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Throughout history, India has absorbed and modified to suit its
needs, the best from all the civilisations with which it has come
into contact. Once again the fledgling nation demonstrated the
maturity and wisdom of its ancient traditions, and the truth of its
claim that it was opposed, not to the people or the civilisation of
Britain and the West, only to its imperial domination. India chose
to remain within the British Commonwealth of Nations. It also
adopted the British system of Parliamentary Democracy, and retained
the judicial, administrative, defence and educational structures and
institutions set up by the British. India is today the largest and
most populous democracy on earth, with universal adult suffrage.
The Indian Constitution, adopted when India became a Republic on
January 26, 1950, safeguards all its people from all forms of
discrimination on grounds of race, religion, creed or sex. It
guarantees freedom of speech, expression and belief, assembly and
association, migration, acquisition of property and choice of
occupation or trade.
The Indian
Parliament consists of two houses: The Rajya Sabha or Council of
States, and the Lok Sabha or House of Representatives. The former
consists of 250 members, mainly elected and some nominated by the
President, and is presided over by the Vice-President. The Lok Sabha
is made up of 543 members elected from the States and Union
Territories. All legislation requires the approval of both Houses.
The President is the Head of State, and is appointed through the
votes of an electoral college drawn from both Houses and from the
Legislature of the constituent States. The Prime Minister is the
head of the Government, and is the leader of the majority party in
the Lok Sabha. The President appoints ministers on his advice.
Members of the State Legislative Assemblies or Vidhan Sabhas are
elected through universal adult franchise. Each State has a Chief
Minister who is the leader of the majority party of the Assembly.
Elections are supervised by the Election Commission, an independent
body. An independent judiciary is the guardian and interpreter of
the Constitution, and the Supreme Court is the highest tribunal in
the land, at the apex of the state High Courts. The Civil Services
implement government policies freely and fairly. Entrance to these
Services is by annual public examinations open to all.
The achievement of independence was but the first step towards
creating a modern nation. Jawaharlal Nehru spelt it out very
clearly, "We talk of freedom, but today political freedom does not
take us very far unless there is economic freedom. Indeed, there is
no such thing as freedom for a man who is starving or for a country
that is poor." Today, economic development and social justice are
the priorities of the Indian government.
India Today
India's vanguard role in the international anti-colonial struggle
has given her natural moral leadership of the Third World in its
quest for international peace, equality and justice. Refusing to be
drawn into the dangerous confrontationalist politics of super power
rivalries, India was a moving force behind the formation of the
Nonaligned Movement (NAM) in 1961. Nonalignment does not mean
neutrality, it means a principled approach to international issues.
In consonance with the spirit of the movement, India has always
sought close bilateral relations and cooperation at all levels with
countries of both the Western and Socialist blocs, as well as with
other nonaligned nations. The relevance of nonalignment has not
diminished in the post USSR era, but the movement has had to
redefine its perspective in the context of increasing polarity
between the affluent, developed nations of the North, and the
economically developing nations of the South. The main thrust of the
movement now is to assert the independence of the South against the
hegemony of the North, and to resist the interventionist political
pressures of aid conditionalities.
At the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
India strongly asserted the position of the countries of the South
that environmental problems cannot be tackled in isolation from
economic and developmental issues. Pointing out that the affluent
nations consume a disproportionately enormous share of the earth's
resources and create most of its industrial pollution, India joined
the developing countries in insisting on complete national
sovereignty over natural resources, and demanded that they be
suitably compensated for restraining economic growth in order to
preserve these assets in the interests of global survival.
The international prestige enjoyed by the country has enabled
India to take a leading role in multilateral initiatives toward
finding solutions to some of the critical issues of the day, such as
nuclear disarmament, apartheid, the rights of the Palestinian
people, protection of the environment and the evolution of a more
just international economic order. Mutual respect and cooperation
have also been the basis of India's relationship with her
neighbours.
The South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC),
established in December 1985, provides a valuable forum for the
promotion of regional cooperation among its seven member states -
Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
SAARC is based on the principles of sovereign equality, territorial
integrity, political independence, mutual benefit and non
interference in the internal affairs of other states. The U.N.
Declaration of the Indian Ocean as a Zone of Peace, which India has
consistently supported, is another step in the direction of peace
and stability in the area.
The moral authority vested in India as a legacy of its
anticolonial stand, has enabled it to play a vigorous and principled
role in all international fora, including the United Nations, in
efforts to banish all forms of exploitation from the world.
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