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FOCUS ON INDIA (FOI), Issue August 2007: Volume IV No 8 |
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Thursday, 06 September 2007 |
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Monthly e-newsletter from Focus on the Global South, India
Content summary:
It is said that democracies are like wine; they mature with age. August 2007 marks 60 years of independence for Pakistan and India. Whereas Pakistan is ruled by a military dictator, India is being marketed for global capital as the 'world's fastest growing free market democracy'. In her article, Meena Menon argues that figures being advertised as signs of India's success such as GDP growth, FDI inflows and cell phone usage reflect the creation of immense wealth for the upper and middle classes. She also makes the important point that the democracy gap has widened in the country with disastrous implications for common people. We also carry a report on 2 events to mark the occasion.
A political crisis looms around the recently
concluded Nuclear deal between the USA and India. The left parties on
whom the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) Government depends for its
continued existence has opposed the deal. The Government has dug in its
heels. We carry a statement from the Left parties which views the deal
in the context of an overall strategic tie up with the United States.
They have called upon the government not to proceed further with the
operationalising of the agreement, and asked for a parliamentary
review. Importantly they are also asking for a Constitutional amendment
for bringing international treaties and certain bilateral agreements
for approval in parliament. We also have a statement from the National
Alliance of Peoples Movements (NAPM) on the Deal.
The WTO Doha
'Development' Round negotiations are back on track despite the recent
failure of talks among the G4 at Potsdam and the expiry of the US
President's Fast Track Authority in June 2007. The negotiations got a
fillip with the release of draft texts for both agriculture and NAMA in
July 2007. These developments in Geneva do not augur well for
developing countries. A background note from Focus on the Global South,
Food Trade and Nutrition Coalition-Asia and Forum for Biotechnology and
Food Security gives an update.
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