Office of the Commissioner for NRI Affairs.
          (Cabinet Minister Rank)
            GOVERNMENT 
OF GOA
            
August 9, 2010
 
 
            Dear Sir. I 
am enclosing an article ‘Musings on Independence Day’  by  Shri 
Eduardo Faleiro, former Union Minister and presently Commissioner for NRI 
Affairs with a Cabinet Minister rank in the Government of 
Goa.    You may like to publish it by giving it an appropriate 
title.  Thanking you. Yours  sincerely. Lilia Rodrigues. Secretary.
**********************************************************************
MUSINGS ON INDEPENDENCE DAY
 
By
 
Eduardo Faleiro
 
            On August 
15, we celebrate the Independence Day. On that day,  in 1947, Prime 
Minister Nehru proclaimed  a tryst with destiny, “a moment which comes but 
rarely in History when we step from the old into the new, when an age ends and 
the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance” 
            The colonial 
rule destroyed the Indian economy and greatly impoverished the people of India. 
An estimate by the Cambridge historian Angus Wilson reveals that in 1700, 
India’s share of the world income was 22.6 percent comparable to the entire 
income of Europe  which was then at  23.3  percent . By 1952, 
however, India’s share fell to 2.3 percent of the world income.  By  
all  accounts, India was a prosperous nation at the onset of Western 
colonialism.  The French traveller Jean - Baptiste Tavernier in his 
‘Travels in India’, written in the 17th  century,  gives  
the  following  account  of Indian life. “Even in the 
smallest  villages,  rice,  flour, butter, milk,  
beans  and  other  vegetables,  sugar  and 
sweetmeats  can  be  procured  in  abundance”.  
Yet, du
 ring  the  British  rule, as  per  Government records 
of the time, 70 to  80 percent of Indians were living at subsistence 
levels, two   thirds   were   
undernourished   and   in   
Bengal    nearly four fifths were undernourished.
At all times  in its History, even the most distressing, India was revered 
by the great minds across the continents.  The renowned  American 
historian, Will Durant summed it up “India was the  motherland of our 
race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe’s languages: she was the mother of our 
philosophy; mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics; mother, 
through  the Buddha, of the ideals embodied in Christianity; mother, 
through the village community, of self-government and democracy. Mother India 
is in many ways the mother of us all”.
                       
 Today, India is the second fastest growing economy in the world with a growth 
rate of 8 to 10 percent per year.  This has been accompanied by growth in 
life expectancy, literacy and food security. India’s present GDP is expected to 
multiply 5 times by 2030.
The freedom struggle was not just for political freedom. It was not merely to 
dislodge foreign rulers and install our own. It was also for social and 
economic change and for a life of peace and dignity to all citizens. Whilst 
India witnesses rapid economic growth, there are still vast numbers of people 
in the country who face grave problems of illiteracy, disease and poverty. What 
is required is greater attention to inclusive development that benefits 
significantly all sections of the population.
A major managerial and policy challenge that we face today results from the 
speed  of urbanization. It is estimated that by 2030, most cities and 
quasi urban regions of India will witness a substantial increase in population. 
Unless a massive expansion of infrastructure begins right now, these regions 
will be affected by a sharp decline in water supply with a large section of the 
population having no access to potable water at all.  Towns could have 70 
to 80 per cent of sewage untreated.  Whilst car ownership will increase 
exponentially, shortcomings in the transportation infrastructure might create 
an unmanageable urban gridlock. Affordable housing for the low income group is 
a most important concern.  At present, a person earning an average salary 
cannot own a dwelling in most parts of the country and the price of land is 
bound to further increase over the years. An strategy ought to be devised to 
provide affordable housing to the average citizen. Planni
 ng mandates in the United Kingdom have generated 20 to 25 per cent of all 
affordable units built over the last decade.  South Africa allots free 
land for houses to its poorest income group.  Singapore provides public 
housing for more than 80 per cent of its population through a dedicated Housing 
Development Board, interest rate subsidies and other financial devices to make 
housing affordable to all.
            We, the 
people of India, must rise above our religious, ethnic and linguistic diversity 
and together deal with the multifarious tasks that confront us today. The  
framework  for  responsible  citizenship   and  
national  regeneration has been laid down   in  the  
Indian  Constitution  in  three  parts.  Part III of 
the Constitution deals with the Fundamental Rights, Part IV  with the 
Directive Principles of State Policy and part IVA with the   
Fundamental Duties. Fundamental Rights are basic human   rights 
which   the   State recognizes and it provides for their 
enforcement. We are all equally human, the world is one family and all human 
rights are for all. The nature and extent of State responsibility for the 
protection of human rights in India was indicated by the National Human R
 ights Commission in the case of the Gujarat riots of 2002. It said “It is the 
primary and inescapable responsibility of the State to protect the right to 
life, liberty, equality and dignity of all those who constitute it. It is also 
the responsibility of the State to ensure that such rights are not violated 
either   through overt acts or through abetment or 
negligence”.   
The Directives Principles of State Policy are guidelines to be kept in mind by 
the Government whilst framing laws and policies.  These guidelines include 
the promotion of the Panchayati Raj system, free and compulsory education to 
all children below the age of 14 years and provision of adequate means of 
livelihood to all.
The Fundamental Duties are moral obligations of all citizens and are 
specifically intended to promote responsible citizenship and national unity and 
harmony. We often harp on our rights but neglect and may even be unaware of our 
duties. Mahatma Gandhi remarked “I learnt from my illiterate but wise mother 
that all rights to be deserved   and   
preserved   come from duty well done.”  
The Constitution lists ten Fundamental Duties. Each has a distinct role and 
importance in our polity. One of the fundamental duties is “to provide harmony 
and the spirit of common brotherhood among all the people of India transcending 
religious, linguistic and regional or sectional diversities”. 
What is needed is a citizenry conscious of their rights and of their duties. 
The Union and State Governments should work together with voluntary 
organizations to promote awareness of our constitutional rights as well as of 
our responsibilities and to sensitize the citizens to the values enshrined in 
the Constitution.  
 
(The writer is a former Union Minister and presently the Commissioner for NRI 
Affairs with a  Cabinet Minister rank in the Government of Goa)

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