Monday, May 19, 2014

India’s PM-elect Narendra Modi: a friend of Israel

India’s PM-elect Narendra Modi: a friend of Israel

 

Originally Posted in  Times of Israel by Vijeta Uniyal

 

Narendra Modi is the next Prime Minister of India. Modi’s NDA-Alliance won 336 out of 543 seats in the Indian parliament. He has routed the ruling Congress Party led by Rahul Gandhi, the 4th generation member of Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.

Modi is arguably one of the most capable administrators in India. As Chief Minister of Gujarat State (2002-14) he turned around the economy, created infrastructure and improved public services. With a population of 60 million, Gujarat’s per-capita GDP today is much higher than India’s average. 

Today majority of Indians want Modi to repeat his performance as the next Prime Minister the country.
A lot of ink has been spilled in the international press over this relatively unknown man now at the helm in New Delhi. However there is one story readers in Israel need to hear: 

Modi is a friend of Israel, the like of whom India has not seen before.

This fact can be stated without any exaggeration or wishful thinking. All one needs to do is to look at Modi’s track record.

Modi is the first Indian leader to have actually visited Israel. He has often expressed admiration for Israel’s achievements in research, technology and innovation; espacially in the field of agriculture and water resources.

Every year more than 2000 farmers from Gujarat visit Israel to get trained in advance farming techniques – at their own expense. He welcomed Israeli Companies to enter water management and recycling sector in 50 cities of Gujarat; and invited Israel to be the guest country at Gujarat state’s flagship Agricultural Fair (Vibrant Gujarat Agro Tech Global Fair 2014).

Snubbed by US on the basis of allegations relating to his role in 2002 Hindu-Muslim riots, Modi has held excellent working relationship with Israeli business community and diplomatic mission. He has worked to create an industrial fund to promote joint ventures between Israeli and Gujarat-based companies.

Narendra Modi is expected to visit Israel, before he calls on Washington.

To Modi’s credit, he has never expressed any personal grudge against the US administration’s punitive actions; but judging by his political track record, he does tend to remember old friends. According to most pundits in New Delhi, He is expected to visit Israel, before he calls on Washington.

Ideologically, Modi is sympathetic to the notion of the Jewish homeland. His own election manifesto mirrors the millennia-old Jewish desire and calls India a homeland for prosecuted Hindus. 

This is sea change compared to the attitudes of his successors, who refused to recognize Israel till 1991 and restricted India-Israel relations to trade and defense procurement.

I will leave it to the skeptics and pundits to give a thousand and one reasons for not extending a hand of friendship to India’s PM-elect Narendra Modi; but for me if someone talks like a friends, act like a friends – I will take my chances and call him a friend.


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