Chandrayaan-3, COVID management most impactful things done by India in past 10 yrs: EAM

Photo: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar at Kirori Mal College. (X/@DrSJaishankar)


External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Monday said Chandrayaan-3 mission and COVID management are among the most impactful things done by India in the past 10 years.

People around the world are fascinated by India’s technology feats, the External Affairs Minister said while addressing an event in Kirori Mal College here.

“We are the fifth largest economy, soon we’ll be the third. What decisions we make at home are also very keenly followed by the world. So, if we are now in the coming weeks going to decide our future in whatever way we wish, it’s not just a conversation amongst ourselves. It’s a conversation or a discussion in which the other six billion people are also tuned in. These are all actual aspects of why Bharat matters,” Dr. Jaishankar said.

“Probably much more fascinating to the world is actually those technology feats that we do. I would say in the last 10 years, probably the most impactful thing we have done, other than COVID management, was going to the moon,” he said.

Dr. Jaishankar said the Chandrayaan-3 mission had a huge impact on the perception of Indians abroad.

“And finally, as I said, a lot of it is about actually a country which has the ability to stand up for itself, for its interests, for its citizens, stand up to pressure, and in a sense, you know, radiate its own persona and its culture,” he said.

Speaking about India’s global image at the present time, Dr. Jaishankar said the perception of India changed after how India handled the COVID challenge. He noted that India started as a country of “great concern” and ended up as the “source of the greatest support.”

He said, “I do want to share with you as someone who travels a fair amount, what is actually our global image today. Because when we say why Bharat matters, at the end of the day, countries matter because there is a perception, there is a branding which has been created. I, from my own travel experiences, thought of six or seven really key points today. When any of you go abroad or you meet someone from abroad, these are actually their perceptions of India.”

“One, I would say the dominant one is that this was a country which handled the COVID challenge exceptionally well. It started out as the country of the greatest concern. It ended up as the source of the greatest support. And not just handled the COVID, they actually took the right decisions which enabled us today to become the fastest growing economy of the world. Because do remember, a lot of countries today have still not recovered from the COVID. That their economic performance even today is still shaped very much by the shock and damage that they suffer during COVID,” Dr. Jaishankar said.

The External Affairs Minister also spoke about how India has been bringing its people back home when there is a war or any other emergency situation in another country. He talked about how Indian students were brought back to India under Operation Ganga. Dr. Jaishankar noted that there were many nations who asked their citizens that they had to return to their country on their own.

He said, “The second is the manner in which we secure our citizens of India. Believe me, that has got everybody’s attention in the world. You know, a lot of us rightly are very proud of how – I’ll give you an example of how we got our students out of Ukraine in Operation Ganga. As I said, rightly so. But I also want you to know that there were many countries who actually told their students and their citizens, saying, sorry guys, there’s nothing I can do. You now have to figure out your own way out.”

“And these were not developing countries. They were even developed countries, who actually told their people, you are on your own. So, this change which has come about, that any Indian travelling anywhere has that sense, that look, you know, sometimes people talk about, you know, there’s something called a passport index. And the passport index basically is based on how many places you don’t need a visa for,” the External Affairs Minister added.

He emphasised that the Indian passport is looked at with greater respect and it shows that the government stands with the person carrying that passport.

The External Affairs Minister said the passport index should include who will come for a person when he or she is in trouble and the system which is willing to back you up when you go out and termed it the “real value of the passport.”

He noted, “To me, there is something missing in that index. I would have put which passport you are carrying and who will come for you when you are in trouble. And believe me, if you put that factor in, you will get a very different passport index out there. Not getting a visa and having an ability to travel easily is just one part of it.”

“What happens when something goes wrong? Who will look after you? Who has a system which is ready to back you up when you go out? To me, that’s the real value of the passport. And if the Indian passport today is looked at with greater respect, as I said, one part of it is what you do at home. But the other is also that people know that this passport means that their government stands behind the person who’s carrying the passport,” the External Affairs Minister added.

Stressing that people abroad are fascinated by how things like ration card systems and election systems work in India.

Dr. Jaishankar said, “The third is our performance at home. And I often share with my own colleagues in the cabinet and in the parliament that they think that when the foreign minister goes out of India, all the time we discuss foreign policy makes sense.”

Highlighting the infrastructure progress in India, the External Affairs Minister said the Indian government has built 40 million houses and given to people who have low income.