Southasian elephant
The BBC has decided to pull the rug from under its South Asia web portal, even as the 17th SAARC Summit got underway in Addu Atoll in the Maldives. The Corporation seems to have felt that a regional outlook was no longer a paying proposition – and well might it have thought so, given that its managers do not live here and do not have to think about building a Southasian future. But for those of us who do, Southasia is an increasingly real proposition, and done to be nurtured and developed to match the evolving times and accompanying economic, cultural and geopolitical possibilities.
Himal has always proposed that Southasia be understood as something more than the SAARC formula of seven (and eight, since Afghanistan joined) nation states. It is a matter of definition, and our proposition has been that this vibrant, diverse, vast Subcontinent should not be restricted to a single classification. The moment one goes beyond a single characterisation – and seek to reflect the historical, perhaps, or the geographical, demographic and economic realities – Southasia begins to become a real, exciting place.