
A smiling girl from Indian Diaspora at Hyderabad International
Convention Centre (HICC) on the last day of the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas,
in Hyderabad on January 9, 2006.

OVERSEAS INDIANS INTERVENTION SOUGHT IN CONTAINING HIV/AIDS
The Minister of State for Overseas Indian Affairs, Shri Oscar Fernandes
has urged NRIs and PIOs to support AIDS awareness and control activities
in India. He said that the Government was involving all related agencies
in to spread awareness about killer disease. Shri Oscar Fernandes, who
was also Convener of Parliamentary forum on AIDS, was delivering key
note address at Panel Discussion on HIV/AIDS in India-Role of Diaspora,
at Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas-2006, here today. He said that for the Government,
ensuing the safety of every Indian from this disease is a matter of
priority. Shri Oscar Fernandes lauded those efforts of Andhra Pradesh
government in creating awareness among masses as well as vulnerable
groups with sex education even at school and college level.
Shri K. Rosaiah, Minister of Health and Finance, urged
that NRIs and PIOs should come forward to adopt HIV/AIDS affected children.
He chaired the panel discussion on HIV/AIDS in India-Role of Diaspora.
The State Health Minister also asked them to give a thought towards
adopting districts of their native land to maintain primary health centers.
Shri Suresh Prabhu, a member of Parliamentary forum
on AIDS, asked the delegates to think globally and act locally. Shri
JD Seelam, another member of the forum also spoke on the occasion. Dr.
Vijay Koli, Shri Inder Singh, President GOPIO, Dr. Arjun R.V. Daluvoy,
were also present at the occasion.
SEPARATE NRI DEPARTMENT TO CATER TO NON-RESIDENT ANDHRITES
The Government of Andhra Pradesh has decided to set up a separate NRI
department which will work for the welfare of the non-resident Andhraites.
Speaking at a session on the “Indians in Gulf” at the Pravasi
Bharatiya Diwas-2006 here today, Shri Mohammed Ali Shabbir, A.P. Minister
for Information and Public Relations, said the State Government appointed
a study group under his chairmanship to look into the problems of non-resident
Andhrites in the Gulf countries, which has recently submitted its report.
The report to the findings of the Group, the Minister said that Andhra
immigrants are facing problems with the immigration laws of host countries.
Stating that the state government is very keen to solve
the problems of Telugus in the Gulf countries, the Minister informed
that the state government has decided to create a single window cell
to provide various services to visiting and returning AP NRIs. The cell
will ensure proper counseling and guidance to prospective and present
Gulf NRIs, liaison with various government departments, proper pre-departure
training, consultancy services for savings and investments by the NRIs,
awareness about immigration laws and other issues.
The State Government is also considering a special group
insurance scheme with coverage of accident, health and other benefits
for the NRIs and making registration of recruiting agents and a man-power
corporation to meet the labour demand overseas. Emphasizing the need
to provide vocational and professional training to intending workers
overseas, Shri Shabbir Ali said that the Osmania University, Maulana
Abdul Kalam National Urdu University and the University of Hyderabad
have decided to set up study centers in Gulf countries.
Speaking on the occasion, Shri Madhavan, President of
Indian Association in Sharjah, appealed to the Central Government to
reserve seats in all professional colleges for the children of NRIs.
Shri K. Kumar, President , Indian Community Welfare Committee, Dubai,
said that the blue-collar workers in the Gulf are facing the problem
of delayed and non-payment of wages and requested the Union Government
to look into the matter through its Embassies.
PBD MAY LEAD TO BRINGING OVERSEAS INDIAN JOURNALISTS CLOSER
Among the various issues concerning the Diaspora being highlighted at
different panel discussions the Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas 2006, one which
merited attention was “Reporting on the Diaspora”. In a
panel discussion chaired by Shri Sanjaya Baru, Media Advisor to Prime
Minister, journalistic issues like breaking stereotypes of the third
world in the backdrop of increasing global access to information, emergence
of slew of TV channels, lending an appropriate Indian perspective for
western reportage of events of ethnic importance etc were discussed.
Summing up the discussions the chairperson Shri Sanjaya
Baru said that the Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas should emerge as the forum
to contribute towards global free access to information. Responding
to the idea of launching a pan-Indian Television channel, he said the
market needs to be imaginatively captured as one single channel/publication
may not cater all the communities of overseas Indians..He further called
for greater networking in order to build federations with global influence.
The distinguished panel had six participants namely,
Mr. Sreenath Sreenivasan, Professor of Journalism Columbia University,
Mr. Raju Narisetti, senior journalist of Wall Street Journal, Ms. Neena
Gopal, foreign editor of Gulf News, Mr. Chidanand Rajaghatta, Washington
Correspondent, Times of India and Mr. Paras Ramautar, who has worked
in Trinidad and Tobago in media and public relations.
NRIS TO BE INVOLVED IN PREPARATION OF AGENDA FOR PBD EVENTS
As many as 1,360 PIOs and NRIs registered for PBD-2006 and out of them
1,146 delegates from 51 countries participated in the Pravasi Bharatiya
Diwas-2006. This was disclosed by the Union Minister of State for Overseas
Indian Affairs Shri Oscar Fernandes at the ninth and the last plenary
session of the PBD here today.
Shri Fernandes said that efforts will be made in future
to involve the NRIs and the PIOs also in preparing the agenda for the
next Pravasi Bharatiya Diwas events. The Minister said that the PBD-2006
has identified some significant and important issues concerning the
PIOs and the NRIs and recommendations made in different sessions will
be processed by the Ministry and appropriate action will be taken on
them.
Briefing about some of the important achievements of
the PBD-2006, Shri S. Krishna Kumar, Secretary, Ministry of Overseas
Indian Affairs, said that a Remittance Service was launched for the
NRIs on the first day of the event. He hoped that this facility will
help in further improving the savings potential of the NRIs and encourage
them to invest in India. He also hoped that the Knowledge Network as
proposed during the fifth plenary session would soon become a reality,
with the help of UNESCO and UNDP. He assured that the suggestions and
proposals made by the delegates in various sessions will help in working
out an action plan for the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs.
President Calls up on Overseas Indians to transform
Rural Villages
The President Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam has called upon
the overseas Indians to provide leadership for transformation of Indian
villages with their experience and knowledge. Delivering a richly illustrated
lecture on the subject of Umbilical Connectivity and Societal Change
at the valedictory session of the 4th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas here today
the President underlined that the transformation of India needs transformation
of six hundred thousand villages. “You can definitely provide
the leadership for transformation of the cluster of villages around
your village with your experience and knowledge connectivity. If it
is interests you, you can definitely become a partner in this noble
mission” he added.
The President said that overseas Indians have been successful,
thanks to the foundation in education and the heritage their home country
gave them, and also the opportunities that the country they have gone
has given. They look for the warmth of human relations in India. The
society remains a loving mother to grown up sons and daughters who always
return. This he called the umbilical connectivity between the mother
and the children and said that we belong to same umbilical connectivity,
whether we are in India or in any other part of the planet. India, whose
70% people live in rural areas, has a vision to transform itself into
an economically developed country before 2020, and added that “It
is not only important for the Non-Resident Indians to pay the debt to
their motherland but all of us living here have also to pay back the
debt to our motherland which has nurtured and grown us.”
The following is the full text of the President’s
Speech:
“I am delighted to participate in the conferment
of Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards 2006. I congratulate the award winners
for their contribution in promoting international understanding for
healthy bilateral relationship between the countries and enable us to
project the right image of India abroad. I am happy to meet you all
in this gathering. I also congratulate the PIO's for the Overseas Citizenship
of India (OCI). My greetings to the organizers - Ministry of Overseas
Indian Affairs in partnership with Government of Andhra Pradesh and
the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.
Cultural deprivation
Sometime back Nobel Laureate Sir V.S. Naipaul met me
with his wife Lady Nadira. We walked through the Mughal Gardens in Rashtrapati
Bhavan and discussed various issues related to the history of our country
and its people. Sir Naipaul thoughtfully told me that while India as
a Nation is a very recent phenomenon, Indian as people are as old as
the mankind on this planet. Sir Naipaul informed me that he is the descendant
of unskilled labourers of North Indian Brahmin origin, who were shipped
out of India as settlers for farming of the British Empire. He called
him a dispossessed child of India whose upbringing in a far away Trinidad
familiarized him with a new type of deprivation that is the cultural
deprivation. His books reflects his in-built love for the nation of
his origin.
Empire of Indian Mind
Today, the 9th day of January, marks the return of Gandhiji
from South Africa to India 91 years ago. His work in South Africa and
reasons of his return are well known. The point I would like to make
is that when Gandhiji returned, he travelled from one colony to another
of an Empire on whose territory; the sun would never set at that time.
It would not be an exaggeration, if I say that today the sun truly cannot
set on the empire of the Indian Mind. Some children of Mother India
are always working wherever the sun is shining on this planet be it
Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, the Americas and, indeed, on the icy
reaches of Antarctica. Twenty million children of India live in various
parts of the planet and every year it is increasing, because they are
needed.
Experiences
Before coming here, I was at Peda Amiran village near
Bhimavaram town today morning with Prof MR Raju, a Nuclear Scientist
who held important positions in American Laboratories, including Los
Alamos National Laboratory, during his 33-years stay there. On 1992,
2nd October the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, Prof Raju decided
to move with his family, permanently to their village and serve the
society with their knowledge and wealth. His contribution during the
last one decade has made a difference to the village. I participated
in the inauguration of a Rural Cancer Treatment and Research Center
built by him under Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Trust. I met on that occasion
a lawyer, a maxillofacial surgeon and an ophthalmologist; they are all
working in the United States and drawn to Raju’s mission. I also
saw Byrraju Foundation’s work in the rural community. Working
in 150 villages across five districts of Andhra Pradesh, it has an impact
on nearly one million rural lives. Their programmes include healthcare,
education and adult literacy, water, environment and sanitation and
livelihood skills. The Foundation is entirely funded by Satyam Computer
Services Limited. I can see the impact of their work on Human Development
Index in the Bhimavaram region. I discussed with Shri B. Ramalinga Raju,
Chairman, Satyam Corporation for establishing the linkage for economic
connectivity.
What attracts India?
What does all these people symbolize? What attract people
spread across the planet to the land of their origin? I asked this question
to a Minneapolis-based engineer Madhu Reddy who met me few days ago
in Hyderabad. He informed me that he just signed a MoU with Electronics
Corporation of India Ltd to set up a production unit for Digital X-ray
(D.R.) systems. These systems are latest in Radiography equipment and
have not yet arrived in India due to its prohibitive cost. He told me
that not only he would sell the D.R. Systems in a cost effective way
to Indian hospitals, and also export to other countries. The product
will be internationally competitive. When I asked, “Why are you
doing that? Madhu Reddy replied, “Sir, while it makes a perfect
business sense to manufacture electronic products in India and export
them, I also want to repay the debt I owe to this land and society where
my forefathers had existed to whom I am just a connected link.”
Madhu Reddy who is successful in the United States was born and educated
here. “There is a debt to be repaid by me,” he says. Friends,
it is not only important for the Non-Resident Indians to pay the debt
to their motherland but all of us living here have also to pay back
the debt to our motherland which has nurtured and grown us.
Four Waves
People of Indian Origin worldwide represent four waves
of migration in the past. The first, and probably the longest wave,
was of Indians going forth in search of knowledge and opportunity as
travellers, as teachers and as traders. Indians went to China and around
Indo-China. The second wave was one of enforced migration of indentured
labour, a legacy of colonialism. Indians were taken to Africa, West
Indies and England. The third wave was a product of partition. The fourth
and the most recent wave has been that of Indians empowered with skill
and knowledge seeking various type of opportunities and challenges.
The destination is the United States, Canada and English speaking European
countries and West Asia. Will there be a fifth wave? In the fifth wave,
towards the end of 21st century, Indians may participate in the planetary
civilization that may result many resourceful Indians inhabitating Mars
and entering the space industrial establishment on Moon.
The spirit of movement
The four migratory waves happened in different historical
settings for different reasons, but the central theme remained quest
for better living conditions and opportunities to excel. Hope to transform,
to translate our living present to a productive future is what makes
human a unique creature of the Cosmos. This is indeed true of migrants
the world over. The important point is that Indians always migrated
as individuals and never as communities. In fact even during the Partition,
brothers chose to separate rather than migrating as a family. The attraction
of the homeland has been historically proved powerful than compulsions
of migration, definitely in the long run and over a period of lifetime.
The presence of all of you here today testifies this. What is that unique
thing that binds an Indian to this land?
The Eternal Mother
Overseas Indians have been successful, thanks to the
foundation in education and the heritage their home country gave them,
and also the opportunities that the country they have gone has given.
I receive visitors settled abroad from all walks of life. Many of them
have brought their children first time to their motherland. They look
for the warmth of human relations in India. This society remains a loving
mother to grown up sons and daughters who always return. This I will
call umbilical connectivity between the mother and the children. We
belong to same umbilical connectivity, whether you are in India or in
any other part of the planet. Friends, India, whose 70% people live
in rural areas, has a vision to transform itself into an economically
developed country before 2020. Now I would like to discuss what I presented
in the Indian Science Congress on 5th January 2006 about how a rural
area can be developed with education centres as base line.
Technology for societal transformation
The transformation of India will need transformation
of six hundred thousand villages. This would need creation of seven
thousand PURAs spread in different parts of the country with physical
connectivity, electronic connectivity, knowledge connectivity leading
to economic connectivity. I suggested that the decision could be taken
to allot Rs. 500 crore to develop 100 PURA Clusters. Each cluster, comprising
of 20 to 30 villages, will have an educational institution as a nucleus.
The development will comprise of setting up of village knowledge centres;
agro-clinics; Tele-education and Tele-medicine centres; and other employment
oriented schemes such as bio-gas plants; water treatment plants (brackish
to potable water); bio-fuel esterification plant; cold storage; consumer
product development; vocational training centres and setting up of business
centres by the entrepreneurs for national and international marketing
of the products from these rural enterprises. In all these cases, the
educational institutions should plan the activities in consultation
with local people who are the beneficiaries of this programme.
A Performance Challenge
These hundred PURA programmes originating from educational institutions
and with public-private partnership will provide the experience for
taking up big programmes in future in an industrial scale. This undertaking
will build the capacities of the villagers and encourage the Indian
entrepreneurs to become an active partner in this development process.
These activities should not be treated as mere experiments and scientific
knowledge; it is the application of science and technology to societal
transformation. The winners are the academic institutions and the rural
people belonging to the PURA Clusters. Finally, there should be a clear
assessment whether the villagers have been benefited. A joint team of
the village members and the scientists/technologists can do this. This
will lead to the birth of the Civic Scientists. This is the performance
challenge, which I would like to pose to the experienced scientific
community and to the Government officials. This mission I gave since
I had seen three operational PURA projects: one in Tamil Nadu which
I have discussed earlier in the last year, second in Maharashtra and
the third in Madhya Pradesh. I would like to describe the three PURA
systems to the members assembled here.
Periyar PURA (Tamil Nadu): I have inaugurated Periyar
PURA complex pioneered by Periyar Maniammai College of Technology for
Women, Vallam in Tanjore, a year back. I thought of sharing with you
the developmental concept of a cluster of over 65 villages near Vallam,
Thanjavur district of Tamil Nadu that involves a population of 3 lakhs.
This PURA complex has all the three type of Connectivity – physical,
electronic and knowledge – leading to economic connectivity. The
centre of activity emanates from the women engineering college that
provides the electronic and knowledge connectivity. Periyar PURA has
health care centres, primary to post graduate level education and vocational
training centres. This has resulted in large-scale employment generation
and creation of number of entrepreneurs with the active support of 850
self-help groups. Two hundreds acres of waste land has been developed
into a cultivable land with innovative water management schemes such
as contour ponds and water sheds for storing and irrigating the fields.
All the villagers are busy in cultivation, planting Jatropha, herbal
and medicinal plants, and power generation using biomass, food processing
and above all running marketing centres. This model has emanated independent
of any government initiative. The Engineering institution has provided
the committed leadership. Recently, 5 of Periyar PURA villages are connected
through Wi-MAX Wireless of 4 mbps connectivity It provides a sustainable
economic development in that region. This gives me the confidence that
PURA is a realizable proposition and this movement can be multiplied
by thousands of entrepreneurs, educational administrators, small-scale
industrialists and bankers with the support of the government agencies.
Loni PURA (Maharashtra): At Loni in Maharashtra, pioneered
by Pravara Medical trust, a participative model of integrated rural
development has come up among 44 villages with the population of 80,000.
It is improving the productivity of the rural people through improved
quality of life with healthcare, education and employment. The concept
is people centric development for social transformation. The thrust
area of development has been on comprehensive Medicare particularly
for women and children, need based health education and e-connectivity
to the farmers. The complex has created 27 educational and vocational
institutions consisting of schools, colleges, polytechnic and ITI including
medical and engineering colleges. They have created sugar factory, biogas
plants, chemical plants and power projects. They have large number of
self-help groups for providing low interest loan for the weaker sections
in the society. Due to the co-operative effort of the people, literacy
in these villages has gone up from 63% to 83%, birth rate has come down,
infant mortality rate has decreased to 35 per 1000 from 70 per 1000
and the standard of living of the people has gone up by over 20% compared
to other villages in the neighbouring areas.
Chitrakoot PURA (Madhya Pradesh): At Chitrakoot in Madhya
Pradesh, I met Nanaji Deshmukh, the ninety-year-old social worker. His
team belonging to Deendayal Research Institute (DRI) is developing and
implementing a village development model. Nanaji told me that people’s
power is more potent, stable and enduring than political power. By becoming
one with the oppressed and depressed, one gains the acumen of administration
and governance. Social advancement and prosperity are possible only
by injecting the spirit of self-reliance and excellence in the younger
generation. Using this principle, DRI has plans to develop one hundred
clusters of villages having approximately five villages each around
Chitrakoot. They have already developed 80 villages in 16 clusters consisting
of about 50,000 people.
I witnessed sustainable development at Patni village
based on indigenous and traditional technology, knowledge systems and
local talents. The programme aims at income generation through value
addition, innovative agricultural practices, inculcating scientific
temper among the villagers, improvement of health and hygiene, striving
towards 100% literacy. The villagers are doing water harvesting; effectively
using it for cultivation of food grains, medicinal and aromatic and
horticulture cultivation. Apart from all these development activities,
the Institute is facilitating a cohesive conflict free society. I understand
that the eighty villages around Chitrakoot are almost litigation free.
The villagers have unanimously decided that no dispute will be taken
to court and the differences will be sorted out amicably in the village
itself. Nanaji told me that if the people fight among each other they
would have no time for the development. This message has been understood
by the society.
The Institute has developed a novel concept of putting
a graduate married couple at the hub of the societal transformation.
Called “samaj-shilpi dampati” (societal sculpture couple),
they counsel and intervene in the affairs of the village citizens. In
the same Chitrakoot environment there is another social organisation
called Shri Sadguru Seva Sangh trust is carrying out number of social
activities including the running of quality eye care centre.
GRID Connectivities
India has embarked on a mission to provide connectivity
for billion people in the form of GRIDs. This GRID gives national connectivity
consisting of Knowledge GRID, Health GRID, E-Governance GRID and PURA
GRID. That means citizen to citizen, citizen to state, Government to
Government and citizen to institutions and rganization are connected.
This GRID system will certainly maximize the synergy between the rganization
and people leading to faster economic growth and productivity. The Grids
are as follows:
1. Knowledge GRID – Inter-connecting Universities
with socio-economic institutions, industries and R&D Organisations.
2. Health Care GRID – Inter-connecting the Health
Care institutions of Government, Corporate and Super speciality hospitals,
research institutions, educational institutions and ultimately, Pharma
R&D institutions.
3. E-Governance GRID – Inter-connecting the Central
Government and State Governments and District and Block level offices
for G2G and G2C connectivity.
4. PURA GRID – Connecting the PURA Nodal centres
with the Village knowledge centres and Domain service providers. Since
this is the backbone for rural development all other GRIDs will infuse
the knowledge into this GRID for sustainable development, healthcare
and good governance. For example, five of the Periyar PURA villages
have now been connected with Periyar Maniammai College and Rashtrapati
Bhavan using Wi-MAX connectivity.
5. Integrated Village Knowledge Centers will act as
an inter-connected delivery mechanism for tele-education, tele-medicine
and e-Governance services apart from individual access by the people,
within and between the Village Knowledge Centres.
This GRID will weave the people together in to a strong
social fabric. Apart from economic prosperity it will bring societal
transformation.
Conclusion
Friends, in a rural environment, I find a revolution is taking place
due to the sustained effort of committed leadership for removing human
pain. We are all part of our nation. What the more fortunate among us
have to do is to provide the leadership that can help bring about transformation
in the other India. India has got 600,000 villages. I am sure each one
of you assembled here will have a connectivity with one of these villages.
You can definitely provide the leadership for transformation of the
cluster of villages around your village with your experience and knowledge
connectivity. If it is interests you, you can definitely become a partner
in this noble mission.
I am sure that after living in foreign societies you
would have realized that each one of us is a member of the extended
human family. We have the same hopes and aspirations, fears and longings,
desires and dreams. Our station in life is dictated by a random draw
that was made by forces beyond our imagination even, leave alone our
control.
Working in rural areas is not easy. It is like Kurukshetra,
as my friend Prof MR Raju termed it. Still it gives him wholesome satisfaction
to serve the rural people. To come here and participate in the societal
transformation is indeed a spiritual challenge. Each of us, wherever
we are, can make a commitment in our lifetime to bring about positive
change in the land of our birth and enhance its glory. India, seeks
your knowledge, experience and the art of success you have learnt through
your struggle abroad. She beckons in your success!
My best wishes to all of you for success in your missions
wherever you live. Your prosperity is our happiness.”
The President also honoured fifteen NRIs/PIOs with
the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards-2006 on this occasion.