---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shiva Shankar <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 9:40 AM
Subject: national security
To:



'... The Right to Education Bill that has just been passed by the Rajya
Sabha and the Lok Sabha, if it is notified by the government, will only be a
boon for those who make money in the school business, while it will be a
disaster for those who have no access to education today. Unfortunately,
that is what the rich and the ruling classes want. For education is the most
important weapon of empowerment, and the best defence against exploitation.
...'

http://www.hindu.com/2009/08/11/stories/2009081155790800.htm

Questions of real national security

Pushpa M. Bhargava

Policies with regard to agriculture, education and health need to change in
order to ensure a meaningful and wide-ranging security for this country.

The arms business is probably the second largest business in the world after
the food business. It is, therefore, not surprising that we consider
national security to be just what the defence and allied services provide
the country.

But there could not be a greater illusion than that. With all the weapons in
the world, we must not consider ourselves secure unless we have agriculture
security (which is synonymous with food security, farmers’ security and
rural sector security), education security, and health security. If India
were secure on these fronts, there would have been no so-called left-wing
extremism affecting a quarter of the districts: in many areas the
government’s writ does not seem to run now.

We waived farmers’ loans, but did we take steps to empower them so that they
do not need to take any more loans? What we did was for political gain. For
what we did not do, the explanation is that we pay only lip service to
farmers’ security.

Agriculture security concerns seeds, agro-chemicals, water, power and soil.
It involves the marriage of traditional and modern agricultural practices;
the de facto empowerment of panchayats and women; the marketing of
agro-products at fair prices. Such security requires the provision of
sources of augmentation of income to agriculturists and village-dwellers
through the development of traditional arts and crafts, medicinal plants,
and the unparalleled repertoire of fruits and vegetables. Also involved here
are organic farming; the use of post-harvest technologies; orchid tissue
culture (for example, Arunachal Pradesh has 650 varieties of orchids which,
if exploited, can bring the State an income of Rs.10,000 crore a year),
mushroom culture, and the appropriate use of fisheries and marine wealth.
Other elements include intelligent energy use; the empowerment of the rural
sector with knowledge; microcredit; the integration of rural and urban
sectors; appropriate research such as on organic farming, bio-pesticides,
and the development of varieties with all the advantages of hybrids, that
would benefit India: research that is being encouraged under the Indo-U.S.
Knowledge Initiative on Agriculture would be of greater use to the U.S. The
integration of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme with carefully
thought-out developmental plans; prevention and management of disasters such
as floods and famine and the cleaning up of land records are also not to be
forgotten. Then come a system to prevent, detect and take care of
bio-terrorism against agriculture. Emerging new and exotic diseases of
plants and animals need to be tackled by setting up centres of plant and
animal disease control. Climate change has to be addressed, bearing in mind
the fact that a one-degree rise of temperature can bring down the production
of wheat by 5 million tonnes. None of the above constituents of agriculture
security has been adequately taken care of.

If a power from outside India wishes to control this country’s destiny
today, it is not going to drop a nuclear bomb: it only has to control Indian
agriculture. And to do that, it needs to control just seed and
agro-chemicals production. The Indian government is not cognizant of this:
otherwise, more than 30 per cent of the country’s seed business today would
not have been under the control of multinational seed companies. Indeed, a
moratorium on genetically modified (GM) crops would have been declared until
preparations were made to test them adequately.

As regards education, the most important division in the country today is
between those (numbering less than 10 per cent) who have access to good
education and those (adding up to more than 90 per cent) who have only
education without any value. The former are the rulers and the latter are
the ruled.

With the extensive commercialisation of both school and higher (including
professional) education leading to a university degree, education has become
a commodity to be sold and purchased. India is perhaps the only country in
which this has happened so extensively, with the buyer getting the minimum
that the seller can get away with. So a private school has no hesitation in
charging Rs.10,000 as laboratory fees for a Class I student, and there is
often no correlation between what is charged and for what amount the receipt
is given. You could sometimes get your required registration and university
affiliation for an engineering, medical, pharmacy or nursing college that
you are setting up by buying off the inspection team and officers of the
accreditation authority. It is no surprise, therefore, that 80 per cent of
the engineering graduates (in fact, graduates in all areas) India produces
are unemployable.

Till the 1960s, there was no commercialisation of education, and
government-run or trust-run schools were uniformly good. The children of the
rich and the poor went to the same school, and the rich and the powerful had
a stake in government schools. Now only the poor send their children to
government schools; they might as well not do that too for, at times the
school may exist only in name or the designated teacher may not come for
weeks on end. Or, if he is a little more considerate, he may send a
surrogate replacement for 20 per cent of his salary which he would
compensate for by engaging in a more lucrative business activity during
school hours.

The Right to Education Bill that has just been passed by the Rajya Sabha and
the Lok Sabha, if it is notified by the government, will only be a boon for
those who make money in the school business, while it will be a disaster for
those who have no access to education today. Unfortunately, that is what the
rich and the ruling classes want. For education is the most important weapon
of empowerment, and the best defence against exploitation.

To be truly independent as a nation, and to maintain national dignity, India
needs a knowledge society in which every citizen has a minimum amount of
knowledge. The country can do that only by decommercialising and
decommodifying education and setting up a common school system (for which
there has been a continuous demand since the days of the Kothari Commission
in the early-1960s) in which the students of the rich and the poor in the
same neighbourhood would be studying in the same school without paying any
fees, and with a new curricular framework. That is the only way for us to
ensure education security.

As regards health security, the lack of a sense of ethics in the medical
profession (with some exceptions granted), and corruption in the Central
Government Health Service, in the corporate health sector, and in the
Medical Council of India, are matters of common knowledge. Inflated bills,
pay-offs, unnecessary medical tests and a lack of general physicians are all
well-known and well-documented phenomena. In Bhopal on September 24, 2008, a
gas tragedy victim was denied medical assistance in the Bhopal Memorial
Hospital which was permitted to be set up by Union Carbide expressly for the
gas tragedy victims; he died the next day while waiting in the hospital. But
who cares?

Our rural health-care scheme covers just a few diseases. Contrast our
health-care efforts with that of China’s recently announced well-thought-of
programme of spending $124 billion to modernise its national health-care
system in the next three years.

We seem to really care only about the requirements of countries such as the
U.S., the multinational companies, and the top 15-20 per cent of our rich
and the powerful. According to an article in The Lancet (May 16, 2009), a
small country like Ghana lost $60 million since 1951 which it spent on
training health workers who have migrated to the U.S., the U.K. and Canada.
The U.K. alone saved £103 million in training costs by importing Ghanians.
It is unclear what the corresponding figures are for India and the U.S., but
there is no doubt that the U.S. will be the winner.

Ironically, the Indian government can do everything required to ensure
agriculture, education and health security. The Green Revolution was based
on our own varieties and not seed companies’ hybrids. Some of the best
schools in the country even today are the Central Schools, or Kendriya
Vidyalayas. And many of the best institutes of higher learning in every
sector are government institutions. Some of our best hospitals, such as the
All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi, the Post Graduate
Institute of Medical Education and Research in Chandigarh, and the Christian
Medical College Hospital in Vellore, are run by the government or a trust
without a profit motive.

If the present Indian policies with regard to agriculture, education and
health security continue to be pursued, there could well be a civil war in
the next 10 to 15 years.

(Dr. P.M. Bhargava is former vice-chairman, National Knowledge Commission.)



-- 
http://venukm.blogspot.com

http://www.shelfari.com/kmvenuannur

http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to