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Indian
Americans
voice Kashmir concerns in White House
Chidan
and Rajghatta
WASHINGTON, FEB 25: If posterity captures a defining moment
that signaled the political coming of age of Indian Americans
in the United States, it could be at noon in the year 2000
on a balmy Thursday in Washington. Thats when a group
of 33 well-heeled immigrants trooped into the White House
to voice their views on the Presidential trip to South Asia
at the invitation of the Clinton administration. Participants
in the meeting, who spoke on background at the request of
the White House to keep the discussions private, said the
deliberations covered four broad areas: Kashmir, Pakistan's
role in fomenting terrorism in the state, the folly of the
President considering a Pakistan stopover, and up gradation of ties with India through trade and technology transfer.
Possibly for the first time, the Indians went on the offensive
on Kashmir, describing how a harmonious and pluralistic state
had had its peace shredded by Pakistan-sponsored terrorism
carried out by rabid and insular jehadists. Articulating this
viewpoint was Kashmiri activist Jeevan Zutshi, while community
activist Sunil Aghi said a stopover in Pakistan by the President
at this juncture during an India trip would "hurt the
sentiments of a billion people.'' Others like Narpat Bhandari
pressed for a greater US recognition of India's geo-political
aspirations, while his Silicon Valley colleague Kanwal Rekhi
questioned the American soft spot for a nuclear and communist
China at the expense of a more responsible and democratic
India.
Administration officials Karl Inderfurth from the State Department
and Bruce Riedel of the National Security Council heard the
community leaders for nearly 100 minutes, but offered no clues
about the President's agenda or itinerary. The Indian community
was represented by a range of activists from all over the
United States representing different professions and platforms,
with a sprinkling of the usual factotums who claim close ties
with the BJP leadership in New Delhi (the number of invitees
had swelled from 20 to 33 by the time of the meeting). Among
those who attended the meeting included Achamma Chandrasekhar,
Ramesh Kapur, Babubhai Patel, Rajen Anand, Subhas Razdan,
Sudhir Parekh and Gopal Vashisht. Both the participants and
administration officials agreed that the inputs were useful
and provided due recognition to the increasing influence and
visibility of the Indian-American community. This growing
clout has attracted wide coverage in recent times in US news
papers on the East Coast and West Coast -- and some bilious
reporting in the Pakistani media. One embittered Pakistani
newspaper attributed to the White House meeting the sole agenda
of thwarting the President's Pakistan stopover. It also claimed
the pro-India lobby had planted a story in a Washington paper
about the threat to President Clinton's life if he visited
Pakistan. But the US media -- the San Francisco Chronicle,
the San Jose Mercury News, The Washington Post and Washington
Times among them have been lavish in their admiration
for a skilled community that is only now acquiring political
savvy. Reporting that Indian-Americans who now hold 40 per
cent of high-tech jobs in Silicon Valley and earned $60 billion
last year, The Washington Times said on Friday that the community
is pouring money into political campaigns and helping change
the shape of US relations with India. The paper offered no
examples of any huge contributions, but community activists
acknowledge that Indian Americans are beginning to contribute
in a small way, having taken a while to learn how the system
works. But more than the money, some of them have an entry
to influential politicians because of their line of work --
like say in the medical or academic professions. For instance,
prominent community activist Swadesh Chatterjee, who attended
today's meeting, is commonly credited with softening the view
on India of Jesse Helms, the powerful chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee. Another prominent activist is
close to now exiled former speaker Newt Gingrich, having befriended
him during their teaching career. Such connections are now
beginning to pay off, and the White House interaction is a
tacit acknowledgement of the political evolution of the community.
The community was previously hopelessly divided with the usual
factions based on political, ethnic, geographic and linguistic
affiliations. But more recently they are attempting to bury
their differences. At one recent community event, all office-bearers
wore a simple badge that declared them to be Indian volunteers.
Of an estimated 1.4 million Indians now in the United States,
some 400,000 are said to be working in high-tech sectors,
including an estimated 250,000 in the Bay area alone. The
tech corridor in the Washington-Virginia has also attracted
more than 70,000 Indians. More recently, skilled Indian professionals
are coming into India at a rate of more than 50,000 a year.
Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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