*Saturday, January 08, 2011*

* *

*Letter to the Editor – Arab News*

* *

*Mr. Abdulaziz Sager's article is timely. India's Brahmin oligarch is shy of
dealing with the Muslim world in general and the neighboring Gulf Arabs in
particular. They are afraid that Gulf oil wealth will undermine their
'unjustifiable' monopoly on power in India. It is time that Gulf countries
should make a beginning by engendering trust and confidence in Indian
establishment, that though they would remain committed to the international
covenants to Human Rights and ‘real’ democratic norms, they are ready to
proactively cooperate with India, to face the challenges of coming decades.
Any move by the OIC will directly and indirectly impact the overall
political, economic, social standing of 150 million Muslims, who have yet to
make a mark of their existence as well as the potential for great
contribution to world Muslim Ummah as well as to humanity at large. *

* *

*Five Hundred million Muslims of Indian subcontinent cannot be relegated to
ghetto existence, if the world has to live in peace and prosperity.*



*Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai*

*[email protected]*

*http://ghulammuhammed.blogspot.com**   *











http://archive.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=127258&d=11&m=10&y=2009&pix=opinion.jpg&category=Opinion



*Time to end India’s isolation in OIC *


*Abdulaziz Sager | Arab News   *

*As the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) enters the fourth
decade of its existence, it is an opportune moment to introspect on its
continued isolation of India — a country that has the largest Muslim
population in the world after Indonesia. *

*With a membership of 57 countries spread over four continents, constituting
1.5 billion people and a combined GDP of about seven trillion dollars, the
OIC is the second largest inter-governmental group after the United Nations.
*

*The grouping identifies itself to be “the collective voice of the Muslim
world” to “safeguard and protect the interests of the Muslim world in the
spirit of promoting international peace and harmony among various people of
the world”.*

*On the eve of his historic visit to India in 2006, Custodian of the Two
Holy Mosques King Abdullah said that “India should have an observer status
in the OIC” and it would be “beneficial” if Pakistan proposes India’s
candidature. *

*Pakistan, however, objected that any country wishing to get observer status
with the OIC, “should not be involved in any dispute with a member state.”*

*And, therein lies the reason that has hindered the OIC-India relationship
since the Islamic Summit Conference in Rabat in 1969, which was held in the
backdrop of the desecration of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Occupied Jerusalem. *

*King Faisal played a key role in ensuring that India was invited to the
conference because the issue being discussed was not a matter concerning
only “Muslim countries”, but all Muslims. And, India, with its huge Muslim
population, was seen as a stakeholder, apart from the fact that the Indian
head of state at that time was a Muslim — Zakir Hussain.*

*The head of the Indian delegation even addressed the gathering. However,
Indo-Pak differences led Islamabad to keep India out for the remaining
sessions of the conference and all summits thereafter. *

*Since then, until as recently as the first week of October this year, when
the OIC appointed a special envoy for Jammu and Kashmir, the politics of the
subcontinent has drawn a wedge between the organization and India.*

*The OIC stresses that as long as the Indo-Pak tension over Kashmir remains
unresolved, there is very little room for improvement in the organization’s
relations with India.*

*While the OIC advocates the issue of self-determination and resolution of
Kashmir in accordance with the UN resolutions of 1948 and 1949, India is
firm about resolving the issue bilaterally with Pakistan. *

*This stand has been receiving increasing international acceptance, and
appears to be the most viable option to resolve the Kashmir issue. *

*The debate here is not about Kashmir or about Pakistan. The larger concern
is the Muslim world and what it stands to gain with India finding a foothold
in the OIC. It is also natural that India would also gain reciprocal
diplomatic benefits through such a move.*

*While the longstanding Kashmir issue is important enough to be resolved not
only for the sake of the people therein, peace in the subcontinent and the
Asian continent at large, it is equally important for the OIC to look beyond
this issue and address more pressing concerns of the Muslim world. It must
also be argued that while the OIC Charter stipulates that only Muslim
countries willing to promote the objectives of the organization are eligible
for membership, many non-Muslim countries have secured observer status and
even full membership. The most recent is Russia, which came on board as an
observer in 2005, two years after then President Vladimir Putin declared
that Russia was a “Muslim power” that desired to play a role among Muslim
countries. With less than 25 million Muslims in its ranks, the real reason
may have well been Moscow’s attempt to assuage the Muslims over Chechnya and
increase its influence in the Islamic world in order to tip the balance in
its favor in its power politics with Washington.*

*Thailand — a predominantly Buddhist country — received the same recognition
in 1998. It is also an irony of sorts that the Non-Aligned Movement, of
which India is a founding member and has several non-Muslim countries, got
observer status in 1977. Why not India, then? *

*India is making rapid progress in terms of its influence in the
international arena, not just as a trillion-dollar economic powerhouse, but
also as a military and technological giant, all combining to make it a
political heavyweight. *

*Given the current buoyant state of the Indian economy amid a bleak world
scenario, India’s formal association with the OIC could help forge mutually
beneficial economic deals. *

*Equally important are factors that were highlighted by Hamid Ansari in
2006. The former diplomat and current Indian vice president said India
deserves to be an OIC member, not just an observer, because though India is
not a part of the Muslim world, “it is not away from it; not a Muslim
majority state in statistical terms yet host to the second largest community
of Muslims in the world; not a society focused on Muslim welfare only but
one in which Muslims, as an integral part of a larger whole, get the
attention that every other section does.” *

*As a result, a formal place for India in the OIC would add to the
collective credibility and bargaining power of the organization. The OIC
would be able to leverage India in relation to important issues of the
Muslim world. This would help the OIC address the “state of disunity” among
Muslims, which many see as one of the worst in 14 centuries of Islamic
history. *

*In a post-9/11 21st century, the Muslim world faces numerous challenges —
poverty, terrorism, calls for political reform and unemployment. In
addressing these and implementing the Ten-Year Program of Action that was
laid out at the OIC Summit in Makkah in 2005, India’s experiences would be
more of an asset than a liability — especially envisaging joint action to
promote tolerance and moderation, modernization, extensive reforms in all
spheres of activities including science and technology, education, trade,
and good governance and promotion of human rights.*

*With more than 150 million Muslims, most of them part of the world’s
largest democratic process, India deserves to be associated with the OIC. It
is also important to note that many OIC members are sympathetic to the idea.
*

*At the same time, one needs to also see the issue from the angle that by
denying India any role in the OIC, one is, in fact, abandoning the duty of
promoting the interests of the Muslim population of India. *

*Thus, just like summits have been called in the past to search for common
ground among members of the Muslim world on various issues, would it be too
far-fetched to call another to find consensus over formalizing India’s OIC
connection?*

*— Abdulaziz Sager is chairman of the Gulf Research Center. He can be
contacted at: [email protected]*

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