Prime Minister’s
ADDRESS AT PRAVASI BHARATIYA DIWAS
New Delhi, Jan 07, 2007
Col. Har krishan
NRI press
PM’S ADDRESS AT PRAVASI BHARATIYA DIWAS
COME ENGAGE WITH THE NEW INDIA: PM
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13:11 IST
The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh has called upon the overseas
Indians to be active participants in the saga of great adventure
and enterprise of building a new India. Urging them to take full
advantage of existing opportunities in the country, Dr. Singh said,
“I would like you to reach out and invest in a new India.
Invest not just financially, but intellectually, socially, culturally
and, above all, emotionally.”
Inaugurating at the Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas organized by the Ministry
of Overseas Indians here today, he said, “Your roots are what
bring you here. Your branches are what will keep you engaged year
after year here in India’s developmental saga. Come engage
with the new India.”
Thanking Americans of Indian origin for the stellar role played
by them in the adoption of a legislation on Civil Nuclear Energy
cooperation with India, Dr. Singh said, “This is an important
step forward not just in India-US bilateral relations and also as
an essential first step that will enable India to engage in cooperation
in the Civil Nuclear field with other countries that are members
of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. This process will increase the range
of options available to secure our country’s growing current
and future energy needs. This initiative is therefore a vital input
to the critical process of enlarging our developmental options.”
The Prime Minister announced that a proposal to establish an Indian
Overseas Facilitation Centre, which will be a source of investment
advisory services, is presently being developed and examined. He
also announced that the Government is examining a proposal to constitute
a Central Council for the Promotion of Overseas Employment.
Prof. S. Jayakumar, Hon’ble Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore,
Shri Vayalar Ravi, Minister for Overseas Indian Affairs, Smt Sheila
Dikshit, Chief Minister, Delhi, Shri R. Seshasayee, President, CII
were among those present on the occasion:
Following is the text of the Prime Minister’s speech on the
occasion:
“I should begin by wishing you all a very happy new year!
I am delighted to welcome delegates from different lands to this
blessed land of their ancestors. We feel truly proud that in this
hall we find today the entire world represented. This gathering,
ladies and gentlemen, truly symbolizes the ancient Indian yearning
for “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” – the whole world
is one family.
We are one family. The whole world is our home. That is why I have
often said that while the sun has set on many great empires of the
world in the past, the sun will never set on the world of the Indian
diaspora! From Fiji in the East, to Los Angeles in the West, from
Cape Town in the South to Toronto in the North, the people of Indian
origin are the world’s most globalised community.
Each time we have met we have had the honour and privilege of hosting
as our Chief Guest an eminent Pravasi. This year I am delighted
to welcome amidst us Professor S. Jayakumar, the Honourable Deputy
Prime Minister of Singapore. Singapore is a special friend of India.
Our engagement with the countries of South East Asia holds a great
deal to the support we have consistently received from the Government
and People of the friendly country of Singapore. We are all greatly
pleased, therefore, to have Professor Jayakumar in our midst. His
life and his work are a role model for younger generations.
We are truly committed to work with Singapore and other like-minded
countries to strengthen our links with South East Asia and East
Asia. Our destinies are truly inter-linked. We are committed therefore
to explore all options to foster closer, multi-faceted links with
South East Asia and East Asia to usher in a new arch of prosperity
in this extended region and extended neighbourhood of India.
The Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas is a celebration of the global Indian.
It is also a celebration of the home-coming of the global Indian.
That is why we meet here in India in January. It is on the 9th of
January nearly hundred years ago that the "Greatest Pravasi"
Mahatma Gandhi returned home from South Africa and inspired us to
wage a non-violent peaceful struggle for freedom from foreign rule.
Our freedom struggle and the process of our nation building after
independence have been one of the great adventures of humankind
cutting across race, language, religion and ethnic identities. India’s
civilisational pluralism has made it possible for us to reach out
to the world and seek its support in our struggle for freedom and
for Independence.
When I went to South Africa last year I was deeply moved by the
deep bond that unites the peoples of India and Africa. In the past,
this was the bond of our shared struggle against colonialism and
against apartheid. Today, it is the bond of our combined effort
to regain our due place in the comity of nations.
When I meet Heads of State and Government and business leaders
in distant lands they tell me very proudly that the Indian community
in their countries, is a great asset, that people of Indian origin
are highly creative, productive, enterprising, peace-loving and
devoted to their families, their communities and their neighbourhoods.
I would like to take this opportunity today to express a special
word of thanks to the Indian American community. We are happy that
the United States has adopted a legislation that will enable the
US to engage in cooperation with India in the field of Civil Nuclear
Energy. This is an important step forward not just in India-US bilateral
relations and also as an essential first step that will enable India
to engage in cooperation in the Civil Nuclear field with other countries
that are members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. This process will
increase the range of options available to secure our country’s
growing current and future energy needs. This initiative is therefore
a vital input to the critical process of enlarging our developmental
options. And I thank the Americans of Indian origin for the stellar
role that they played in ensuring that this legislation was passed
through the US Congress.
I thank the overseas Indian community and its leaders who played
a very significant role in highlighting the importance of this important
initiative in the US and elsewhere.
I take this opportunity to thank the non?resident Indian communities
in West Asia and other parts of the world for the handsome contribution
their remittances make to the strengthening of our economy.
This year the theme of the Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas is “Rooting
for the Roots”. Let me, however, suggest that your being here
is not just about “roots”. It is also about “branches”.
Even as you discover and nurture your ancient ‘roots’,
I urge you to extend your ‘branches’.
We in India wish to see you engaged in India’s great adventure
of building an India free from the fear of war, want and exploitation.
India has now emerged as one of the fastest growing economies in
the world. India’s growth process creates enormous opportunities
for promoting cross border flows of trade, capital and technology.
I would like overseas Indian communities to take full advantage
of these exciting opportunities that are now on the horizon. I would
like you to reach out and invest in a new India. Invest not just
financially, but intellectually, socially, culturally and, above
all, emotionally. Your roots are what bring you here. Your branches
are what will keep you engaged year after year here in India’s
great development saga. Come engage with the new India.
I am conscious of the great importance of enhancing educational
opportunities for persons of Indian origin for study in our country.
I want Indian universities to be more open to children of overseas
Indians. India is the land of the ancient universities of Takshasila,
Nagarjuna and Nalanda, to which students came from far off places.
I am delighted that Singapore, along with China, Japan, South Korea
and other countries in the region, is supporting us in the Nalanda
Project to which Professor Jayakumar made such a handsome reference.
I agree with the sentiments expressed recently by Hon’ble
Mr. George Yeo, the Foreign Minister of Singapore, that the Nalanda
Project should emerge as “an icon of Asian renaissance”,
and “a centre of civilizational dialogue and inter-faith understanding”,
as indeed it was in the ancient times.
In this gathering last year I had spoken of the proposal to establish
a University for Persons of Indian Origin. This proposal has been
under active consideration in the past year. We envisage the proposed
University as oriented to meet the needs of the overseas Indian
community in the most sought after disciplines such as Science,
Engineering and Management. Our aspiration would be to impart quality
education at par with the best Universities in the world. The challenge
now is to create the requisite enabling framework that will adequately
meet these aspirations. We hope to do this in the coming months.
A proposal to establish an Indian Overseas Facilitation Centre
is presently being developed and examined. This is envisaged as
a source of investment advisory services for overseas Indian investors.
This proposal is being developed on the understanding that an Indian
entity, independent of the Government, though supported by us, and
set up in partnership with industry, could be an effective instrument
to liaise with members of the Indian Diaspora on matters related
to investment in our country.
To ensure that we reap India’s demographic dividend and benefit
from the significant labour supply gaps emerging in countries with
ageing populations, we must take a strategic medium to long-term
view of overseas employment opportunities.
It is time for the overseas Indian worker to move up the wage chain
and India to be perceived increasingly as a provider of skilled
manpower in diverse fields. A suggestion has been made that a professional
body should devise an appropriate strategy to give shape to this
idea. Towards this end the constitution of a Central Council for
the Promotion of Overseas Employment has been mooted. This proposal
is also being examined by the government.
I wish this interaction between overseas Indians and the people
of India to inspire Indians at home to take a broader view of the
world. When I was in Mauritius I said to some of the Mauritian people
whose ancestors hailed from Bihar that they should go to Bihar and
inspire the people there to make a Mauritius out of Bihar. I could
say the same thing about other parts of the country. When we Indian
farmers creating agricultural wealth in California and in the trying
climes of Canada, I wonder how much more our own farmers in India
are capable of achieving.
I sincerely hope that we in India can work together to create an
environment in which the best of every Indian can find his or her
fullest expression. I want every Indian living and working in India,
to aspire for the global recognition that a Zubin Mehta, a Lakshmi
Mittal, an Indra Nooyi, an Amartya Sen and our chief guest Prof.
Jayakumar or a Kalpana Chawla gets when they go overseas.
India is known for its pluralism, for its inclusiveness, for its
willingness and ability to provide a home for all faiths. Every
great religion of the world has found a home here and is practiced
in peace here. This pluralism, this sense of “live and let
live”, this mutual respect and celebration of diversity helps
us to live in peace in distant lands and among different cultures.
That is why I say that every person of Indian origin is an embodiment
of the message, the idea of India.
India is an ancient civilization but we are a young nation. I believe
India’s efforts for social and economic transformation in
the framework of an open society and an open economy, committed
to the rule of law committed to the respect for all fundamental
human freedoms is of great historical significance. Our success
will have a profound influence on the course of human civilization
in the 21st century, when we see strife and tension building up
everywhere. I invite you to be active participants in this great
saga of adventure and enterprise of building a new India.
I once again wish you all a very happy, peaceful and prosperous
new year.”
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YSR/DS/SKS
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