iNDICA NEWS BUREAU-
Indian American lawmakers said on Thursday that lecturing New Delhi on issues of human rights in India is unlikely to work, and they favoured entering into a conversation with the Indian leadership on their concerns with them.
India was colonised for over 100 years. So, when we’re having a conversation about human rights, and you’re having a conversation with (External Affairs Minister S) Jai Shankar or someone else, you have to understand that we’ve had colonial powers lecture us for hundreds of years and the approach is not going to be productive, Congressman Ro Khanna told members of the Indian American community during the Desi Decides Summit of Indian American Impact.
Khanna, who is also co-chair of the Congressional India Caucus, was joined by three other Indian American lawmakers — Shri Thanedar, Pramila Jayapal and Dr Ami Bera — during the panel discussion, which was moderated by Zohreen Shah, ABC national correspondent, who asked them about Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s relations with the Muslim community, the Business Standard reported citing a PTI report from Washington.
Having a conversation (with India) saying, here are the imperfections in our democracy, what are the imperfections in your democracy, and how do we collectively advance democracy and human rights, I think is a more constructive approach, Khanna said.
Bera said he agrees with Khanna. I’ve said the same to the (Indian) foreign minister. If India loses its secular nation, it changes who she is as a country and how the rest of the world views it.
He also said that a Trump presidency is not necessarily the same as Prime Minister Modi being in power. Because we still have a vibrant democracy here. We have a vibrant opposition party in the Democratic Party. We still believe in the freedom of the press and those are all things that I worry about India’s future, he said.
You see what’s happening to the freedom of the press. You’re not really seeing a viable opposition party or it’s being dismantled. The vibrant democracy has to have all of those things, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, the ability to push back. I hope you don’t ever see a second Trump presidency. But if that were to happen, you will see our democracy survive the first time, push back, and our democracy will survive. I certainly hope India’s democracy survives, Bera said.
Jayapal said she agrees with both Bera and Khanna. The only thing I would add is that I think we have to be able to critique our own country’s imperfections and any other country’s imperfections. That’s actually our job in Congress. We shouldn’t lecture, I agree with Roe (Khanna). But we do have to think about all of the United States’ interests. That is economic, for sure. India is an important partner for us. It’s an important partner because of other regional dynamics as well and global dynamics, she said.
It is also important for us to think about our values. Just like we criticise the Chinese government for the treatment of Uyghurs or any other country in the world, we have to be able to also look at what’s happening in India and call attention to it, she said.