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Old India has failed New India, again : A must read about Delhi CWG

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Old India has failed New India, again

Vir Sanghvi, Hindustan Times
September 25, 2010

These days we hear a lot about the clash of the two Indias — the India of the villages vs the India of the cities; deprived India vs shining India, etc. This conflict is undeniable but we are neglecting another clash between two other Indias which is subtler but no less significant. The unprecedented level of public anger over the screw-ups in the preparations of the Commonwealth Games (CWG) can be best understood if we see it as a clash between two Indias.

The people in charge of the Games typify old India: corrupt, slothful, incompetent, chaotic, unconcerned with the pursuit of excellence, unwilling to benchmark against global standards and convinced that in India, sab chalta hai.

The people who are most angered and horrified by the CWG mess are those who believe that we are creating a new India: one that can do things to global standards, whose competence and intelligence are highly regarded all over the world, an India where people work hard, where there are high levels of accountability and where commitments are treated as sacred.

When Indians talk about ourselves these days, it is this new India we allude to. It is the new India that is an emerging superpower. It is the new India that is the rival of a resurgent China. It is the new India that the world is rushing to befriend and to invest in.

But just as we begin to believe the hype about the new India, the old India comes back and bites us in the arse.

One reason why there is so much public outrage over the CWG mess is because we perceive the old India as having failed the new India. On the one hand, we talk about competing with China. On the other, we can never ever dream of matching up to the standard of the spectacular Chinese Olympics. In fact, as long as the old India types are in charge, we can’t even organise the Commonwealth Games, a relatively minor league event.

In the eyes of the world, we are now a laughing stock. We can brag as much as we like about the new India. But when it comes to delivering on an international commitment, we are no China. We are still corrupt, slothful old India.

The most horrifying aspect of the CWG fiasco is that the guys at the top still don’t get it. You and I may think we are building a new India. But the old geezers who are still in charge are content to live in the old India.

Take sports minister, M.S. Gill

(age: 74), a retired babu and the man who must take the rap for many of the screw-ups. Gill’s view is that the Commonwealth Games are like an Indian wedding. There will be disasters. There will be chaos. There will be confusion. But somehow, it will work out in the end. This is India, yaar, he suggested, this is our way of doing things.

It is hard to think of an attitude that is more out of tune with today’s times. Forget about systems, forget about delivery dates and forget about accountability. It’s like a shaadi, yaar. Ho jayega. Somehow!

Or take Jaipal Reddy (at only 68, the baby of this Cabinet). After Suresh Kalmadi fell into disrepute, Reddy was moved in by the government to keep an eye on things. Much of the faulty construction is the responsibility of his ministry.

What do you suppose Reddy’s attitude to the recent foul-ups is? The collapse of the overbridge that injured several workmen. The false ceiling that caved in, etc.

These are minor matters, he says. Why focus so much on them? These things happen, he suggests. And finally, there is the inevitable appeal to patriotism, always the last refuge of the politician. All of us should focus on the positive aspects of the Games and not draw attention to the disasters. Because India’s prestige is at stake.

And who do you suppose put our prestige at stake? The people who oversaw the collapsing bridges? Or you and I who worry about this disaster in the making?

When the Cabinet is full of people who operate in a chalta hai environment, can you be surprised by the attitude of the organising committee?

Every Indian I know was deeply ashamed to see the pictures of ***** in the Games Village and to read the reports about the state of the athletes’ accommodation: paan stains on the wall, dirty loos, and animal footprints on the beds.

And yet, how did the organising committee react? According to Lalit Bhanot, the problem was merely one of the differing standards of western hygiene and Indian hygiene.

With that single response, Bhanot summed up the difference between his India and ours. In his India, it’s all right if there are animal footprints on the beds meant for athletes. If anybody complains, then they are just using western standards of cleanliness.

This clash between the two Indias runs through almost every aspect of the CWG fiasco. In the old India, it is unthinkable for officials to disperse hundreds of crores of rupees without pocketing substantial kickbacks for themselves.

So it is with the CWG organisers. Forget about the over-priced equipment purchased for the Games or the dodgy companies hired at huge cost to perform meaningless tasks. Even the contracts for constructing buildings and roads have been awarded on the kickback principle. Why else do you suppose the infrastructure is so shoddy? Why else would bridges fall, buildings remain incomplete and ceilings cave in?

The tragedy of the Commonwealth Games is that it did not have to turn out like this. If we had assigned the Games preparations to the private sector — to any of the infrastructural companies that run airports, build hotels etc — budgets would have been adhered to, deadlines would have been kept and the construction wouldn’t have been sub-standard. Moreover, there would have been accountability. If the private sector fails, then it doesn’t get paid.

Alternatively, the government could have displayed some leadership. In 1980, Indira Gandhi recognised that the Asian Games would be a fiasco unless the government got involved at the highest level. Rajiv Gandhi oversaw the preparations, deadlines were kept, the infrastructure survives till today and the Games served as an advertisement for India.

But what this government has given us is a complete repudiation of Rajiv’s legacy. The preparations have been handed over to people like Suresh Kalmadi and when ministers have got involved, the task has been left to incompetent windbags. Nor has there been any attempt to find an alternative private sector model.

Is it any wonder that we are all so angry? As hard as we try to build a new India, this fiasco reminds us that old India still has the power to humiliate and embarrass us.

*The views expressed by the author are personal.
 
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Excellent article. Sums up much of what India has to overcome to really succeed, and rightly points out that the barriers are not physical but mental. It is perhaps telling that The Hindustan Times has to run the piece with a disclaimer "*The views expressed by the author are personal." in order to shield itself from the flood of emails from "patriotic" Indians. They are the ones the "old India" relies on to stay in power, they who insist that nothing is wrong, this is just the Indian way, and bristle with pride at every criticism.


To the author, well done.
 
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^^
This is not the Hindu but the Hindustan Times (HT). HT and ToI are very similar papers :lol: , HT is a tad less jingoistic though
 
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True. The CWG did not have to turn out like this at all. The only reason why it did, was so there could be easy money involved. Corruption is a great nuisance to the country, as it now affects everyone and India's image. Hopefully everything will get back on track.
Jai Hind
 
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India is a big balloon puffed up by the west for its own purpose and this just one more indication of that fact. The Australian head of the commonwealth games says India should have never been given the chance to host the games.
 
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India is a big balloon puffed up by the west for its own purpose and this just one more indication of that fact. The Australian head of the commonwealth games says India should have never been given the chance to host the games.

man!!!!!,have u ever read the problems they faced b4 organizing games.do u know during Greece olympics,they were planting trees just b4 the day of games beginning.
do u know abt wat happened during the Manchester games,players were asked to stay at the university hostels.
this is the thing ,every white country will have to say,they nalways criticize others specially asians.
if u want further proof ,u can go for pakistan tour to england.
 
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man!!!!!,have u ever read the problems they faced b4 organizing games.do u know during Greece olympics,they were planting trees just b4 the day of games beginning.
do u know abt wat happened during the Manchester games,players were asked to stay at the university hostels.
this is the thing ,every white country will have to say,they nalways criticize others specially asians.
if u want further proof ,u can go for pakistan tour to england.

Melbourne: India bribed 72 Commonwealth countries $ 100,000 each to get the hosting rights for the scandal-hit 19th edition of the Games which will start in Delhi from October 3-14, a media report claimed on Thursday.


A report in the 'Daily Telegraph' claimed that Delhi pipped Hamilton in the bid after offering huge sums of money to the 72 Commonwealth countries during the final presentation in Jamaica.


The report also said that Australia received a kickback of $ 125,000 from India.






"Delhi sealed the right to host the Games when their delegates emerged at the final presentation in Jamaica and offered all 72 nations $ 100,000 (then about $ 140,000) each for athlete training schemes if they were the successful bidders," the newspaper reported.


"The money, subsequently paid to all nations, was not significant to Australia because it had already decided to vote for India and the payment was not an exceptionally large one.


"But for small nations who have minimal interest in the Games, it clinched their vote and India went on to beat Canadian city Hamilton 46-22 in the final poll. Hamilton had offered the nations about USD 70,000 each," it said.


The newspaper also claimed that some countries' which had supported Hamilton's bid cried foul after India won the bid.


"Hamilton's bid organisers, and many of the nations who voted for them, fired off angry protests about India buying votes and the bad blood generated between several feuding nations still exists," it said.


"The Commonwealth Games Association has decided to ban 11th-hour inducements as a consequence of the outrage over India's tactics."


Australian Commonwealth Games Association president Sam Coffa also accepted that India offered money to get the Games.


"It (the payment) didn't make any difference to our decision but it is not a good thing," Coffa was quoted as saying by the 'Daily Telegraph'.


"We had a situation where Asia has had the Games only once (Malaysia in 1998) and it was worthwhile going again," he said.


Even though the Delhi Games organisers are battling against time to prepare the city for the mega-event, Coffa was hopeful about a successful CWG.


He, however, came hard on the Commonwealth Games Federation for not taking up the matter, in regard to the city's preparedness, with the organisers earlier.


"I still think they can pull it off. If I have any regrets it is that the Commonwealth Games Federation did not act sooner. They were behind schedule quite a few months ago and it would have helped if they had gone to India to get things moving," Coffa said.


Chairman of Hamilton bid Jagoda Pike also pounced on the opportunity and said the scenario would have been different if the Canadian city was awarded the hosting rights.


"I think you can safely say the kinds of issues they are experiencing wouldn't have happened if it were here," Pike said.

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Now, why do you think India had to bribe to get the hosting right! You bribe when you do not really deserve a position, isn't that the reason behind bribing?
 
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Melbourne: India bribed 72 Commonwealth countries $ 100,000 each to get the hosting rights for the scandal-hit 19th edition of the Games which will start in Delhi from October 3-14, a media report claimed on Thursday.


A report in the 'Daily Telegraph' claimed that Delhi pipped Hamilton in the bid after offering huge sums of money to the 72 Commonwealth countries during the final presentation in Jamaica.


The report also said that Australia received a kickback of $ 125,000 from India.






"Delhi sealed the right to host the Games when their delegates emerged at the final presentation in Jamaica and offered all 72 nations $ 100,000 (then about $ 140,000) each for athlete training schemes if they were the successful bidders," the newspaper reported.


"The money, subsequently paid to all nations, was not significant to Australia because it had already decided to vote for India and the payment was not an exceptionally large one.


"But for small nations who have minimal interest in the Games, it clinched their vote and India went on to beat Canadian city Hamilton 46-22 in the final poll. Hamilton had offered the nations about USD 70,000 each," it said.


The newspaper also claimed that some countries' which had supported Hamilton's bid cried foul after India won the bid.


"Hamilton's bid organisers, and many of the nations who voted for them, fired off angry protests about India buying votes and the bad blood generated between several feuding nations still exists," it said.


"The Commonwealth Games Association has decided to ban 11th-hour inducements as a consequence of the outrage over India's tactics."


Australian Commonwealth Games Association president Sam Coffa also accepted that India offered money to get the Games.


"It (the payment) didn't make any difference to our decision but it is not a good thing," Coffa was quoted as saying by the 'Daily Telegraph'.


"We had a situation where Asia has had the Games only once (Malaysia in 1998) and it was worthwhile going again," he said.


Even though the Delhi Games organisers are battling against time to prepare the city for the mega-event, Coffa was hopeful about a successful CWG.


He, however, came hard on the Commonwealth Games Federation for not taking up the matter, in regard to the city's preparedness, with the organisers earlier.


"I still think they can pull it off. If I have any regrets it is that the Commonwealth Games Federation did not act sooner. They were behind schedule quite a few months ago and it would have helped if they had gone to India to get things moving," Coffa said.


Chairman of Hamilton bid Jagoda Pike also pounced on the opportunity and said the scenario would have been different if the Canadian city was awarded the hosting rights.


"I think you can safely say the kinds of issues they are experiencing wouldn't have happened if it were here," Pike said.

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Now, why do you think India had to bribe to get the hosting right! You bribe when you do not really deserve a position, isn't that the reason behind bribing?

thats true that india bribed,even i heard in indian parliament.nothing new in this.truth is that india bribed more than others n india got.games are related to the country ability whether thew nation is capable to host the events or not.but our oc didnt did this n tarnished the image.but ig they host it successfully then every body will forget this wat happened or wat not.

i heard during parliament session,minister was saying if we dont host the events then how would we project our self??.

and also i want to tell u ..to get an armed equipment ,country have to bribe coz they know this is the possible way to get that one.wat abt games,if they are linked with the country capability
 
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thats true that india bribed,even i heard in indian parliament.nothing new in this.truth is that india bribed more than others n india got.games are related to the country ability whether thew nation is capable to host the events or not.but our oc didnt did this n tarnished the image.but ig they host it successfully then every body will forget this wat happened or wat not.

i heard during parliament session,minister was saying if we dont host the events then how would we project our self??.

and also i want to tell u ..to get an armed equipment ,country have to bribe coz they know this is the possible way to get that one.wat abt games,if they are linked with the country capability

Well, that proves my point!
 
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India is a big balloon puffed up by the west for its own purpose and this just one more indication of that fact. The Australian head of the commonwealth games says India should have never been given the chance to host the games.

Baloons exist, T-REX's do not!

P.S. You believe everything the aussies say?

@ OFFTOPIC

Although I fully agree with the author here, let me remind that this guy Vir Sanghvi had about 6-7 months back, written an editorial in the same Hindustan Times or may be Hindu ( I don't remember) saying "A stable Pakistan is not in India's interest."

I found it...there you go:

http://www.virsanghvi.com/vir-world-ArticleDetail.aspx?ID=266
 
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Seems like this whole corruption thing is an epidemic in every nation (mostly in Asia, S. America and Africa) as it drastically is affecting our image.
I really hope things turn around soon.
209mtsp.gif
 
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'HOPE KARNE SE KYA HOGA'.Half the people in 'new india' dont even vote but complain when corrupt ministers are in power.
 
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I don't buy this article age is nothing to do with it its about the lack of leadership or a good leader.

As for youth Rahul Gandhi don't have guts otherwise its his govt. and he is also a MP he can take the lead or steps to manage everything. But its a big failure for Young leader like Rahul Gandhi.

Take the another example: Kashmir has a very young CM still he is failing in governance why?????????? He is young if its a quality. Also, he has the backing of Rahul Gandhi because of being a good friends. Otherwise his father Farroq Abdullah or Saifuddin Soz or Gulam Nabi Azad can control the situation smartly.

And mind it they are old people not young like Omar Abdullah.
 
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