leading
Democrats -- Gray Ackerman, Frank Pallone and Jim McDermott -- who argued that the passage of such a measure would have helped
strengthen separatist militants in Punjab and Kashmir and greatly
affect the United States's ability to influence New Delhi in a
''positive way''.
Burton, who has been bringing in such anti-India amendments
for the last several years, spoke of the ''human rights abuses'' in
Kashmir, Punjab and Nagaland.
He also drew attention to what he called repression of women and
''untouchables''.
The Republican law-maker said the denial of aid would make it
known to India that the US would not put up with human rights's violations.
Moreover, India had always been against the Untied States. It had
backed the Soviet Union during the cold war and openly voted against
the US in the United Nations. Then, why should the US provide
aid to such a country, he asked.
In respone, Pallone, who visited India last year, said Burton
had given ''outdated , exaggerated and inaccurate'' information
about the situation in India.
He said Burton had dealt with only one aspect of the human
rights issue, ignoring the constant threat that India faced from
the terrorist organisations, many of which had the moral and
military support from foreign countries, especially Pakistan.
He said Pakistan frequently supported the terrorist groups in a
direct attempt to destabilise India.
Ackerman objected to the manner in which Burton sought to
criticise India. ''It was down right India-bashing,'' he said.
UNI
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