SAARC SANS TERRORISM
After many a hiccup, the SAARC summit scheduled for 4-6 January will finally happen at a difficult time in the entire region's history. There is an epic war going on in the Hindu Kush, and within each of our borders there are bitter insurgencies and separatist struggles. George W. Bush has set the agenda for the whole world by letting the cat out of the bag to catch the terrorist but it would be a mistake for the SAARC summit to get carried away on terrorism. There is a serious worry that the SAARC agenda will be hijacked by heads of government suddenly finding the one area where they can agree – and thereby squelching the aspirations of minorities and oppositional political groups in each of the seven countries of the region.
The American need to find the perpetrators of the terror acts of 11 September and bring them to book is valid, and South Asia too is duty-bound to help find those who helped execute the plan to kill thousands of innocents at one go. But it is another thing to try and take advantage of the American war against terrorism to ease one's own burden by accessing a political cover to do what you could not do otherwise.