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INDIA NEWS |
PRESS RELEASE
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No. 62/2001 |
Sept 14, 2001 |
Following is the text of the PM’s address to the nation telecast on Doordarshan, today:
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My dear countrymen,
As you know, terrorists have struck yet another blow - at the United
States of America, at humanity, at the civilized way of life.
But I have not the slightest doubt about the eventual outcome.
Democracies, open, free and plural societies shall prevail.
Our prayers rise for those who have been killed. Our hearts go out to
those who have lost their loved ones. Every Indian feels for them.
More than that, at least fifty three thousand families in India know
exactly the pain they are going through at the moment: for terrorists have mowed
down and blown up that number here in India over the last two decades. For
years we in India have been alerting others to the fact that terrorism is a
scourge for all of humanity, that what happens in Mumbai one day is bound to
happen elsewhere tomorrow, that the poison that propels mercenaries and
terrorists to kill and maim in Jammu and Kashmir will impel the same sort to
blow up people elsewhere.
In the Address I had delivered at the joint meeting of the United States
Congress a year ago, I had said, "Many
of you here in the Congress have in recent hearings recognised a stark fact - no
region is a greater source of terrorism than our neighbourhood. Indeed, in our
neighbourhood - in this, the 21st Century - religious war has not just been
fashioned into, it has been proclaimed to be, an instrument of State policy.
Distance offers no insulation. It should not cause complacence. "You know,
and I know - such evil cannot succeed. But even in failing it could inflict
untold suffering. That is why the United States and India have begun to deepen
their cooperation for combating terrorism. We must redouble these efforts." In
the wake of this new blow, Rashtrapatiji has assured President Bush that we
stand united with the American people in this hour of grief. I have reiterated
to President Bush that what the terrorists have done "sends a strong
message to democracies that we redouble our efforts to defeat this grave threat
to our people, our values and our way of life." I
have assured him that "we stand ready to cooperate with you in the
investigations into this crime and to strengthen our partnership in leading
international efforts to ensure that terrorism never succeeds again." It
is for the same reason that India has taken the lead over the last two years to
have the United Nations adopt a Comprehensive Convention against Terrorism. That
Convention is ready. The international community should finalise it, and begin
acting on it in concert. I can scarcely stress that too much -the imperative
that peoples and governments act in concert. Those who wreak evil have their
networks across the world. Those who will thwart them must be united too. We
must strike at the roots of the system that breeds terrorism. We must stamp out
the infrastructure that imparts the perverse ideological poison by which the
terrorist is fired up.
We must hold governments wholly accountable for the terrorism that
originates from their countries. In
a word, to get at the terrorists, the world community must get at their
organizations, at those who condition, finance, train, equip and protect them.
To get at the organizations, it must isolate, and thus compel the States that
nurture and support them, to desist from doing so. And
we must do so, recognizing that the death inflicted on some distant people is as
revolting as death inflicted on us. It is as necessary that the perpetrators of
such horrors be brought to justice - whichever place, whoever is their target in
any particular instance.
In a word, my countrymen, the terrorists and those who give him a safe
haven are enemies of every human being, they have set themselves against the
world. The world must join hands: to overwhelm them militarily, to neutralize
their poison. As
an integral part of this battle, it is necessary that we bear in mind that no
religion preaches terrorism. The fringe elements of society, which seek to cloak
terrorism in a religious garb, do grave injustice to both their faith and its
followers. Our revulsion against their barbaric acts should not prejudice us
against the innocent people who practice the religion, for which the terrorists
claim to act. If this happens, we would only be furthering the terrorists'
agenda of fomenting hatred and division in society along communal lines. The
fiendish destruction in the US has immediate consequences for us, it has direct
lessons for us. What
the terrorists have inflicted on the US, once again reminds us that the people
and countries that are peace loving, have to be prepared for the entire spectrum
of violence -for it is the aggressor, the terrorist who shall choose what weapon
to deploy. His target has to build the capacity to counter whichever device he
deploys. Now, being prepared across the spectrum, costs resources, it costs
enormous amounts. But that is the price we have to pay for holding our own in
the world of today. That
is all the more so in the region in which we are placed. As this region has
become the hub of terrorism, much of the response to the destruction that the
terrorists caused on 11th September, could take place in our vicinity. Quite
apart from the dangers with which we are confronted on our own, this response
itself will impose heightened costs. We have to brace ourselves to bear them.
And remember that this turn has come at a time when the world economy was
already on the edge of a substantial slow down. The pressures are certain to
become more intense: India spends almost Rs. 90,000 crore on
importing oil. An increase in the price of a barrel of oil by just a dollar
increases our import bill by Rs. three thousand six hundred crore. On the one hand, there is liable to be
less demand for our exports; on the other, our competitors, facing the same
pressures, are liable to exert even harder to push their exports; On the one hand, because of heightened
uncertainties, the flows of foreign direct investment are liable to shrink; on
the other, we will have to try even harder to convince the potential investor
that India is a better destination for his funds than other countries. For
reasons such as these, we have to redouble our efforts, we have to prepare
ourselves for harsh measures in the coming months. But we have to do more than
just bear economic costs.
We have to review our hobbled laws, our dilatory procedures. That even
the first stage of the trial of those who carried out the serial blasts in
Mumbai, has not been completed is an open invitation to terrorists to continue
with impunity.
But governmental agencies are not the only ones that have to
pull themselves up. Each of us has to willingly put up with the inconveniences
that come our way as the security forces go about their work. In
the end, I am sure each of you would want me to once again convey heartfelt
sympathies to the families of those who have been killed. Our condolences also
to the families of the numerous Indians and Indian Americans who have lost their
lives. These were our children, who were using their genius to unite India and
the United States in a common quest for a strong and peaceful future. Their
death binds our two countries in a common resolve to defeat forever the forces
of terror. My
countrymen, the coming months are going to be months of trial. All who love
freedom - peoples as well as governments - all democracies must stand firm, and
united, and resolute. And in India, all of us must be one. The first requisite
in this battle is that – We maintain
peace and communal harmony at home; We remain united in purpose. We remain
unflinching in our resolve to bear the hardships that come our way. Every Indian
has to be a part of this global war on terrorism.
We must, and we will, stamp out this evil from our land, and from the
world. Jai Hind."
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