TOPIC: General Studies 2
- India and its neighbourhood- relations
- Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests
- Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests
In News: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), launched his Commonwealth outreach through a series of meetings with leaders of Indian Ocean Region, African, Caribbean and Pacific Islands.
India’s pivotal role at CHOGM – An Analysis
Opportunity for India to engage with other countries: Potential of CHOGM has not been realised yet – there is great value in this association. There exists great uncertainty and unpredictability on the global level – with China adopting a leading role. India is in a better position to shape policies today.
Relevance of grouping: If it has to survive, it has to reorganise itself. Britain has realised that India needs to be brought in, in a much bigger way. At a time, when India is expanding its global footprint, the argument of CHOGM being a relic of the past, does not hold true. India should take this opportunity up; and re-look at how India can engage with other players.
Britain’s expectations:
Expectations from India:
The Way Forward – Seize the Opportunity
India must not squander the opportunity presented by the renewed interest in the Commonwealth. India should take active steps to –
Commonwealth Facts:
Founded: 1949
Head of the Commonwealth: Queen Elizabeth
Member-states: 53 (31 small states, many of them islands)
Population: 2.4 billion (60% under the age of 30)
Smallest country: Tuvalu (11,000); largest: India (1.3 billion)
GDP: $13 trillion by 2021
Commonwealth secretariat: Marlborough House, London
Since the London Declaration of 1949, which established the modern Commonwealth, India has held a pivotal position in this voluntary association of 54 independent sovereign states. It was India’s decision in 1948, as a newly independent Republic, to remain in the Commonwealth which influenced other Asian and African countries to join the organisation and which opened the era of the modern Commonwealth.
Since then, it was firmly established that joining the Commonwealth no longer necessarily involved continued allegiance to the British Crown. At the same time the word ‘British’ was dropped from the association’s title to reflect the Commonwealth’s changing character.