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Tags: Current Focus, India,
The difficulties in covering India by putting black people in the same category as Muslim minority in India, its an easy analogy to present to minorities and whites in the U.S. conscious of race riots and civil rights, but very misleading. Muslims in India maybe 14% of the population but looked at South Asian region they are a significant part of the population, beyond the period following partion into India and Pakistan in 1947 to today, a period of 66 years compared to eight centuries of living side by side with many Muslim rulers and dynasties during some periods and in some regions. During the British period from the 18th century to 1947 Muslims did poorly as science and technological progress left poorer Muslims and lower Hindu castes behind. Tiny minority communties such as the Parsees ( the Tata Group) did extremely well. Receptivity to western education and science, and the English language was a key factor for progress. India's constitution made great efforts under Gandhi and Nehru to provide equal rights to minorities and lower castes. In the process Nehru's party, the Indian National Congress took up the cause of Muslims. Yet in the period that followed for six decades the Congress party was not able to make large improvements for the Muslim communities in large northern states such as Uttar Pradesh. It has come under criticism for using the Muslim communities as a voting bloc, but stuck in underdevelopment without action from Congress to make large improvements. The Bharatiya Janata Party first made it to power under the leadership of prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee. Under Vajpayee the government maintained peaceful race relations. He was critical of Modi's failure to take strong action to stop race riots in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. At the same time, as reported in the WSJ, India's Supreme Court has cleared the Gujarat chief minister, and the BJP nominee for the general elections, of supporting the riots. The Muslim community in India and in South Asia is too important a part of the region, with its
Grouped Articles
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Six Killed in Explosions Ahead of India Campaign Rally
Wall Street Journal 10/28/2013
India's Ruling Party Stumbles as Opponent Modi Marches On
New York Times 12/08/2013
Congress Party Defeated in Indian State Elections
New York Times 12/08/2013
Victory, and Setback, for Indian Opposition Leader
New York Times 12/26/2013
Poll Suggests Crushing Loss Awaits India’s Governing Party
New York Times 02/26/2014
The fastest growing state in India and the work accomplished by Narendra Modi.
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India's Main Opposition Party Names Candidate for Prime Minister
Wall Street Journal 09/13/2013
India's Rising Hindu Nationalist
Wall Street Journal 09/16/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Six Killed in Explosions Ahead of India Campaign Rally
Wall Street Journal 10/28/2013
Victory, and Setback, for Indian Opposition Leader
New York Times 12/26/2013
For Indian Stocks, the Answer Is Blowing in the Political Wind
Wall Street Journal 12/27/2013
Grouped Articles
Anti-corruption protests in India: No modern-day Mahatma
Economist 08/27/2011
Washington Post 06/09/2013
Party Leader in India Becomes Ill After Speech
New York Times 08/26/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Six Killed in Explosions Ahead of India Campaign Rally
Wall Street Journal 10/28/2013
India's Ruling Party Badly Beaten in State Elections
Wall Street Journal 12/08/2013
India's Congress government version of events presents it an issue of constitutional sovereignty. Indian public opinion sees it as truly an issue of controlling widespread corruption. Freedom of the press and freedom of assembly are guaranteed in India by the constitution and is exercized continuously since 1947. Corruption at all levels in India in the delivery of public services and in the development of infrastructure has to be experienced to be fully grasped. It acts as a perpetual tax on the middle class and the poor. One has to carefully read the draft of the anticorruption bill drafted by the Congress government, and understand how things function locally today, to realize that it is designed to make little difference in the current state of things. Designed that way because it is a silent but no less explicit intent of the government, political parties, the bureaucracy and interests that have advantages with the existing system, to preserve the status quo. Activist Hazare's bill is designed to give the anti corruption body called a Lokpal the powers it needs to be effective. The prime minister could be exempted but the bureaucracy at all levels and members of parliament and state legislatures if immune to this kind of oversight, would in a developing country with the local conditions of India, render it meaningless. Because this is where the corruption resides. Limits of overreach by the Lokpal come from the body simply acting as a referral system which sends the cases to the judiciary. In doing so constitutional powers are actually vested in the judiciary and the Supreme Court as the final arbiter. India's system of government does not confer sovereignty to parliament- as the Congress government contends- but divides powers between the President, Parliament, and the Judiciary, with a system of checks and balances as in the U.S. Because the current system has delivered a high rate of growth there may be even a tolerance for corruption as a necessary evil as practiced in China. Conditions are differen
Grouped Articles
Indian PM slams anti-corruption activist as protests over arrest spread - The Washington Post
Washington Post 08/17/2011
India's Main Opposition Party Names Candidate for Prime Minister
Wall Street Journal 09/13/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
New Indian Party Shakes Up Politics
Wall Street Journal 12/02/2013
Indian Parliament Passes Bill Forming Anticorruption Agency
New York Times 12/18/2013
Big Indian States Deal Poll Setback to Congress Party
Wall Street Journal 03/07/2012
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Angry young Indians: What a waste
Economist 05/16/2013
India’s demographic challenge: Wasting time
Economist 05/16/2013
Anti-corruption protests in India: No modern-day Mahatma
Economist 08/27/2011
Washington Post 10/18/2011
Party Leader in India Becomes Ill After Speech
New York Times 08/26/2013
How Emerging Markets Can Get Their Mojo Back
Wall Street Journal 09/12/2013
Narendra Modi is the chief minister of Gujarat state in India, where he has implemented a strategy for developing infrastructure, roads, power plants, and attracting foreign investment in the automobile and other industries. With India's slowing growth and corruption in government he is now the choice of the BJP party to run against the ruling Congress party in the 2014 general election. His slogan is minimum government and maximum governance. He is popular in Gujarat state for running a clean administration and generating a decade of high economic growth in the state with a population of about 60 million.
Grouped Articles
India's Main Opposition Party Names Candidate for Prime Minister
Wall Street Journal 09/13/2013
India's Rising Hindu Nationalist
Wall Street Journal 09/16/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Six Killed in Explosions Ahead of India Campaign Rally
Wall Street Journal 10/28/2013
India's Ruling Party Badly Beaten in State Elections
Wall Street Journal 12/08/2013
India's Ruling Party Stumbles as Opponent Modi Marches On
New York Times 12/08/2013
Grouped Articles
Anti-corruption protests in India: No modern-day Mahatma
Economist 08/27/2011
Washington Post 06/09/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Big Indian States Deal Poll Setback to Congress Party
Wall Street Journal 03/07/2012
Poll Suggests Crushing Loss Awaits India’s Governing Party
New York Times 02/26/2014
Young, Aspiring Indians Fuel Rise of Narendra Modi
Wall Street Journal 04/07/2014
The task of building an organization behind competent and good government, and having programs to help the farmers in rural areas, the extremely poor, and farmers in debt, all work to build credibility and votes in India. This position has been taken by the Congress leaders prime minister Manmohan Singh, Sonia Gandhi, and Rahul Gandhi. Years of patient effort at the grassroots and for development if continued could payoff for the current leaders and for India.
Grouped Articles
Angry young Indians: What a waste
Economist 05/16/2013
Party Leader in India Becomes Ill After Speech
New York Times 08/26/2013
India's Lower House Passes Food Bill to Help Poor
Wall Street Journal 08/26/2013
India's Main Opposition Party Names Candidate for Prime Minister
Wall Street Journal 09/13/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Six Killed in Explosions Ahead of India Campaign Rally
Wall Street Journal 10/28/2013
Grouped Articles
âAn Uncertain Glory,â by Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen
New York Times 09/06/2013
Campaign for Prime Minister in India Gets Off to Violent Start
New York Times 09/17/2013
Amid Modi’s Centrist Shift, an Aide With a Turbulent Past Rises
New York Times 07/05/2014
Why a rising star of Muslim politics in India stirs hope and fear - The Washington Post
Washington Post 08/17/2015
India Eyes Affirmative Action for Muslims
New York Times 03/09/2012
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