Provocative commentaries on international issues, social development, and people and places by a veteran journalist
PranayGupte's Articles In Current Events » Page 6
June 11, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Profile: Maurice F. Strong By PRANAY GUPTE Special to the Sun The Canadian business tycoon and self-styled socialist who's currently embroiled in a scandal relating to the United Nations, Maurice Strong, has created a worldwide network of influential people whom he's enlisted in the cause of environmentalism and "sustainable development," a phrase he claims to have coined to denote ecological security, economic progress, and social justice. But the 75-year-old Mr. Strong, a son of poor...
May 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
I flew to Paris to attend an exhibit at the Museum of Decorative Arts in the Louvre. The exhibit consisted of T-shirts produced by 79 renowned fashion designers to mark World AIDS Orphans Day, May 7. WAOD is the creation of Countess Albina du Boisrouvray, the founder of the Association Francois-Xavier Bagnoud, named after her son, a helicopter rescue pilot who was killed in Mali while on a mission. To say that the exhibit was dazzling would be to engage in an understatement. I don't believ...
April 1, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Col Allen Editor, the New York Post Herbert Allen CEO, Allen & Company Stanley S. Arkin Arkin Kaplan Leon D. Black Apollo Management Michael R. Bloomberg Mayor of New York City Joyce Brown President, Fashion Institute of Technology Arthur Carter The New York Observer James Cayne CEO, Bear Stearns Kenneth Chenault Chairman, American Express Hillary Clinton United States Senator William Jefferson Clinton Former U.S. president Steven A. Cohen SAC Capi...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Of course it's preferable to give an electorate the opportunity to "turn out the rascals" every two or four or five years -- depending on a country's electoral cycle -- but how many rascals do we truly toss out? In many of the Third World's democracies -- and here I return to India as a prime example -- felons and assorted thugs, once elected to legislatures, rarely get dislodged. That's because of the privileges that power can fetch: the pork barrel, the natural deference that significantly ...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Having been a columnist for Newsweek International for 18 years, I would suggest this to fellow G2K list members: Don't take the magazine's selection of "leaders to watch" too seriously. The choices are made quite arbitarily and, I submit, often without genuine in-depth knowledge of various regions. To name only one person -- Mohsen Kadivar -- in a region of more than 300 million people is actually quite capricious. Surely there are other men and women who might qualify for the moniker of...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
It's nice that some Iraqis are optimistic about the upcoming election. But let's not forget that an election is only a process, a means toward establishing a governing order. Implicit in the trust that people invest in election is that those who they elect are capable of good governance and policymaking. Has anyone given much thought to who the candidates are? And their qualifications? An election isn't a magic bullet that guarantees a subsequent period of good governance. I refer G2K lis...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Regardless of Iraq's internal situation prior to the US invasion in 2003, the fact remains that the liberation and occupation have resulted in anarchy where most instruments of governance cannot function. In my view, it's unlikely that Iraq can be restored to any semblance of a functioning society in the foreseeable future because of the 2003 war and now certainly because of the unending domestic turbulence. It seems to me that three things need to be addressed with regard to Iraq: 1....
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Michael Axworthy writes: "The doctrine that values of freedom and democracy are culturally relative, and therefore unsuitable in various parts of the world, is old and creaks. I recall it being used by people on the left in the early 80's about countries in Eastern Europe that are now members of the EU and NATO, as a result of democratic elections. It is a patronising argument, and its companion, that the West should stay out of Africa, or the Middle East, or East Asia, has been a favourit...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
The Saudis have long had close ties with Pakistan. They generously finance the madrasas, particularly those that emphasize a constructionist view of Islam. They also hire Pakistani troops and intelligence personnel, often for protection of assorted Saudi royalty. Some Saudi princes are known to favor Pakistani brides. All this by way of saying that, when it comes to weighing in on the intractable Pakistan-India dispute over Kashmir and other disputed territories, the Saudi have always ta...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
Iraq is lost, at least for the foreseeable future, as a functioning society. It is lost even more as a functioning democracy. It is lost as a place where various ethnic communities can live in harmony to pursue a common goal of eradicating poverty and engendering prosperity. All this needn't have been.
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
It may well be that some Iraqis would want a continued US presence in their country because of a belief that the Americans would somehow protect various ethnic elements from going after one another with blood on their minds. My own experience in the Middle East and elsewhere in the developing world suggests that there's usually a substantial difference between what people say for the sake of convenience and out of the exigencies of self-interest, and what they truly believe. Do Kurds, Shias, ...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
The potential of a "tyranny of the majority" always exists in any society, even a democratic one. And James Madison was quite precient about this in his commentary. In my native India, this argument has often been used by minority Muslims, who point to the fact that 80 percent of India's population consists of Hindus. But India has nevertheless managed to remain a secular state where minorities of all sorts are respected and are accorded the same rights and privileges as the majority. Ind...
January 14, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
There is no way out of the Iraq quagmire other than for the US and other well-meaning liberators to get out, thereby cutting their own losses. The "significantly smart" members of the Gulf2000 List can cogitate all they want, but I'm afraid that Iraq is "lost." It is lost in the sense that the current prescription of imposing elections on an unwilling and unacceoting electorate isn't going to work. Nor is the imposition of more troops to maintain law and order. As I've written before in ...
January 10, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
The potential of a "tyranny of the majority" always exists in any society, even a democratic one. And James Madison was quite prescient about this in his commentary. In my native India, this argument has often been used by minority Muslims, who point to the fact that 80 percent of India's population consists of Hindus. But India has nevertheless managed to remain a secular state where minorities of all sorts are respected and are accorded the same rights and privileges as the majority. Ind...
January 7, 2005 by Pranay Gupte
What will it take to end global poverty? By Jack Freeman Written for Earthtimes This June it will be five years since the nations of the United Nations agreed upon a set of "Millennium Development Goals" -- basically aimed at halving the amount of extreme poverty on the planet by the year 2015 -- and pledged their governments to work toward achieving them. Customarily the UN puts off conducting formal reviews of its major resolutions and their implementation until at least 10 years hav...