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<DIV>South Asia Partnership Canada<BR>Cordially invites you to a mid-day
presentation<BR>On<BR></DIV>
<DIV>The War on Terror and India's Quest for
Security<BR> <BR>by<BR> <BR>Professor M. D. Nalapat<BR>UNESCO Peace
Chair<BR>Manipal Academy of Higher Education <BR>Manipal,
India<BR> <BR> <BR>Date: Wednesday May 14, 2003<BR>Time: 12.00 to 2.00
PM<BR>Place: Room 202, 1 Nicholas Street, Ottawa<BR><BR><BR>”After Punjab in the
1980s, India faced militancy in Kashmir the next decade. More than two decades
of experience has given rise to a uniquely Indian way of dealing with terrorism,
one different from that followed by the other two democracies with which it is
often clubbed, Israel and the US. For New Delhi, the war on Terror is just one
part in an overall effort to create a secure environment for its one billion
citizens, a process that takes in not just the United States and Russia but
China into its range. What is the Indian experience? And what lessons can other
democracies learn from it, in a context defined by 9/11 and the US response to
that atrocity? In a context that has seen the rise of China as the new Giant of
Communism?”<BR> <BR>M. D. Nalapat is Professor of Geopolitics and UNESCO
Peace Chair at the Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India's elite private
university. He was Coordinating Editor of the Times of India,
largest-circulating English-language newspaper in India, Editor of the
second-largest Malayalam daily Mathrubhumi.<BR><BR><BR>During his tenure in the
Mathrubhumi, he had taken up issues such as religious intolerance, focusing for
example on the denial of certain privileges to "lower" castes in the famous
Guruvayur temple in Kerala; the discarding of unwanted wives through easy
divorce practices in the Muslim community; and the denial of inheritance rights
to Christian women in the state. He also exposed several cases of governmental
corruption.<BR><BR>During his tenure with The Times of India, M. D. Nalapat
emphasized the problems arising from India's insurgencies and the creation
of nuclear and missile deterrents. Professor Nalapat was the first to
enunciate the theory, later popularized by Russian Prime Minister at the time,
Yevgeny Primakov, that an alliance of India, Russia (then USSR) and China would
have the capability of posing an effective challenge to the Western
Alliance. In 1994 he called for the use of the "business card" in Pakistan,
offering commercial incentives generously while denying concessions sought by
the Pakistan Army. <BR></DIV>
<DIV>He has researched extensively on insurgencies in India. His book,
"Indutva," claims that all Indians are a composite of Vedic (Hindu),
Mughal (Muslim), Western (Christian) civilizations. Therefore the Hindu Right's
concept of Hindutva (which demands that all Indians adapt to and adopt practices
of the Hindu faith) was unworkable.<BR></DIV>
<DIV>As UNESCO Peace Chair, he organized major conferences, including on
USA-India relations; Persian Gulf Region-India relations; and China-India
relations. In February this year he organized the first-ever
Trilateral Security Conference between India, Israel and the USA in
partnership with the Jewish Institute of International Security Affairs,
Washington.<BR><BR> He is Senior Associate of the National Institute of
Advanced Study, Bangalore and Member of the Institute for Social and Economic
Change and the United<BR> Services Institution of the Indian Ministry of
Defense. Apart from being a contributor to several newspapers he is
Consulting Editor of the Indian Defense
Review.<BR>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------<BR>Space
is limited. Please RSVP:<BR> <BR>Faruq Faisel<BR>Canadian Program
Manager<BR>South Asia Partnership Canada<BR>1 Nicholas Street, Suite
200<BR>Ottawa Ontario K1N 7B7<BR>Canada<BR><BR>E-mail:
ffaisel@sapcanada.org<BR>Phone: (613) 241 1333, Extension 226<BR>Fax: (613) 241
1129<BR>URL: www.sapcanada.org<BR> </DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>