Thursday 15 August, 2013

Five Achievements Since Independence







AS India completes 66 years of its independence on August 15, 2013, it is time to reflect on what the nation has achieved in this period. One can reel out dozens, possibly scores, of achievements but then these have to be special, unique and extremely select. Five should be a good number and a challenge!


So, here we go!



If the question were to be regarding achievements of India as a nation since the Indian civilization began millennia ago, there is no doubt that India has been a world leader in diverse fields, not just spiritualism.
India invented the decimal and the Number system millennia ago. Zero was invented by the Indian prodigy in astronomy and mathematics, Aryabhatta (476-550 CE). Great Britain’s oldest university, Oxford, came into existence only in the year 1167. India’s Takshashila University was the world’s first which was established in 700 BC wherein more than 10,500 students from all over the world pursued higher studies in more than 60 subjects. The University of Nalanda, built in the 4th century BC, is another feather in the Indian cap. It’s a pity that for various socio-political reasons the two ancient Indian universities could not sustain, while Oxford University continues its glorious run uninterruptedly.



The value of pi was first calculated by Budhayana, who actually is the father of the concept known to the modern world as the Pythagorean Theorem. Budhayan flourished in the 6th century, long before the European mathematicians dominated the world stage.



India is the birth place of algebra, trigonometry and calculus. It was a thousand years ago when Sridharacharya used numbers as big as 1053 while the largest numbers in the world then, used by the Greeks and the Romans, were 106.



But then this is the past. What about the present: the contemporary India? 

The five top most achievements of the independent India, according to me, are as follows.



1. Maintaining its unity and integrity: This is the most important achievement of India since independence because India has survived its modern map despite diverse challenges, despite an over a quarter century-long proxy war from across the borders and stiff terrorism-related challenges on domestic and foreign fronts. More importantly, despite such challenges India’s secular fabric and its amazing unity in diversity have remained intact.



2. India’s vibrant democracy: India has remained an island of democracy amid a vast ocean of autocratic rules in the neighbourhood. India has been a pulsating, throbbing democracy and has emerged as the largest democracy in the world. Right from the days of Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru and Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel, when the two topmost Indian leaders often differed drastically from each other on core issues, to the contemporary times of Anna Hazare, India has continued on the democratic path. Whenever a general election has thrown out a government, the new dispensation has taken over. Peacefully. Many a times. This is India’s victory!



3. The aam aadmi (common man)-specific programs:  Few other countries in the world would have taken up such programs and implemented these with such gusto as India has. The list is long, but on top of the chart would be the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sarak Yojana, Right to Information (RTI), Right to Education (RTE) and the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA). India’s most ambitious developmental project perhaps, the Right to Food is in the pipeline. This would inevitably pave the way for Right to Medicare and Right to Shelter and many more other rights that are enshrined in the Indian Constitution but have not yet been delivered.



4. India’s space program:  India’s modest efforts to conquer the space that began in 1975 with the successful launch of its first satellite Aryabhatta in 1975 have now come of age. Today, India is among the select few space powers in the world to launch foreign satellites and eye a big chunk of the $ 200 billion commercial rocket launch industry. India has sewn up space agreements with over 20 countries. More importantly, it is now preparing for its Mars Mission in December 2013. It is no mean achievement for a country that was finding it difficult to feed its own people till it successfully embarked on a Green Revolution nearly half a century ago, is now aiming literally for the stars!



5. The nuclear and missile programs: No other programs have beefed up India’s defence and forced the world to acknowledge India’s strides in the field of defence and science and technology as these two. In fact the Point number 5 in this list is a supplementary to the point number 1. India’s prowess in the field of missile technology is a strong deterrent for the enemies. The nuclear program and the missile program form an integral part of this. India has been running the two programs simultaneously and successfully. India’s missile program is spearheaded by such missile systems as the Agni, Prithvi, Akash and Nag. BrahMos, the world’s fastest Cruise missile jointly developed by India and Russia, is the newest addition to the Indian missile bouquet.



These, in my view, are top five achievements of India since independence. India’s Herculean efforts in combating poverty, illiteracy and unemployment do not find a mention in this list, though they are covered in point number three. This is largely because India as a nation was expected to fare better than it has thus far. This leads us to the five top failures of India in the past 65 years. Perhaps we can call them “challenges”, instead of “failures” because these are, and have to be, the templates for any government that comes to power in the next few decades. 



The five “challenges” are: (i) corruption, (ii) population explosion, (iii) poverty, (iv) illiteracy, and (v) unemployment. If India wants to become a global superpower, then these challenges have to be met. India has the required resources, given its very high percentage of young population. It is up to the leaders to deliver and also up to the people as to what kind of leaders they choose to ensure early deliverance. 


courtesy by  Saudi Gazette

Sunday 17 March, 2013

Should India lower the age of consent?



India's government has reportedly cleared lowering the age of consent for sex to 16 years.

This comes after increasing it to 18 in a tough anti-rape ordinance following the outrage after the fatal gang rape of a student in Delhi last December.

Raising the age of consent to 18 has placed India among the more orthodox countries in a world where the norm and the global average is around 16 years.

Many believe that raising the age of consent is fraught with risks.

India is a divided and hierarchical society where relationships between men and women belonging to different castes, classes and religions can spark violence and feuds. Sex before marriage remains taboo.

Nevertheless, India's young are more sexually active than ever before. A 2007 study by the International Institute for Population Sciences and the Population Council found that more than 42% of men and 26% of women aged 15-24 in relationships had sex with their partner.

Many fear that a higher age of consent could lead to young men being packed off to reform homes on the basis of complaints by the irate parents of the young women.

Last year, a judge in Delhi expressed fears that such a move would "open the floodgates for the prosecution of boys for offences of rape on the basis of complaints by girls' parents [even if] the girl was a consenting party".

Also, as leading women's right's lawyer Flavia Agnes points out, a third of rape cases in India are filed by parents against boys with whom their daughters have eloped.

"All that raising the age of consent to 18 years will do is to give society greater control over the lives of young people and young boys in consensual relations with girls," says lawyer Vrinda Grover.

Raising the age of consent can have other unfortunate consequences.

Many young people rush into marriage quickly as it is widely considered to be sanction for having "legal" sex.

Many of these marriages fall apart quickly as their partners are mentally not prepared for it. A large number of girls aged 15-18 are also kidnapped for marriage.

Supporters of a higher age of consent for sex argue that those under 18 are not prepared to handle sexual relations.

They say a higher consent age also checks widespread child abuse, teenage pregnancies, human trafficking and rape.

Over a century the age of consent in India has been raised from 10 to 18 reacting mainly to concerns over child marriage, and much later over rape and teenage pregnancies.

Still, according to the National Population Policy, over 50% of girls marry below the age of 18. Conflating age of marriage for girls (18) with age of consent, says researcher Pallavi Gupta "negates any form of sexual freedom that young girls below that age group can exercise".

But clearly, India needs to do more to protect its girls and stop child marriages than raise the age of consent


by BBC