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Why has India blocked foreign tsunami aid to the Nicobar and
Andaman islands?
By Parwini Zora and Daniel Woreck
25 January 2005
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The remote Andaman and Nicobar group suffered a devastating
blow from the December 26 tsunami. The low-lying and mostly uninhabited
chain of 572 islands in the Bay of Bengal was the closest Indian
territory to the epicentre of the massive earthquake. As well
as being swamped by the sea, it was hit by a series of substantial
aftershocks.
The official death toll is now more than 1,800 but over 5,500
people are still missing, presumed dead. While the southern state
of Tamil Nadu had the largest number of Indian deaths in absolute
terms, the population of the Andaman and Nicobar islands is just
356,000 and is proportionately the hardest hit. An estimated 288,000
people, or 80 percent of the total population, have been affected.
Nearly 12,000 survivors from the 38 inhabited islands were
evacuated to the Andaman capital of Port Blair. By January 4,
however, the exodus had to be halted as relief camps in the town
had filled to overflowing. Most of Port Blairs schools were
overcrowded with refugees while others were forced to live under
plastic sheeting.
An estimated 40,000 people are taking shelter in relief camps
scattered across the archipelago. The camps are under the supervision
of local authorities who are installed directly by the central
government in New Delhi and come under the supervision of the
Indian military.
The Indian government claims to have organised adequate emergency
relief for the stricken islands. The survivors, however, complain
of delays and a lack of medical care, and have criticised the
manner in which the Indian military has conducted relief operations.
The government has not only ignored the grievances, but refused
all offers of assistance from foreign aid groups.
The only international organisation allowed to operate across
the archipelago is UNICEF. Foreign journalists and aid workers
have been confined to Port Blair and not permitted to travel to
any of the outlying islands. International aid groups have been
permitted to provide assistance to local organisations, but even
these activities have been restricted.
Just over a week ago, International Red Cross officials accused
authorities of hijacking aid being sent to survivors. The Red
Cross alleged that supplies being shipped to Port Blair were being
seized at the docks, apparently for distribution by government
agencies.
According to a BBC report, The Andaman-Nicobar administration
is determined to prevent foreign voluntary groups from joining
the relief effort, even if it is by proxy.
The obvious question arises: why such sensitivity to a foreign
aid presence in the Andamans?
From the outset, New Delhi has insisted that India did not
require international aid. Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Suran
told the press: In terms of not accepting foreign assistance,
we feel we have all the resources to cope... our response to this
disaster was very prompt and effective.
In fact, the government went further. In line with its ambitions
to become a major regional power, New Delhi rushed medical and
technical aid to Sri Lanka, the Maldives and the Indonesian province
of Aceh. In its largest ever peacetime operationOperation
Sea Wavethe Indian navy dispatched 32 ships to the
stricken countries in the space of just one week.
During a visit to Calcutta, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh commented:
Our response [to the tsunami] was not shaped by false pride
or by chauvinism. We are happy to be part of the global community
and to work with it. He nevertheless boasted that India
could demonstrate to the world its ability and capability to stand
on its own feet.
But as the inadequacy of relief efforts in southern India surfaced
in the media, New Delhi was compelled to modify its stance. While
still rejecting direct aid from foreign countries, the Singh government
declared that it was willing to accept financial aid from the
UN, the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. Various aid groups and non-government organisations,
foreign and India, were already providing some assistance.
Sensitive military bases
In the Nicobar and Andaman group, however, the tight restrictions
remain in force. While the Indian government has pointed to the
need to protect the aboriginal tribes, its overriding concern
is to preserve the secrecy surrounding Indian military bases on
the islands. As Suba Chandran, an analyst at the Delhi-based Institute
of Peace and Conflict Studies, told the BBC: It is a Cold
War mentality. India is sensitive about its military installations
in the Andamans.
At its southernmost point, the archipelago is just 150km from
Indonesias Sumatra. The northernmost point is less than
50km from the Coco Islands which belong to Burma. The islands
are in an ideal position to monitor shipping through the Malacca
Strait, which is a key route from the Middle East to North East
Asia and the broader Asian Pacific region. A substantial proportion
of world trade, including vital oil supplies to Japan and China,
passes through the strait. US military strategists have long regarded
the sea-lane as a crucial choke point that could be
used to cut off vital supplies in the event of a conflict, with
China in particular.
The area is the focus for growing rivalry. In an effort to
protect its supply routes, China has strengthened ties with Burma
and is reportedly developing naval bases and electronic surveillance
facilities in the country. India, which has been developing a
close strategic alliance with the US, has used the Nicobar and
Andaman islands to counter the Chinese presence in
Burma and other Asian countries.
In 2001, India spent an estimated $US2 billion to establish
the Andaman Nicobar Command, jointly run by the army, navy, air
force and the coast guard, to preside over its military operations
in the archipelago. The Indian airforce has a substantial presence,
including a fighter squadron and a unit of helicopters. The army
was to station a full division or 8,000 soldiers in the islands.
Surveillance and monitoring stations have been established along
the entire archipelago.
Since winning last years elections, Congress has continued
the overall military expansion set in train by the previous Bharatya
Janatha Party (BJP)-led coalition. In last years budget,
defence spending was boosted by another 27 percent to a total
of $US17.63 billion or 2.5 percent of the countrys Gross
Domestic Product (GDP). The hardware to be purchased includes
three French Scorpion submarines, 115 multi-purpose fighters,
three Phalcon airborne warning radar systems and a Russian aircraft
carrier.
The Congress-led government did not hesitate in maintaining
the close military relations with Washington established by its
predecessors. Last July-August, the Indian Airforce took part
in a US exercise in Alaska codenamed Exercise Cooperative Thunder.
In October, the Indian navy engaged in manoeuvres with the US
navy in the Arabian Sea near Goa.
An article on the Asia Times website last November entitled
Navy reflects Indias strategic ambitions pointed
to the expansion of Indian naval operations. Most striking
of all, the Indian navy is in the midst of a deployment to the
South China Sea and beyond that is bringing Indian warships to
ports in Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, South Korea and
Japan. This is the first time that the Indian navy will have such
an extensive agenda in the South China Sea.
The authorUS strategic analyst Dr Donald Berlinnoted
that India had held discussions with Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore
about naval collaboration in the Malacca Strait. The Indian and
Indonesian navies are already engaged in joint patrols in what
is known as the Six Degree Channel separating Nicobar from the
Indonesian island of Sabang. The channel is normally used by all
international shipping entering or leaving the Malacca Strait.
Indias strategically-located bases in the Andaman and
Nicobar islands are crucial to its ambitions for a naval presence
in the Malacca Strait and beyond. In preserving a cloak of secrecy
over its military operations in the archipelago, the fate of tsunami
victims is clearly the last consideration.
See Also:
Under the guise of "humanitarianism",
US marines land in Sri Lanka
[12 January 2005]
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