The Rediff Special /J N Dixit
If NAM is to be kept alive, it will have to move away
from the orthodoxies and
repetitious hortatory pronouncements
NAM's contribution towards the
resolution of these issues was in terms of
focusing international attention on these issues and giving general
political and moral support to action and impulses which led to
the solutions.
The defence and strategic equations of the world
have undergone a qualitative change with the disappearance of
the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. So NAM's general posture
as it evolved since 1961 on security
issues in the conventionally accepted sense of the term has also
become passe.
The NAM summits at Jakarta in 1992 and in
Cartagena in 1995 as well as the foreign ministers meeting over
the last five years have deliberated on these dilemmas. The general
conclusion arrived at was that NAM is uniquely
placed to forge a global consensus on issues of contemporary global
concern. There have also been formalistic affirmations that there
is an overarching solidarity and adherence to a shared vision
and approach to meet the challenges of the economic, technological
and new political undercurrents permeating inter-state relations
and the world order.
All this would be gratifying if substantiated
by patterns of state behaviour of NAM members.
This is not the case. The old continental sub-groups
of NAM (the Asian, the African, the European
and the Central and South American groups) have now been replaced
by new groups in the movement. You have the Islamic group of countries,
the ASEAN group of countries, the Maghrab Arabs, and the sub-Sahara
African groups functioning in separate identities.
The linkage between NAM on the one hand and
other multilateral fora representing the interests of the developing
countries like UNCTAD and the G-77 have been diminishing over
the years. The profound technological and economic changes which
have occurred among the different member countries and in different
regions represented in NAM have resulted
in inequalities in levels of prosperity and the quality of life between
different groups of countries belonging to the movement. This,
in turn, has resulted in different categories of interests motivating
the policies of given countries.
The process has culminated in
the emergence of new regional organisations and groups like
ASEAN, NAFTA, APEC and even SAARC representing more
cohesive pattern of concerns and interests and functioning as
more effective entities responding to the specific needs of different
groups of countries.
The transformation of the international economic
order has resulted in most non-aligned countries developing connections
with advanced market economy countries, the linkages which cannot
be entirely conform to the general orientations of NAM on these matters.
This phenomenon has found economic and
political expression in the manner in which non-aligned countries
have responded to issues being discussed at the conferences of
the WTO and multilateral discussions on issues like environment,
sustainable development, non-proliferation and disarmament.
One has to acknowledge that except for lip service supporting NAM,
the movement comes alive temporarily during its
summits and foreign ministers conferences. Then each member
goes its own way.
The Delhi meeting of the NAM foreign ministers would have
two objectives: First, that of ensuring that the conference is
publicly perceived as a successful exercise because India is
hosting it. Secondly, the foreign ministers meeting provides
an opportunity for substantive and critical introspection about
the relevance of the movement to member-countries, particularly,
to India.
If NAM is to be kept alive and is to have a
future role, it will have to move away from the orthodoxies and
repetitious hortatory pronouncements. The movement would have
to focus the new challenges that developing countries are facing
about transfer of technology and investments, about social and
educational issues and about human rights, about meeting the political
implications of new strategic and power equations dominated by
the great powers which are affecting the functioning of the UN
and evolving international economic arrangements.
Mr Gujral
would do well in asking his non-aligned colleagues whether they
agree that these are the challenges which non-aligned countries
face and whether they are willing to engage in forging a collective
approach to deal with these problems and whether their countries
would be capable of translating such a collective approach into
their policies, regardless of the other linkages and equation
that they have with other centres of power and influences in the
world.
J N Dixit's earlier columns:
India needs Iran's friendship in its efforts to normalise relations with Pakistan
Indo-US ties: Benign neglect and continued pressure?
We should respond to Nawaz Sharif positively, but without any expectation of achieving tangible results
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