But there are people who are asking: diplomatic victory for whom? What does diplomacy mean for most ordinary Indians anyway? It means that if you are an Indian in trouble abroad, your country comes to your aid, pulls out all stops in getting you out of jail, makes sure that you get a safe passage home if you’ve been caught up in conflict and generally takes care of you: considering the amount you pay in taxes, protects your interest.
The sorry truth is that when it comes to public dealings: putting out a public face of India as a country, a regional power and rising international power, officialdom fails spectacularly. This applies to everyone across the board – whether it is the little guys, the construction labour say, in Saudi Arabia; or well-heeled highly qualified professionals in the US or UK. A quick chat with some of those who have been in trouble abroad and have gone to the Indian Embassy / High Commission seeking help suggests: don’t bother. You will be treated with contempt, unhelpfulness and rudeness. This is subject to the caveat that applies in all Indian situations: if you know someone, that’s different.
A young woman studying at Cambridge about three years ago had finished her course. She had packed all her things, had taken the train from Cambridge to Paddington and was just getting off the train to change to the Heathrow Express when suddenly two youths sidled up to her, slit the straps of her laptop bag which had her passport, ticket and money, secured it and raced out of the station. Dazed and disoriented, the girl fell to the ground and was helped up by bystanders only to find she had absolutely nothing – except a photocopy of the first and last page of her passport in her suitcase. After filing a police complaint and securing a copy, she went to the Indian High Commission, expecting that she would get some advice on what to do next. She was bleeding at the knees, crying and distraught.
Recognising she had nothing to lose, she just walked out and went to the Home Office. There, a paper was issued to her immediately that would help her leave Britain and explain things to the Indian immigrations in Delhi. By then she had missed her flight so British Airways arranged a passage for her on another flight.
So diplomacy and entitlement – of service, help and outreach to Indians – need to come together. After all, all of us pay for it !
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